Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Anti-Trans Law Controversy Deepens In Montana House
Disputing criticism that they had silenced Montana鈥檚 only transgender lawmaker, Republican leaders abruptly canceled a session of the House of Representatives on Tuesday, a day after heated protests led to arrests in the House chamber. In a brief news conference, Speaker Matt Regier blamed the lawmaker, Representative Zooey Zephyr, for the standoff, saying that she was not following House rules. 鈥淭he only person who is silencing Representative Zephyr is Representative Zephyr,鈥 he said. (Robbins and Fortin, 4/25)
State Rep. Zooey Zephyr stood on the Montana House floor, holding her microphone in the air. Protesters鈥 chants echoed as they demanded she be allowed to speak. Police officers, some carrying batons, removed her supporters. Seven people were arrested.聽聽Monday鈥檚 protest came after days in which Zephyr has been prevented from speaking on the House floor after she denounced Republicans for supporting anti-transgender legislation. (Rummler, 4/25)
In updates on transgender health care in Texas 鈥
Transgender Texans of all ages could have their access to transition-related medical treatments severely limited 鈥 or effectively ended 鈥 under a bill the Texas Senate preliminary approved Tuesday. (Nguyen, 4/25)
A memo sent to Texas Department of Agriculture employees last week told employees at the department to dress "in a manner consistent with their biological gender." Employees who don't follow the new rules could be disciplined or fired, according to the memo. Advocates for LGBTQ people in Texas said the directive appears to target transgender people and could run聽afoul of federal anti-discrimination laws. (Wayne Ferguson, 4/25)
From Florida, Oregon, and elsewhere 鈥
The Florida House of Representatives has approved a bill that would allow state courts to intervene in custody disputes and remove transgender children who are receiving gender-affirming care from supportive families with whom they live. In extreme circumstances, legal experts say this may even 鈥渋nvolve the state taking physical custody of a child.鈥 SB 254 would classify gender-affirming care for transgender youth as a form of 鈥渟erious physical harm,鈥 which could be cited during a custody enforcement hearing to allow unsupportive parents to take 鈥減hysical custody of [the] child.鈥 The amended bill, which originally passed on April 4 by a vote of 27 to 12, now returns to the Senate. (McNeill, 4/25)
For most of her life in New Mexico, Christina Wood felt like she had to hide her identity as a transgender woman. So six years ago she moved to Oregon, where she had readier access to the gender-affirming health care she needed to live as her authentic self. Once there, Wood, 49, was able to receive certain surgeries that helped her transition, but electrolysis, or permanent hair removal, wasn鈥檛 fully covered under the state鈥檚 Medicaid plan for low-income residents. Paying out-of-pocket ate up nearly half her monthly income, but it was critical for Wood鈥檚 mental health. (Rush, 4/26)
Schuyler Bailar, the first openly transgender NCAA athlete who swam on the men鈥檚 team at Harvard University during the 2018-19 season, dismissed the argument that transgender female athletes have an advantage over biological females when it comes to sports. Bailar hosted former University of Pennsylvania swimmer Lia Thomas on his "Dear Schuyler" podcast on Monday and in his closing monologue argued that the talk about biological differences in sports when it comes to men is celebrated but when it comes to women and transgender women it is policed and legislated. Bailar used Michael Phelps and Caster Semenya as his examples. (Gaydos, 4/26)