New rule from HUD

The Department of Housing and Urban Development issued a new regulation yesterday requiring federally funded homeless shelters to house transgender people in accordance with their gender identities.

The new rule, which covers all single-sex shelters funded through the HUD's Office of Community Planning and Development (CPD), seeks to ease widespread difficulty among the transgender population in accessing single-sex shelters — particularly those for women.

Transgender people already experience disproportionate rates of homelessness. And according to one study published earlier this year by the Center for American Progress, they also face pervasive anti-trans bias in the process of seeking shelter. Just 30 percent of shelters across four states said they were willing to house transgender women with other women, the study found.

Once rejected from shelters, transgender people often face the difficult choice of living on the streets or going to single-sex facilities that do not match their gender identities, where they're more vulnerable to abuse or violence.

According to the National Transgender Discrimination Survey, 47% of all transgender respondents who had accessed shelters in the past chose to leave those facilities because of ill-treatment, while 25% of transgender who stayed in shelters were physically assaulted by another resident or a member of the staff. 22% reported being sexually assaulted.

The new rule is another important step to ensure full acceptance of transgender and gender non-conforming individuals in HUD-supported programs.

This new rule will ensure equal access to the very programs that help to prevent homelessness for persons who are routinely forced to choose between being placed in facilities against their gender identity or living on our streets.

--Julián Castro, HUD secretary

As a society, we have a responsibility to help the homeless, executive director of the National Center for Transgender Equality, in a statement. "Unfortunately, 1 in 5 transgender people have been homeless at some point — and they deserve to find shelter in a place of safety and dignity, just like anyone else.

--Mara Keisling, NCTE

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SnappleBC's picture

Although it seems to me that all of these are temporary wins. The larger problem of educating the public and just plain fear of the different remains and will bite us over and over. Happily, I think our youth will eventually save us. Sadly, I had to say "eventually".

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A lot of wanderers in the U.S. political desert recognize that all the duopoly has to offer is a choice of mirages. Come, let us trudge towards empty expanse of sand #1, littered with the bleached bones of Deaniacs and Hope and Changers.
-- lotlizard

RantingRooster's picture

when my wife and I were facing eviction because she had to stop working as a result of cancer and I was her fulltime caregiver, I went to the Dallas, HUD, they told me there was a two year waiting list to get affordable housing. I politely asked, "what are we to do till then?" The nice lady replied "I don't know!"

I love when a agency has the right answers....

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C99, my refuge from an insane world. #ForceTheVote

enhydra lutris's picture

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --