Showing posts with label bathroom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bathroom. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 5, 2023

All gender restroom now in Bray! (and a second one in Walters)


To the residents of Bray and Walters-

Consistent with ESF's commitment to diversity, to better accommodate our campus' demographics and in accordance with NYS 8 NYCRR Part 317, changes to existing toilet room designations are being made. We recognize that the changes noted below do not completely address this issue. This is a step towards improvements; additional changes will follow as more building project updates occur. The change is proposed for implementation this coming week.

 Bray Hall

The single occupant restroom at the basement level of this building will be designated an all-gender bathroom. [This restroom is not ADA accessible.]

Walters Hall

The single occupant restroom on the 4th floor of this building will be designated an all-gender bathroom. [This restroom is accessible per ADA guidelines, as is the all gender restroom on the ground floor.  All Walters restrooms have at least one accessible stall].

Signage [has been posted will be posted shortly]  to indicate this change. This is only one step in a larger effort that will address this important issue throughout all ESF properties. 

Our campus has adopted a Bias Reporting tool that can be accessed through this link, https://www.esf.edu//ide/bias.php . The Bias Reporting System has the capability to report incidents anonymously, or not, and is a way for the campus to report incidents that occur. For your reference please see our NondiscriminationPolicy.

Questions and comments regarding these initiatives should be directed to Rex Giardine.

Erin Tochelli

Associate Director of Academic Administration
SUNY College of Environmental Science & Forestry 
Pronouns: she/her/hers

“The mightiest oak in the forest is just a little nut that held its ground”

Monday, January 25, 2021

ESF’s bathroom signage and menstrual product initiatives shared at SUNY Spectrum conference

You saved my life: Restroom Stories of Safety and Survival - Messaging, Hygiene Products & Prophylactics” was recorded during the 3rd annual SUNY SPECTRUM Conference, August 26, 2020.  Staff at ESF (Sue Fassler, Jules Findlay, and Heather Engelman), SUNY Upstate (Cristina Pope and Mattie Cerio), or both (Dr. Malika Carter) discussed menstrual product distribution, signage in bathrooms, and single stall and ADA accessible restrooms, as well as the lactation rooms on both campus—and normalizing the conversations about all these things. Upstate staff shared information about wudu stations, their distribution of complimentary prophylactic products, and how all of these impact their clinical Health Equity Index rating while ESF folks spoke about the unique challenges of field work.  The presentation shares some data and photos compiled by members of the ESFWomen listserv, as well as work that moved forward because they kept asking questions. 


One of the most important commitments we can make in supporting a culture of belonging on our campuses is to provide safe restrooms. Join us as we share our successes and failures with leadership buy-in, messaging, restroom renovations, signage, and complimentary hygiene and prophylactic products.

Learning Objectives:

  • Practical knowledge of project planning steps in creating ALL Gender restrooms
  • Practical knowledge on communicating and celebrating successes
  • Learn how to implement a complimentary hygiene product service
  • Learn how to implement a complimentary prophylactic service

Convener:

  • Karren Bee-Donohoe  (She, Her, Hers), Associate Vice Chancellor, SUNY Office for Capital Facilities

Speakers:

  • Malika Carter (She, Her, Hers), Chief Diversity Officer, Environmental Science and Forestry and Interim Chief Diversity Officer, Upstate Medical University
  • Mattie Cerio (She, Her, Hers), Medical Social Worker & LGBT Program Manager, Upstate Medical University
  • Heather Engelman (She, Her, Hers), Instructional Support Technician, Environmental Science and Forestry
  • Sue Fassler (She, Her, Hers), Sustainable Facilities Manager, SUNY ESF 
  • Jules Findlay, Coordinator of Education Abroad, SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry
  • Rebecca Hoda-Kearse (She, Her, Hers), Title IX / Affirmative Action Officer, College of Environmental Science and Forestry
  • Cristina Pope (She, Her, Hers), Director, Health Sciences Library Upstate Medical University
  • Carl A. Thomas Jr (He, Him, His), Interim Affirmative Action Officer & Supplier Diversity Coordinator, SUNY Upstate Medical University 


Tuesday, May 12, 2020

Re-usable menstrual products

ESF has received a $5,000 award to further look holistically at the campus' materials ecosystem and to build a zero-waste campus infrastructure that effectively addresses accessibility, equity, and systemic oppression from the New York State Association for Reduction, Reuse and Recycling (NYSAR3) and the New York State Pollution Prevention Institute (NYSP21). 

