The Mercury News

Trans kids fear Alabama medicine, bathroom laws

- By Kim Chandler

MONTGOMERY, ALA. >> Ninth grader Harleigh Walker, 15, spends her time after school like many girls her age: doing homework, listening to Taylor Swift, collecting records and hanging out with friends.

But this year, her spring break also included trying to persuade members of the state House and Senate to reject legislatio­n banning gender-affirming medication­s for transgende­r kids like her under 19.

She was unsuccessf­ul. On Thursday, Alabama lawmakers passed the measure, and Gov. Kay Ivey signed it into law on Friday, meaning Harleigh's doctor would face prison time if she continued to prescribe her testostero­ne blocking drugs.

“Honestly, I'm a little scared now,” Harleigh said Thursday after learning the bill had passed. “But we're still going to fight, no matter what.”

She said she is holding out hope the bill will be blocked by a court.

Alabama is among multiple states with Republican-controlled legislatur­es that have advanced bills not only to block medical treatment but to ban transgende­r children from using school restrooms or playing on sports teams that don't correspond with their sex at birth. The Alabama medication bill is one of the most far-reaching: It would put doctors in prison for up to 10 years for prescribin­g puberty blockers or hormonal treatment to trans kids under 19.

“I believe very strongly that if the Good Lord made you a boy, you are a boy, and if he made you a girl, you are a girl,” said Ivey, who faces a May primary with conservati­ve opponents trying to outflank her on her right.

Ivey also signed a separate measure that requires students to use bathrooms that align with their original birth certificat­e and prohibits instructio­n of gender and sexual identity in kindergart­en through fifth grades.

Cathryn Oakley, state legislativ­e director and senior counsel for the Human Rights Campaign, a national advocacy group for the LGBTQ community, called the new laws “breathtaki­ngly cruel and cowardly” and “the single most anti-transgende­r legislativ­e package in history.” Groups on Friday vowed to quickly file a lawsuit challengin­g the measures in court.

Oakley and other opponents say transgende­r health is being used as a deliberate political wedge issue to motivate a voting base.

The measures have prompted swift backlash from medical experts, Democratic President Joe Biden's administra­tion, the U.S. Department of Justice and the families of trans youth.

Harleigh's father, Jeff Walker notes that many of the same Alabama lawmakers who supported the ban on gender-affirming medical treatment recently argued, `It's your body and your choice' regarding coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns. He said the family is now scrambling to find another state where it can continue Harleigh's medical care.

 ?? COURTESY OF JEFF WALKER VIA AP ?? Jeff Walker and his daughter Harleigh of Auburn, Ala., stand outside the White House on March 31, where they were guests for Transgende­r Day of Visibility.
COURTESY OF JEFF WALKER VIA AP Jeff Walker and his daughter Harleigh of Auburn, Ala., stand outside the White House on March 31, where they were guests for Transgende­r Day of Visibility.

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