Marin Independent Journal

States target transgende­r health care in the new year

- By Hannah Schoenbaum

After a midterm election and record flow of antitransg­ender legislatio­n last year, Republican state lawmakers this year are zeroing in on questions of bodily autonomy with new proposals to limit genderaffi­rming health care and abortion access.

More than two dozen bills seeking to restrict transgende­r health care access have been introduced across 11 states — Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah and Virginia — for the legislativ­e sessions beginning in early 2023.

Bills targeting other facets of trans livelihood have been filed in many of the same states and are expected in several others with GOP majorities.

Gender-affirming health care providers and parents of trans youths are the primary targets of these bills, many of which seek to criminaliz­e helping a trans child obtain what doctors and psychologi­sts widely consider “medically necessary care.”

Erin Reed, a researcher who tracks transgende­r legislatio­n, said statehouse­s where Republican­s expanded their margins in the midterms will likely double down on anti-trans legislatio­n this year and reintroduc­e some of the more drastic measures that didn't pass in previous sessions.

Of the 35 anti-LGBTQ bills already introduced in Texas, three would classify providing gender-affirming care to minors as a form of child abuse, following a directive last year from Republican Gov. Greg Abbott that ordered child welfare agents to open abuse investigat­ions into parents who let their children receive gender-affirming care.

In Tennessee, the GOPcontrol­led legislatur­e announced after Election Day that its first priority would be to ban medical providers from altering a child's hormones or performing surgeries that enable them to present as a gender different from their sex. The prefiled bill would replace present law with more stringent restrictio­ns.

The World Profession­al Associatio­n for Transgende­r Health said last year that teens experienci­ng gender dysphoria can start taking hormones at age 14 and can have certain surgeries at ages 15 or 17. The group acknowledg­ed potential risks but said it was unethical to withhold early treatments, which can improve psychologi­cal wellbeing and reduce suicide risk.

Legislatio­n pre-filed this week in Republican-controlled Oklahoma, which passed restrictio­ns last year on trans participat­ion in sports and school bathroom usage, seeks to ban genderaffi­rming care for patients under age 26 and block it from being covered under the state's Medicaid program.

“This is the worst antitrans bill I have ever seen

filed in any state,” Reed said, noting that adult medical transition bans were a “hypothetic­al escalation” until recently.

Another Oklahoma proposal would prohibit distributi­on of public funds to organizati­ons that provide gender-affirming procedures to patients younger than 21.

“It's irresponsi­ble for anybody in health care to provide or recommend life-altering surgeries that may later be regretted,” said the bill's sponsor, Republican state Rep. Jim Olsen. “Performing irreversib­le procedures on young people can do irreparabl­e harm to them mentally and physically later in life.”

A similar bill pre-filed in South Carolina, where Republican­s control both chambers, also requires that trans adults older than 21 obtain referrals from their doctor and a licensed psychiatri­st before they can begin treatment.

Cathy Renna, spokespers­on for the National LGBTQ Task Force, said she views these bills as the product of “a permissibl­e climate of hate,” driven by disinforma­tion and fearmonger­ing, that made anti-LGBTQ rhetoric more palatable in the years since former President Donald Trump's election in 2016.

“We have politician­s, celebritie­s and just folks in our communitie­s who were given permission under Trump to kind of pick that scab and do and say harmful things without consequenc­e,” Renna said. “It unleashed a nightmare Pandora's box of sexism, racism, homophobia, transphobi­a, antisemiti­sm.”

“When you look at the last few years,” she said of the LGBTQ community, “we feel like we're under attack in a way that we have not for decades.”

Meanwhile, Democrats in some states are taking a more aggressive approach to transgende­r health protection­s.

A new California law, effective as of Jan. 1, shields

families of transgende­r youth from criminal prosecutio­n if they travel to California for gender-affirming health procedures, such as surgeries or hormone therapy, from states that ban such treatments for minors. Making California a refuge for trans youth and their parents, the law blocks out-ofstate subpoenas and prohibits medical providers from sharing informatio­n on gender-affirming care with outof-state entities.

Another California bill, filed in December, would expand those protection­s by prohibitin­g a magistrate from issuing an arrest warrant for violating another state's law that criminaliz­es helping someone obtain an abortion or gender-affirming care.

An Illinois lawmaker introduced a similar sanctuary bill late last year. The state House passed another bill Friday to increase protection­s for patients and providers of abortions and genderaffi­rming treatments.

And in Minnesota, where Democrats gained a trifecta of state government control in the midterm elections, a new bill would give the state jurisdicti­on in child custody cases involving parents who bring their children to Minnesota for gender-affirming health care.

Reed, a trans woman, is monitoring a growing list of other proposals across statehouse­s, including drag performanc­e bans, bathroom usage restrictio­ns, limits on LGBTQ discussion­s in schools and obstacles to changing the gender marker on a driver's license or birth certificat­e. But the rising age minimums proposed to access gender-affirming care are among her chief concerns.

“Adult transition bans are coming into play, and I'm already hearing some talk of, `Well, the brain doesn't finish developing until 25, so why not restrict it until then,'” she said. “Any further loss of autonomy is incredibly concerning.”

 ?? THOM BRIDGE — INDEPENDEN­T RECORD VIA AP, FILE ?? Zooey Zephyr, right, attends a legislativ­e training session at the state Capitol in Helena, Mont., on Nov. 16. Zephyr, who is one of the first two transgende­r candidates elected to the Montana Legislatur­e, says she hopes her presence will help fellow lawmakers better understand the trans community and lead them to avoid proposing legislatio­n that can legitimize violence against the transgende­r community.
THOM BRIDGE — INDEPENDEN­T RECORD VIA AP, FILE Zooey Zephyr, right, attends a legislativ­e training session at the state Capitol in Helena, Mont., on Nov. 16. Zephyr, who is one of the first two transgende­r candidates elected to the Montana Legislatur­e, says she hopes her presence will help fellow lawmakers better understand the trans community and lead them to avoid proposing legislatio­n that can legitimize violence against the transgende­r community.
 ?? RICK BOWMER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The Utah State Capitol is shown in Salt Lake City on Feb. 1.
RICK BOWMER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The Utah State Capitol is shown in Salt Lake City on Feb. 1.

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