With the grant, ESF will purchase menstrual cups and materials for reusable pads. This effort will build upon the College's zero-waste and inclusivity goals and move closer to becoming a zero-waste campus by 2025. ESF launched its campus-wide composting program in August 2019 and has seen a 27 percent decrease in trash (by weight) since that time.

Lack of access to menstrual products (AKA "Period Poverty") also negatively impacts quality of life for far too many individuals.  Such supplies are in constant demand at food pantries and other social support structures.  This can prevent full participation in school and field work; menstrual cups in particular can  Thus the Office of Inclusion, Diversity, and Equity has also pledged funds, and the Baobab Society has pledged their supplies of menstrual cups that the had purchased for a tabling event for Womyn's Herstory Month, as well as assistance in tabling.  As a cost saving measure, PIs budgeted funds for fabric, rather than cloth pads, and hope to recruit student groups and volunteers to make pads, and to teach others to do the same.

Read the press release from The Office of Communications & Marketing here.

Thursday, January 30, 2020

Information on menstrual products in more ESF restrooms


Shared via "CampusNews"
Dear ESF Campus Community,

Over winter break, the Inclusion, Diversity, and Equity Committee worked with the Facilities Department to provide free menstrual products in every restroom on campus. These products have previously been available in women’s restrooms, but have now been placed in men’s and all-gender restrooms as well. A list of locations of women’s, all-gender, single-occupant, and accessible restrooms is available from the ESF Women’s Caucus: https://www.esf.edu/womenscaucus/documents/bathrooms.pdf.

The reasoning behind placing menstrual products in all restrooms is simple: there are people on our campus who find themselves in need of these products, and they should have easy access to them. The Gender Expression Non-Discrimination Act (GENDA) states that all restrooms may be used by any person regardless of gender identity or expression. Women are not the only people who menstruate, and people of all genders should be able to access menstrual health products in any restroom they enter.  The products are in small bins with lids, and can be easily avoided by those who are not in need of them.

One question that has been posed to the Committee is whether these products should be limited to the all-gender restrooms on campus. All-gender restrooms are very limited on campus; some buildings don’t have any, or lack quickly navigable paths to those in other buildings.  Timing access to these products when needed for ¼ of each month can be a challenge.  If any period is extra heavy, or a person also has a mobility challenge or an extra time constrained schedule, the difficulty to reach an all-gender restroom would be far greater. Many folks who menstruate have preferred products and will only be using what’s in the baskets when they don’t have time or funds to get what works best for them. Lacking access to these products can negatively impact access to education and to work.

The IDE Committee is proud to be part of this initiative to promote equitable access to necessary health products for our entire campus community.

For more information on this and other inclusion, diversity, and equity initiatives, please visit www.esf.edu/ide. Additional information and resources regarding GENDA can be found via the New York Transgender Advocacy Group website at https://www.nytag.org/genda. Any questions, concerns, or ideas can be addressed to [revised contact: Heather Engelman, engelman@esf.edu]. 

Best,

Jules Findlay (they/them)
Coordinator of Education Abroad
Office of International Education
SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry
9 Old Greenhouse · 1 Forestry Drive · Syracuse, NY 13210

Friday, October 26, 2018

R*E*S*P*E*C*T


Two issues arose during a recent swapping of the “bathroom fliers”—one of the fliers to be replaced had already been pulled from one of the single stall spaces.  This was disappointing, but not unexpected, as this is a recurring thing in that particular very private space, with the fliers or URL label removed (fortunately, we’ve only had to replace the holder once).  But also, one of the fliers in one of the most public restrooms had been altered:


ironically demonstrating the point of the cartoon, that the “feminist agenda” (nyuk, nyuk) IS not to "hate on men" (the word for that is "misandry") but that everyone (regardless of gender or gender identity) should indeed be treated respectfully.   But that this is such a novel concept for some that without scheduling, it doesn't get done.   Admittedly, the first few feminist waves ignored (or outright squashed) the intersections with other identities, but the current one aims to do better, for the betterment of all.  Which brings me to another interpretation of this graphic:  to mindfully consider group composition, to ensure there are women and other historically underrepresented groups at the table.  Make no mistake, while women are >50% of the population and in some undergraduate student bodies, they remain underrepresented in a number of fields and levels of academia.


