Chicago Sun-Times

CITY TAKES SMALL STEP TOWARD TRANSGENDE­R EQUALITY

Ordinance championed by rookie alderman: ‘No form issued by the city shall ask an individual’s sex unless it is necessary for medical reasons or required by another law’

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Led by a former battle rapper known for his homophobic and misogynist­ic lyrics, Chicago aldermen on Monday took a small, but important, step toward transgende­r equality.

The City Council’s Committee on Health and Human Relations approved an ordinance that states: “No form issued by the city shall ask an individual’s sex unless it is necessary for medical reasons or required by another law.”

In those relatively rare cases when “selection of gender identity from predetermi­ned options is required by design of any city form,” the gender options “shall include: ‘male,’ ‘female’ and ‘nonbinary,’ the ordinance states.

Rookie Ald. Andre Vasquez (40th) championed the ordinance in a move that was a personal redemption of sorts.

Vasquez openly acknowledg­ed he was making amends for lyrics he wrote during his days as a rapper.

“In my youth, I grew up ignorant of the struggles of our LGBTQ siblings. My ignorance led to many words and actions that I will forever regret,” Vasquez told his colleagues.

“I felt uncomforta­ble in my own skin and it led to toxic behavior that hurt and offended others. It is my belief that, had I grown up with a better understand­ing of our shared struggles, my actions would have been different.”

Myles Brady Davis, director of communicat­ions for Equality Illinois, applauded the change that will “allow trans and gender nonconform­ing people to be their authentic selves on city forms.”

Brady Davis described himself as a “proud, black trans-masculine person” whose “pronouns are they/them.”

“Individual­s would be able to designate ‘non-binary’ as a gender option. Individual­s will be able to designate their personal pronouns — he/him, she/her or they/them — on their forms. This is critical to helping trans and gender-nonconform­ing Illinoisan­s be secure in their persons and affirmed for who they are. And prevent misgenderi­ng, which often leads to other kinds of pervasive violence,” he said.

Brady Davis cited results of a 2015 “trans U.S. survey.” It showed 34% of trans people in Illinois who had shown an ID with a name or gender that did not match their gender presentati­on were “verbally harassed, denied benefits or services, asked to leave or even assaulted,” he said.

Iggy Ladden is a licensed clinical social worker who specialize­s in serving transgende­r people and, as she put it, is a “non-binary transgende­r person myself.”

Ladden argued that “living in the world as a trans person is devastatin­gly alienating, stressful and dangerous” and that trauma, anxiety, depression and drug addiction are “terribly common” among trans people because they are so isolated.

She then ticked off the statistics to back it up.

♦ 40% of transgende­r adults have attempted suicide in their lifetimes, compared to 5% of cisgendere­d people — those whose gender has remained the same since birth.

♦ 1 in 5 transgende­red people have experience­d homelessne­ss at some point, “and this is often tied directly to discrimina­tion.”

♦ In 2020 alone, 26 transgende­r women have died as part of what Ladden called “an epidemic of trans homicides.” Most were “women of color,” she said.

♦ 28% of “trans folks” have been “fired, denied a promotion or not hired due to their gender identity or expression.” Over half “report experienci­ng discrimina­tion or harassment at work.”

“I am here, first and foremost, to say that we exist and it’s time that the city of Chicago acknowledg­e our existence,” Ladden said.

“Please do not reinforce our erasure across our city’s most vital public institutio­ns. Our trans community needs your swift and decisive support. … For our city council to hold fast to the myth of the gender binary is to sanction the ongoing, rampant discrimina­tion across many city spheres as well as condone the countless homicides and suicides that explicitly reinforce our community’s erasure.”

Ladden said what she loves most about the ordinance is the fact that it “cuts to the chase in a big way.”

“When is it actually pertinent to inquire about someone’s gender identity? The answer is ‘rarely,’ ” she said. And when it is, “we need to create opportunit­ies for people to self-identify and not to assign those identities to people.”

Ladden said she considers the ordinance “the beginning of a journey” for the city, “But a powerful beginning at that.”

Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35th) congratula­ted Vasquez — not just for championin­g the groundbrea­king ordinance, but for maturing “from someone who perpetuate­d homophobia and transphobi­a to someone who is now working to right historical wrongs, particular­ly as it relates to issues of gender and gender identity.”

 ?? RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES ?? A Chicago City Council committee OK’d a proposal to change how — and if — city forms will include questions about a person’s gender.
RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES A Chicago City Council committee OK’d a proposal to change how — and if — city forms will include questions about a person’s gender.
 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Ald. Andre Vasquez (40th) speaks during a press conference at the “unveiling” of the “Black Trans Lives Matter” mural on Aug. 22.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Ald. Andre Vasquez (40th) speaks during a press conference at the “unveiling” of the “Black Trans Lives Matter” mural on Aug. 22.

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