Las Vegas Review-Journal

Foster child bill to require gender identity training

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ate clothing.

“This would be a requiremen­t for everyone in contact with LGBTQ youth, whether it’s directly or indirectly,” Araujo said. “So people know how to respond if they encounter a 6-year-old who identifies as male even though their gender marker (at birth) might be female.”

Mandated training doesn’t mean parents with certain religious views will be omitted from being caregivers or required to foster LGBT children, Araujo said. He said religious groups may oppose the bill.

The law would also require the Division of Child and Family Services of the Department of Health and Human Services to improve how issues are reported and resolved, said Denise Tanata, executive director for the Children’s Advocacy Alliance.

“When we were talking to the youth, often times they feel the people who they were suppose to talk to were often the people they felt discrimina­ted against,” she said. “They tell us they don’t know who they can talk to or often have hard times getting hold of the right person.”

Tanata said legislatio­n like this would have benefited Torres, who reunified with his family after nine months at his foster home.

During his time in foster care, Torres said his family made him feel uncomforta­ble, referred to transgende­r people as “she/hims” and even outed him at school.

“When I said something (to my foster mom) she essentiall­y told me to suck it up,” he said.

The proposal has gained support from the Gay and Lesbian Community Center of Southern Nevada and Children’s Advocacy Alliance and others.

Blue Montana, transgende­r program manager at the center, shuffled through the foster system until he was 9. He said Araujo’s legislatio­n would have given him — and many LGBT youth Montana works with — more stability.

“I remember when I was 7, no one would take me because I identified as a boy,”said Montana, now 41. “They didn’t know what to do with me so they kept passing me around. A bill like this would have made a huge difference for me.” Contact Michael Lyle at 702-387-5201 or mlyle@ viewnews.com. Follow @mjlyle on Twitter.

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