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Trans Symposium Forwards Mission of Educating Medical FieldTrans Symposium Forwards Mission of Educating Medical... Fort Lauderdale Trans Symposium Forwards Mission of Educating Medical Fieldby Christiana Lilly, SFGayNews It’s pouring rain outside, but those inside the conference rooms at the Embassy Suites in Fort Lauderdale are too engrossed in their seminars to care. During the second day of the third annual Transgender Symposium,...

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Trans Kids Jazz and Coy Honored at GLAAD AwardsTrans Kids Jazz and Coy Honored at GLAAD Awards GLAAD President Herndon Graddick focuses on Trans issues at the GLADD Awards At the 24th Annual GLAAD Media Awards in New York this past weekend, GLAAD President Herndon Graddick spoke about the evolving mission of the organization, and the importance of the transgender community in his vision for the future of equality....

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TLDEF Files Complaint to Protect Transgender Child From School DiscriminationTLDEF Files Complaint to Protect Transgender Child... Complaint Alleges Six-Year-Old Transgender Girl Denied Access to Girls' Bathrooms at School TLDEF today announced that it has filed a complaint with the Colorado Civil Rights Division on behalf of a 6-year-old girl who has been barred from using the girls' bathrooms at her elementary school. For the past year, Coy Mathis,...

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Transgender Tween Jazz Talks Dating With Barbara WaltersTransgender Tween Jazz Talks Dating With Barbara Walters A Special Edition of “20/20 Saturday” Airing Saturday, January 19 at 8pm on ABC. Jazz is a typical 11-year-old girl except for one thing — she was born as a boy. From the moment she could speak, Jazz sensed that she was trapped in the wrong body and decided to dress and live as a little girl. Her parents made...

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Generation LGBTQIAGeneration LGBTQIA By Michael Schulman STEPHEN IRA, a junior at Sarah Lawrence College, uploaded a video last March on We Happy Trans, a site that shares “positive perspectives” on being transgender In the breakneck six-and-a-half-minute monologue — hair tousled, sitting in a wood-paneled dorm room — Stephen exuberantly declared...

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Know Your Rights and Protections

Category : Know Your Rights, Latest News

NCTE Releases Trans “Know Your Rights” Health Care Guide

Keisling on the Affordable Care Act Supreme Court Hearings: “It’s a difficult position to be in knowing how much is at risk.”

The National Center for Transgender Equality (NCTE) has released Health Care Rights and Transgender People. The guide lays out the rights and protections transgender people have in health care, and the process for reporting instances of discrimination.

“It is our hope that trans people can use this resource to address the many health disparities we face,” said Mara Keisling, NCTE Executive Director. “The resource,” she said, “also makes it clear that transgender people benefit tremendously from important health care reforms like the Affordable Care Act.”

Early this week, Keisling weighed in on the arguments before the Supreme Court about the individual mandate, an essential part of the Affordable Care Act:

“It is unclear whether losing the individual mandate in the Supreme Court would put other parts of the law at risk including the protections transgender people have gained in health insurance programs and other aspects that address the health needs of trans people.”

Today, Keisling added, “The guide tells us exactly what is at stake for trans people with the justices now in their corners drafting their opinions. It’s a difficult position to be in knowing how much is at risk.”

Download The Guide Here

On Trans Beauty Contestants

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Category : Latest News, News Around The Nation

I have to admit, as far as trans issues go, beauty pageants are way down my list of priorities. At a time when it’s difficult to access doctors willing to treat trans people for the flu let alone assist in transition, when even something as simple as basic human rights inclusion remains uncertain, and when I still struggle to find answers to questions about which shelters are willing to take in trans men or women, Miss Universe seems an alternate reality, in many ways.

The delisting of health care funding for genital reassignment surgery in 2009 made it difficult or impossible for many Albertans to reach a pivotal benchmark that would make beauty pageants (mainstream ones, anyway) a real possibility, let alone allow the documentation change that would enable legal congruence in their everyday lives. I’ve always been inclined to stand up for the “cause un-celebre”… pretty white people (and I mean that non-critically, as someone who is sometimes identified as such) usually have plenty of folks willing to stand up for them.

