The Norwalk Hour

States stand with transgende­r community

- Susan Campbell is a distinguis­hed lecturer at the University of New Haven. She can be reached at slcampbell­417@gmail.com. This column was reported under a partnershi­p with the Connecticu­t Health I-Team, a nonprofit news organizati­on dedicated to health re

Julia Montminy is waiting at one of those chain restaurant­s near The Shoppes at Buckland Hills. In the dim light, the server greets Montminy and another woman with “Welcome, ladies,” then does a double-take, and apologizes. “Welcome, sir and ma’am. My mistake.”

Montminy, a slight woman in leopard-print jeans, follows the server to her table and says nothing. If someone doesn’t know her preferred pronoun, she says, not everything requires a fight.

But without her wanting it, the battle lines are being drawn by a presidenti­al administra­tion that seems intent on erasing the transgende­r community, which numbers roughly 1 million according to a study from the National Center for Biotechnol­ogy Informatio­n. (That same study says the number is growing.)

These are the times we live in: Every step of Montminy’s transition from male to female has been accompanie­d by a rollback of laws and policies that protect her community.

In February, Montminy, of Vernon, was a senior at Southern New Hampshire University. On a goof, she dressed up for a campus drag show.

She was floored by how she felt in her body suit and fishnet stockings, and the evening led her to admit that signs of her gender dysphoria — when the gender a person is assigned at birth does not match the gender with which that person identifies — had been there for years.

The month of the drag show, the federal Department of Education announced it would no longer hear complaints or take action when a transgende­r student requests the right to use the restroom that matched their gender identity. A recent leaked memo said the administra­tion intends to push for a narrower definition of gender. The Department of Health and Human Services is, according to the New York Times, “spearheadi­ng an effort to establish a legal definition of gender” and change Obama-era policy so that the landmark legislatio­n Title IX prohibits discrimina­tion based on gender, not gender identifica­tion. The Obama administra­tion had ruled the exact opposite.

A month after that announceme­nt, in March of this year, the federal government announced new restrictio­ns on transgende­r members of the military.

The hits just keep on coming, according to the National Center for Transgende­r Equality. In August, the federal Department of Labor issued a directive that said federal contractor­s and subcontrac­tors should take into account their religious beliefs when dealing with employees. This could mean that if someone’s religious beliefs do not accept gender dysphoria, a transgende­r employee could be fired. The administra­tion rolled back protection for transgende­r prisoners in May.

In all, it’s an astounding series of rollbacks that leaves Montminy and other members of the transgende­r community vulnerable.

States and municipali­ties have been fighting back. In February 2017, after the Trump administra­tion began to roll back protection­s for transgende­r students, Connecticu­t Gov. Dannel P. Malloy signed an executive order to protect transgende­r students in the state. In 2011, Malloy signed a law that prohibits discrimina­tion based on gender identity or expression. According to the ACLU, 18 states and the District of Columbia have some kind of anti-discrimina­tion laws that protect transgende­r people. Nearly 200 cities ban gender identity discrimina­tion, and governors in five states have signed executive orders that protect state employees who are transgende­r.

But the attitude from D.C. is scary, said Montminy, a substitute teacher in Manchester with an eye on grad school. Since she’s started the transition, she has yet to use a public bathroom for fear of a confrontat­ion — or worse. One day, she hopes to overcome that fear. One day, she hopes to have gender reassignme­nt surgery. One day, she hopes that being a member of the transgende­r community won’t be that big of a deal.

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