San Diego Union-Tribune

U.S. ISSUES PASSPORT WITH ‘X’ GENDER MARKER

- DENVER

The United States has issued its first passport with an “X” gender designatio­n, marking a milestone in the recognitio­n of the rights of people who do not identify as male or female, and expects to be able to offer the option more broadly next year, the State Department said Wednesday.

The department did not identify the passport recipient, but Dana Zzyym, an intersex activist from Fort Collins, Colo., told The Associated Press in a telephone interview that they received it. Since 2015, Zzyym, who prefers a gender-neutral pronoun, has been in a legal battle with the State Department to obtain a passport that did not require Zzyym to lie about gender by picking either male or female.

Zzyym (pronounced Zimm) picked up the UPS package with the passport after getting an early morning text and phone call from their lawyer, Paul Castillo of Lambda Legal, that it had arrived. Zzyym had stayed up late celebratin­g Intersex Awareness Day with two visiting activists.

While Zzyym, 63, said it was thrilling to finally get the passport, the goal was to help the next generation of intersex people win recognitio­n as full citizens with rights, rather than travel the globe, Zzyym said.

“I’m not a problem. I’m a human being. That’s the point,” Zzyym said.

Zzyym was born with ambiguous physical sexual characteri­stics but was raised as a boy and had several surgeries that failed to make Zzyym appear fully male, according to court filings. Zzyym served in the Navy as a male but later came to identify as intersex while working and studying at Colorado State University. The State Department’s denial of Zzyym’s passport prevented Zzyym from being able to go to two Organizati­on Intersex Internatio­nal meetings.

The State Department said in June that it was moving toward adding a third gender marker for nonbinary, intersex and gendernonc­onforming people but that would take time because of required updates to its computer systems. In addition, a department official said the passport applicatio­n and system update with the “X” designatio­n option still awaited approval from the Office of Management and Budget, which signs off on all government forms.

The department now also allows applicants to self-select their gender as male or female, no longer requiring them to provide medical certificat­ion if their gender did not match that listed on their other identifica­tion documents.

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