I am against laws like this. I am ALSO against laws like in Washington state where people can use the facility that they "self-identify" with. I think both types of laws are too difficult to enforce -- one requires bathroom monitors to use birth certificates to determine while room a person may use while the other requires bathroom monitors to read minds to ensure that a person claiming to self-identify with the opposite sex is a true transgendered individual or a sexual predator. I think the best laws would be to have no laws on this issue; allow businesses to decide for themselves how best to address this issue. When you issue laws that affect everyone, there is no way to compromise or find different solutions to the issue, but rather you force one viewpoint / value system upon the most people thereby taking away the most freedom from the public. I actually think that the unisex facilities meant for one occupant at a time (except for cases of parents aiding their children) are the best way to go. But even saying this, I do not want a law that requires all building to convert all gender-specific rooms to these unisex, individual rooms as this too ignores a business' freedom to operate their own business and again forces all to comply with the law regardless of the challenges that this imposes on businesses.