USA TODAY US Edition

Transgende­r inmates housed by identity

Calif. governor signs laws related to LGBTQ issues

- Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law on Saturday requiring California to house transgende­r inmates in prisons based on their gender identity – but only if the state does not have “management or security concerns.”

The California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion houses men and women in separate facilities. Transgende­r inmates are often housed based on their sex assigned at birth. Advocates say this is dangerous, particular­ly for transgende­r women housed in facilities for men.

The law Newsom signed Saturday says officers must ask inmates privately if they identify as transgende­r, nonbinary or intersex. Those inmates can then request to be placed in a facility that houses either men or women.

The law says the California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion cannot deny those requests solely because of inmates’ anatomy, sexual orientatio­n or “a factor present” among other inmates at the facility.

But the state can deny those requests if it has “management or security concerns.” If a request is denied, the state must give the inmate a written statement explaining the decision and give the inmate a “meaningful opportunit­y” to object.

Sen. Scott Wiener, a Democrat from San Francisco who authored the bill, said he doesn’t expect that exception to be used very often.

“It’s just a false narrative about transgende­r people and about transgende­r women in particular that they’re somehow not really women and are just trying to scam their way into women’s bathrooms or facilities in order to do bad things,” Wiener said. “Overwhelmi­ngly the people who are being victimized are trans people.”

“It means a lot to me and my sisters,” said Michelle Calvin, a transgende­r woman incarcerat­ed at Mule Creek State Prison who recently called in to a news conference about the bill. “I’ve been in for 15 years. I’ve been through the abuse, I’ve been through the disrespect of staff not addressing me for who I am because I am a woman.”

Connecticu­t passed a similar law in 2018. Rhode Island, New York City and Massachuse­tts have also housed inmates based on their gender identity.

The law also requires officers to address transgende­r inmates based on the pronouns of their choice. And it requires officers to search inmates based on the search policy of their gender identity.

The law was one of several LGBTQrelat­ed laws Newsom signed on Saturday. He signed a law requiring public health officers to better track how diseases are affecting the LGBTQ community and one to ban life and disability insurance companies from denying coverage because someone is HIV positive.

And Newsom signed a law that sets up a Transgende­r Wellness and Equity Fund to provide grants to organizati­ons that back the transgende­r community.

 ?? ERIC RISBERG/AP ?? A new Caiifornia law requires prisons, including San Quentin State Prison, to house transgende­r inmates based on their gender identity.
ERIC RISBERG/AP A new Caiifornia law requires prisons, including San Quentin State Prison, to house transgende­r inmates based on their gender identity.

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