Too, I’m not all that comfortable with the idea of reinforcing the beauty myth, the gender expectations and stereotypes – to some of us, a kind of lookist oppression that keep women self-conscious, self-deprecating and at times too subjected to assert what we need. The way we devalue people based on their looks is devastatingly cruel. An “un-pretty” person aspiring to compete in such a pageant would easily receive the same kind of crude and derogatory remarks that a trans contestant does, and probably worse.

To those who tell me that “God doesn’t make mistakes” regarding the birth sex of transsexuals, I’ve often responded that He or She does give us challenges, and I’ve always seen transsexual and transgender people as both having a challenge to become who we need to be, as well as presenting a challenge to society in how rigidly it tries to assert ideas of who women and men are, who they should be, and all the ways we unconsciously enforce the rules of gender.

All of that said, I can also understand how I would have felt if I’d been allowed to transition in my teens and been fortunately blessed. I’m not without empathy, don’t want to project those pageant misgivings onto an individual, and secretly there’s a part of me that hopes “our girl” (of course, I’ve never met her and have no real connection, but it will feel that way nevertheless) can have the opportunity to do us proud. We admire when people dare to stand above the crowd, and we want our youth to succeed – regardless of any other divergent thoughts we might have on the situation.

And it is in the context of all of that, that I (as a trans activist) see the dilemma of Jenna Talackova, the Canadian beauty pageant contestant who was disqualified from the 2012 Miss Universe Canada competition because she had been born physically male.

I make the distinction of “physically” because Ms. Talackova has made statements indicating that she (as with many transsexed people), always understood herself to be female, and that the alternatives never actually fit properly. She knew herself as female at four, began transition at fourteen and the now-23-year-old had surgery several years later, in 2010.

I don’t personally consider surgery to be the moment that one “becomes” a woman or “becomes” a man, but in current legal contexts, it is often held to be that way. And I suppose that one of the things that makes the Donald Trump-owned beauty contest decision significant is that it asserts that a person’s sex can still be invalidated, after even this benchmark.

This has been debated in other arenas. The International Olympic Committee changed its rules a few years ago to allow trans people to compete, provided they’re two-years post-operative and continuing hormone therapy (although it remains to be seen how transmale HRT – injectible testosterone – will be handled in the practical application), but other sporting organizations still struggle at times… such as the International Association of Athletics Federation’s catastrophic mishandling of biologically intersexed (although intersexed is not really the same thing as transsexed) runner Caster Semenya.

Even if you limit scope to Canada and beauty contests, though, it’s worth noting that in 2011, supposedly “redneck” Calgary, Alberta overwhelmingly supported Avery Mitchell – a trans woman – in a contest in which breast augmentation was the prize – which is an admittedly problematic contest when it comes to lookism and gender expectations (probably more so than pageants), but nevertheless demonstrates clear changes in the public’s thinking. Miss Universe organizers may indeed be well behind the curve on this.

Ultimately, though, the heart of the issue boils down to something that some in the public continue think about trans people. Realistically, it’s hard to claim that Ms. Talackova has an unfair advantage over other women competing for the crown, so the argument has to turn to essentialism if it’s even to be made at all. Although beauty may be skin deep, the essence of who we are goes straight to the core, and that is what is being challenged. And when a person’s essence and validity is at issue, the arguments can get very mean – and very painful – very fast. In this, I don’t envy Ms. Talackova, and would gladly offer any support that I can.

Even some of those who are willing to “tolerate” transsexual and transgender individuals are still not prepared to accept and acknowledge them as the men and women that they are and need to be – and that includes allies.

If God indeed leveled a challenge to our society, then it’s a biggie. I regularly hear the argument that “you can’t change your chromosomes” (although the more you learn about human biology, the more you realize the failures of that as a “proof”), and the world of comedy is so saturated with “really a guy” jokes that the general public still doesn’t sometimes get why trans people would get so angry about being reduced to a punchline.

