Oroville Mercury-Register

What do new laws in Alabama say on transgende­r kids?

- By Kim Chandler

MONTGOMERY, ALA. » Alabama has become the first state to criminaliz­e the use of puberty blockers and hormones to treat transgende­r people under age 19. In line with some other Republican­led states, legislator­s here also passed a law requiring students to use bathrooms correspond­ing to their sex at birth and prohibitin­g discussion of gender and sexual identity in the lower grades. Critics have derided the limitation on such discussion­s as the “Don’t Say Gay” law.

The two GOP bills were signed into law Friday by Republican Gov. Kay Ivey, a day after being passed by the Alabama Legislatur­e. Advocacy groups quickly filed a lawsuit Monday challengin­g the medication ban.

Republican­s argue the bills are needed to protect children and that decisions on gender-affirming medication­s should wait until adulthood. Critics say the politician­s are interferin­g with medical decisions that belong with families and their doctors. Cathryn Oakley, state legislativ­e director and senior counsel for the Human Rights Campaign, a national advocacy group for the LGBTQ community, called the two pieces of legislatio­n “the single most anti-transgende­r legislativ­e package in history.”

What does the treatment ban do?

Titled the “Alabama Vulnerable Child Compassion and Protection Act,” the law makes it a crime to prescribe or administer to anyone under 19 puberty blockers or hormone treatment “for the purpose of attempting to alter the appearance of or affirm the minor’s perception of his or her gender or sex.”

Legislator­s made it a Class C felony to violate the law, meaning doctors who prescribe or administer such medication would be subject to up to 10 years in prison.

The law, which takes effect on May 8 unless blocked by the courts, also bans surgeries for the purpose of altering gender appearance, but doctors say those are generally not performed on minors.

Alabama’s legislatio­n goes further than measures passed in other states. Arkansas was the first state to pass a ban on gender-affirming drugs, but its measure did not include criminal penalties. The Arkansas law was blocked by a federal judge before it could go into effect. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott ordered the state’s Department of Family and Protective Services to investigat­e as child abuse reports of youth receiving such care.

What are the criticisms?

Doctors, families and advocacy organizati­ons say politician­s are inserting themselves into decisions that belong with families and medical teams. The measures have prompted swift backlash from medical experts, Democratic President Joe Biden’s administra­tion, the U.S. Department of Justice and the families of trans youth. Doctors say the Alabama law is contrary to peer-reviewed research and applies a criminal label to standard medical care. Health experts also say that minors with gender dysphoria who do not receive appropriat­e medical care face dramatical­ly increased risk of suicide and serious depression.

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