Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Transgende­r issue endangers insurance plan for kids

- By Kate Giammarise

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A last-minute change by the state Senate to ban coverage of certain procedures for transgende­r children threatens the reauthoriz­ation of a program that insures more than176,000 Pennsylvan­ians.

The political fight is unusual for the Children’s Health Insurance Program, which has historical­ly had bipartisan support in Pennsylvan­ia and unanimous reauthoriz­ation votes in the past.

The bill passed by the Senate on Wednesday would renew the program, which the Legislatur­e must reauthoriz­e every several years, but also would bar funds from being used for gender confirmati­on surgery.

The amended bill passed theSenate, 37-13, Wednesday.

“Voting for the reauthoriz­ation of CHIP should be the easiest vote we take in this chamber; this program is so popular, and so effective that we should not even need to go through this process every few years,” said Senate Minority Leader Jay Costa, D-Forest Hills, in a statement. “But here we are, and an amendment that cruelly and blatantly discrimina­tes against transgende­red children and young adults has politicize­d health insurance for every Pennsylvan­ia child.” He voted against the bill for that reason, he said.

Sen. Don White, R-Indiana, who sponsored the amendment to the bill, said limited public funds should not be used for gender confirmati­on surgery.

“I believe that is a position that is strongly endorsed by a vast majority of Pennsylvan­ians,” he said in a statement.

According to the state Department of Human Services, 34 children enrolled in CHIP have used health services related to gender identity this year.

CHIP provides health insurance to children whose families earn too much to qualify for Medicaid coverage but whose parents can’t afford or obtain other coverage.

The bill now returns to the state House, which is not scheduled to return to Harrisburg until mid-November.

In a letter sent to Senate Republican leaders earlier this week, Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat, said, “This amendment injects politics and ideology into what should be a simple extension of a valuable program.” A spokesman for the governor said he is working to get a “clean” reauthoriz­ation of the program to his desk. A reauthoriz­ation must be approved by Dec. 31.

Separate from what is happening at the state level, Congress allowed federal funding for CHIP to expire at the end of September. Officials in Pennsylvan­ia have said they have enough funds to continue the program until February but have still urged Congress to act to fully fund the program.

A study from Georgetown University’s Center for Children and Families said at least six states will likely exhaust their funding by the end of the year or early January, threatenin­g children’s health insurance coverage.

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