logo
Scottish Government to review 'unlawful' trans policy

Scottish Government to review 'unlawful' trans policy

Earlier this month, it wrote to officials saying single-sex facilities in government buildings, such as female toilets and changing rooms, needed to be restricted to biological sex rather than gender identity.
In a formal legal letter before action, the group called on SNP ministers to urgently rewrite "clearly unlawful' internal guidance to bring it into line with the recent judgment on biological sex from the UK's highest court.
READ MORE
The Scottish Government confirmed to the group that the policy is being looked at. However, it said it had not been amended and that there were complexities that need to be considered.
There are 1,016 toilet facilities in the 66 sites that make up the Scottish Government's estate. Around 18% of the facilities are gender-neutral single-user "superloos", while the rest are designated as either male or female.
There are also numerous smaller sites — including fisheries and field-monitoring offices — where facilities may be shared or gender-neutral.
In April, the UK's highest court ruled unanimously that a Gender Recognition Certificate (GRC) does not alter a person's sex for the purposes of the Equality Act. The judgment clarified that the terms "man" and "woman" in the legislation refer to biological sex, not acquired gender.
That ruling meant every organisation in the country needed to review their equality policies.
The Supreme Court ruled that sex in the Equality Act meant biological sexWhile First Minister John Swinney initially welcomed the "clarity" provided by the judgment, the Scottish Government has previously said it is waiting for further guidance from the Equality and Human Rights Commission before issuing new advice to Scotland's public sector — including prisons, schools and the NHS.
In her letter to Sex Matters, Nicola Richards, the Scottish Government's director of people, said they did not agree that it was "appropriate or straightforward to take immediate steps" to bring its toilets policy into line with the Supreme Court's ruling.
She cited the Good Law Project's legal challenge to the Health and Safety Executive's interpretation of the Workplace (Health, Safety and Welfare) Regulations 1992 as a reason for a lack of action on the policy.
Dr Richards wrote: "Given these complexities, the Scottish Government does not agree that it is appropriate or straightforward to take immediate steps to either withdraw or amend the current policy.
@It is my understanding that the approach of the Scottish Government in this regard, of reviewing policies and, where appropriate, seeking guidance from the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), is consistent with the position of the UK and Welsh Governments.
"Appropriate changes will be made to the policy referred to in your letter, and others impacted by the ruling, as soon as the Scottish Government has further clarity. This will follow any required and appropriate consultation and engagement."
Ms Richards has also offered to meet with Sex Matters.
READ MORE
Maya Forstater, the founder of the group, said they had accepted the offer in "the hope of gaining clarity about how the Scottish Government is currently managing its workplace facilities, and when it intends to bring them into line with the law".
She added: "Tomorrow would be a good answer. It is now three months since the Supreme Court ruling and, this week, the Sandie Peggie tribunal resumes.
"It is atrocious that public bodies are still dragging their feet and describing the question of whether female staff deserve privacy and dignity as complex.
"Parliament makes the law and the highest court in the land has now clarified its meaning."
She added: "Whether or not we pursue legal action depends entirely on what the Scottish Government does next."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EXCLUSIVE Man who shed 85lbs in under a year shares easy changes he made to lose the weight
EXCLUSIVE Man who shed 85lbs in under a year shares easy changes he made to lose the weight

Daily Mail​

time14 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Man who shed 85lbs in under a year shares easy changes he made to lose the weight