The roots of ugly attitudes can run very deep, and be very unconscious all at the same time.

It`s not entirely that simple, of course. Denis Davila, national director of Miss Universe Canada, says that Talackova claimed on her registration form that she was born female. In that sense, the pageant can assert that a deception occurred, whether consciously or unconsciously (depending on whether she had read the fine print). And that may even work as a legal defense.

But the requirement – in writing – on a registration form is itself discriminatory, and it’s essentialist to require it in the first place. It only works if you believe that who we are is not really who we are and that at no point do we ever genuinely become who we claim to be – that it’s a figment of our imagination. Most Canadians don’t typically experience this kind of invalidation, and yet we’re supposed to endure it constantly, with poise and patience and the understanding that merely accepting that we do in fact know who we are is hard for people. While society has began to understand us somewhat in recent years, it’s taking a long time for the implications to sink in.

Ultimately, Ms. Talackova’s fight will probably end up in court. Contrary to the Harper Conservatives’ contention that it’s “unnecessary” to extend human rights to transsexual and transgender people, our record on outcomes has been somewhat iffy.

Transsexual women who are incarcerated are still typically either imprisoned with men or else made to serve out their entire sentences in solitary confinement. Although considered medically necessary, provinces and health insurers still make special exemptions for trans-related health coverage. Finding homeless shelters willing to take in trans men at all is still often impossible. Even the recent travel regulation change – which could prevent trans people from simply boarding a plane in Canada if enforced to the letter – remains in place.

All too often, the endgame for trans advocates is “we get to lose this one too.” But things are changing, and I wish Ms. Talackova and her legal team the best.

Filed By Mercedes Allen, Bilerico Project

Jail Has New Policy for Transgender Inmates

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Category : Latest News, News Around The Nation

Gender-identification, rather than sex at birth, respected under new policy

Transgender inmates at Cook County Jail can now be housed, dressed and searched according to the gender they identify with rather than their sex at birth under a new policy that advocates hope will keep some of the facility’s most vulnerable detainees safe.

Since March 21, transgender inmates entering the jail have been screened by a Gender Identity Committee that decides where and how they should be housed. Previously, all inmates automatically were assigned to live among the gender they were born with, regardless of how they self-identified, a situation that attorneys said put them at high risk for physical and sexual abuse.

“You’ve got people who are in every way a woman — but for their genitalia — who are being placed in male prisons,” said John Knight, director of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Project of the ACLU of Illinois.

Sheriff Tom Dart first revealed the new policy to the Windy City Times newspaper, saying it came about when he realized the jail didn’t have a policy for housing transgender inmates.

Owen Daniel-McCarter, project attorney with the Transformative Justice Law Project of Illinois, said his transgender clients at Cook County Jail have “faced really horrendous treatment there across the board,” including nearly constant verbal harassment from correctional staff and other inmates. Conditions are especially hard for transgender women.

“There’s a lot of ridicule of anybody in a masculine space who is effeminate in any way,” Daniel-McCarter said. There’s also the challenge of getting the right clothes, such as bras.

The new seven-page policy applies to housing, clothing, showering, grooming and searches, among other categories. The Gender Identity Committee has broad discretion over what clothes and toiletries inmates should have access to and what gender security officers can search them. The policy requires sensitivity training on gender identity disorder and the Gender Identity Committee for all officers and supervisory staff.

Policies for transgender inmates are becoming more common across the country, with jails in Washington, San Francisco and Maine adopting them, advocates said. Cook County Jail is the first in Illinois to institute one, according to Steve Patterson, spokesman for the Cook County sheriff’s office.

The rules took effect March 21 and have been applied to seven inmates since then, and staff already have seen some early success with one woman in particular, Patterson said.

“Since coming into our women’s division, we’ve seen her absolutely thrive,” Patterson said. While she has a lengthy criminal history and has served time in state prison, this marks the first time she’s been able to talk about her gender identity while being incarcerated, he said. She has group therapy sessions and counseling with other women, and officers and detainees refer to her by female pronouns, he said.

