North Carolina's contentious "bathroom law" has already cost the state nearly $400 million — and the losses keep piling up.
The law, known as House Bill 2, prevents local governments from protecting LGBT people with nondiscrimination ordinances. It also mandates that transgender people must use the bathroom that corresponds with their biological sex rather than their gender identity.
Related: Transgender Bathroom Law Is Costing North Carolina Millions in Lost Sports Tourism
The law's precise toll is hard to measure, as it involves speculation on future revenue. But Wired crunched the numbers and pegged North Carolina's financial hit at more than $395 million, a figure that rises with each business that takes a public stance against the law.
Last week alone, the state lost out on an estimated $91 million in revenue when the NCAA and Atlantic Coast Conference announced they were moving 15 college championship events from the state, citing values of equality and diversity.
The events include early-round games in the Division I men's basketball tournament, which North Carolina cities have hosted in 11 of the past 14 seasons, and the ACC football title match, which Charlotte's Bank of America Stadium has hosted every year since 2010.
But that wasn't even the biggest financial hit North Carolina took from a sports organization. In July, the NBA's concerns with the law spurred the league to move its 2017 All-Star Game from Charlotte to New Orleans. The loss of the marquee weekend means Charlotte will miss out on upward of $100 million, according to the Charlotte Regional Visitors Authority, using estimates from previous All-Star games in similarly sized markets.
Related: Major U.S. companies ask judge to block NC transgender bathroom law
And the damage could get even worse. Two more college sports conferences with member schools in North Carolina — the Southern Conference and Division II's Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association — are reportedly mulling whether to move their championship events from the state.
The CIAA's departure would be particularly devastating. Its men's and women's basketball tournaments, held annually in Charlotte, generated more than $55 million for the city in 2015, the most recent year for which statistics were available.
North Carolina lost additional revenue when PayPal, Deutsche Bank, and other companies canceled expansions in the state, costing the state more than 1,000 jobs and at least $100 million in economic activity, according to The Charlotte Observer. Pullouts and boycotts from other companies, including the film studio Lionsgate, constitute another $88 million or so, Wired found.
Cancelled events make up another loss of at least $100 million for the state, Wired calculated, using figures from local visitors bureaus. That includes concerts from acts such as Bruce Springsteen and Maroon 5, as well as a number of lucrative business conferences.
Add to that mounting legal fees the state is using to defend the law — including $500,000 diverted from a disaster-relief fund — and Wired arrived at a grand total of $395 million lost for the state.
The biggest disaster may be looming in the distance. According to one estimate, North Carolina could be at risk to lose nearly $5 billion a year in federal funding for public schools and universities, depending on the result of the Justice Department's ongoing lawsuit against the state.
This article originally appeared on Business Insider: Read more from Business Insider:
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