Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lawmakers would define man and woman based on sperm and ova

- BY KIM CHANDLER

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Alabama lawmakers are advancing legislatio­n that would strictly define who is considered female and male based on their reproducti­ve systems. Opponents said the move could erode the rights of transgende­r and intersex people in the state.

“There are only two sexes, and every individual is either male or female,” declares the Senate bill approved in committee on Tuesday.

It defines sex based on reproducti­ve anatomy and says schools and local government­s can establish single-sex spaces, such as bathrooms, based on those definition­s. A House committee plans to take up similar legislatio­n Wednesday.

BATHROOM REGULATION

The bills are part of a wave of legislatio­n in Republican states that seek to regulate which bathrooms transgende­r people use, which school sports teams they can play on, and to prohibit gender-affirming medical care, such as puberty blockers and hormone therapy, particular­ly for minors.

“I am here today to stand for women’s rights,” said Republican Sen. April Weaver, the sponsor of the bill. She said the definition­s will guide courts in interpreti­ng existing laws and “codifies the time-honored definition­s of male, female, woman, man, boy, girl, mother, father, and sex.”

The bill states that a female is someone who, barring accident or anomaly, has a “reproducti­ve system that at some point produces ova” and male as someone who, barring accident or anomaly, has a “reproducti­ve system that at some point produces sperm.” The bill requires any state-supported entity collecting informatio­n related to sex to “identify each individual as either male or female at birth.”

During a public hearing, opponents said the legislatio­n is part of ongoing attacks on the rights of transgende­r people to simply go about their daily lives.

‘IT’S OK THAT WE EXIST’

“I’m here to say that I’m literally just a woman. I’m also transgende­r. People like me have always existed… and it’s OK that we exist,” Allison Montgomery told the County and Municipal Government Committee.

Montgomery said what proponents are seeking would mean that men who have “taken testostero­ne for years and have developed full beards” would be required to use women’s restrooms because their bodies once produced ova.

It is not clear how the proposal would affect people who are considered intersex, or born with a combinatio­n of male and female biological traits. The committee added language that sex can be designated as unknown on state records “when sex cannot be medically determined for developmen­tal or other reasons.”

The legislatio­n is at odds with decades of medical research showing gender is a spectrum, not a binary structure, and that sexual anatomy doesn’t always agree with the chromosome­s and genes that cause most people to develop and identify as male or female.

The measure would create a vague exemption for people with intersex conditions — saying that individual­s with congenital or medically verifiable difference­s in sex developmen­t “must be accommodat­ed” in accordance with federal law — while declaring that such people “are not a third sex.”

Research indicates that the U.S. population of intersex people, born with physical traits that don’t match typical definition­s of male and female, is even bigger than that of transgende­r people.

A proponent of the bill, Becky Gerritson, executive director of the Eagle Forum of Alabama, said the definition­s would give guidance to the courts.

‘HELP PRESERVE SINGLE-SEX SPACES’

“This bill will help preserve those single-sex spaces which ensure privacy, safety, equal opportunit­y,” Gerritson said.

Democratic senators Linda Coleman-Madison from Birmingham and Merika Coleman from Pleasant Grove questioned the need for the bill.

“This is just so heartbreak­ing. We spend all of this time about trying to keep people down who are not like us. It’s sad,” Coleman-Madison said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/KIM CHANDLER ?? In 2023, a person holds a sign during a rally outside the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Ala.
AP PHOTO/KIM CHANDLER In 2023, a person holds a sign during a rally outside the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Ala.

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