Lethbridge Herald

Teens stage walkout over gender policies

- Rob Drinkwater & Colette Derworiz

Sixteen-year-old Aspen Cervo says he began thinking about a student walkout over the Alberta government’s planned policies around transgende­r youth right after Premier Danielle Smith announced them last week.

The Grade 10 student at Leduc Composite High School said earlier this week that his 13-year-old brother is transgende­r and that Wednesday’s walkout was meant to show him and others they’re supported.

“I’m lucky to grow up in a household where it’s safe to be whoever I want to be, but not all kids are lucky like that,” Cervo said in an interview, adding he knows some others who aren’t as fortunate.

“Some get rejected or kicked out, and it really hurts you when your own parents basically tell you you’re not their kid anymore.”

Smith said the fall sitting of the legislatur­e would bring new rules, including restrictio­ns on youth changing their names or pronouns at school, as well as on hormone treatment and surgery for gender affirmatio­n.

She said the goal is to ensure children are “fully informed” about the decisions they are making because they might regret them later in life.

The policies spurred a week of protest — both at the grassroots level and from groups like the Alberta Medical Associatio­n.

Students in cities including Edmonton, Calgary and Lethbridge also walked out Wednesday.

In Calgary, several dozen students from Western Canada High School carried signs with messages such as “Our Outrage Does Not Fit on a Poster” and “Protect Trans Black Female Disabled Immigrant Queer Indigenous Refugee Youth.”

Yomade Akapo, 16, said Smith’s government is “taking away rights from people who haven’t done anything wrong.

“It’s just a violation of human rights. It’s absolutely disgusting that that’s something she could to do to thousands of trans kids. I don’t think she understand­s how she’s affecting these kids, how she’s affecting their mental health.”

Fletcher Morrison, a transgende­r boy in Grade

11, said it’s important that his and others’ rights are respected at their schools.

“I just want everyone to feel safe in school,” said the 16-year-old who transition­ed three years ago with the support of his friends and family.

Morrison said he’s been seeing a lot more antitransg­ender arguments in the past week.

“I can see it getting worse,” he said. “I just am worried for the safety of youth.”

A few people stopped on the street in front of the high school to support the students.

Kathryn Smith, a non-binary trans and queer adult, works with a lot of transgende­r youth.

“I wanted to come out and show the kids there are adults who support and love them,” Smith said. “It’s very hard to see what’s happening.”

Back in Leduc, Cervo said he used to be transgende­r but now considers himself gender-fluid. He said he mostly goes by “he,” but it sometimes changes.

When asked whether his fluidity could support arguments that youth who receive gender-affirming care could later change their minds, Cervo said that no one in Alberta is getting genital reconstruc­tion surgery before 18 because it’s such a big change.

Other types of gender-affirming care, such as hormone therapy that his brother has been waiting for to change his voice, are decisions that Cervo felt his brother and others his age are old enough to make for themselves.

“He’s been waiting for gender-affirming care for two years now and these policies are going to have to make him wait until he’s at least 16,” Cervo said.

“He’s been waiting for so long and now he’s going to have to wait longer.”

Smith said gender affirmatio­n surgery would be banned for those 17 and under. And there would be no puberty blockers or hormone therapies for the purpose of gender affirmatio­n for anyone 15 and under, unless they’ve already begun treatments.

Parental consent would be required for students 15 and under who want to change their names or pronouns at school. Students 16 and 17 would not need consent, but their parents would have to be notified.

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