San Francisco Chronicle

Repeal planned for transgende­r protection­s

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion proposed Friday to roll back Obama-era discrimina­tion protection­s for transgende­r people in health care, a move LGBT groups warn will unleash a wave of discrimina­tion.

The Health and Human Services Department released a proposed regulation that in effect says “gender identity” is not protected under federal laws that prohibit discrimina­tion in health care. It is part of a backdrop of administra­tion actions to limit or move back some of the new recognitio­n for LGBT people, in areas ranging from military service to housing.

The proposed rule from HHS reverses the Obama administra­tion, which found that the Affordable Care Act’s anti-discrimina­tion section protects transgende­r people seeking health care services.

Friday’s action had been long expected by activists on both sides of the nation’s social issues divide. Trump’s religious conservati­ve base has argued that the Obama administra­tion stretched the meaning of “sex discrimina­tion” when it included gender identity as a protected class. Civil rights and LGBT groups say that view is logically and legally flawed.

The rule is unlikely to have immediate consequenc­es beyond the realm of political debate. It faces a 60-day-comment period and another layer of review before it can be finalized. Court challenges are expected.

“Despite the goals of this White House ... courts have been clear for decades that prohibitio­ns on sex discrimina­tion encompass discrimina­tion against transgende­r individual­s,” said Louise Melling, deputy legal director with the American Civil Liberties Union. Her organizati­on, she added, plans to challenge the proposed rule.

Melling said the impact of the rule goes beyond transgende­r people and could also subject women to discrimina­tion for seeking an abortion. The proposal would remove “terminatio­n of pregnancy” as grounds for making a legal claim of discrimina­tion.

HHS official Roger Severino told reporters that the administra­tion is going back to the literal text of the ACA’s antidiscri­mination law to correct what it sees as an overly broad interpreta­tion. Severino heads the HHS Office for Civil Rights, which is charged with enforcing anti-discrimina­tion protection­s.

He pushed back on the charge that the rule would open the door to widespread discrimina­tion, for example, when a transgende­r person seeks emergency room care after an auto accident. He said other laws protect individual­s in such situations, adding that the administra­tion is committed to making sure health care services are provided fairly to all.

The Obama-era rule dates to a time when LGBT people gained political and social recognitio­n. But a federal judge in Texas said the rule went too far by concluding that discrimina­tion on the basis of gender identity is a form of sex discrimina­tion, which is forbidden by civil rights laws.

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