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Press Release

Readout of Civil Rights Division’s Quarterly LGBTQI+ Community Stakeholder Meeting

For Immediate Release
Office of Public Affairs

Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division and the division’s LGBTQI+ working group convened a quarterly meeting yesterday with LGBTQI+ community stakeholders.

Department leadership, including representatives from the Civil Rights Division, FBI, Community Relations Service, Office of Justice Programs and Office on Violence Against Women heard from attending organizations on an array of topics. Those topics included hate crimes targeting the LGBTQI+ community, threats of violence against LGBTQI+ organizations and healthcare providers serving LGBTQI+ patients; discriminatory legislation targeting the LGBTQI+ community; protections for LGBTQI+ parents in the foster care and adoption process; and discrimination faced by both intersex individuals and individuals living with HIV. Representatives from other federal government agencies were also in attendance, including the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Departments of Health and Human Services, Education, Housing and Urban Development, Labor, Homeland Security, Defense and Veterans Affairs.

This week’s meeting reinforces the Justice Department’s commitment to taking an all-of-department approach to protecting LGBTQI+ rights, including by engaging with organizations and stakeholders on issues affecting the LGBTQI+ community. The department’s recent work on LGBTQI+ rights issues includes a statement of interest challenging North Carolina’s bans on gender-affirming health care for transgender minors and an amicus brief in support of transgender individuals who are seeking medical treatment for gender dysphoria that is excluded from Medicaid coverage by a Florida administrative rule and state statute.

The department has also prosecuted hate crimes based on LGBTQI+ status or affiliation with the LGBTQI+ community, addressed discrimination based on transgender status in employer-provided health insurance coverage, affirmed that correctional institutions cannot deny medically appropriate care for people with gender dysphoria, took action to combat the criminalization of HIV status, and continued to educate the public about threats facing the LGBTQI+ community, including by hosting another virtual, nationwide community meeting outlining practical steps for protecting LGBTQI+ communities from hate-motivated attacks and threats of violence. These and other efforts can be found on the Civil Rights Division’s LGBTQI+ working group’s website

Assistant Attorney General Clarke meets with the division's LGBTQI+ working group and LGBTQI+ community stakeholders.
Assistant Attorney General Clarke and the division's LGBTQI+ working group meet with LGBTQI+ community stakeholders.
Updated February 16, 2024

Topic
Civil Rights
Press Release Number: 24-185