Tuesday, August 8, 2017

Bathrooms, revisited


A Message from the President



Dear ESF Community,

A major priority of the College in the coming year will be to further address issues of accessibility, equity, and inclusion. This comprises several areas of concern, including increased compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), better access to all our facilities for members of our community and visitors-both here on the main campus and at our regional properties-and enhanced spaces that exemplify equality for all people. Equitable access to restrooms is one of the most important components of an elevated focus on accessibility.

Last academic year I directed our Physical Plant and Facilities unit to accelerate their activity to address the current inequitable situation in regard to the disproportionate availability of restrooms for women, and to provide more gender-inclusive options. Academic Governance, our Leadership Council, student governance groups, and others identified this very important need as well. Please see the memo below on this issue from Rex Giardine, our associate facilities program coordinator, and please recognize the changes being proposed are only our first step toward a much more comprehensive and College-wide solution.

I encourage you to share your thoughts on this proposal with Rex.


My Regards, Quentin Wheeler


TO: ESF Community
FROM: Rex Giardine, Associate Facilities Program Coordinator
DATE: August 8, 2017
RE: Campus - Toilet Room Change Initiatives

Consistent with ESF's commitment to diversity and to better accommodate our campus' demographics, several changes to existing toilet room designations are proposed. We recognize that the changes noted below do not completely address this issue either here on our main campus or at our regional properties. This is only the first phase of improvements; additional changes will follow this phase. The changes proposed, for implementation in the coming weeks, include the following:
Gateway Building
The men's and women's single-occupant toilet rooms on Floor 2 (near the elevator) will both be designated as gender-inclusive.
Illick Hall
Illick was constructed in the late 1960's with the higher number of men's toilet facilities reflective of the disproportionate number of men on campus at that time. As a measure to begin to create a balance indicative of the current ESF main campus demographic, the following changes are proposed in Illick Hall:
The existing men's rooms on Floors 1 and 4 will be designated as women's rooms. The existing women's room on Floor 4 will be designated as a single occupant, gender-inclusive restroom. This room has a lockable door

Feedback concerning the proposed changes will be accepted through August 16. It is our goal to implement accepted changes Monday, August 21, 2017.

Temporary informative signage will be installed at each restroom approximately one week ahead of the change, and maintained until occupants and visitors to the building become accustomed to these new designations.

A directive by President Wheeler, recommendations for bathroom equity outlined in a recent Academic Governance resolution, and requests made by both undergraduate and graduate students, as well as other faculty and staff members, are the major catalysts for these changes. There are additional measures in design to create ADA-compliant, single-occupant, gender-inclusive toilet rooms in both Illick Hall and Moon Library, with construction anticipated to take place during the 2017-2018 academic year.

Again, this is only one step in a larger effort that will address this important issue throughout all ESF properties.

Questions and comments regarding these initiatives should be directed to Rex Giardine in Physical Plant and Facilities at rgiardin@esf.edu or 315-470-6731.

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Bathroom Equity Resolution and Discussion, Academic Governance Meeting


At the April 18, 2017 Academic Governance Meeting, in discussion of a Resolution on Bathroom Equity, the college was asked to examine the distribution of on-campus bathrooms, and report back at the May 11 meeting ("Issue of all gender restrooms has been received and discussed and they are aggressively pursuing how to fix these issues.").  Haley Kim, of the Daily Orange, followed up with some of those that spoke:  

SUNY-ESF passes resolution to increase bathroom equity, targeting gender and accessibility



  

