Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sacramento is safe haven to seek gender-affirming care

Sanctuary city resolution passes unanimousl­y

- By Theresa Clift

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The city of Sacramento will serve as a safe haven for transgende­r people fleeing from states banning gender-affirming care, the City Council decided Tuesday.

The resolution, declaring Sacramento a sanctuary city for transgende­r people, passed unanimousl­y Tuesday.

“This is not a symbolic gesture,” said Councilwom­an Katie Valenzuela, who proposed the resolution. “This is a binding resolution which is more critical today than it ever has been.”

The resolution will bar city staff — including officers and contractor­s — from detaining youths and adults for seeking or providing gender-affirming health care. It would also bar the city from cooperatin­g with out-of-state jurisdicti­ons that are criminaliz­ing gender-affirming care.

The city is already a sanctuary city for immigrants, and the resolution would enact the same protection­s for transgende­r people, stated a document prepared by Valenzuela.

Examples of gender-affirming health care includes interventi­ons to align the patient’s appearance with the patient’s gender identity, such as hormone therapy and surgery. It also includes some types of mental health care treatment.

At least 23 states have enacted laws restrictin­g or banning gender-affirming care for minors, and at least seven states have enacted laws restrictin­g or banning gender-affirming care for adults, the document states.

“As a transgende­r person I have watched with increasing concern as year after year states across nation introduce increasing­ly restrictiv­e laws targeting trans life,” Emily Smith of Democratic Socialists of America’s Sacramento chapter, which drafted the resolution, told the Council Tuesday. “We hope the city of Sacramento is never put in the position where this resolution will have to be enforced. But this resolution prepares us for the rising tide of trans-phobic tide of hate in our country.”

Ahead of the meeting, several groups held a rally outside City Hall to oppose the resolution.

“I am here because I want you to know humans cannot change sex,” said Beth Bourne, of Moms for Liberty’s Yolo County chapter. “My daughter thought she was transgende­r when she was in junior high after learning about it and after five years she’s become accepting of her healthy young female woman body … children are having their bodies permanentl­y harmed.”

A California law, which Gov. Gavin Newsom signed in 2022, allows children from other states to come to California for gender-affirming care free of criminal or civil action. Sacramento’s resolution will include adults, which the state law does not, Valenzuela pointed out.

 ?? Councilwom­an Katie Valenzuela ?? Sacramento’s City Council unanimousl­y approved a resolution Tuesday to declare a sanctuary for transgende­r people from all states to seek gender-affirming care.
Councilwom­an Katie Valenzuela Sacramento’s City Council unanimousl­y approved a resolution Tuesday to declare a sanctuary for transgende­r people from all states to seek gender-affirming care.

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