Advocates said they’re cautiously optimistic that the policy will improve conditions and security for transgender inmates, but that only time will tell.

“I definitely commend Tom Dart’s office for having concern about the treatment of transgender people,” Daniel-McCarter said.

“I really hope that there’s follow-through and that it’s actually enforced, and that it’s enforced in an affirming way.”

By Karen Hawkins

Hud Annouces New Regulations for Equal Housing

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Category : Know Your Rights, Latest News, News Around The Nation


Hud Secretary  Donovan Announces New Regulations To Ensure Equal Access To Housing For All Americans Regardless of Sexual Orientation or Gender Identity

New regulations, published as final in the Federal Register next week, will go into effect in 30 days

WASHINGTON – U.S. Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Shaun Donovan announced today new regulations intended to ensure that HUD’s core housing programs are open to all eligible persons, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity. Donovan previewed the announcement at the 24th National Conference on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) Equality – Creating Change. View the final rule here.

“The Obama Administration has viewed the fight for equality on behalf of the LGBT community as a priority and I’m proud that HUD has been a leader in that fight,” said Secretary Shaun Donovan. “With this historic rule, the Administration is saying you cannot use taxpayer dollars to prevent Americans from choosing where they want live on the basis sexual orientation or gender identity – ensuring that HUD’s housing programs are open, not to some, not to most, but to all.”

The new regulations, published as final in the Federal Register next week, will go into effect 30 days after the rule is published.

U.S. Congressman Barney Frank (D-Mass.) also expressed support for the publishing of final LGBT housing guidelines, “I am grateful to the Obama administration for instituting this important policy.”

The final rule, published as Equal Access to Housing in HUD Programs – Regardless of Sexual Orientation or Gender Identity, makes the following provisions:

  • Requires owners and operators of HUD-assisted housing, or housing whose financing is insured by HUD, to make housing available without regard to the sexual orientation or gender identity of an applicant for, or occupant of, the dwelling, whether renter- or owner-occupied.  HUD will institute this policy in its rental assistance and homeownership programs, which include the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) mortgage insurance programs, community development programs, and public and assisted housing programs.
  • Prohibits lenders from using sexual orientation or gender identity as a basis to determine a borrower’s eligibility for FHA-insured mortgage financing.  FHA’s current regulations provide that a mortgage lender’s determination of the adequacy of a borrower’s income “shall be made in a uniform manner without regard to” specified prohibited grounds.  The rule will add actual or perceived sexual orientation and gender identity to the prohibited grounds to ensure FHA-approved lenders do not deny or otherwise alter the terms of mortgages on the basis of irrelevant criteria.
  • Clarifies that all otherwise eligible families, regardless of marital status, sexual orientation, or gender identity, will have the opportunity to participate in HUD programs. In the majority of HUD’s rental and homeownership programs the term “family” already has a broad scope, and includes a single person and families with or without children.  HUD’s rule clarifies that otherwise eligible families may not be excluded because one or more members of the family may be an LGBT individual, have an LGBT relationship, or be perceived to be such an individual or in such relationship.
  • Prohibits owners and operators of HUD-assisted housing or housing insured by HUD from asking about an applicant or occupant’s sexual orientation and gender identity for the purpose of determining eligibility or otherwise making housing available. In response to comments on the proposed rule, HUD has clarified this final rule to state that this provision does not prohibit voluntary and anonymous reporting of sexual orientation or gender identity pursuant to state, local, or federal data collection requirements.