The State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry’s Academic Governance body recently passed a resolution, 44-11, calling for bathroom equity on campus. Faculty have said a lack of accessibility has plagued SUNY-ESF for years, leaving some students — especially transgender students — often feeling uncomfortable using the bathrooms.
The resolution asks the administration to conduct a bathroom audit, change the signage of some bathrooms in the Gateway Center, renovate and re-designate other bathrooms across campus and write a policy to improve bathroom equity for future buildings.
“The excuses that I hear are our buildings are old and we don’t have a lot of money, and lack of money in different places, but at some point we need to invest in the comfort in the people that work here,” said Kelley Donaghy, an associate professor of chemistry and one of the co-writers of the resolution.
The administration is to present its results of the study and plans for renovation by May 11, the next Academic Governance meeting. While President Quentin Wheeler has expressed support for the resolution, nothing has been done yet to Donaghy’s knowledge, she said.
In Illick Hall, there are 38 places for men to use the bathroom, while only eight for women, according to the resolution. Many of ESF’s buildings were constructed when the campus was predominantly male, the resolution notes, but now the campus sees “more balanced diversity of genders.” Additionally, not all restrooms are Americans with Disabilities Act-compliant, Donaghy said.
The discussion for a resolution only came this semester, though. Donaghy said she was inspired by the film “Hidden Figures,” where one of the main characters, who is black, is forced to walk across campus to use the bathroom because of segregation.
Knowing that many transgender students at SUNY-ESF don’t feel comfortable using the restrooms, Donaghy went to the chemistry department and suggested changing Jahn Laboratory’s third floor women’s restroom into an all-gender bathroom.
While most of the women on the floor supported the change, it was blocked because of a code rule about bathroom equity — the building couldn’t change over a women’s bathroom without changing over a men’s, Donaghy said.
Instead, Sierra Jech, a graduate chemistry student, came up with the idea to change both the men’s and women’s first floor bathrooms in Jahn to all-gender bathrooms, Donaghy said. They created a petition that reached close to 300 signatures.
“We wanted to show the chemistry department that more than just chemistry students would be using the restroom, and we also wanted to show that there was widespread support,” Jech said.
SUNY-ESF’s Undergraduate Student Association voted in support of both the petition and resolution, said Ben Taylor, the organization’s president. The association previously passed a resolution calling for more gender-inclusive bathroom spaces. The issue hasn’t been contentious among students, Taylor said.
But the resolution was debated at the Academic Governance meeting, said Heidi Webb, library technician at ESF and one of the co-writers of the resolution. One of the biggest pushbacks has been over the bathroom codes for buildings.
Brian Boothroyd, assistant director of physical plant for facilities at ESF, who spoke at the meeting, said he is in support of the resolution but added that it’s not as simple as just changing the signs on the doors. While this is a priority and some changes might be easy to make, there needs to be a deeper evaluation of other facilities before major renovations happen, he said.
“A change to accommodate one group might negatively affect another group that we don’t even know of yet,” Boothroyd said.

But Donaghy and Webb argue that there are some bathrooms that can be changed immediately. In Gateway, there are two single-occupancy bathrooms — one labeled for men and the other women — that they said could easily be relabeled. Changing these bathrooms was one of the key points in the resolution.
“Since we have these two single-stall bathrooms that are lockable from the inside,” Donaghy said, “… Why is this even a concern? It should have been done the day after the resolution.”
Another concern was that some of the bathrooms, like the ones in Jahn, were multi-stall. The resolution cites other SUNY campuses with all-gender bathrooms, like SUNY Stony Brook, Geneseo and Oneonta. At the meeting, those arguing against the changes brought up concerns of hygiene and safety.
Janine DeBaise, an instructor of writing and literature classes at ESF, said some of these arguments are “absurd” and that there are no mysterious hygiene issues — men and women can share bathrooms, just like in family homes, she said.
People also argued that women might not feel safe using the same facility as men. Webb said there are holes in this argument, though, and she dislikes it because it says that men can’t control themselves.
“If women don’t feel safe, that’s a larger issue and we need to figure why they don’t feel safe,” Webb said. “It has to be they don’t feel safe beyond the bathroom too, right?”
While most of the SUNY-ESF campus — across faculty, staff and students — seem in support of increasing bathroom equity across campus, Donaghy said that those against the proposal need to consider how it could increase comfort for many on campus.
“When someone says to me, ‘I’m uncomfortable with this,’” Donaghy said, “I want to just say, ‘But other people are uncomfortable with our current circumstances too. Why is your comfort more important?’”

