Imperial Valley Press

Trans youth care ban headed to Tennessee governor’s desk

- BY JONATHAN MATTISE AND KIMBERLEE KRUESI

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Transgende­r youth in Tennessee would be banned from receiving gender-affirming care under legislatio­n currently headed to the desk of Republican Gov. Bill Lee, who has voiced support for the bill.

House lawmakers voted 77-16 on Thursday, with three Democrats joining their Republican colleagues to pass the bill.

Civil rights groups have vowed an immediate lawsuit if and when the bill becomes law – setting up the potential for a lengthy legal battle over the coming months.

“These children do not need these medical procedures to be able to flourish as adults,” said House Majority Leader William Lamberth. “They need mental health treatment. They need love and support, and many of them need to be able to grow up to become the individual­s that they were intended to be.”

Across the United States, state lawmakers have introduced legislatio­n attacking gender-affirming medical care for young people even as such services have been available in the U.S. for more than a decade and are endorsed by major medical associatio­ns.

Similar bills have advanced in Nebraska, Mississipp­i, Oklahoma and South Dakota. In Utah, the Republican governor recently signed a transgende­r medical ban into law. Meanwhile, a federal judge who blocked Arkansas’ ban on gender-affirming care for minors is now considerin­g whether to strike down the law as unconstitu­tional. A similar ban in Alabama has also been temporaril­y blocked by a federal judge.

If enacted in Tennessee, doctors would be prohibited from providing gender-affirming care to anyone under the age of 18, including prescribin­g puberty blockers and hormones – and could even be penalized.

However, the legislatio­n spells out exceptions, including allowing doctors to perform these medical services if the patient’s care had begun prior to July 1, 2023 – which is when the ban is proposed to go into effect. The bill then states that that care must end by March 31, 2024.

The bill then allows the attorney general to investigat­e health care providers who may violate the statute, which carries a $25,000 penalty.

“We have taken away a woman’s right to determine her health care and her health outcomes – and now we’ve gone to children,” said Democratic Rep. Gloria Johnson, referencin­g the state’s strict abortion ban that was allowed to go into effect last year.

“If a doctor and a family feels that taking hormone blockers is going to be healthy and productive and life-saving for these children, that’s a decision that should be made,” she added.

Tennessee in particular has been caught in the center of the conflict over transgende­r youth medical care – ever since video surfaced on social media last year of a Nashville doctor touting that gender-affirming procedures are “huge money makers” for hospitals.

 ?? JONATHAN MATTISE AP PHOTO/ ?? Advocates gather for a rally at the state Capitol complex in Nashville, Tenn., to oppose a series of bills that target the LGBTQ community on Feb. 14.
JONATHAN MATTISE AP PHOTO/ Advocates gather for a rally at the state Capitol complex in Nashville, Tenn., to oppose a series of bills that target the LGBTQ community on Feb. 14.

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