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A new proposed agreement filed in federal court on Friday would make clear that transgender people can use restrooms and other public facilities that align with their gender identity, but Republican state legislative leaders continue to oppose it.

The agreement, called a consent decree, was filed in U.S. District Court in the Middle District of North Carolina. If U.S. District Judge Thomas D. Schroeder approves the agreement, that would settle all of the claims in a pending federal lawsuit over a state law, House Bill 142, that regulations what restrooms and other public facilities transgender people can use in North Carolina.

House Bill 142 replaced a much more controversial law called House Bill 2, which barred transgender people from using bathrooms and other public facilities that matched their gender identity. In other words, under HB2, transgender women would have been forced to use the men’s bathroom and transgender men would be forced to use the women’s bathroom. But the law had no enforcement mechanism and neither does the new law, HB142.