RESOLUTION TO REQUEST BATHROOM EQUITY ON ESF’S MAIN CAMPUS

Sponsored by the Executive Committee of Academic Governance

Whereas it is acknowledged that some of our buildings are old and were built when the campus gender demographic was predominately male; and

Whereas the gender demographic on this campus has changed significantly since, approaching a more balanced diversity of genders; and

Whereas a recent bathroom audit of Illick Hall revealed that men have 38 places (urinals and toilets) to relieve themselves and women only have 8; and

Whereas it was recently calculated that women in Illick Hall routinely lose approximately 40 minutes a month either waiting in line for a stall or walking between floors or to another building and often cannot use a facility between classes; and

Whereas genderIspecific bathrooms present problems for parents needing to travel with differently gendered children and disabled people with differently gendered attendants; and

Whereas there are buildings on campus without ADA accessible bathrooms for both genders or at least one all gender fully accessible bathroom and many bathrooms currently designated as handicap accessible are likely only minimally accessible; and

Whereas there are currently few facilities on the SUNYIESF campus where individuals not on the gender binary, transgender, gender nonIconforming, or transitioning individuals are comfortable “Peeing in Peace”;1 and

Whereas a recent petition requesting that the first floor men’s and women’s multiIstall bathrooms in the Jahn Laboratory which has a wealth of bathrooms having been constructed after 1993, be reIdesignated as all gender was signed by approximately 275 (and counting) community members; and


Whereas the Jahn Chemistry Faculty passed a motion in support of all gender bathrooms but requesting that the College investigate the renovation of existing bathrooms including the cost and impacts on students, faculty and staff; and

Whereas the Undergraduate Student Association passed Resolution 05.2015: A Resolution Recommending the SUNYIESF Administration Implement Gender Inclusive Spaces; and

Whereas at the 172nd Plenary of the SUNY University Faculty Senate a resolution was passed recommending the SUNY Wide Implementation of Gender Inclusive Spaces;2 and

Whereas a new bill is being considered within the New York State Legislature “that would make all singleIoccupancy restrooms in public places gender neutral”;3 and

Whereas Syracuse and New York State include gender identity under Title VII, a Federal law that protects all employees from discrimination;4 and
Whereas the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has published clear guidelines for “Best Practices, A guide to restrooms access for transgender workers” 5 ; and

Whereas OSHA also recommends that there be one water closet for every 15 employees6;

Therefore be it resolved that Academic Governance requests that ESF administration and the ESF Capital Planning Committee perform a bathroom audit that includes: assessing the current accessibility, availability, and ADA compliance of all handicap restrooms; investigating the cost and feasibility of renovating and reIdesignating the Jahn first floor bathrooms as all gender; reassigning some men’s bathrooms as women’s rooms in Illick Hall; and

Be it further resolved that Academic Governance requests that ESF administration charge physical plant with reIdesignating the second floor bathrooms located in the Gateway Building (side by side, singleIstall lockable for individual occupancy, men’s and women’s bathrooms) immediately and the change be advertised widely; and

Be it further resolved that Academic Governance requests that the ESF Administration and the Capital Planning Committee seek to achieve bathroom equity across campus by renovating and reI designating other bathrooms in other buildings; and

Be it further it resolved that Academic Governance requests that the ESF Administration create a policy to ensure that all new buildings constructed and all future renovations in existing buildings on the ESF campus be built with fully accessible all gender bathrooms, exclusively; and

Finally, be it resolved that Academic Governance requests that the ESF Administration and the Capital Planning Committee report the results of their study and their plans for renovation of current facilities at the May 2017 meeting of Academic Governance.

Approved and adopted the __________day of __________ 20____.


Vote:                                        Ayes:            _________ Nos: _________
Absent:                     _________

__________________________________________
Secretary of Academic Governance for the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry


1 Peeing in Peace, Transgender Law Center, transgenderlawcenter.org
2 SUNY UFS resolution on Gender Inclusive Spaces, http://system.suny.edu/media/suny/contentI assets/documents/facultyIsenate/plenary/172I02I1IGenderIInclusiveISpacesIResolution.pdf
3 NY Bill Proposed statewide requirement for gender neutral bathrooms, Geoff Herbert Syracuse.com
4 See below for Title VII resources and information
5 OSHA Best Practices Guide for Transgender Workers, https://www.osha.gov/Publications/OSHA3795.pdf
6OSHA Table J1 – designating the number of water closets for the number of employees, https://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document?p_table=STANDARDS&p_id=9790# 1910.141(g)(2)



