Neighborhood

A safer place to pee

By Jackson Cofer and Elias Gross

There is a new campaign in town to raise awareness on a subject that no one really wants to talk about: bathrooms. Under the auspices of Kentuckians for the Commonwealth (KFTC), Jackson Cofer, Elias Gross and a handful of concerned activists have banded together to form a Safe to Pee campaign for Lexington. Starting with the vision of access to safe bathrooms for all people, the campaign is focused on those who do not conform to traditional gender roles, the different-abled, and those in non-traditional families.

We are researching building codes to create an informed checklist to assess the conditions of bathrooms in Lexington. We plan to dispatch teams with our checklists and our vision to collect data on safe bathrooms starting in the downtown area.

We will meet with business owners to discuss our findings and reward those who care about our mission. Single stall restrooms will be fitted with gender-free signs created by local artists and all businesses will have the opportunity to display stickers we have created to identify their commitment to having safe, accessible, and accommodating restrooms for all.

Jackson’s story

We care about this issue because we have stories that we are sick of hearing repeated. Jackson’s story goes a little like this:

“It was opening night at Buster’s Billiards and Backroom and I was there to celebrate the new location of this beloved pool hall. It bustled with new and old friends and I milled around with my PBR, taking in the vastness of the renovated warehouse space. It soon was clear to me that the seal needed to be broken and I wandered with my friend, Dale to where the bathrooms were. Now, at the old Buster’s there were two doors. I can’t recall if they were marked in any way but they were single-stall and I clearly remember using both depending on which one had a shorter line.

The new Buster’s is a different story. To accommodate the larger capacity, the owners created multiple stall restrooms. The doors were clearly marked and featured the time-worn line that poured from the women’s side while men darted in and out of theirs.

I stood and contemplated. I had been going by my chosen name of “Jack” and had been binding to pass as male for nearly a year. Being new at this, it did not always occur to me to locate accommodating restrooms in advance. I gambled on men’s rooms having a stall with a door that actually shut and locked. My friend went in and came back with grim news. The men’s room was a free-for-all with zero privacy.

I considered using the women’s room in hopes that most of the folks in there would know me but then began to sort through the “tranny harassment” file in my mind. The case of the transman who used a women’s room and was beaten within an inch of his life upon exiting the stall by one woman’s boyfriend who was in the restroom at the same time… the trans woman who didn’t pass well enough in the women’s room, was arrested and forced to register as a sex-offender. That it could be illegal for me to use either public restroom was not lost on me as I opted for the parking lot.

Squatting in the corner of the Buster’s parking lot, slightly buzzed with my pants around my ankles I got to thinking…why must I choose public urination and risk injury, arrest, and harassment simply because I, like everyone else, must answer the call of nature every once in a while?”

Safe bathrooms

In talking to our friends about bathroom safety, we heard more stories of bathroom struggle. “Sometimes when I am with my brother, Paul, he needs help using the restroom,” said Mel Lesch, UK alumnus and co-founder of UK’s LGBT resource center, the OUTsource. “As someone with down syndrome, he has low muscle mass and can’t always reach everything. I cannot help him in single gender restrooms even though I am helping him as a sibling.”

Likewise, Tim Buckingham, staff member of KFTC, expressed his discomfort in some ”family friendly” businesses. “My daughter, Joleigh, was 6 months old and having stomach troubles. I had her on the table in the restroom and was working her legs to relieve some of her stomach pain. A guy walked in, made some smart ass comment about how this was the men’s room and then left.”

Understandably, it is not the fault of the establishment for one patron to make an ignorant comment to another. But who’s fault is it when patrons get assaulted for choosing the “wrong” restroom? Is it the responsibility of the business owner to create a safe space for all of their customers? We think so.

At press time, the safe bathrooms database Safe2Pee.org listed only one business with single-stall bathrooms safe for all genders in Lexington. The bathrooms, located at 3rd Street Stuff, are the only correct and current listing on the site (Beer Trappe anyone?). These restrooms are appreciated and valued but not sufficient in a city of over 270,000.

We, the frustrated, know we are not alone. We cannot change this reality without your support. We need folks to gather support via petitions and folks to fill out our teams to collect data. We need those who can emphasize with our stories and those who have their own.

The next planning meeting for the Safe2Pee campaign will be Saturday, November 6 from 3-5 P.M., site tba. Send an email to Jackson Cofer at jackcoferguitar@gmail.com to get plugged into our campaign to make Lexington a safer place to pee for everyone.

5 Comments

  1. Yeah, but how can you expect me to take something serious when the correspondent goes by Jack Cofer… Jack…offer? If you want to be silly, be silly. Just don’t expect me to give a shit.

    • Keith Halladay

      It should be noted that Jack Cofer is a real name and a real person, and is a well known musician and community figure in Lexington. His web site is found at http://www.jackcofer.com/

      • Thanks Keith! and John, Jack’s last name is pronounced Koe – Fer. Being that there is only on “F” in his name, the “o” is long.

  2. John,

    Your comment really rubs me the wrong way. It sounds to me like 1.) You are mocking and belittling the experience of gender non conforming people and the differently abled, and 2.) You are completely out of touch with all of the work that KFTC has been doing.

    In regards to our legislative and voter work, we’ve been working non-stop during this election season. The central Kentucky chapter hired a full time voter empowerment organizer and three part-time electoral organizers to help coordinate our election work this year because it’s so big. We sent out over 9,740 voter guides (and also created an online version at http://www.kentuckyelection.org) to central Kentuckians and by the end of the day tomorrow we’ll have contacted over 8000 registered voters in central Kentucky. We’re giving people rides to the polls all day tomorrow. We also recently formed a political action committee (newpowerky.org) and have been aggressively trying to send our new power message to Kentuckians all over the state. I won’t even get into the rest of it but you can keep up with all of our work at http://www.kftc.org.

    Finally, the idea anyone would think that working to create safe spaces for people in our city isn’t important blows my mind and reminds me how important the campaign really is. Instead of putting a value judgment on our work maybe you could come out to our next meeting and be a part of the discussion. The central Kentucky chapter meets the third Thursday of every month at 7pm at the Episcopal Mission house on the corner of 4th St. and MLK.

  3. I didn’t know this was a campaign by Central Kentucky KFTC. I thought they had more important things coming up with legislative sessions and whatnot.

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