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Park employee fired after trans pride display
Los Angeles Times
|August 25, 2025
The Yosemite biologist was with a group that hung a flag over El Capitan.

Photographs by PATTIE GONIA SHANNON JOSLIN, a biologist at Yosemite National Park, was fired after a group they were with unfurled a trans pride flag in the park.
A National Park Service employee was terminated and may be criminally charged for unfurling a trans pride flag over El Capitan in Yosemite National Park, park officials said.
The firing has sparked an outcry from LGBTQ+ activists, who are accusing the federal government of firing the worker to silence them.
On May 20, a group of LGTBQ+ activists and climbers ascended El Capitan — an iconic vertical wall formation in Yosemite National Park — to display a 55-by-35-foot trans pride flag to affirm transgender identity and support biological research that showed natural occurrences of sex switching in other animals, according to a news release.
Among the group were Shannon Joslin, a Yosemite biologist, and Pattie Gonia, a prominent environmental and LGBTQ+ activist.
"Raising this flag in the heart of El Capitan is a celebration of our community, standing in solidarity with each other and all targeted groups," said Joslin, whose pronoun is "they." "Being trans is a natural, beautiful part of human and biological diversity."
Joslin, 35, worked as a wildlife conservationist, statistician and chiropterologist (an expert in bats) at Yosemite since 2021. A doctoral graduate from UC Davis, they managed the Big Wall Bats program and created Yosemite climb guidebooks in addition to volunteer work, the release said.
This story is from the August 25, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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