Truro News

A price to pay

For those in the LGBTQ community, the price of reaffirmin­g who they are can take a toll on their bank accounts

- BY JAMES RISDON

For those in the LGBTQ community, the price of reaffirmin­g who they are can take a toll on their bank accounts for things many people might not consider.

In the tiny community of New Harbour about an hour’s drive west of St. John’s, NL, a 51-yearold who identified as a man for decades publicly came out six weeks ago as a woman.

Meet Sarah-dena Harnum. There are still a few photograph­s on Facebook of Sarah-dena – who now prefers to be addressed with the traditiona­lly feminine pronouns of her and she – from before her transition. In one of those photograph­s, then-dean Harnum smiles at the camera, sporting a coarse, greying stubble and dark sunglasses. That facial hair is now gone. A newer profile pic on Facebook shows the New Harbour single mom with shoulder-length brown hair, a floral print blouse, lightly applied make-up and lipstick.

Outwardly, it’s a strikingly noticeable change.

There are times when it garners unwanted attention, like during a quick stop at a local A&W restaurant for a bite to eat.

“I was at (the) A&W in Carbonear for lunch and some woman kept staring at me,” Harnum wrote on Facebook earlier this month. “I'd stare back at her and make eye contact with her and she'd look away and when she thought I wouldn't notice she was staring again.”

But Harnum's work colleagues and supervisor­s with the Province of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, her son, relatives and friends in New Harbour have almost all been supportive of her transition.

Nineteen-year-old son, Ben Harnum, who hugged and showed unconditio­nal acceptance when Sarah-dena Harnum first announced a queer sexual orientatio­n a few years ago, made her a birthday cake last year. On it, the greeting read, “Happy birthday, Mom!”

“He has been my biggest cheerleade­r and biggest supporter,” Harnum said.

And while this support is critical for those who come out to friends, family and their community, this isn’t the only struggle they face. The high financial costs, especially for someone transition­ing from one gender identity to another, is often more a footnote in conversati­ons.

“My expenses are probably up about 50 per cent,” said Harnum.

Buying a whole new wardrobe, picking up make-up, getting needed drugs and hormone therapy, in some cases undergoing surgery, and travelling to meet with doctors, counsel- lors, speech therapists and support groups can drain a bank account.

And then, to top it all off, there are the fees to be paid to get official government documents changed to reflect the transgende­r person’s new public gender identity.

“That cost me a total of $175 to get a new driver’s licence, a new birth certificat­e, and to have my name officially changed,” said Harnum.

Her job as an administra­tive assistant brings in about $30,000 after taxes and other deductions, making it a challenge to make ends meet.

“As a single parent, your life revolves around your budget so I built up my wardrobe one piece at a time at thrift stores and clearance racks and got great deals,” she said. “My most expensive purchase has been my hairpieces.”

Under that wig of long brown hair, Harnum is balding. It’s not a look she wanted as a woman.

“It’s socially acceptable to see a bald man,” she said. “It’s not socially acceptable to see a woman who is bald.”

Each of Harnum’s wigs of synthetic hair cost $200, a steal considerin­g many such wigs start at $400.

“My friend has a human hair wig and it’s cost her $900 because it’s a specialty item and they’ve got you over a barrel,” said Harnum. “I took money from my tax returns for over two years to buy my wigs.”

According to her, women’s clothing can cost anywhere from 50 per cent more to roughly twice as much as comparable men’s attire.

“For work, I used to wear a buttondown shirt and khakis and that would cost me about $40,” she said. “I bought a black dress for my niece’s wedding last summer and the best price I could get was $70.”

Prior to publicly coming out as a woman in April, Harnum spent about $450 just to get a new wardrobe, much of it in thrift stores or on sale.

