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Equalities boss outlines changes on toilets, changing rooms and women’s sport

17 Apr 2025 3 minute read
Photo by Marcel Gnauk from Pixabay

Trans women cannot use single-sex female toilets, changing rooms or compete in women’s sports, in light of a Supreme Court ruling, the head of Britain’s equalities watchdog said.

Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) chairwoman Baroness Kishwer Falkner said Wednesday’s ruling was “enormously consequential” and brought clarity, as she vowed to pursue organisations which do not update their policies.

The ruling that the terms woman and sex in the 2010 Equality Act “refer to a biological woman and biological sex” means transgender women with a gender recognition certificate (GRC) can be excluded from single-sex spaces if “proportionate”, the Supreme Court said.

Baroness Falkner said organisations should be “taking care” to look at the “very readable judgment” to “understand that it does bring clarity, helps them decide what they should do”.

Sport

Asked if it was now simple that trans women cannot take part in women’s sport, she told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “Yes, it is.”

On changing rooms and toilets, Baroness Falkner said: “Single-sex services like changing rooms must be based on biological sex.

“If a male person is allowed to use a women-only service or facility, it isn’t any longer single-sex, then it becomes a mixed-sex space.

“But I have to say, there’s no law that forces organisations, service providers, to provide a single-sex space, and there is no law against them providing a third space, an additional space, such as unisex toilets for example, or changing rooms.”

She suggested trans rights organisations “should be using their powers of advocacy to ask for those third spaces”.

The commission is expecting to lay an updated statutory code of practice before Parliament by the summer, and has said it is working “at pace to incorporate the implications of this judgment” into the code for public bodies setting out their duties under the Equality Act.

Baroness Falkner said the commission evaluates when the law is not followed by organisations and can speak to those bodies, or “use enforcement, compliance tools or whatever, we will be continuing to do that”.

‘Accommodated’

Regarding single-sex hospital wards, she said the NHS will “have to change” their 2019 policy, which says that trans people “should be accommodated according to their presentation”.

Baroness Falkner said the court ruling means there is now “no confusion” and the NHS “can start to implement the new legal reasoning and produce their exceptions forthwith”.

Officials said they were already updating the guidance but the judgment will be considered as they move forward.

Care minister Karin Smyth told BBC Breakfast the “NHS will obviously be complying” along with “every other public body”.

She said she hopes the ruling will draw a line under arguments over gender recognition, but accepted more “homework” needed to be done on what it will mean in practice.

The Supreme Court decision was hailed as a victory by women’s rights campaigners, but LGBT charity Stonewall described the judgment as “incredibly worrying for the trans community”.

Baroness Falkner said while the ruling is a “victory for common sense”, this is only the case “if you recognise that trans people exist”.

She added: “They have rights, and their rights must be respected – then it becomes a victory for common sense.”

She added: “It’s not a victory for an increase in unpleasant actions against trans people. We will not tolerate that.

“We stand here to defend trans people as much as we do anyone else. So I want to make that very clear.”


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8 Comments
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Adrian
Adrian
26 days ago

Disabled toilets are unisex, and present in the majority of settings. Simple roll out the facility over time in all venues.

Barry
Barry
26 days ago
Reply to  Adrian

Disabled toilets are for people with disabilities. What’s needed is mandatory gender neutral facilities that anyone can use with service providers choosing to offer single-sex facilities if the deem it value for money.

Karl
Karl
25 days ago
Reply to  Adrian

That’s too sensible. Bigots will still find anger in that and make up lies. Though I think all toilets should be gender neutral, like in our homes.

Martyn Vaughan
Martyn Vaughan
25 days ago

In any club, permission to join requires the original members to approve entry. Transwomen cannot allow themselves to join the club of women by simply stating that they are women; that requires the approval of the original members i.e. biological women. And most biological women do not wish to allow transwomen entry. Case closed.

Barry
Barry
25 days ago
Reply to  Martyn Vaughan

It’s not case closed because you still have to find a way to ensure a marginalised and vulnerable group aren’t discriminated against and can live their lives with dignity. The only alternative is to remove single-sex services and facilities altogether, and find other ways to ensure everyone feels safe.

Rob Wright
Rob Wright
25 days ago
Reply to  Martyn Vaughan

so they are all bigots much like men only clubs or whites only in the 60s

Lindie
Lindie
25 days ago
Reply to  Martyn Vaughan

I don’t recall being asked

Rhea
Rhea
21 days ago

Ah so in the year of our lord 2025 we are creating separate but equal facilities for minorities. This is literally the stupidest way a society has implemented segregation

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