FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Wednesday, March 1, 2023
Media Contact: Aaron Pelo, apelo@miaflcio.org | 734.355.2741
Michigan AFL-CIO Applauds Historic Vote Expanding LGBTQ+ Protections
LANSING, MI – Today, the Michigan state Senate passed a historic expansion of the Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act to include LGBTQ+ people as a protected class, ensuring civil rights, freedoms, and protections to all Michiganders regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity and expression.
“This is a historic day for Michigan’s LGBTQ+ community,” said Michigan AFL-CIO President Ron BIEBER. “Michigan’s labor movement has fought for decades to ensure the LGBTQ+ community is protected from discrimination in the workplace and afforded the same rights as everyone else regardless of who they are or who they love.” The AFL-CIO, the largest federation of labor unions in the nation, first called for prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation in 1979. The Michigan AFL-CIO was an early and out-front supporter of Fair and Equal Michigan’s previous effort to expand ELCRA through the ballot initiative process.
The Michigan AFL-CIO has long included protections for LGBTQ+ people in their contracts and has a staunch commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion. A 2020 report by the Williams Institute estimated Michigan has over 220,000 LGBTQ+ people in the workforce. “Today’s action by the Michigan Senate is a victory for hundreds of thousands of LGBTQ+ workers across the state who have for too long been without the legal protection they deserve to live freely and authentically,” said BIEBER.
The move to expand the Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act will make permanent a ruling by the Michigan Supreme Court last summer declaring that the state’s anti-discrimination law prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. It is expected the House will vote on the expansion swiftly and send it to Governor Whitmer’s desk.
The Michigan AFL-CIO, Michigan’s largest labor organization, is a federation representing forty different labor organizations, eighteen different central labor councils, and eight constituency groups representing over 1 million union members and their families.
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