by Laurel Powell •
Thirteenth Edition of HRC’s Municipal Equality Index, Nation’s Most Comprehensive Survey of Cities’ LGBTQ+ Policies, Shows Record Breaking 130 Cities - More Than 25% of All Surveyed - Earned Highest Possible Score As State-Level Challenges Mount
WASHINGTON – Today, the Human Rights Campaign Foundation (HRC), the educational arm of the nation’s largest Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer (LGBTQ+) civil rights organization, in collaboration with the Equality Federation, an advocacy accelerator rooted in social justice that builds power in a network of state-based LGBTQ+ advocacy organizations, released the thirteenth edition of the Municipal Equality Index (MEI), the only comprehensive nationwide assessment of LGBTQ+ equality in the areas of municipal policies, laws and services. HRC is proud to partner with the City of Tempe, Arizona and Mayor Corey Woods to launch the 2024 index. Tempe is an MEI “All-Star City,” which scores highly on the index despite a lack of state-level non-discrimination laws.
The 2024 MEI shows a record breaking 130 cities scoring the highest possible marks on the index, representing a combined population of approximately 49 million people. This year also marks an increase to the national average score, with cities in nearly every region (except for the Southeast and Great Plains) seeing their averages increase.
This important progress was made even as pressure has continued from states that pass laws and policies that seek to shut transgender people - particularly trans youth - out of public life. Since the first MEI report in 2012, when only five cities offered these vital benefits, to 187 municipalities in 2022, and now more than 240 in 2024, the trend continues to be toward inclusivity. Despite this, state legislatures have enacted discriminatory laws that prevent transgender people from getting certain kinds of medically necessary health care. Cities who have worked to ensure that transgender-inclusive health benefits are covered by their insurance plans are in many cases no longer able to provide that coverage in a meaningful way as a result of discriminatory decisions made by state legislators. This is, unfortunately, reflected in the 2024 MEI report as a loss of points for about 35% of the cities who have attempted to offer this care but have been preempted from doing so.
Key findings from the 2024 Municipal Equality Index, which scored 506 cities, include:
Only 6 cities scored zero points.
Alabama: Birmingham
Alaska: Juneau
Arizona: Chandler, Flagstaff, Glendale, Mesa, Phoenix, Scottsdale, Tempe, Tucson
Florida: Coral Gables, Fort Lauderdale, Hollywood, Miami, Miami Shores, Oakland Park, Orlando, St. Petersburg, Tallahassee, Tampa, Wilton Manors
Georgia: Atlanta, Decatur
Indiana: Bloomington, Evansville, Terre Haute
Kansas: Lawrence, Overland Park, Topeka, Wichita
Louisiana: New Orleans
Missouri: Columbia, Kansas City, St. Louis
Montana: Bozeman*, Missoula
Nebraska: Omaha*
North Carolina: Carrboro, Chapel Hill, Charlotte, Durham, Greensboro, Winston-Salem
Ohio: Akron, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, Dayton, Dublin, Lakewood, Toledo
Oklahoma: Norman, Tulsa*
Pennsylvania: Allentown, Carlisle, Erie, Harrisburg, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Reading, State College
South Carolina: Myrtle Beach
South Dakota: Brookings, Vermillion*
Texas: Arlington, Austin, Dallas, Denton, Fort Worth, San Antonio
West Virginia: Charleston, Huntington, Morgantown
Wyoming: Laramie
Nationwide, 65 cities have a policy that prohibits bullying on the basis of sexual orientation in their youth-facing city services and 63 cities offer the same protections for gender identity.
159 cities offer and are able to actually provide health benefits to their municipal employees that include coverage for gender affirming care
Oregon (+9), Maine (+7), and Minnesota (+6) were the highest state average increase
121 cities ranked by the MEI now have more comprehensive, transgender-inclusive non-discrimination laws than their state
Comparatively, only 30 cities did so in 2019, nearly doubling over the last five years
Every year, the Municipal Equality Index scores the 50 state capitals, the 200 largest cities in the United States, the five largest cities or municipalities in each state, the cities home to the state’s two largest public universities, 75 cities and municipalities that have high proportions of same-sex couples, and 98 cities selected by HRC and Equality Federation state groups, members, and supporters.
Even though local leaders continue to pave the way forward for equality, there remains an unacceptable patchwork of laws for LGBTQ+ people across the country. This reinforces the need for the federal Equality Act - one of HRC’s top legislative priorities - that would provide consistent and explicit non-discrimination protections for LGBTQ+ people across key areas of life, including employment, housing, credit, education, public spaces and services, federally funded programs, and jury service.
The full 2024 MEI report, including detailed scorecards for every city and a searchable score database, is available online at www.hrc.org/mei.
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