ExxonMobil has quietly adopted LGBT workplace protections in the wake of President Barack Obama’s executive order prohibiting federal contractors from discrimination on the basis of sexual ordination or gender identity.
According to ExxonMobil’s recently released standards of business conduct, it is now the policy of the company to provide equal employment opportunity to LGBT people.
The reversal in policy comes after ExxonMobil shareholders have voted year after year to reject adopting LGBT workplace protections. But now, with Obama’s executive order set to go into effect later this year, ExxonMobil is falling in line with federal law. For those reasons, LGBT-rights advocates saw the company deserves little credit for finally adopting inclusive workplace policies.
“This wasn’t prompted by a change of principles or corporate values, it represents Exxon’s response to President Obama’s July 2014 executive order that prohibits federal contractors from discriminating against LGBT people,” said Deena Fidas, director of the Human Rights Campaign’s Workplace Equality Program, in a statement. “Exxon had to include these explicit workplace protections or risk losing its federal contracts.”
“Exxon’s management deserves little credit for finally adopting the LGBT fairness policies they have rejected year after year for almost two decades, but this is an important victory for the company’s current LGBT employees and future LGBT job applicants,” added Tico Almeida, founder and president of Freedom to Work, in a statement. “It’s obvious Exxon is making these changes now because of mounting legal pressure and the impending risk of losing hundreds of millions of dollars in federal contracts thanks to President Obama’s executive order.”
In July, Obama signed Executive Order 13672 prohibiting contractors who do work with the federal government from discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity, a move long sought by advocates. In December, the Labor Department released the final rule implementing Obama’s executive order, set to take effect 120 days after its posting.
Almeida’s Freedom to Work has filed a complaint against ExxonMobil alleging the company discriminated against job applicants who were LGBT. “We will continue prosecuting our civil rights lawsuit against Exxon in Illinois because the corporation should be held accountable for its discriminatory actions from the recent past,” Almeida said. “We will also remain vigilant and file new cases, including under the Obama executive order, based on any new evidence of discrimination that we find at Exxon.”
ExxonMobil is one of the federal government’s top 100 contractors. However, the company has repeatedly held the lowest ranking on HRC’s Corporate Equality Index — the first and only company to receive a negative score.
“Exxon has a long, established history of anti-LGBT stances,” said Fidas. “To articulate its policy through the lens of legal conformance is not an affirmative changing of course and full adoption of equality, but instead a calibrated response to retain government contracts.”
Federal agencies under the Trump administration have flagged hundreds of words to avoid in official government memos, public-facing websites, and informational materials.
Government agencies are seeking to comply with a President Trump executive order seeking to rid the government of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) practices, and any programs or initiatives that conservatives decry as "woke," including those that focus on racial and cultural identity, LGBTQ identity, and the idea of "equity" rather than equality.
The list appeared in government memos and agency guidance, ordering the removal of the words from government websites, internal communications, and from written or printed materials.
Germany's Foreign Office is issuing warnings to transgender and nonbinary citizens traveling to the United States.
The warning is due to a recent executive order from President Donald Trump declaring that only passports with male or female gender markers will be accepted as valid. The order erases transgender identity from law, refusing to acknowledge a person's gender identity if it differs from their assigned sex at birth.
Under Trump's order, the U.S. will only recognize two sexes: male and female, based on biological characteristics at birth as a matter of policy. It declares that gender cannot be changed through medical interventions.
The School District of Philadelphia announced it will defy President Donald Trump's executive order prohibiting transgender athletes from competing in women's sports.
This move contrasts with the actions of the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association, the governing body of K-12 sports in the Keystone State.
The PIAA revised its policy to comply with Trump's executive order, replacing references to a student's "gender" with sex. It removed principals' authority to make a final determination regarding a student's sex and allowed a school to determine it (presumably based on the gender marker on school records and birth certificates, although the policy lacks specifics).
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