Other actions HUD has taken for LGBT Americans include:

  • HUD conducted the first-ever national study of discrimination against members of the LGBT community in the rental and sale of housing.  Every ten years, HUD does a study of the impact of housing discrimination on the basis of race and color.  HUD undertook this important research in 1977, 1989 and 2000 and is currently undertaking this study again. It is believed that LGBT individuals and families may remain silent because in many local jurisdictions, they may have little or no legal recourse. While there are no national assessments of LGBT housing discrimination, there are state and local studies that have shown evidence of this sort of bias. For example, a 2007 report by Michigan’s Fair Housing Centersfound that nearly 30 percent of same-sex couples were treated differently when attempting to buy or rent a home.
  • HUD currently requires its recipients of discretionary funds to comply with local and state non-discrimination laws that cover sexual orientation or gender identity.
  • In 2011 HUD issued new guidance that treats discrimination based on gender nonconformity or sex stereotyping as sex discrimination under the Fair Housing Act, and instructs HUD staff to inform individuals filing complaints about state and local agencies that have LGBT-inclusive nondiscrimination laws.
  • The Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in rental, sales and lending on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, disability and familial status. Approximately 20 states, and the District of Columbia, and more than 150 cities, towns and counties across the nation have additional protections that specifically prohibit such discrimination against LGBT individuals. Under the guidance issued in June 2010, HUD will, as appropriate, retain its jurisdiction over complaints filed by LGBT individuals or families but also jointly investigate or refer matters to those state, district and local governments with other legal protections.
  • HUD, HHS and the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR) hosted the first ever federal government summit addressing issues for LGBT seniors in December 2011.

View the final rule here.

HUD’s mission is to create strong, sustainable, inclusive communities and quality affordable homes for all. HUD is working to strengthen the housing market to bolster the economy and protect consumers; meet the need for quality affordable rental homes: utilize housing as a platform for improving quality of life; build inclusive and sustainable communities free from discrimination; and transform the way HUD does business. More information about HUD and its programs is available on the Internet at www.hud.gov and http://espanol.hud.govYou can also follow HUD on twitter @HUDnews, on facebook at  www.facebook.com/HUD, or sign up for news alerts on HUD’s News Listserv.

More Transgender Kids Seeking Help, Getting Treatment

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Category : Latest News, Trans Youth

When Aidan Key was a little girl, he didn’t realize he had gender identity issues. He simply knew something was off.

“I didn’t necessarily become aware that I was trapped in the wrong body,” says the 49-year-old Bellingham, Wash., native who had gender reassignment surgery at the age of 33. “I became aware that people didn’t perceive me as I felt myself to be. It was just odd to me to have to wear a dress the first day of kindergarten. It didn’t make sense.”

Today, Key might have received counseling — and perhaps even puberty blocking drugs — at one of a handful of U.S. clinics designed to help adolescents with what’s now called gender identity disorder or GID. The psychological diagnosis is used to describe a male or female who feels a strong identification with the opposite sex and experiences considerable distress because of their actual sex (the word “disorder” refers to the distress the person feels, not the fact that they identify with another gender).

According to reports published Monday in the medical journal Pediatrics, a small but growing number of teens and even younger children who think they were born the wrong sex are now getting support from parents and from doctors who give them treatments that could eventually help them change their sex.

Some estimates say about 1 in 10,000 children may have GID, Dr. Norman Spack, author of one of three reports published Monday and director of one of the nation’s first gender identity medical clinics, at Children’s Hospital Boston told the Associated Press. And that number does appear to be on the rise, experts say.

The number of people treated at Spack’s Gender Management Service clinic, also known as GeMS, which was the focus of a study, increased fourfold between January 1998 and February 2010. The clinic now averages about 19 patients each year, compared with about four per year treated for gender issues at the hospital in the late 1990s.

While many children can take part in nonconforming gender activities without issue — little boys playing princess, for instance — those with GID can experience a host of psychological problems, especially with the onset of puberty.

“It’s devastating to them,” says Dr. Scott Leibowitz, a child and adolescent psychiatrist at GeMS clinic in Boston.

Those who don’t get support in the form of counseling or medical treatment can be at high risk for behavior and emotional problems, the study found. Of the 97 patients younger than 21 years old in the study who met the criteria for GID, 44.3 percent had a history of significant psychiatric problems, including 20.6 percent who reported self-mutilation and 9.3 percent who attempted suicide. The youngest in the study was age 4.

