Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Report: States lack protection­s for transgende­r youth

- By Marina Villeneuve

AUGUSTA, MAINE >> Most states lack anti-discrimina­tion policies and staff training needed to protect transgende­r youth in foster care, juvenile detention facilities and homeless shelters, according to a new report.

There are clear federal standards for the treatment of such youth, but states and communitie­s don’t always follow such rules, said Currey Cook of the civil rights organizati­on Lambda Legal, which helped write the report.

“Most placements and facilities are sex-specific and too often don’t affirm their identities,” Cook said.

The data on transgende­r youth is limited, but experts say transgende­r youth are a small portion of the overall population but represent an outsize percentage of youth in settings such as detention halls and homeless shelters.

The report recommends states improve their antidiscri­mination policies and require ongoing staff training in LGBTQ issues to better protect transgende­r youth, who often face family rejection, trauma, discrimina­tion and mental health or behavioral issues.

Last fall, a transgende­r boy killed himself at a Maine youth correction­s facility. His mother said he didn’t receive the mental health treatment he needed. The 16-yearold boy’s death has led to calls for improved conditions and treatment for all incarcerat­ed youth, particular­ly transgende­r young people and those navigating mental health issues.

The state Department of Correction­s is working with the nonprofit Portland Outright to hold group sessions for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r community at Long Creek Youth Developmen­t Center. Knowles was a member of the group, which said it supports community-based alternativ­es to incarcerat­ion for young people.

New York and California are the only states with comprehens­ive nondiscrim­ination policies that apply to transgende­r youth in out-of-home care settings, although communitie­s in other states are showing promise too, according to the report.

The report was co-authored by the Washington-based Center for the Study of Social Policy and New York-based Children’s Rights, a child welfare advocacy group.

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