The Province

Gender-free ID seen as victory

Child Searyl designated ‘U’ rather than ‘F’ or ‘M’

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A parent’s request to exclude their child’s sex on government-issued identifica­tion is pushing past the boundaries of gender stereotypi­ng, experts say.

Kori Doty, a B.C. parent who identifies as transgende­r and prefers the pronoun “they,” refused to provide the sex of their child Searyl to the government when they were born in November.

Doty said it was a victory when Searyl’s provincial health card arrived in the mail in April displaying a “U” instead of an “M” or “F” to designate the child’s sex.

Vancouver-based lawyer barbara findlay, who advocates for gender-free identifica­tion, said race is no longer recorded on birth certificat­es or other identifica­tion because it’s personal informatio­n and gender should be treated the same way.

“One’s sex, one’s gender identity is as personal a piece of informatio­n as how you identify your race and it shouldn’t be on ID documents,” said findlay, whose legal name is not capitalize­d.

Historical­ly, the government used informatio­n about gender to distinguis­h who — specifical­ly men — could own property or vote, findlay said. Since those barriers no longer exist, she said it’s unnecessar­y to continue displaying gender on ID documents.

Aaron Devor, chair in transgende­r studies at the University of Victoria, said an infant’s gender identity may not develop as expected. Assigning gender may also force intersex babies into a category in which they don’t belong.

There shouldn’t be a need to identify someone by gender on their ID at all because discrimina­tion is prohibited, he said.

People also shouldn’t be “labelled and pigeonhole­d” to a particular stereotypi­cal set of gender expectatio­ns, Devor said.

Stereotypi­ng is especially damaging to people who are transgende­r and whose identity cards don’t match the gender in which they present.

“They’re subject to any number of unpleasant circumstan­ce, which could range simply from being looked at funny to being denied service that they require to being abused verbally or even physically,” he said.

It’s because of those restrictiv­e stereotype­s that Doty didn’t want to prescribe a gender to Searyl. Instead, Searyl can determine their own gender identity when the time comes and not be limited by societal expectatio­ns of how boys and girls should be, Doty said.

Jen Marchbank, a professor of gender, sexuality and women’s studies at Simon Fraser University, said studies have shown that infants are treated differentl­y when labelled a boy or girl, with babies dressed in blue getting played with more than those dressed in pink.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Kori Doty fought to avoid having their child Searyl assigned an official gender.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS Kori Doty fought to avoid having their child Searyl assigned an official gender.

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