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Transgender Advocates Lead Panel on Trans Day of Visibility
For Transgender Day of Visibility, Grace Detravarah, Osborne LGBTQ liaison joined New York City Council’s Women’s Caucus and LGBTQ Caucus for a panel on the state of

For many transgender people, heightened visibility can put them at greater risk of discrimination.
“I always let someone know where I’m at and who I’m with,” said Chanel Lopez, a transgender community liaison for the New York City Commission on Human Rights who shares her location with her best friend at all times.
Chanel was one of many transgender advocates who discussed safety, policing, and more during a Zoom panel on March 31 for Trans Day of Visibility, a worldwide holiday commemorating the accomplishments of transgender people. The event was led by the New York City Council’s Women’s Caucus and LGBTQ Caucus.
TS Candii, a Black transgender activist and leader of Black Trans Nation, moderated the panel discussion, which featured Cecilia Gentili, the founder of Trans Equity Consulting; Grace Detrevarah, an LGBTQ liaison at the Osborne Association; and Elana Redfield, the director of LGBTQI Affairs at the New York City Department of Social Services.
While the event focused on the importance of representation and the discriminatory policing of trans bodies, advocates also celebrated their most recent gains. Advocates led a successful effort to repeal a loitering law known as a ban on “Walking While Trans” due to the way in which the now-gutted law was used by police officers to disproportionately target transgender women of color. That legislation, which was signed into law this year, also seals all prior convictions and records under the statute.
“This was a win driven by trans people,” Gentili said. “We did it.”
Gentili praised TS Candii, one of the lead organizers in the movement to reverse the archaic policy.
“You do not get enough glory as you should,” Gentili said tearfully to TS Candii. “I’m taking this opportunity to celebrate you.”
For others, the repeal of the law was long overdue.
“It’s about time,” Lopez said. “We’ve been fighting this for years.”
Detrevarah recalled how frequently law enforcement officers used the law to harass transgender people for unsubstantiated reasons, such as carrying condoms in their purses.
“It was like they were playing eenie, meenie, miny mo,” Detrevarah said. “This gives us an opportunity to address the other things that are on our agenda.”
Read the rest of the coverage for Transgender Day of Visibility here.