Transgender Issues Threaten Jobs
Fla. City Manager Fights To Keep Job; University Dean In Michigan Has Already Lost His
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A protest at City Hall in Largo, Fla., Feb. 27, 2007, as the city commission voted to begin the process of firing the city manager days after he said he is a transsexual. (AP Photo)
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Largo mayor Patricia Gerard and City Manager Steve Stanton during a moment of prayer at the beginning of the City Commission meeting on whether he should be fired, Feb. 27, 2007. (AP Photo)
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In Largo, Florida, late Tuesday, the City Commission voted to begin the process of firing the city's top official - less than a week after he announced plans to pursue a sex change operation.
The 5-to-2 vote begins a three-step process to remove Largo City Manager Steve Stanton, 48, the city's top official for 14 years. He confirmed rumors last week that he is a transsexual.
Stanton, who built a solid reputation as a forceful and energetic leader, hoped to keep his $140,000-a-year job as he underwent the gender reassignment process.
"It's just painful to know seven days ago I was a good guy and now ... I have no integrity," Stanton told the commission Tuesday. "My challenge here has always been that someday I was going to leave this organization. So I am going to do it with a smile on my face."
The mixed feelings expressed by Stanton might easily be recognizable thousands of miles away in Spring Arbor, Mich., where a veteran faculty member now living as a woman has been fired by a private Christian university.
"I think they decided to terminate me rather than call me Julie," the former John Nemecek told the Jackson Citizen Patriot, as he collected a pink slip from Spring Arbor University, after 16 years on the job – ten as an associate dean.
Nemecek, 55, said he was told Monday, three days after legally changing his name, that he had been fired and will be paid through May.
"A primary reason for this is John's decision to not honor the contract we had agreed on," the school said in a statement confirming the firing. "We will honor our end of the contract financially and pay John through the end of the academic year."
Nemecek wears a blond wig and dresses as a woman but has no plans to undergo sex change surgery.
Nemecek, who is married and an ordained Baptist minister, has filed a gender discrimination complaint against the school and the two sides are scheduled to meet March 6 in mediation.
Largo's city manager also has a chance to appeal the decision on his job.
He will be placed on paid leave while the city begins the legal process to end his contract. The council must vote again to formally fire him.
Largo Mayor Patricia Gerard and Commissioner Rodney Woods cast the dissenting votes Tuesday.
"He's done a great job for us," Gerard said. "He's done what we asked him to do and taken the heat over and over and over again and now we're going to turn on him."
Largo Commissioner Mary Gray Black said Stanton's surprise announcement last week confirming that he is a transsexual "caused stress, turmoil, distraction and work disruption" in the city. His contract says he can be fired without cause at any time.
"I do not feel he has the integrity, nor the trust, nor the respect, nor the confidence to continue as the city manager of the city of Largo," said Black, who introduced a resolution to fire Stanton on Monday.
About 500 people attended the 3½ hour special meeting at Largo City Hall on Tuesday to debate Stanton's fate. Dozens of people signed up to speak to the council, some praising Stanton and others saying the exposure of his secret life undermined his ability to lead the city.
City officials have received hundreds of e-mails about Stanton's announcement, most calling for his removal.
Commissioner Gay Gentry praised Stanton, but supported his firing.
"I sense that he has lost his standing as a leader among the employees of the city," Gentry said. "We have need of an organizational leader that employees will follow."
Largo is a city of about 76,000 about 22 miles west of Tampa.
Stanton, who is married, said he has not yet scheduled the surgery, but is undergoing counseling and hormone replacement therapy in preparation for the operation.
The city council had given Stanton generally good reviews for his management of the city's $130-million budget and roughly 1,200 employees. The council gave him an $11,000 annual pay raise in September, with Black casting the lone dissenting vote.
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- Largo commissioners violated their own internal non-discrimination policy. In 2003, they adopted a policy that explicitly prohibits discrimination in public employment on the basis of gender identity and expression.
It is time to send these places a message that transsexualism is a medical issue, and all citizens deserve to be protected from blatant discrimination. - Reply to this comment
- I hope all Largo commission members keep one thing in mind: The type of person they are at work may not necessarily be the same type of person when they are away from the office. Do they think that the residents of Largo Florida would be happy if they found out that some commission members drink to much, pursue interests others may feel improper, have gambling problems, may not be faithful, have been audited, etc.? If found out would that information cause, as Largo Commissionar Mary Gray Black says, other city employees to feel "stress, turmoil, distraction and work disruption"?
All Largo commission members better have spotless pasts and spotless future behavior before they decide to vote to remove Steve Stanton. I pray that right now individuals are reviewing their pasts, looking for skeletons in their closets. That information should then be given to the residents of Largo, Florida through the newspaper and internet. If some have "skeletons in the closet" then they should receive the same treatment that they are giving Steve Stanton. They should be removed from office because other city employees may feel "stress, turmoil, distraction and work disruption".
Thank God I don't live in Largo, Florida. - Reply to this comment
- NOW THIS IS NEWS: REAL AMERICA, RANKS RIGHT UP THERE WITH THE AL GORE,"NOT ENOUGH GREEN" STORY. ONLY IN AMERICA.
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- Jesus and his disciples wore long hair and skirts for Gawd's sake! Who gives a flying feather? There are a lot bigger things to be threatened by.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




