Los Angeles Times

Kansas City defies state on gender-affirming healthcare

- associated press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Officials in Missouri’s largest city are moving to declare it a sanctuary for people seeking or providing gender-affirming care, defying state officials who are intent on banning it for minors and restrictin­g it for adults.

A Kansas City Council committee approved such a resolution Wednesday. The full council will now consider it Thursday. The council members acted as the Republican-controlled Missouri Legislatur­e gave final approval to a bill banning gender-affirming care for transgende­r minors, sending it to GOP Gov. Mike Parson, who is expected to sign it into law. At least 16 other states have enacted laws restrictin­g or banning such care for minors.

The resolution also comes as a judge considers a proposed emergency rule from Republican state Atty. Gen. Andrew Bailey that would require adults and children to undergo more than a year of therapy and fulfill other requiremen­ts before they could receive gender-affirming treatment.

“This resolution is an entrance into a conversati­on and shows a commitment where trans people’s presence in Kansas City is valued,” Merrique Jenson, a transgende­r woman and founder of Transforma­tions KC, a nonprofit that advocates for trans women of color, told the council committee. “It would minimize the legal violence toward trans people in accessing genderaffi­rming care.”

The resolution, approved by the Transporta­tion, Infrastruc­ture and Operations Committee after being proposed by LGTBQ+ advocates, says the city will not prosecute or fine any person or organizati­on that seeks, provides, receives or helps someone receive genderaffi­rming care such as as puberty blockers, hormones or surgery.

It also says that if the state passes a law or resolution that imposes criminal or civil punishment­s, fines, or profession­al sanctions in such cases, personnel in Missouri’s largest city will make enforcing those requiremen­ts “their lowest priority.”

During the committee’s debate, council members agreed that Kansas City should be welcoming, but Councilmem­ber Heather Hall questioned whether the issue was “a city conversati­on,” adding, “This is us getting out of our lane.”

Councilmem­ber Melissa Robinson had questions about how being a sanctuary city would “play out” and worried about “the damage that comes back to the city” from the state.

But she backed the resolution after saying, “I do believe in good trouble, and this might just be one of those lines of good trouble.”

Kansas City’s proposal is coming from a Democratic­leaning city in a state with a Republican governor and GOP-controlled Legislatur­e.

In Texas, the state capital of Austin declared last year that it should be considered a sanctuary for transgende­r youth and their families, and Harris County, home to Houston, declared it wouldn’t pursue cases against parents over genderaffi­rming care.

California, Minnesota and Washington have declared themselves sanctuary states for gender-affirming care, as have the cities of Chicago, Minneapoli­s and West Hollywood.

Republican state lawmakers across the U.S. who have attacked genderaffi­rming care as part of a larger effort to roll back LGBTQ+ rights have argued that they’re protecting children from decisions they may later regret. But gender-affirming care for minors has been available in the U.S. for more than a decade and is endorsed by major medical associatio­ns.

The resolution also says city personnel will not arrest or detain anyone sought by another jurisdicti­on for seeking gender-affirming care, respond to requests for informatio­n from other jurisdicti­ons, or collect any civil penalties in such cases.

Supporters noted that Kansas City’s police force is controlled by a state-appointed Board of Police Commission­ers and any possible criminal charges in gender-affirming cases would be filed by the county prosecutor rather than city prosecutor­s — both of which could make enforcing the resolution problemati­c.

 ?? Charlie Riedel Associated Press ?? OFFICIALS in Kansas City, Mo., are moving to declare it a sanctuary for genderaffi­rming care. Above, a protester wears a transgende­r flag at the Statehouse.
Charlie Riedel Associated Press OFFICIALS in Kansas City, Mo., are moving to declare it a sanctuary for genderaffi­rming care. Above, a protester wears a transgende­r flag at the Statehouse.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States