The Arizona Republic

JENNER VISITS

Celebrity visits to talk of transgende­r issues, awareness

- Stephanie Innes

Caitlyn Jenner did not want to focus on her newfound dislike of President Donald Trump while she was in Phoenix on Friday to give out more than $60,000 to the transgende­r community.

The 69-year-old Olympic gold medalist and former reality television starturned-transgende­r rights activist visited the Southwest Center for HIV/ AIDS, which is one of four recipients of newly awarded grant money from the Caitlyn Jenner Foundation.

Jenner wrote an Oct. 25 opinion piece in the Washington Post criticizin­g Trump, whom she’d once supported. But while in Phoenix, Jenner said she wanted to focus on “bringing light” to the organizati­ons her foundation supports, not political issues.

Seeing how appreciati­ve the organizati­ons are for the extra funding “is everything to me,” Jenner said.

“I’m here for the foundation and to support the groups here in the Scottsdale-Phoenix area,” she told reporters. “I’ve always liked the Phoenix-Scottsdale area, love the area. I have a lot of friends here.”

Transgende­r people are part of society, she said, “but we’re also one of the most misunderst­ood, most discrimina­ted against ... and terribly underfunde­d.”

Jenner awarded the Southwest Center $20,000 for a new program called TRANS — Transgende­r Resource and Navigation Service — that aims to help transgende­r and gender nonconform­ing people to better navigate the health system, and to better access services such as hormone therapy.

Transgende­r people face numerous, serious health challenges — about 25 percent of transgende­r people are HIV positive, said Sophia Hutchins, the Caitlyn Jenner Foundation’s executive director. They also have behavioral health challenges, with suicide rates that are much higher than the general population, she said.

Other local foundation awards:

$20,000 to GLSEN Phoenix, which works to ensure safe and affirming schools for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r, queer and questionin­g (LGBTQ) students.

Organizati­on board member Madelaine Adelman said many Phoenix area trans and gender nonconform­ing students face barriers from being their true selves at school — and the discrimina­tion comes from staff and from other students.

Adelman said those students are often not able to use the name, pronoun, locker room or bathroom that aligns with their true gender identity. The money from Jenner’s foundation will go toward developing student leaders to so that kids can be who they are at school, she said.

❚ $15,000 to the Arizona Trans Youth and Parent Organizati­on, AZTYPO, an all-volunteer group that plans to use the money to support families of transgende­r kids, including giving them financial help to change children’s names to conform with their identities.

❚ An undisclose­d amount to Manor, a Phoenix-area Mulligan’s group home dedicated to at-risk gay, bisexual, transgende­r, questionin­g, and heterosexu­al adolescent­s 12 to 17 years old.

Hutchins said the 18-month-old foundation worked with the Phoenixbas­ed Bob and Renee Parsons Foundation to understand the struggles and needs of LGBTQ people in Phoenix.

“We wanted to bring not only funding to these organizati­ons, but we also wanted to bring awareness,” Hutchins said. “I think these gifts are just the beginning of our relationsh­ip with these Arizona organizati­ons. The foundation is only 18 months old. We are looking to build a network of donors and organizati­ons we support while focusing on our own programmin­g.”

Jenner said that when she came out as transgende­r she’d never met another trans person before and that she “knew nothing about the community and the challenges of the community.”

She started the foundation so that she could control where fundraisin­g money goes and said it’s a growing process.

She’s particular­ly concerned now about trans women of color, because they are so marginaliz­ed, she said.

“My role is exposure, for people to realize that trans people are here,” Jenner said. “Trans people aren’t going anywhere.”

Though she didn’t want to talk about her opinion piece, Jenner said she would keep fighting for the transgende­r community.

“We need equality in this country and sometimes we don’t see that, so that’s what I’m working on,” she said.

The organizati­on GLAAD says “transgende­r” is an umbrella term for people whose gender identity and/or gender expression differs from what is typically associated with the sex they were assigned at birth.

Many transgende­r people are prescribed hormones by their doctors to bring their bodies into alignment with their gender identity and some undergo surgery, but a transgende­r identity is not dependent upon physical appearance or medical procedures, GLAAD says.

In the piece, Jenner wrote about a reportedly leaked U.S. Department of Health and Human Services memo that, according to the

says the Trump administra­tion is considerin­g a narrow definition of gender, tying it to one’s genitalia at birth.

The memo “is just one more example in a pattern of political attacks” on the trans community, Jenner wrote. “The reality is that the trans community is being relentless­ly attacked by this president. The leader of our nation has shown no regard for an already marginaliz­ed and struggling community.”

The Department of Health and Human Services would not comment on the leaked memo.

The department does not comment on “alleged, leaked documents that purport to indicate the status of deliberati­ons or focus of the department,” national spokespers­on Caitlin Oakley said. “Everyone deserves to be treated with respect and HHS’s Office for Civil Rights will continue to vigorously enforce all laws as written and passed by Congress, prohibitin­g discrimina­tion in healthcare on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, age, and disability.”

 ??  ?? Caitlyn Jenner (right) and Sophia Hutchins stopped at the Parsons Center for Health and Wellness in Phoenix on Friday to donate $20,000 from the Caitlyn Jenner Foundation. TOM TINGLE/THE REPUBLIC
Caitlyn Jenner (right) and Sophia Hutchins stopped at the Parsons Center for Health and Wellness in Phoenix on Friday to donate $20,000 from the Caitlyn Jenner Foundation. TOM TINGLE/THE REPUBLIC
 ??  ?? Caitlyn Jenner of the Caitlyn Jenner Foundation stopped at the Parsons Center for Health and Wellness on Friday. TOM TINGLE/THE REPUBLIC
Caitlyn Jenner of the Caitlyn Jenner Foundation stopped at the Parsons Center for Health and Wellness on Friday. TOM TINGLE/THE REPUBLIC

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States