ADDITIONAL RESOURCES


Syracuse local ordinance https://www.municode.com/library/ny/syracuse/codes/code_of_ordinances?nodeId=PTLLOLA_C H8HURI_S8I4UNDIPR I

Most SUNY Schools have multiIstall all gender bathrooms some notable articles: Stony Brook: http://studentaffairs.stonybrook.edu/lgbtq/ourcampus/restrooms.html Geneseo: https://www.geneseo.edu/lgbtq/restrooms

Friday, March 24, 2017

All Gender Bathrooms, effort to designate some others as


Friends,

At a meeting recently, it came to my attention that there are almost no All Gender bathrooms on campus,  that even single stall bathrooms are still designated as single gender and cannot be re-designated.  At this meeting it was pointed out that some of our community members who are transgender, not on the gender binary, gender non-comforming or transition were uncomfortable using a rest room and would wait all day to return home.  So why aren’t all the single-stall bathrooms designated as “all gender” you ask?  Apparently there is a law that requires that if one single gendered bathroom is re-designated then the opposite single gendered bathroom must be also.  As many of you know in some of our buildings at ESF we have a  dearth of bathrooms, and in many of the oder buildings the bathrooms were converted men’s rooms to women’s rooms.  And sometimes there aren’t equal numbers of mens and women’s rooms at all so that has made re-designating these rooms difficult to impossible.

In the Jahn and Baker complex due to the youth of the building or the recent renovations there is a plethora of bathrooms.   These restrooms are not single-stall bathrooms but there are men’s and women’s rooms on each floor.  Sierra Jech, Heidi Webb and myself have written the attached petition to request that the multi-stall first floor women’s and men’s rooms on the first floor of Jahn be re-designated as All Gender bathrooms.  These bathrooms are extremely accessible and within 30 steps of a set of single gender bathrooms in Baker Laboratory and about 150 feet from single gender bathrooms in Gateway - all on the same level, no elevators or steps required.  There will no doubt need to be some remodeling but we feel that we need to make the request to get the conversation started.  I know that not everyone is comforatble with a multi–stall All Gender bathroom but for some, this will be a huge relief and for visitors a sign of our inclusivity.  Further, there is precedent at other SUNY schools.  Personally, I hope that on a campus where many students in field classes are told that the rest room is the nearest bush, this initiative will find wide support.

Sierra, myself and others will be tabling next week in Gateway and if you’d like to sign the proposal we would appreciate your assistance, we will be there hopefully Wednesday and Thursday.  Additionally, you are welcome to come to my office and sign.  Or you can send me an email indicating your support, or print the PDF, sign the document, scan it and email it back or even electronically sign it and return.  I don’t know how many signatures it will take or what the next steps will be, but all the support we can get will help as we move this forward.

Thank you,

Kelley






Kelley J. Donaghy, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Chemistry
Immediate Past Executive Chair of Academic Governance
SUNY Senator
Director of the Environmental Scholars Program
315 Jahn Laboratory
1 Forestry Drive
SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry
Syracuse, NY 13210

