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  • 2019-10-02 (xsd:date)
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  • Did Portland, Oregon, 'Ban Urinals in Public Buildings'? (en)
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  • We received multiple inquiries from readers in September 2019 about the accuracy of reports that claimed officials in Portland, Oregon, had decided to ban urinals from public buildings in the city. On Sept. 25, the right-leaning website The Gateway Pundit posted an article with the headline Portland Bans Urinals in Public Buildings -- Out of Respect to the City's 'Shared Values,' which reported that: The city of Portland (where else) is now banning urinals in city-owned buildings and spending taxpayer money to remove them. The first urinal-free building is appropriately called The Portland Building, where countless paper-shuffling city bureaucrats congregate to waste oxygen and demand pay raises. That post cited an earlier article by local television channel KGW8, which reported that: KGW8 also claimed, in its headline, that urinals had been banned from the Portland Building, though, unlike The Gateway Pundit, it did not claim the purported ban extended to all public buildings in the city. Portland city officials have indeed decided not to install urinals in any bathrooms in the Portland Building, which was under renovation as of September 2019. However, The Gateway Pundit's article was misleading and illogical in characterizing that decision as a ban and also inaccurate in claiming that the urinal policy applied to all public buildings (or even more than one) in the city. A spokesperson for the city's Office of Management and Finance and the Portland Building reconstruction project confirmed to Snopes in an email that officials chose not to install urinals when the restrooms were remodeled, and provided a graphic that showed the expected layout of bathrooms in the building, including female, male and all-user (gender-neutral) bathrooms. The absence of urinals in either male or all-user bathrooms, the spokesperson explained, meant that in the future, we have the ability to move to all-user restrooms on additional floors. In his email to employees in February 2019, Portland's Chief Administrative officer Tom Rinehart explained that all of the bathrooms had also been designed to be identical to one another, meaning that if officials later chose to convert some gender-specific bathrooms to gender-neutral status, that switch could more easily be made. That email, and the plan in question, related only to the Portland Building, meaning The Gateway Pundit's headline claim — that the city had banned urinals from public buildings — was false. Rather, the spokesperson told us: It is possible that, in future remodels of other city buildings, urinals may not be installed if restrooms are renovated. There are no plans to remove urinals as a separate project. The description of the Portland Building urinal policy as a ban on urinals — as claimed by both The Gateway Pundit and KGW8 — was illogical and grossly misleading. The city itself owns and manages the building and is responsible for overseeing its renovation. Rather, the city has made a design choice in order to facilitate potential future changes to the gender status of bathrooms in the building. For the foregoing reasons, we issue a rating of Mostly False. (en)
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