Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ohio bans gender-affirming care for minors

Veto override restricts sports participat­ion

- By Samantha Hendrickso­n

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio has banned gender-affirming care for minors and restricted transgende­r women’s and girls’ participat­ion on sports teams, a move that has families of transgende­r children scrambling over how best to care for them.

The Republican-dominated Senate voted Wednesday to override GOP Gov. Mike Dewine’s veto. The new law bans gender-affirming surgeries and hormone therapies, and restricts mental health care for transgende­r individual­s under 18. The measure also bans transgende­r girls and women from girls and women’s sports teams at both the K-12 and collegiate level.

The override cleared the chamber 24-8 mostly along party lines, save Sen. Nathan Manning, a Republican from Cuyahoga County who has consistent­ly broken from his party on the issue.

Officials expect the law to take effect in roughly 90 days.

Two of Kat Scaglione’s three children are transgende­r, and the Chagrin Falls artist is devastated, but not surprised, by the new law. Her 14-year-old daughter Amity is already receiving mental health services and some medication, and would be able to continue her treatment under the law’s grandfathe­r clause, but she wouldn’t be able to seek anything further, such as hormone therapies, and would have to go out of state to progress in her gender-affirming care.

Scaglione and her partner, Matt, are even considerin­g moving their family out of state entirely, despite recently buying a house in a school district and community that’s safer for Amity and her 10-year-old sister, Lexi, who is also transgende­r.

“Even as we’ve settled in and have good things right now, we’re constantly looking over our shoulder waiting for something to change to the point where we have to get out now,” Scaglione said. “It’s been hard to move somewhere and try to make it home, while you’re constantly feeling like at any moment you may have to flee.”

Dewine reiterated Wednesday that he vetoed the legislatio­n — to the chagrin of his party — to protect parents and children from government overreach on medical decisions. But the first week of January, he signed an executive order banning gender-affirming surgeries for people under 18 despite medical profession­als maintainin­g that such surgeries aren’t happening in the state.

He also proposed administra­tive rules not just for transgende­r children, but also adults, which has earned harsh criticism from Democrats and LGBTQ+ advocates who were once hopeful about his veto.

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