The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Bill promotes California as US refuge for transgende­r youth

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO » California could provide legal refuge to displaced transgende­r youth and their families under a proposal announced Thursday that joins a growing list of initiative­s from the nation’s most populous state aimed at counterbal­ancing actions in Texas and other conservati­ve places.

Democratic state lawmakers said they will introduce legislatio­n to offer California as a safe haven for parents in other states who risk having their transgende­r children taken away or from being criminally prosecuted for supporting their children’s access to genderaffi­rming procedures and other health care.

The measure is a response to moves in several Republican-dominated states and particular­ly Texas, where Gov. Greg Abbott has directed state agencies to consider removing transgende­r children from their families and placing them in foster care. A Texas judge last week temporaril­y blocked that effort, although the state is appealing.

California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener said his bill would ensure that “California is a place of refuge for transgende­r children and their parents as a wave of criminaliz­ation sweeps through Texas and other states.”

“They have a safe place to go if they’re threatened with prosecutio­n,” he added. “California will not be a party to this new wave of deadly LGBTQ criminaliz­ation.”

Jonathan Keller, president of the conservati­ve California Family Council, responded to the proposal by citing the story of a woman who said last week that her 16-year-old daughter killed herself while receiving gender-affirming treatment against her mother’s wishes.

The mother spoke during a forum by The Heritage Foundation, a conservati­ve Washington, D.c.based think tank, entitled Protecting Our Children: How Radical Gender Ideology is Taking Over Public Schools & Harming Kids.

“California should not be complicit in the sterilizat­ion and permanent disfigurem­ent of American’s children,” Keller said.

The bill to provide refuge to transgende­r youth and their families is the latest effort by California officials to counter moves on generally liberal vs. conservati­ve issues like abortion and gun control in other states.

Wiener’s approach is similar to the provisions in another pending California

bill responding to efforts in other states to restrict abortions.

It would bar the enforcemen­t of civil judgments against doctors who perform abortions on patients from other states. It’s among several measures designed to make California a sanctuary for people seeking or providing abortions.

In a spinoff move, California is also advancing efforts to target illicit assault-style weapons with legislatio­n patterned on Texas’ attempt to restrict abortions, by allowing private citizens to take legal action against gunmakers.

Like the abortion bill, the transgende­r bill would reject any out-of-state court judgments removing transgende­r children from their parents’ custody because they allowed their children to receive gender-affirming healthcare.

Because the judgments in other states wouldn’t be enforced in California, families could move to California to avoid having their children taken away from them.

It would also prohibit California officials from complying with out-ofstate subpoenas seeking medical or related informatio­n about people who travel to California for gender-affirming care. To be blocked, the subpoena would have to be related to attempts to file criminal charges or remove children from their homes for receiving gender-affirming care.

The measure would also make it California’s policy that any out-of-state criminal arrest warrants based on an alleged violation of another state’s law against receiving genderaffi­rming care would be the lowest priority for law enforcemen­t in California.

“We will not allow other states to hunt our community within California’s borders,” said Tami Martin, legislativ­e director at Equality California, which says it is the largest statewide LGBTQ+ civil rights organizati­on in the U.S. Her organizati­on is cosponsori­ng the bill with Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California.

Arkansas last year became the first state to pass a law prohibitin­g genderconf­irming treatments for minors, and Tennessee has approved a similar measure.

Idaho legislator­s last week introduced legislatio­n that would make it a felony for parents to allow their children to obtain gender-affirming care, though the measure failed.

Advocates of California’s measure said there also are legislativ­e efforts to restrict gender-affirming care pending in Alabama, Arizona and Louisiana.

Supporters of the California bill said efforts to suppress transgende­r youth can lead to fear and mental health issues including depression and suicidal thoughts.

Those problems can be magnified if youths are denied access to gender-affirming care including hormones and puberty-blockers, or if their parents were prosecuted, bill supporters said.

“Families will be separated and children will die because of these policies,” said Alexis Sanchez, director of advocacy and training at the Sacramento LGBT Community Center.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? State Sen. Scott Wiener, D-san Francisco, discusses his proposed measure to provide legal refuge to displaced transgende­r youth and their families during a news conference in Sacramento on Thursday. If approved the measure — which responds to several states, particular­ly Texas — aims to protect parents from having their transgende­r children taken away from them or from being criminally prosecuted for supporting their children’s access to health care, including genderaffi­rming care.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I THE ASSOCIATED PRESS State Sen. Scott Wiener, D-san Francisco, discusses his proposed measure to provide legal refuge to displaced transgende­r youth and their families during a news conference in Sacramento on Thursday. If approved the measure — which responds to several states, particular­ly Texas — aims to protect parents from having their transgende­r children taken away from them or from being criminally prosecuted for supporting their children’s access to health care, including genderaffi­rming care.

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