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Quote from: Phoenix1742 on November 16, 2017, 03:19:18 PMAre there any women in your profession? Ultimately, people will know you by your work. If that's good, I think you'll be ok. Nothing is guaranteed, but be glad you don't live in a state that's backwards. It could be worse. Look at the HRC CEI database. Maybe you can get a job at a more liberal company.
I live and work in Maryland, specifically in Baltimore. I know that Maryland had some anti-discrimination laws on the books, but as an "at will employment" state, discrimination can be hard to prove.
My bigger concern is more about the "good old boys" attitude of construction and engineering - there's value placed on being a "man's man". I've actually had someone tell me "I can tell you're a good man by the way you shake hands" - little does he know! :-D
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Quote from: extraaction on November 16, 2017, 04:21:58 PMWhile it's true that not everyone will be cool with trans people, I have to think there are organizations that don't tolerate discrimination against minorities. Maybe not a big number, but they exist. Part of it will be socio-geographic, a lot of it is industry. If it's a government job in a state with protections, you're probably safe. Some big companies like Wells Fargo, intel, IBM, Apple etc, are good. The key is to do due diligence. Research companies, find the the good ones if your company sucks. FWIW, I work for the state and didn't know anyone to get my job or keep it, but if I lost it, I'd keep on going.
from my experience, I'd say you're not going to avoid discrimination. It's really hard to find a job and really hard to keep a job without "connections"
Quote from: Gertrude on November 16, 2017, 03:41:07 PMThere are women engineers, but they are few and far between - maybe 5-10% tops.
Are there any women in your profession? Ultimately, people will know you by your work. If that's good, I think you'll be ok. Nothing is guaranteed, but be glad you don't live in a state that's backwards. It could be worse. Look at the HRC CEI database. Maybe you can get a job at a more liberal company.
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Quote from: Gertrude on November 16, 2017, 04:36:37 PMI've thought of that - that if I found a job for the state, or a big company like a Johns Hopkins or similar, that I'd have a lot more protections available to me than I will in a small 15 person firm. It's definitely been something I've kept in mind.
While it's true that not everyone will be cool with trans people, I have to think there are organizations that don't tolerate discrimination against minorities. Maybe not a big number, but they exist. Part of it will be socio-geographic, a lot of it is industry. If it's a government job in a state with protections, you're probably safe. Some big companies like Wells Fargo, intel, IBM, Apple etc, are good. The key is to do due diligence. Research companies, find the the good ones if your company sucks. FWIW, I work for the state and didn't know anyone to get my job or keep it, but if I lost it, I'd keep on going.
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Quote from: Phoenix1742 on November 17, 2017, 07:05:11 AMI think that would be a great plan. Look up Liz Ryan on LinkedIn. She specializes in becoming a consultant and hr stuff. She was hr director at us robotics at one time. I find her insight helpful.
There are women engineers, but they are few and far between - maybe 5-10% tops.
It's actually an interesting twist - a lot of contacts have a diversity requirement, and a women owned business counts as diverse. So if I were to start my own firm, transitioning would actually be an advantage. But that's something entirely different - I'm not ready to go out on my own.
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