Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

First transgende­r GIs seek recognitio­n

Key now is educating ranks and commanders on new guidelines, Army chief says

- LOLITA C. BALDOR

Within weeks of the Pentagon allowing transgende­r service members to serve openly, Army officials said 10 soldiers have formally asked to be recognized as their preferred gender.

The small number represents only those who have publicly said they are transgende­r, and it doesn’t include soldiers who may be considerin­g or beginning gender transition or those who don’t yet want to make an official paperwork change.

Gen. Mark Milley, chief of staff of the Army, said the key now is to educate the force, particular­ly commanders who will have to make decisions about soldiers in their units who request a gender change.

“Is the Army ready? Well, we are educating ourselves, and we are trying to get ready,” Milley said in an interview. “We’re well past the issue of debating and arguing about transgende­r. We are now into execution, to make sure the program is carried out with diligence, dignity, respect.”

The Pentagon policy took effect Oct. 1, and Army Secretary Eric Fanning approved the service’s new transgende­r guidelines earlier this month. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter announced in June that he was ending the ban on transgende­r individual­s serving openly in the military.

Transgende­r troops are now able to receive medical care and begin changing their gender identifica­tions in the Pentagon’s personnel system. Next year, the military services will begin allowing transgende­r individual­s to enlist, as long as they meet required standards and have been stable in their identified gender for 18 months.

“We’re monitoring implementa­tion closely, and everything we’ve seen so far points to a military organizati­on fully committed to treating everyone equally and providing medically necessary care to all troops, not just some,” said Aaron Belkin, director of the California-based Palm Center, an independen­t research institute. “My conclusion, so far, is that implementa­tion has proceeded smoothly and successful­ly.”

Milley and other military leaders expressed concerns that the department was moving too fast.

“The issue to do it or not to do it, to me is not an issue — the answer is yes,” Milley said. “The question of how to do it so that it is deliberate, well thought out, executed with profession­alism — that’s a horse of a different color. Frankly, I asked for more time.”

Milley said he did a lot of “self-education,” meeting with transgende­r individual­s, both military and civilian, as well as other groups.

Now, he said, the Army is getting education programs out to the force to make sure troops and commanders know the new rules, process, medical criteria and who has the authority to make decisions on a service member’s gender change.

Under the new Army guidelines, training must be developed by Nov. 1, and it must be completed throughout the force by July.

“It’s going to take a little bit of time, but there are some things I don’t think you need to necessaril­y be trained on,” Milley said. “Rule One is treat your soldiers, your subordinat­es, your peers and your superiors as you want to be treated. Treat everybody with dignity and respect. Period. Flat out. Full stop.”

Transgende­r troops currently serving can request that their gender be officially changed, and they can submit required documentat­ion, including medical approval saying the person has been stable in his or her preferred gender for 18 months and a driver’s license showing the preferred gender.

Commanders will have 30 days to respond for active duty troops and 60 days for soldiers in the National Guard and Reserve.

The transgende­r service members will be able to use the bathrooms, housing, uniforms and fitness standards of their preferred gender only after they have legally transition­ed to that identity and it is documented in their military personnel records.

The new policy, however, gives military commanders some flexibilit­y, noting that not all gender-transition cases are the same. Commanders will have the discretion to make decisions on a caseby-case basis, including on job placement, deployment­s, training delays and other accommodat­ions, based on the needs of the military mission and whether the service members can perform their duties.

According to the Army guidelines, commanders can allow “reasonable accommodat­ions” including changes to housing, bathroom and shower use to respect the modesty or privacy interests of soldiers, and to maintain morale, order and discipline.

They prohibit creating transgende­r-only areas and say that any privacy accommodat­ions that are made must be open for use by all soldiers, not just transgende­r individual­s.

And commanders can’t force a soldier to use a bathroom or shower of the person’s preferred gender before their legal transition.

According to Carter, a Rand Corp. study found that there are between 2,500 and 7,000 transgende­r service members in the active duty military, and another 1,500 to 4,000 in the reserves.

"Is the Army ready? Well, we are educating ourselves, and we are trying to get ready." — Gen. Mark Milley

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