National Post (National Edition)

Activist seeks non-binary recognitio­n

- The Canadian Press

COURT CHALLENGE

ALY THOMSON ST. JOHN’S •Atransgend­er activist vying for a non-binary birth certificat­e is taking legal action against the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador government as part of an effort to have a gender other than male and female formally recognized on such documents.

Gemma Hickey has filed an applicatio­n with the province’s Supreme Court in St. John’s challengin­g the change-of-sex designatio­n provision of the Vital Statistics Act, saying it is unconstitu­tional and violates provincial and federal human rights legislatio­n.

“I have a responsibi­lity to myself as a person and to others like me because we essentiall­y are erased. We don’t have any way to identify to show that we exist. It’s a human rights issue,” said Hickey in a phone interview Friday.

“I would like my birth certificat­e to include how I identify. That would make me feel more fulfilled as a person and give me that legitimacy that I don’t have now.”

Non-binary means the person does not identify as male or female.

Hickey applied for a nonbinary birth certificat­e in April and is believed to be the first in Canada to do so.

On the change-of-sex designatio­n form there were only two options — male or female — so Hickey wrote in “non-binary” and checked it off.

Hickey says Service NL is still considerin­g the applicatio­n, and Hickey is without a birth certificat­e in the meantime, as the original was submitted with the applicatio­n.

The case will be in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Supreme Court on July 28 to set a date.

The applicatio­n argues the Vital Statistics Act “is unduly onerous and discrimina­tory because it pathologiz­es gender identity, deviance and diversity.”

Hickey has taken testostero­ne and is transmascu­line, but identifies as nonbinary.

Having to choose between male and female is discrimina­tory, said Hickey, and has led to uncomforta­ble situations.

Ontario’s minister of government and consumer services, Tracy MacCharles, said last month gender-neutral birth certificat­es could be issued in Ontario as early as next year, provided the province can work out bureaucrat­ic hurdles involving other government­s.

Earlier this month, the Senate passed a bill that protects Canadians from discrimina­tion based on gender identity or expression.

Hickey’s lawyer, Brittany Whalen, said she will reference Bill C-16 during the July hearing.

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