ALBANY, N.Y. — A proposed amendment to New York's constitution barring discrimination based on ''gender identity'' and ''pregnancy outcomes'' was restored to the November election ballot Tuesday by a state appeals court.
The court decision clears the way for a statewide referendum this fall on an amendment that has been praised by Democrats as a way to protect abortion rights, and assailed by Republicans for the protections it might offer to transgender people.
In a short decision, a panel of midlevel appellate judges overturned a May ruling by an upstate judge to strike the proposed Equal Rights Amendment from the ballot.
That justice, Daniel Doyle, said state lawmakers had made a fatal procedural error in an initial round of approvals for the proposed amendment, passing it a tad too quickly without waiting for a required legal memo from the state attorney general.
In overturning that decision, the appellate division judges cited a legal technicality of a different sort: They said the people who sued to block the amendment had missed a deadline to bring their legal challenge under a four-month statute of limitations.
''This is a huge victory in our efforts to protect access to abortion in New York and to protect many vulnerable communities from discrimination,'' New York Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement.
The New York Constitution currently bans discrimination based on race, color, creed or religion. The proposed amendment would add to that list ethnicity, national origin, age, disability, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, pregnancy, pregnancy outcomes and reproductive health care and autonomy.
The proposed amendment wouldn't explicitly preserve a woman's right to have an abortion, but would effectively prevent someone from being discriminated against for having the procedure.