A man who shed 85lbs in under a year has revealed the simple changes that he made to lose the weight. Ethan Noblesala, 32, from New York City, said his weight began to soar while he was working 'long hours' and averaging very little sleep as the CFO for a startup company. Food became a 'comfort and a convenience' for him, and he confessed that he didn't put much thought into how his lifestyle was affecting his body. 'I didn't really think about how it impacted my body. I wasn't tracking anything, and I wasn't fueling myself intentionally,' he explained during an exclusive chat with the Daily Mail. '[Food] was used as a way to network from happy hours to unhealthy late night meals.' At his heaviest, he weighed 235 pounds, and he struggled to do 'simple tasks' such as 'go up a flight of stairs or tie his shoes.' But everything changed in November 2023 after he was diagnosed with prediabetes. '[That] scared me. It made everything real,' he explained. 'I didn't want to head down a path that would only get worse with age. 'I wanted to feel better, move more freely, and be in control of my health.' He decided it was time to turn his life around, and he went on to lose a whopping 85 pounds in under a year. He explained to the Daily Mail that he started by focusing on 'small but consistent changes' like drinking more water, walking every day, and prioritizing sleep. 'I didn't do anything extreme overnight,' he dished. 'But over time, it snowballed.' Then, he revamped his diet - swapping out processed food for whole ingredients. He also started tracking his food intake and staying on a calorie deficit. While he loved playing sports as a child, staying active had fallen to the backburner due to his busy work schedule. But after he began to lose weight he got into playing pickleball, which reignited his love of fitness. 'As I got more confident, I added strength training and built a daily movement habit,' he continued. 'I also built a system to keep myself accountable... I completely restructured how I think about health. 'Now, I live an active lifestyle. I move every day, eat to fuel my body, and surround myself with people who also want to move and prioritize health.' As for the key to his success, he believes it was 'accountability and consistency.' 'I found ways to stay motivated, track my progress, and celebrate the small wins,' the fitness guru added. He said he now feels so much better both physically and mentally. 'I have more energy, I sleep better, and my mental health has improved significantly,' he gushed. 'I feel like I have control over my life again. That transformation gave me the clarity and purpose to build something that can help others do the same.' Ethan - who now weighs 150 pounds - recently co-founded WeFit Labs, 'a fitness platform that uses competition and community to help people stay on track with their health goals.'

Joe Wicks helping Government move away from ‘boring' fitness videos
Joe Wicks helping Government move away from ‘boring' fitness videos

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Joe Wicks helping Government move away from ‘boring' fitness videos

Fitness coach Joe Wicks is helping the Government move away from 'boring' video campaigns aimed at improving health, the Health Secretary has said. Wes Streeting mocked his own suit and tie appearance as he spoke on ITV's This Morning to help promote a new animated series for children, known as Activate. Created by Wicks and backed by Government funding, the series contains five-minute workouts to get children moving. Mr Streeting said: 'It's really bite size. You can do it in your living room, you can do it in your bedroom, you can get your family involved. 'And look, the truth is that if the Government was trying to produce something like this on our own, it probably would have been like, sorry to say, but a boring Government video. 'I mean, I've just turned up looking like this this morning. 'It's kind of a really good, kind of physical manifestation of how boring Government can be. 'And the great thing about this partnership we've got is we're putting some resource behind it so we can make more of these videos and they can be more freely available. 'You've got Joe's passion, energy, dynamism – all that comes through… 'We want to be part of this, because we've got one in five children leaving primary school with obesity, so getting children active, getting them out and about, and also meeting kids where they are…Lots of them are on YouTube. 'They're doom-scrolling like the rest of us…so we're meeting these kids where they are, and giving them something fun and easy to engage with and motivational.' Mr Streeting said his own experience of kidney cancer had made him focus on his health, 'but the nature of my job means my exercise has suffered'. He joked that he was 'not going to be on the front of Men's Health (magazine)' like ITV host Ben Shephard, but every time he managed to get to the gym it was good for his body and his mental health. Wicks added: 'This isn't just about the body. We have kids with serious anxiety, depression, getting pulled out of school, they're really struggling. 'So this is about holistic process, about improvising movement for the mind. 'Because when you when you get the mind right, the body will follow, the transformation will come, and food choices will improve. 'The family's energy lifts up. This is so much more than just about body image and weight loss.' The Activate episodes are being shown on Wicks' Body Coach TV channel on YouTube.

Ice cream brands to change their recipes as part of RFK Jr's MAHA push
Ice cream brands to change their recipes as part of RFK Jr's MAHA push

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Ice cream brands to change their recipes as part of RFK Jr's MAHA push

