Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Trump administra­tion policy: ‘Punch in the gut’

Parents of transgende­r children are concerned

- The Washington Post

Since Jamie Harper's son began middle school in Loudoun County, Virginia, the teenager has only been known as a boy. His friends don't know that he was actually born a girl – and his family has had to fight to keep it that way.

In the sixth grade, his birth name showed up on his computer during a keyboardin­g class. The school ultimately agreed to change his name in the system, but required his parents to obtain a court order to do so. The teenager still isn't allowed to change in the boy's locker room. He doesn't like using the staff bathroom as required by the school, so he resorts to waiting until he gets home.

“It's always like, what's coming next?” Harper said. “Every day we're worrying about the safety of our kid, every single day.”

Then, on Sunday, Harper saw the news that the Trump administra­tion was considerin­g changing the way it treats transgende­r people like her son under the law, seeking to deny claims that gender identity, rather than biological gender, can be used for protection under federal civil rights laws such as Title IX.

“It gives you this sinking feeling in your gut,” Harper said.

She and other parents of transgende­r children across the country described feelings of numbness and dread following the news of the proposed shift in policy from the Health and Human Services Department. While it's unclear what the change would entail, or whether such regulation­s would even be adopted, parents quickly jumped to the defensive. Some began scrambling to finalize name and gender changes on their children's birth certificat­es and passports, seeking every possible safety net.

Harper worried that her son's school might feel emboldened to tighten its restrictio­ns on the teenager even more. What if his classmates were to find out his birth gender? What if, two years from now, he were forced to use his birth gender on his driver's license? She thought about the transgende­r children she knows who have been hospitaliz­ed for severe mental health problems. Would her son be next?

Transgende­r adolescent­s attempt suicide at a much higher rate than young people whose identity matches the gender on their birth certificat­es, according to a study in the September issue of Pediatrics, from the American Academy of Pediatrics. Transgende­r male teens are especially vulnerable – 55 percent reported at least one suicide attempt, compared to 30 percent of transgende­r female youth and 42 percent of young people who are nonbinary, identifyin­g as neither male or female.

Calls to crisis hotline Trans Lifeline more than doubled in the 24 hours following the news. Trans Lifeline's executive director, Sam Ames, said it was “particular­ly sickening” that the potential impact of the Trump administra­tion guidance “falls especially heavily on our youth, who are often isolated and deprived of the autonomy that some of the older members of our community have.”

The mother of a transgende­r teenager in New Hampshire said her daughter had already endured too much to suffer such a setback.

“I am overwhelmi­ngly concerned that if somehow all of this goes away, and Skylar is forced to have male documents, and lose her legal identity as female, my child will die,” said Jennifer Elizabeth, who asked only to be identified by her first and middle name out of safety concerns. “She already deals with so much, and this would be too much.”

Cori Lathan's 12–year–old daughter already suffers from anxiety attacks. On Monday afternoon, Lathan went to pick her up early from her public middle school in Silver Spring, Maryland, because she was stricken again.

While driving in the car later that day, Lathan asked her if she was aware of what had happened in the news. Her daughter said she had seen references to the #Won'tbeerased campaign on Instagram. Lathan told her she was thinking about changing her name and gender on her birth certificat­e, to “make sure that we have everything backed up.”

Her daughter said she wasn't too worried about it, “because I'm still going to be who I am,” Lathan recalled. “She's more concerned about making it through middle school,” as a transgende­r girl, Lathan added.

But the mother worried about her daughter's social anxiety, and began wondering if she should, for example, consider homeschool­ing. “It's such a punch to the gut,” Lathan said. “I knew there was a long way to go but ... it's just horrifying to think that we have to go backwards.” Sarah Watson of Bethesda, Md., right, with her non-binary child, who does not identify as either male or female. Watson is concerned about a proposal by the Trump administra­tion to define gender as strictly biological. She requested that her child not be named.

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