When Jackson Villarreal worked at the West St. Paul Walmart, his nametag said “Jack.” But his supervisors repeatedly called the transgender teen by his birth name.
Villarreal asked them to stop, but the harassment instead escalated to unwanted questions about his gender, regulatory documents say. Ultimately, a supervisor offered another Walmart worker $100 to pull down Villarreal’s pants to determine whether he was a boy or a girl, the Minnesota Department of Human Rights found.
The department’s investigation concluded Walmart had subjected Villarreal to “severe and pervasive harassment” based on his gender identity — a rare finding.
Villarreal sued Walmart for sex discrimination last fall, and the case is pending in Dakota County District Court. Walmart has denied Villarreal’s allegations, and told the Minnesota Star Tribune in an email that it does “not tolerate discrimination of any kind.”
Villarreal, through his attorney, declined to comment. His case offers a window into what a recent UCLA study called “persistent and widespread” discrimination against transgender employees in the workplace.
It also comes at a time when federal pursuit of workplace gender identity discrimination claims could be curtailed.
One of President Donald Trump’s first executive orders last month — under the rubric of “restoring biological truth to the federal government” — was to remove federal policies and regulations promoting “gender ideology.”
Trump also fired two commissioners of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), and axed the independent agency’s general counsel.