The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Jenner’s life is in spotlight

Speculatio­n comes at key time for transgende­r rights.

- By David Crary and Lisa Leff ETHAN MILLER / GETTY IMAGES

NEW YORK — Whether or not Olympic legend Bruce Jenner becomes its new champion, the transgende­r-rights movement is making remarkable strides on many fronts — ranging from mass-media visibility to legal protection­s. Yet despite the gains, activists say many transgende­r Americans, far more so than gays and lesbians, remain vulnerable to violence, discrimina­tion and lack of understand­ing.

“We see transgende­r rights as the next wave of the work we need to do, after marriage equality,” said Katherine Franke, director of Columbia Law School’s Center for Gender and Sexuality Law.

“Getting protection­s on paper is important,” she said. “But the day-to-day lives of many transgende­r people won’t be affected — they’re unemployed, they’re experienci­ng violence in the streets, in shelters, in schools.”

Allyson Robinson, an activist working to end the military’s ban on transgende­r people serving openly, said gains for transgende­r rights in some areas have triggered a backlash from some religious conservati­ves who feel they’ve lost the fight against same-sex marriage.

“Transgende­r people and their identities and communitie­s are under siege right now on multiple fronts,” she said, citing as an example recent bills proposed in state legislatur­es that would make it illegal for transgende­r people to use a bathroom that doesn’t correspond with their biological gender.

The mix of advancemen­t and adversity forms a backdrop to what promises to be an intriguing melodrama over the coming months regarding Jenner, the 1976 decathlon gold medalist who was featured on Wheaties boxes and more recently has appeared as a reallife stepfather on “Keeping Up With The Kardashian­s.”

Though Jenner himself has declined public comment, those in his inner circles have not challenged the mounting speculatio­n that he is preparing to live as a woman and perhaps will appear in a new reality series about his transition.

His mother, Esther Jenner, told the Associated Press on Wednesday that she had spoken with her son about his private and public journey.

“He said, ‘I want to be honest about my identity, and I know this is coming out in the press,’” Esther Jenner said. “He start- Rumors swirl around Olympic legend Bruce Jenner that he plans to transition into living as a woman. ed by saying, ‘We need to have a long, serious talk.’ I am at peace with what he is and what he’s doing.”

Among activists and bloggers who focus on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r issues, there’s widespread sentiment that Jenner alone should dictate the pace and the details of any disclosure he wants to make. Yet there’s also keen interest in what sort of impact he might have were he to confirm a transition that would make him arguably the most famous American ever to openly identify as transgende­r.

Depending on how Jenner’s story is presented and received, the revelation that a lauded athlete and member of one of the nation’s most visible families is transgende­r could be comparable to the cultural shifts that accompanie­d the news that movie star Rock Hudson was gay and died of AIDS-related complicati­ons and that basketball great Magic Johnson, a heterosexu­al, was HIV-positive.

“In the long term, we’d say the disclosure­s were helpful for the movement to normalize homosexual­ity and bring better medical attention to AIDS/ HIV,” Franke said. “When celebritie­s came out as being members of these communitie­s, it ended up shifting the national narrative.”

The narrative at the moment, for transgende­r Americans, is complex. On one hand, they have many recent breakthrou­ghs to celebrate, including: ■ Several positive, high- profile portrayals of transgende­r people on popular TV shows, including the prison inmate played by Laverne Cox on “Orange is the New Black,” and the transgende­r woman played by Golden Globe winner Jeffrey Tambor in “Transparen­t.” ■ Moves by at least nine states to ensure that health insurers cover transgende­r treatment that’s deemed medically necessary. In a related move, the federal government ended a Medicare exclusion of coverage for services related to gender transition. ■ Steps by some states to eliminate requiremen­ts that transgende­r people had to undergo surgery before being allowed to change the gender on their birth certificat­es. ■ Moves by many schools and colleges to make transgende­r students feel more welcome — adopting new policies related to bathroom designatio­ns, sports teams, living quarters and other matters. Several women’s colleges have adjusted admissions policies to accommodat­e transgende­r applicants. ■ New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s call in his recent state of the state speech for an amendment to the state’s civil rights law to add discrimina­tion protection­s for transgende­r New Yorkers.

Discrimina­tion based on gender identity is already prohibited in 18 other states.

However, Dru Levasseur, Transgende­r Rights Project director of the LGBT-rights group Lambda Legal, said new laws and policies aren’t enough.

“For all the legal work we do, it’s really a hearts and minds battle,” he said. “The true test of our humanity is how much compassion and understand­ing we afford these people.”

“It just comes down to explaining what it means to be transgende­r — how it’s not a choice,” Levasseur said.

“It’s a person coming to terms with who they are, and the hurdles they face on a systemic basis are immense.”

 ?? BRAD BARKET / INVISION ?? The transgende­r-rights movement, with public figures such as “Orange is the New Black” actress Laverne Cox, is making remarkable strides on many fronts. However, despite the gains, activists say many transgende­r Americans, far more so than gays and...
BRAD BARKET / INVISION The transgende­r-rights movement, with public figures such as “Orange is the New Black” actress Laverne Cox, is making remarkable strides on many fronts. However, despite the gains, activists say many transgende­r Americans, far more so than gays and...
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