Laura Edwards-Leeper, a psychologist specializing in youth gender issues at Seattle’s Children’s Hospital and co-author of the Pediatrics study, says at her hospital, “more and more people are banging down the doors to get in. I’m guessing in part this is due to media attention and people becoming a bit more accepting about it. Parents are becoming more open to the possibility and willing to get help for their kids.”

Unfortunately, some parents who seek help for their child through traditional channels – such as the family pediatrician – can come away feeling judged.

“I’ve heard many, many stories of adults and families being turned away with a stern lecture about their parenting or their choices,” says Key, director of Gender Diversity, an education, support and training organization committed to increasing awareness about gender variations. “It can often be viewed as a moral issue.”

Support from parents doesn’t always exist either, says Key. ”The response varies so much,” he says. “Some parents will tell the kids ‘No, you’re really a boy. No, those are girl toys. You don’t want that.’ They try to get the child not to engage in these activities because they know it’s not accepted by society, they know the child will be teased. I try to think they have the best intentions.”

Sometimes, the response of parents — or others — can be quite damaging. A related study of childhood abuse in the current issue of Pediatrics found gender nonconformity before age 11 was a risk indicator for physical, sexual, and psychological abuse in childhood as well as probable PTSD.

Chromosomal variations?
Key says there are many theories about why some people have GID but research seems to point to chromosomal variations, i.e., “intersex conditions,” such as a female with XY chromosomes instead of XX chromosomes. Another theory has to do with the way a particular person’s brain is mapped. ”A person may have a brain that is more oriented towards male and their body is female,” he says. “There’s been some preliminary research that supports that. But the verdict is still out. They need to do more research on it.” As for what parents should do if their child starts acting in a gender nonconforming way, Key advises ongoing communication and conversations. ”Ask them, ‘Do you just want to wear dresses or do you feel like you’re a girl?’” he says. “Sometimes a boy who just wants to wear dresses is just a boy who wants to wear dresses.”

When little kids speak up and tell their parents “I have the body of a boy but the heart and mind of a girl,” though, parents should take note and decide how they want to handle it, he says.

At the GeMS clinic in Boston, a team of psychiatrists, psychologists, endocrinologists, and pediatricians provide tools to help adolescents navigate the choppy social and psychological waters of gender identity.

“As non-transgender individuals, we take for granted how easy life is when our mind and our body are congruent with each other,” says Leibowitz. “Clinicians and pediatricians need to understand what gender nonconformity and gender dysphoria mean for a specific individuals and to know there are options out there that will profoundly improve their quality of life.”

But even kids who have emotional support can become extremely distressed when puberty hits and their body begins to change into that of a stranger, says Leibowitz.

Learning to fit in
Key says as a child, he had questions that grew sharper as he got older about where he fit in.

“I remember once when I was 9 observing all the families in the lobby at church and realizing that I was supposed to grow up and get married and have a family,” he says. “I remember thinking ‘I don’t mind getting married and having a family, but I don’t want to be the wife. I want to be the husband.”
Key says he received a lot of support from his mother, step-father and identical twin sister, Brenda.

“My family was very encouraging of nontraditional female activities,” he says. “I was aware that society expected something different from me but since my family said ‘We don’t care about that,’ I accepted that and said ‘It’s society’s problem, not my problem.’”

Key says he had a couple of boyfriends in high school but by age 19, realized he was attracted to women and began to identify as a lesbian. Over the years, though, he came to realize that that wasn’t quite right, either.

“It was challenging,” he says. “I was getting all this support to be whatever type of woman I wanted to be, but no one asked what if being a woman wasn’t the right part. That was a fixed situation. There was nothing to be done about it.”
Today, at the GeMS clinic in Boston, young children and their families get psychological counseling and are monitored until the first signs of puberty emerge, usually around age 11 or 12. Then children are given puberty-blocking drugs, in monthly $1,000 injections or implants imbedded in the arm. Being able to temporarily push the pause button on puberty (the drug’s effect are completely reversible) is extremely helpful, says Edwards-Leeper. The idea is to give these children time to mature emotionally and make sure they want to proceed with a permanent sex change.

