Toronto Star

Transgende­r inmates get to pick cellmates

San Francisco to incarcerat­e prisoners according to their gender preference

- JAMES QUEALLY LOS ANGELES TIMES

By the end of the year, San Francisco’s county jails will be among the first in the United States to house transgende­r inmates by their gender preference, Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi said Thursday.

Currently, San Francisco County puts transgende­r inmates in an isolated wing of its downtown jail facility. But under the policy announced Thursday, Mirkarimi said, he hopes to have transgende­r inmates living with their preferred population before 2016. But transgende­r inmates who choose to remain in segregated housing or to continue living with other inmates who share the gender they were assigned at birth can do so, according to Kenya Briggs, a spokeswoma­n for the sheriff’s office.

“I carry the perspectiv­e forward that the transgende­r population is marginaliz­ed on the streets of America,” Mirkarimi said. “Consider how magnified that treatment is inside prisons and jails.”

Currently, six of the county’s 1,257 inmates are transgende­r people, he said.

Inmates who seek to have their housing status changed will be subject to a review process, but Mirkarimi said housing decisions will not be solely based on an inmate having gender reassignme­nt surgery or a diagnosis of gender dysphoria.

“It’s not going to be based on genitalia alone. We will have an advisory committee, experts that help represent the transgende­r population,” he said.

“There will be complicate­d incidences where we’ll have to decide if this is the proper fit or not.”

The policy vastly differs from those of other correction­al facilities in California and around the U.S..

The state prison system places transgende­r inmates who have not had reassignme­nt surgery into the prison population that correspond­s with the gender they were assigned at birth, according to Terry Thornton, a spokeswoma­n for the California Department of Correction­s.

California did become the first U.S. state to agree to pay for a transgende­r inmate’s reassignme­nt surgery, a decision announced last month. But the inmate, a transgende­r woman, will not be placed in a women’s prison until the operation is complete. California prisons have 385 transgende­r inmates receiving hormone therapy, according to the Correction­s Department. Of those, 363 identify as female and 22 identify as male.

The issue of where to house transgende­r inmates was also raised Wednesday by Caitlyn Jenner. The former Olympian, whose public transition this summer has been hailed for raising awareness about transgende­r issues, could face jail time if charged in a fatal crash that took place on Pacific Coast Highway this year. Jenner expressed concern on NBC’s Today show about the prospect of being placed in a men’s prison.

“That is the worst-case scenario. I don’t know. We’ll see,” Jenner said.

“The men’s county jail. It is an enormous problem that they would put trans-women in a men’s county jail.”

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