LGBTQ Equality Updates for January 2023

MAP's Equality Maps provide a detailed snapshot of the current state of LGBTQ laws and policies in the United States. In this regularly changing landscape, these are the state and local policy updates as of January 2023.

State Policy Updates

(The links in the policy updates below take you to relevant coverage, the Equality Map for an issue, or the Equality Profile for a state.)

Nondiscrimination protections

Identity document laws and policies

In Indiana, a second court ruling found that the state's stated process for amending birth certificates (which requires a court order) does not apply to gender marker changes, and that Indiana courts therefore lack the authority to order gender marker changes. This follows a previous ruling in May 2022.

We've updated our Equality Map for identity documents to reflect that the current process is therefore unclear or unknown in Indiana. There is a related case pending before the state Supreme Court, and the state's attorney general is pushing the Court to take the case and affirm that state courts cannot order gender marker changes. Local reporting also states that the state legislature may take up the issue in 2023.

Read more in MAP's latest report on ID documents - The ID Divide: How Barriers to ID Impact Different Communities and Affect Us All.

Anti-LGBTQ legislation

Many states have already pre-filed dozens of anti-LGBTQ bills ahead of the 2023 session, which we expect to be even worse than this past year for anti-LGBTQ?-?and especially anti-trans?-?legislation.

SB219, an Oklahoma bill introduced in early January, prohibits medical professionals from providing gender-affirming coverage to anyone under 26.

Learn more about the state of medical care bans in our Healthcare Laws and Policies map.

Local Level Policy Updates

Nondiscrimination ordinances

Comprehensive nondiscrimination ordinances?-?covering both sexual orientation and gender identity in all three of employment, housing, and public accommodations?-?were passed in:

* Note: it has been inaccurately reported that Casper is the fourth city in Wyoming with such an ordinance. The other city being referred to is Cheyenne, which passed a hate crimes ordinance earlier in 2022; however, Cheyenne's ordinance covers only hate crimes and does not include nondiscrimination protections. The state of Wyoming lacks a hate crime law and also lacks LGBTQ protections in its nondiscrimination law. While all four cities have taken steps to address these gaps in state law, their ordinances are not all the same.

As of January 1, 2023, at least 374 municipalities fully and explicitly prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity in private employment, housing, and public accommodations. This is a notable increase from 334 municipalities at the beginning of 2021, and at least 363 at the beginning of 2022.

This only includes municipalities with fully comprehensive protections in states that do not already have statewide protections. This statistic does not include, for example, cities in California that also have local ordinances, given California's state level protections. This count also does not include cities that only have protections based only on sexual orientation but not gender identity, or only in housing but not private employment and public accommodations, for example.

MAP Policy Research Updates

In November 2022, MAP released two reports covering: the landscape of ID document laws and policies and the state of LGBTQ Community Centers in the U.S.

The ID Divide: How Barriers to ID Impact Different Communities and Affect Us All

MAP's new report details the many overlapping barriers to obtaining an ID or accurate ID, and how these barriers significantly impact people's ability to access basic needs and essential services, move through their daily lives, and participate in civic life?-?as well as the broader harms to public health and safety.

The report provides a robust cross-population analysis, illustrating how barriers to ID affect us all but impact specific communities in different ways. Highlights of the report include:

Read the full report here. You can also learn more about the report in our press release and find other ID-related content at our Identity Documents issue page.

2022 LGBTQ Community Center Survey Report

In partnership with CenterLink, MAP published its eighth LGBTQ Community Center Survey Report in a series dating back to 2008.

2022 was a record-breaking year, with more than 208 centers participating across 45 states, D.C., and Puerto Rico?-?our highest participation yet. See below for a few key report highlights:

To schedule an interview with a MAP researcher or for questions please contact Rebecca Farmer at rebecca@mapresearch.org.


About MAP: MAP's mission is to provide independent and rigorous research, insight and communications that help speed equality and opportunity for all. MAP works to ensure that all people have a fair chance to pursue health and happiness, earn a living, take care of the ones they love, be safe in their communities, and participate in civic life. www.mapresearch.org

Connect with us