“By stopping puberty early on, a boy won’t grow as tall, his facial hair won’t come in, his Adam’s apple won’t develop,” she says. “All the things that make it difficult for adult transgender people to pass are eliminated. The quality of life for transgender people who have been fortunate enough to receive puberty blocking medication is so much better.”

Kids will more easily pass as the opposite gender, and require less drastic treatment later, if drug treatment starts early, Spack said. For example, boys switching to girls will develop breasts and girls transitioning to boys will be flat-chested if puberty is blocked and sex-hormones started soon enough, Spack said.

While many of the patients at the GeMS clinic included in the study were too old for puberty blocking medications, two-thirds did go on to receive cross-sex hormone therapy (i.e., testosterone for women and estrogen for men), which can be a precursor to sexual reassignment surgery. Only one of the 97 in the study opted out of permanent treatment, Spack says.

Not all adolescents with GID opt for the surgery when they reach the age of consent, though, says Leibowitz. “It’s very individualized and it’s really a private issue. It also isn’t covered by insurance and can cost $20,000,” he says. “For some people, that might not be a necessary thing.”

Key, now married, says his surgery was not only necessary, but a “no brainer.”
“Once I had a conscious acknowledgment that I was transgender, it was simply a matter of logistics,” he says. “I started saving money. One of the most amazing feelings I ever had was being on a beach without my shirt on and being male and feeling like ‘Finally, this is what I’m supposed to feel like.’ Normal, natural and right. And about time.”

By Diane Mapes

Rajee on Dr. Phil: Silicone Disaster

Category : Transgender

Rajee was recently interviewed by Dr. Phil on “Cosmetic Surgery Disasters” regarding illegal and toxic silicone injections. She has come forth speaking out as a victim and has decided to share her story with the intention of helping others.


In The Life: Beauty on the Black Market

Category : Transgender

How far would you go to enhance your feminine appearance? In The Life: Beauty on the Black Market explains the risks.


Deadly fire at transgender event; 14 eunuchs dead, 40 injured

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Category : News Around The World

New Delhi, Nov 20: At least 14 eunuchs were killed and 40 others injured when a major fire swept through a community hall in an east Delhi locality where a congregation of the trans gender community was taking place. The incident took place at around 7 PM when around 1000 eunuchs from across the capital had gathered for a festival. 14 people died in the incident and over 40 were injured and rushed to various hospitals, police and hospital authorities said.

The fire, which started in the kitchen, spread through the premises and destroyed the tents which had been put up for the congregation. As the fire spread, people ran helter-skelter searching for a safe zone but many got trapped in the fire and lost their lives, police said.

Locals said they heard the huge cries of people and came out and saw that the entire community hall premises engulfed in flames. The locals also tried extricate trapped people till the police and fire service personnel came and began the rescue operations.

The congregation, which has been going on for the past three days, had begun at around 1 PM on Sunday and the participants were dancing and enjoying the evening when the fire took place. Sunday was the last day of the congregation.

Fire brigade official said 14 bodies have been recovered and 40 injured have been admitted to hospitals. Hospital authorities feared that the toll could go up further because many of the injured have suffered grievous burn injuries. Delhi government ordered a thorough probe into the fire incident. Delhi Health Minister A K Walia said Deputy Commissioner(Revenue) of East Delhi J P Sharma has been asked to invesitage the incident and file his report to the state government at the earliest.

Transman Making a Difference on Capitol Hill

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Category : Latest News, News Around The Nation

Sources on the Hill confirmed to The Transadvocate that Barney Frank’s office will announce the hiring of Diego Sanchez today. Sanchez will replace outgoing senior policy adviser, Joe Racalto.

Diego Sanchez is used to being labeled “the first transgender,” and he doesn’t mind. He’s happy to pave the way.
“If no one is first, then there can’t be a second,” jokes Sanchez, 52, whoyesis the first transgender person hired for a senior congressional position on Capitol Hill and is busy tackling healthcare reform and employment-discrimination issues as an aide to Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass.

