It’s a shame we have to think that way and consider such possibilities when writing laws.Such a ridiculous law would provide cover for any pervert who wanted to enter women's bathroom. "It was an emergency!" would be an awfully convenient (and hard to disprove) excuse.
I agree. But then, you also know my gender.Probably not, no. But at the same time, I'm going on 62 and I have yet to see it happen that there was a long line at the men's but no line at the women's; however, I see the opposite weekly. The OP's insistence on having a written law on his person that will give him permission to use the women's is beginning to make me awfully suspicious of his motives.
I do have a condition that at times causes an urgent need to use a restroom. And believe me, there are businesses that would prevent me from using the women's bathroom if the men's bathroom was full even if the women's bathroom was completely unoccupied. And under Colorado law, the business would be justified in doing that because no law says it can't. That would be the reason for having such a law — it would force the business to accommodate me. the OP, and others who have a medical condition that prompts an immediate need to use the restroom. This isn't about whether a prosecutor might file some kind of charges should I go into the women's restroom. It's about whether the business could prevent me from doing it in the first place. So to this extent I sympathize with the OP.Nor do I. Which is why I'm growing somewhat suspicious of his insistence on having a written law he can show people.
So far as I know, no state has such a law that goes as far as allowing one sex to use the restroom of the other when a medical need requires urgent use of a restroom. If any state does it is very much the unusual one. Certainly Colorado does not have such a law. And the reason for it is obvious: most of the public would not support such a law because of privacy concerns, a lot of people don't want persons of the opposite sex barging into a restroom they are in regardless of the urgent need the person may have to use a restroom.Pretty unreal that a state wouldn't make a law that accommodates both male and female in case of an emergency restroom visit.
I'm calling the challenge flag on this one. You are turning this into a male vs. female issue, and that's unfair. It's pretty clear to me that you have not faced the kind of medical issue that causes an urgent need to use a restroom and thus have likely not really considered the full universe of bathroom situations out there. I have thought of the full universe of restrooms out there out of necessity.Okay, my last word on the subject.
Those of you with a Y chromosome are missing my main point; which is that it simply does not happen that there will be a line for the men's and none at the women's.
Ya lost me.. are you suggestimg all businesses you enter have some sort of bathroom monitor? When I had my urgency issues I wasn’t asking anybody. Unless an employee happened to see a person enter the women’s bathroom. And followed them in and demanded they leave, I’m not seeing where there would be anybody to stop you from using the women’s restroomI do have a condition that at times causes an urgent need to use a restroom. And believe me, there are businesses that would prevent me from using the women's bathroom if the men's bathroom was full even if the women's bathroom was completely unoccupied. And under Colorado law, the business would be justified in doing that because no law says it can't. That would be the reason for having such a law — it would force the business to accommodate me. the OP, and others who have a medical condition that prompts an immediate need to use the restroom. This isn't about whether a prosecutor might file some kind of charges should I go into the women's restroom. It's about whether the business could prevent me from doing it in the first place. So to this extent I sympathize with the OP.
So far as I know, no state has such a law that goes as far as allowing one sex to use the restroom of the other when a medical need requires urgent use of a restroom. If any state does it is very much the unusual one. Certainly Colorado does not have such a law. And the reason for it is obvious: most of the public would not support such a law because of privacy concerns, a lot of people don't want persons of the opposite sex barging into a restroom they are in regardless of the urgent need the person may have to use a restroom.
The reality is that with such a condition you have to do some planning yourself to deal with the possibility that there may not be a restroom immediately available to you to use. It's not fun, but you are likely to find yourself in that situation at some point, and it's best to be prepared for that.
I can assure you there are times the opposite is true. Heck, a simple example would be when there is a meeting consisting of only men at a given business. If there is some set break time, it’s totslly possible the men’s facilities would be fully engaged and the women’s totally empty.I'm not turning it into male vs. female. Nature did that. And don't assume what I have and have not faced medically. It is, in fact, because I have had that problem in the past that I can speak with certainty as to where the lines are.
LOL Says someone who may not have had a 5+ pound weight bouncing around on one's bladder...It's pretty clear to me that you have not faced the kind of medical issue that causes an urgent need to use a restroom and thus have likely not really considered the full universe of bathroom situations out there.
And it is reasonable to assume such a meeting would occur in an office setting where it would be handled in a discrete manner.Heck, a simple example would be when there is a meeting consisting of only men at a given business. If there is some set break time, it’s totslly possible the men’s facilities would be fully engaged and the women’s totally empty.
Or in a convention center or a hotel meeting room.And it is reasonable to assume such a meeting would occur in an office setting where it would be handled in a discrete manner.