State Senator Linda J. Melconian proposed an alternative amendment that sought to enact regulations so women can exercise in separate rooms from men, or exercise at different times. But, as the Boston Globe reports, men in other states have successfully sued health clubs that set off areas exclusively for women without at least offering men a discount in the absence of a corresponding male-only section. A Los Angeles man successfully won a class action settlement against Bally's for its refusal to abolish rooms with such signs as "Women's Workout Area," "Women's Only," and "Women Preferred." As the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination wrestles with this thorny issue, the Bally Club in Cambridge has retained its section marked for women even though its stated policy is to admit entry to any man who asks.
[Ed.: Enticed by a deal involving several months of free membership, I set up an appointment a few years ago to look at the Bally's in Cambridge. They wound up alienating me considerably by keeping me waiting while they looked around for someone to escort me through the facility. In the meantime I was to fill out a detailed questionnaire for their records and sign in as a guest. Both forms contained a special field for "race," which on the sign-in form was a long column of inscrutable abbreviations that previous guests had filled in as W, W, W, B, W, W, L, N, W, B, X, Q, W, W, etc. The club solicited the racial information as an attempt to comply with an earlier lawsuit alleging racial discrimination. It took just one look at the steroid-infused hulks working out behind the full-length glass partition that separated the waiting room from the main floor to understand the genesis of the lawsuit. To a man, they were all Nazis.]