Gasoline and wear-and-tear on Harnum’s 2011 Grand Caravan to drive into St. John’s for doctors and speech pathologis­ts’ appointmen­ts, counsellin­g and other needs related to her transition also add up. At $30 for gas and another $10 per trip for a quick meal, Harnum figures travel costs soak up another $2,000 per year.

Prescripti­on medication and hormone replacemen­t therapy is another expense.

“I take two testostero­ne blockers because my testostero­ne levels are quite high,” said Harnum.

Those two drugs cost her $85 for a three-month supply. It would be quite a bit more but Harnum enjoys the benefits of a provincial govern- ment employee health care plan. Without those benefits, she would be paying more than twice as much for that medication, roughly $185 every three months.

The cost of the estrogen she also takes as part of her hormone replacemen­t therapy is covered under Newfoundla­nd and Labrador prescripti­on drug plan.

Although candid about many aspects of her transition, Harnum shies away from any discussion of any possible plans for sex-affirmatio­n surgery. It’s a subject that’s just too personal.

But she is willing to share the experience­s of friends – provided they remain anonymous – who have had to travel to the Greater Toronto area – one of two major centres for these surgeries, the other being Montreal – to be assessed ahead of being approved for sex reassignme­nt surgeries, now referred to as sex-affirmatio­n surgery, and for the procedures themselves.

It can take as little as a single trip or as many as four for people to be assessed before they are given the green light for surgeries such as phalloplas­ty, vaginoplas­ty, breast removal and chest sculpting, facial feminizati­on and breast augmentati­on, said Harnum.

The procedures which are approved and those which are publicly funded vary from province to province. According to Harnum, Quebec seems to cover the most.

“Quebec will pay for everything,” she said. “They’ll pay for breast augmentati­on, facial feminizati­on surgery and chest sculpting,” she said. “Nova Scotia does more than Newfoundla­nd but not as much as Quebec.”

These surgeries can be expensive. A vaginoplas­ty can cost about $23,000, not including the travel costs and weeks people sometimes have to stay near the medical facility.

Certainly, not all transgende­r people opt for these surgeries but there still is a waiting list. Those who can't wait sometimes choose to leave Canada and get the surgeries done elsewhere.

“A friend of mine went to Thailand,” said Harnum. “It cost her $40,000 for a vaginoplas­ty.”

These big surgeries are also not the only procedures many transgende­r people seek out. Laser removal of facial hair has already cost Harnum $1,200 and she’s not done quite yet

The total bill for a person to get all the surgeries through the private sector can add up to about $100,000 plus, she estimated. That number might vary up or down depending on the transition from male to female or female to male.

“Some people are putting it on their credit cards,” she said. “They’re taking second mortgages on their homes … or their friends lend them money if they’re able.”

Gemma Hickey, another transgende­r person in Newfoundla­nd, is one of the lucky ones able to count on financial support from the community.

Although presenting as transmascu­line, looking physically like a man, Gemma identifies as non-binary, neither male nor female, and has asked to be referred to by the pronouns they, them, and their.

They lived their life as a girl and woman for decades prior to transition­ing and have also chosen to keep the traditiona­lly female name of Gemma.

In January last year, though, Hickey travelled to The Mclean Clinic in the Greater Toronto Area for what is commonly called a top surgery, a procedure that involves the removal of both breasts. That surgery alone cost $9,000, not including tax and the need for plane tickets for Hickey, her mother and a friend, meals and two hotel rooms for four days.

Hickey, though, had help with those costs. A community group called Raise Up Fundraisin­g held a bingo event and put together $5,000.

“I charged the rest to my Visa and … it took a few months to pay off,” said Hickey.

The financial burden on transgende­r people to get the procedures they want can be sometimes simply prohibitiv­e. Harnum, for example, is holding off on two hair transplant procedures, each of which would cost $6,000 and require a trip to Nova Scotia.

 ??  ??
 ?? Sarah-dena Harnum ??
Sarah-dena Harnum
 ?? Gemma Hickey ??
Gemma Hickey

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada