CURRENT The
Wednesday 03.22.17 American River College Sacramento, Calif. Vol. 68, Ed. 9
GENDER NEUTRAL BATHROOMS SIGNS ON THE WAY TO ARC
Muslim ban instills fear By Solange Echeverria
solangerecheverria@gmail.com
Photo illustration by Lidiya Grib / Arts and Culture Editor
As of March 2017, 19 states, the District of Columbia and more than 200 municipalities have enacted anti-discrimination laws and ordinances allowing transgender people to use public facilities that correspond to their gender identity.
ARC’s new bathrooms protect transgender student’s rights By Cheyenne Drury cheyennemdrury@gmail.com Students who need to use the bathroom may have noticed something different on campus recently: Gender neutral restroom signs are currently ‘under construction’ at American River College. Once administration clarifies what the state social standards are for the signs, ARC will be out with the old and in with the new. “The signs will get up sometime next week,” Vice President of Administrative Services Administration Kuldeep Kaur said. The changes are being put into place thanks to a new bill. Bill AB 1732, also known as The Health and Safety Code 118600, “requires all single-user facilities in any business establishment, place of public accommodation, or government agency to
Lidiya Grib / Arts and Culture editor
American River College will be installing new gender neutral bathroom signs in the near future as Assembly Bill 1732. ARC President Thomas Greene, says the school fully supports the bill.
be identified as all-gender toilet facilities,” according to a press release emailed by ARC President Thomas Greene on March 1. The week prior to Greene’s email “the U.S. Departments of Education and Justice rescinded
previous guidance concerning transgender students’ use of restroom facilities,” according to Greene’s press release. Unlike the USDEJ, ARC strives to “be sensitive to the needs of our campus,” ARC’s Public Infor-
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Sports Feature
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A&C Opinion
mations Officer Scott Crow said. Within the last few years, the rights of the LGBTQ community have caused a lot of controversy —controversy that’s fueled the fire on both the far-right and farleft sides. Bill HB 161, the Physical Privacy Act, was recently filed by Virginia delegate Robert G. Marshall. If enacted, the bill, would have prohibited a person’s entry into “a restroom, changing facility, or private area located in a government building unless such individual is a member of the sex designated to use such restroom, changing facility, or private area,” according to Washington Post contributor Thomas Wheatley.
The bill also defined “sex” as the physical condition of being male or femal as shown on an individual’s original birth
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Although a federal judge in Hawaii temporarily blocked President Trump’s latest travel ban preventing travelers from six predominantly Muslim countries from entering the United States, a sense unease and uncertainty among Muslim students still permeates throughout the campus of American River College. “It makes me feel not safe,” said Sarah Musawi, who is studying to become a Dental Hygienist at ARC. Musawi is a young mother of three children from Iraq. She says that even her children don’t feel safe anymore. “They come to me and say “Momma, Trump doesn’t like Muslims.” I tell them don’t worry about religion, what matters is what kind of person, what kind of human you are.” Musawi said she and her husband fled Iraq because their lives were in danger after having worked for a United States based media company in Northern Iraq. This travel ban, often referred to as “the Muslim Ban” by opponents and proponents alike, was scheduled to take effect March 14 before it was blocked. Trump has heatedly criticized the decision by Federal U.S. District Judge Derrick Watson, calling it “judicial overreach” and vows to continue fighting to instill a travel ban that will pass judicial muster. Ban or no ban, Muslim students on campus are navigating the uncertainty in a myriad of ways. The Muslim Student Club, along with other groups on campus that feel threatened by the current administration’s travel and immigration policies have engaged in an on campus “Know Your Rights” campaign. According a report released in 2014 in partnership with the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs and the Institute of International Education, the U.S. hosts over 880,000 undergraduate and graduate students in our colleges and universities. Many of these institutions have come out publicly against these executive orders and have gone to great lengths to communicate their commitment to easing the fears of their impacted students.
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17-year-old rapper releases an EP two days after flipping his car in the mountains.
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