The NBA has announced that Charlotte, N.C., will host the 2019 All-Star Game, after the state partially repealed its controversial law that limited civil rights protections for LGBT people.
The professional basketball league moved last year's All-Star game from Charlotte, where it was originally scheduled, to protest the state's HB2 law.
"While we understand the concerns of those who say the repeal of HB2 did not go far enough, we believe the recent legislation eliminates the most egregious aspects of the prior law," NBA Commissioner Adam Silver
said in a statement
Today's decision has drawn criticism from some transgender advocates, who say the state is still not providing adequate protections. "This is a disgrace from the NBA but not surprising," Chase Strangio, a staff attorney at the ACLU working on LGBT issues,
wrote on Twitter
HB2 is also known as the "bathroom bill" because it said that in public institutions, transgender people must use the bathroom corresponding to the sex on their birth certificate, rather than their gender identity.
The law created an intense backlash, ultimately costing the state
an estimated $3.7 billion
In March, lawmakers came up with a compromise to partially repeal the measure – but "the deal prohibits local communities from passing anti-discrimination ordinances for at least three years," as
NPR's Camila Domonoske reported
The NBA commissioner said that the league would work with the Charlotte Hornets to "apply a set of equality principles" so that the game and other associated events "will proceed with open access and anti-discrimination policies."
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, a Democrat,
applauded the decision
Michael Jordan, the legendary basketball player and Charlotte Hornets chairman, said he was "thrilled" about the announcement and emphasized that it would have a "tremendous economic impact to our community."
Charlotte has been the focus of the state's debate over the HB2 law.
As Camila reported
State lawmakers then convened and rapidly passed the HB2 law, ultimately overriding the Charlotte city measure.
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