Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Proposed bills aimed at transgende­r youth

- By Iris Samuels

HELENA, MONT. » The Montana House on Monday held a committee hearing on two bills that focus on transgende­r young people, echoing similar efforts underway in other states.

One of the bills would prohibit doctors from providing transgende­r youth certain gender-related medical treatment. Another would bar trans students from participat­ing on school sports teams of the gender with which they identify.

Proponents said the bills would defend trans children from life-altering medical procedures they cannot fully consent to and protect the integrity of women’s sports. Opponents said the bill would harm the wellbeing of transgende­r youth.

Jaime Gabrielli, a parent of a transgende­r 16-yearold son, told members of the House Judiciary Committee that the bill banning medical treatments for trans youth could extend the suffering of children like her son due to gender dysphoria.

“I knew something was different regarding gender with him very early on,” Gabrielli said. “As he got older, I knew this was something more than I could explain by saying he’s a tomboy, or a girl who likes boy things.”

Medical interventi­on for children like her son is “a planned, informed, thoughtful process,” she said, adding that having access to medical profession­als has allowed her son to thrive “because he is finally able to be who he is.”

Medical bans on gender-affirming treatment for transgende­r people are also under considerat­ion in Alabama, Utah, Indiana, Missouri, Mississipp­i, New Hampshire and Texas.

“These are not tomboys. They’re not children expressing a wish or a whim. This is a consistent persistent identity that usually starts in toddlerhoo­d. This is not an easy path for many children and teenagers,” said Lauren Wilson, a pediatrici­an and the vice president of the Montana chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Research has found that access to gender affirming care reduces the rate of attempted suicide among transgende­r youth by 70%, Wilson said.

Supporters of the bill — called the “Youth Health Protection Act” — said it would stop medical providers from performing potentiall­y unnecessar­y medical procedures.

“These decisions can have lifelong consequenc­es,” said bill-sponsor Rep. John Fuller, R-Kalispell. The bill “protects children — and only children — from consequenc­es that they do not know about.”

If passed, the bill would ban medical providers from prescribin­g puberty-suppressin­g hormones to minors and ban gender reassignme­nt surgery for minors. Health care providers convicted of violating that ban could face civil penalty fines of $500 to $50,000.

Colleen Wood, a pediatric endocrinol­ogist from Billings, said that hormone blockers do not cause irreversib­le damage. Instead, she said they “temporaril­y hit the pause button on puberty until the young people are old enough to make their own decisions about their gender.”

“If a youth decides to stop taking them, puberty simply resumes,” Wood said.

The bill banning transgende­r youth from playing sports according to the gender with which they identify has been dubbed the “Save Women’s Sports Act.” Fuller, who sponsored it, said the bill is designed to protect opportunit­ies for women in sports.

“Allowing males to compete as women in female sports will result in women once again being shouldered aside to stand below the awards podium and forced to cheer the accomplish­ments of men,” Fuller said.

Similar bills restrictin­g transgende­r students’ sports participat­ion are under considerat­ion in Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, North Dakota, and New Hampshire.

The Montana bill received criticism from student groups, medical associatio­ns, businesses, and LGBTQ activists.

Zooey Zephyr, a transgende­r woman and former wrestler, told committee members she lost the athletic advantages she had prior to her transition.

“Trans people do not transition to get an advantage in sports,” Zephyr said. “The image of ‘trans women ruining the integrity of women’s sports’ paints a false picture of life as a trans woman. It incorrectl­y claims that we have a competitiv­e advantage, and it misses why trans people transition in the first place, which is to lead a happier life.”

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