America's ice cream giants have pledged to remove artificial dyes from their products within the next three years, federal health officials said on Monday. The move is the latest voluntary effort by food manufacturers to heed calls from the Trump administration to remove synthetic dyes over concerns about potential health effects. Companies including Nestle, Kraft Heinz and General Mills - almost 90 percent of the industry - said they would pull artificial colors from their foods, too. 'This is a renaissance moment for health in America,' US Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Marty Makary said at a news conference. About 40 makers of ice cream and frozen dairy desserts said they would remove seven petroleum-based dyes from their products by 2028, according to Michael Dykes, president of the International Dairy Foods Association. The colors are Red 3, Red 40, Green 3, Blue 1, Blue 2, Yellow 5 and Yellow 6. The trade group wouldn't identify the firms, although Turkey Hill Dairy chief executive Andy Jacobs was present at the event where the announcement was made. The national focus on artificial food dyes is 'a good step to take,' but officials should not ignore larger known contributors to chronic disease, including the added sugars and saturated fat commonly found in ice cream, said Deanna Hoelscher, a University of Texas nutrition expert. 'Just taking out or changing the food dye source is not necessarily going to make it a healthy option,' she said. 'It still is a food that should be consumed in moderation.' However, Makary also hinted that new federal dietary guidelines, expected later this year, would challenge established links between saturated fat and heart disease, ending what he called 'a 70-year demonization of natural saturated fat.' The average American eats about 4 gallons of ice cream a year, the IDFA said. The frozen treat contributes an estimated $12 billion to the economy and supports more than 27,000 dairy industry jobs. Health advocates have long called for the removal of artificial dyes from foods, citing mixed studies showing that they may cause some neurobehavioral problems, such as hyperactivity and attention problems, in some children. The Food and Drug Administration has maintained that approved dyes are safe and that 'most children have no adverse effects' when consuming foods made with them. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has criticized the dyes and pressured manufacturers to remove them from foods. In their place, manufacturers should use dyes made from fruit juices, plant extracts and other sources, federal officials said. The FDA has approved new natural color additives in recent months, including a new blue color made from the fruit of the gardenia announced Monday. Gardenia (genipin) blue is approved for use in sports drinks, candies and certain other products, the agency said. Makary also sent a letter to food manufacturers on Monday that 'encourages' them to speed up removal of the dye known as Red 3, which was banned in January. Food makers have until 2027 to remove the dye, which was found to cause cancer in laboratory rats, but not humans. 'I'm particularly happy to be here today because this is relevant to my favorite food, which is ice cream,' Kennedy said at a press event, lauding the dairy industry for its actions. 'This is a great day for dairy and it's a great day for Make America Healthy Again,' added the IDFA's President and CEO Michael Dykes, referencing Kennedy's MAHA slogan that is a play on President Donald Trump's 'Make America Great Again' or MAGA. Andy Jacobs, CEO of Turkey Hill, said many commercial ice cream manufacturers had already phased out artificial colors or were in the process of doing so. 'By taking this step now, ice cream manufacturers are ensuring that ice cream remains a special part of our lives as consumer preferences change and the nation's regulatory priorities evolve,' he said. Some food companies have said they will stop using artificial dyes, but relying on voluntary action rather than regulatory requirements won't guarantee compliance, said Thomas Galligan, a scientist with the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a consumer advocacy group. 'Talk is cheap,' Galligan said. 'It's easy for companies to make promises to look like they're being compliant and generate goodwill among consumers and the Trump administration, but it remains to be seen if they will actually follow through.' There are also concerns that the bright colors could encourage people to eat more sweet treats, leading to weight gain which is linked to a whole host of chronic diseases. It follows moves from the states, with both California and West Virginia passing laws to ban some artificial food colorings. There are at least 30 others, mostly Democrat, considering similar legislation. Major food manufacturers including Nestle, Kraft Heinz, General Mills, and PepsiCo have already signed on to ditch artificial dyes. Kennedy on Monday said between '35 and 40 percent' of the food industry has now pledged to make the shift, but it was notable the ice cream makers' pledge pushes past the health secretary's original target of end-2026, giving companies an extra year to adjust their supply chains. But key holdouts remain - for example Mars, the maker of M&M's and Skittles, and its subsidiary Kellogg's, whose Froot Loops still use Red 40, Yellow 5, Blue 1, and Yellow 6 in the US, even though the same cereal is artificial dye-free in places like Canada. The FDA recently ordered that Red 3 must be removed from foods sold in the US by 2027 and medications by 2028 , over concerns it can cause cancer. This dye is responsible for the bright red colors found in candies and lollipops, although there are now natural alternatives. Many states are also seeking a ban on Red 40, or Allura red - found in several popular snacks including Doritos, Skittle and Pepsi. Yellow 5 is also on the chopping block, which has been linked to potentially triggering hyperactivity in children and damage to DNA. It is also used in Doritos, juices and cookies. Similarly, Yellow 6 - found in sugary breakfast cereals like Lucky Charms - and Blue 1 - found in sweets like gummy bears - have both also been linked to hyperactivity. Studies in animals have also suggested that Blue 2 - found in sports drinks - and Green 3 - often found in salad dressings - raised the risk of tumors developing, particularly in the bladder and testes.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store