Sanchez was born a girl in 1957 and knew from a very early age that he should have been born a boy. When Sanchez was five, he told his parents that he felt he was born wrongthen braced himself for the punishment he expected would surely follow. It never did. Instead, his mother left the room and returned with a copy of Life Magazine, featuring a story on Christine Jorgensenthe first transsexual in the United States to publicly announce her change of sexual identity.

“If it’s OK for her to do this in the 1950s,” his mother told him, “then by the time you grow up and decide to do this, you will be OK.”

“My parents’ acceptance of me was their way of giving me something they didn’t always get from the world,” he says.

Transsexual Makes Debut in New Polish Parliament

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Category : Latest News, News Around The Nation

WARSAW, Poland — A transsexual woman and an openly gay man took seats in Poland’s newly elected parliament Tuesday, historic firsts that reflect profound social change in this traditionally Roman Catholic country.

Anna Grodzka, who was born a man but underwent a sex change, entered the assembly hall to warm greetings.  Several men and women shook her hand, while one male lawmaker kissed her on the cheek. She was later introduced to Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who also shook her hand.

Grodzka sat next to Robert Biedron, an activist who is the first openly gay person elected to Poland’s parliament. Both belong to Palikot’s Movement, a new progressive party that became the third-largest party in parliament in the Oct. 9 election.

Grodzka said she felt overwhelmed by emotion as the session opened with the national anthem and when she later took her oath of office.

“It is a symbolic moment, but we owe this symbolism not to me but to the people of Poland because they made their choice,” Grodzka told The Associated Press. “They wanted a modern Poland, a Poland open to variety, a Poland where all people would feel good regardless of their differences. I cannot fail them in their expectations.”

Palikot’s Movement, led by outspoken entrepreneur-turned-politician Janusz Palikot, has vowed to push for liberal causes. It opposes the influence of the church in political life, promotes gay rights, and wants to challenge the country’s near-total ban on abortion.

Ewa Kopacz, the outgoing health minister, was then elected the new parliament speaker — the first time a woman was chosen for a post that the constitution defines as the second most powerful political position, after the prime minister.

The seventh parliament since communism fell was opened by a former speaker, Jozef Zych, who invoked words spoken by the late Polish pope, John Paul II, and acknowledged the presence of archbishops and other church leaders who observed from a balcony.

Zych also remembered the late President Lech Kaczynski and the lawmakers who died with him in a plane crash last year — words spoken as Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the late leader’s twin brother, sat solemnly with other conservative lawmakers.

Kaczynski heads the country’s largest opposition party, the nationalist Law and Justice party, which is riven by deep divisions and internal turmoil after expelling three key leaders on Friday who had called for a more democratic leadership style from Kaczynski.

Last month’s election gave Tusk, of the center-right Civic Platform party, a mandate for a second term. It was the first time since the end of communism 22 years ago that a government won a second consecutive term.

Tusk has remained popular thanks to an image he has cultivated of moderation and because the economy has grown impressively since Poland joined the European Union in 2004. It was the only EU country to avoid recession during the global crisis of 2008-09.

President Bronislaw Komorowski addressed the newly elected lawmakers, urging them to work together to maintain Poland’s strong economic performance as Europe faces a new financial crisis.

He called on lawmakers to trim bureaucracy, reform the judiciary and the health system and tackle state debt.

“We know that the state exists for the citizens, and not the other way around,” Komorowski said.

Lech Walesa, the hero of Poland’s anti-communist revolution and a former president, watched the proceedings from a balcony in the assembly hall.

Tusk, whose government formally resigned on Tuesday, plans to keep governing with his junior partner of the past four years, the conservative Polish People’s Party. He also plans to keep many of his key ministers in their jobs, including Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski and Finance Minister Jacek Rostowski.

Later in the day the president charged Tusk with forming a new government. His outgoing team will act as a caretaker government until the new one is formed and faces a confidence vote in parliament.

Tusk said he will build a new government soon, but gave no exact timeline. In any case, it should have no trouble winning a confidence vote because the new coalition enjoys a majority in the parliament.

Written by Associated Press
Tuesday, 08 November 2011 10:29