RESOLUTION TO RE--DESIGNATE THE MEN’S AND WOMEN’S BATHROOMS ON THE FIRST FLOOR OF JAHN LABORATORY AS ALL GENDER
Whereas a new bill is being considered within the New York State Legislature “that would make all single--‐ occupancy restrooms in public places gender neutral”;1 and
Whereas gender--‐specific bathrooms present problems for parents with differently gendered children and disabled people with differently gendered attendants; and
Whereas there are currently few facilities on the SUNY--‐ESF campus where individuals not on the gender binary, transgender, gender non--‐conforming, or transitioning individuals are comfortable “Peeing in Peace”;2 and
Whereas the Jahn Laboratory has a wealth of bathrooms having been constructed after 1993 and having both men's and women’s rooms on at least four floors; and
Whereas the first floor of Jahn Laboratory is connected by the sky bridge to Baker Laboratory and therefore additional men’s and women’s rooms are within approximately 30 steps of and located on the same floors as the first floor Jahn Laboratory bathrooms; and
Whereas the first floor of Jahn Laboratory is centrally located, wheelchair accessible from the Campus Drive entrance, open on weekends when the computer clusters are open, and is a high traffic area;
Therefore be it resolved that the chemistry department and other concerned SUNY--‐ESF community members request that the SUNY--‐ESF Administration re--‐designate the multi--‐stall men's and women’s bathrooms on the first floor of Jahn laboratory as All Gender bathrooms. We would also request that the urinals in the men’s bathroom be enclosed or at a minimum a sign indicating “unenclosed urinals may be in use” be prominently displayed.
We believe that having a multi--‐stall bathroom re--‐designated sends a strong message to our community that all people are welcome within the chemistry department and would be a strong step toward an inclusive and accessible campus.
----
1 NY  Bill  Proposed  statewide  requirement  for  gender  neutral  bathrooms,  Geoff  Herbert  Syracuse.com
2  Peeing  in  Peace,  Transgender  Law  Center,  transgenderlawcenter.org

Thursday, March 23, 2017

Recent menstrual product initiative from USA


....The Undergraduate Student Association is excited to announce the beginning of one of our newest initiatives: complimentary menstrual products for all students! As you may have noticed, bathrooms in Bray, Gateway, and Moon now have small white bins with tampons and pads for students to use as necessary.  Being that our mission is to represent and provide for the needs of all students, we chose to provide these products in both men's and women's restrooms. We understand that not all students require menstrual products and ask that the bins be reserved for those who do.



If you have any questions about this, or if you notice that a bin is empty, please let us know at usa.sunyesf@gmail.com or usa@esf.edu. We also welcome feedback about placement/access so that we are able to expand the program.



Thanks for your cooperation and support of your colleagues and friends!



Ben Taylor

USA President

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Validation and respect

Boxes appeared in a few high traffic areas on campus, laden with individually wrapped sanitary pads, labelled "Free samples (for ladies)."  On each sign, some alert soul changed "ladies" to gender inclusive wording:  "people with menstrual cycles", or "people who bleed from sensitive places."  One of these, someone went a step further, adding a post-it note thanking this individual for "validating me a a person" signed "someone who menstruates but is not a lady."  More post-it notes appeared, in support of the improved wording or the acknowledgement.

I applaud this person who turned questionable wording into a respectful reminder of not just tolerance, but inclusion.  And the respectful conversation that followed was also touching.  Well done, good people.  Well done!

--he

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Local history: In Syracuse, it was one small change for infants, one large step toward equality

When I clicked on this story, I assumed it would be about today's Great Cloth Diaper Change, an  attempt to break the world record for simultaneous cloth diaper changes.  However, it addressed access to changing table; the first suit addressing the lack of facilities for fathers (and the assumption that only moms did this particular familial duty) was in 1985, about our very own Syracuse Hancock Airport.  Read on.
Published in the Post-Standard, April 21, 2012
 By Karen DeCrow, Contributing writer
Syracuse was ahead of the game!
In Miami, Fla., 165 diaper changing stations are being built in men’s rooms and common areas of city properties. A story by Charles Rabin in The Miami Herald reported city commissioners voted in February to spend $45,000 to install baby diaper-changing stations in men’s rooms across the city, “after an hour of heated argument between the measure’s sponsor and the disgruntled police union president.”
The model: a Syracuse lawsuit filed in federal court, establishing that changing diapers is no longer women’s work (Northern District of New York).
My client, the Fathers’ Rights Association of New York State, brought the Syracuse Department of Aviation to U.S. District Court in July 1985. In September 1986, thanks to a decision by the late Judge Howard Munson, there was a celebration of the opening of a gender-free fathers’ and mothers’  nursery, with a ribbon cutting and the changing of two infants by their fathers; one the son of the assistant corporation counsel, the other the son of the president of the fathers’ rights group.
Our lawsuit addressed: sex discrimination against men who were denied equal facilities; sex discrimination against women, who were assumed to have the total responsibility for children while traveling; and the rights of children to be cared for by both parents.

FULL STORY

Karen DeCrow, an attorney and author from Jamesville, NY, is in the National Women's Hall of Fame and writes an occasional column in The Post-Standard.