Outdated IDs a concern for transgender people
Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO
Lauren Grey didn’t think much about the gender recorded on her Illinois driver’s license until she went to test-drive a new car. Although she had been living as a woman for months and easily obtained a license with her new name and a picture reflecting her feminine appearance, Grey’s ID still identified her as male, puzzling the salesmen and prompting uncomfortable questions.
“They are like, ‘This doesn’t match.’ Then you have to go into the story: ‘I was born male, but now I’m not,’” said Grey, 38, a graphic designer living in suburban Chicago. “And they are like, ‘What does that mean?’ It was super embarrassing.” Similarly awkward conversations ensued when she tried to rent an apartment, went to bars or was taken out of airport security lines for inspection.
Most U.S. residents don’t think twice about the gender printed on their government-issued documents. But those “M’’ or “F’’ markers — and the legal and administrative prerequisites for switching them on passports, birth certificates and other forms of identification — are a source of anxiety and even discrimination for transgender individuals.
The rules vary from state to state, agency to agency and even clerk to clerk. But a transgender applicant generally has been required to submit both a court order approving the gender change and a letter from a surgeon certifying that the person underwent irreversible sex-reassignment surgery before obtaining a new document.
Over the past few years, though, the emerging movement for transgender rights has been pressing the issue, persuading state lawmakers and federal and state agencies to simplify the lengthy and often costly process. Advocates recorded their latest victory Friday, when the Social Security Administration announced that it no longer would require proof of surgery to alter the gender identification of individuals in its computers and records.
The move mirrors similar actions by the U.S. State Department, which amended its passport- application policies three years ago to do away with the sex-reassignment surgery requirement, and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, which last year did the same for green cards, work permits and other documents it issues.
About half of U.S. states now allow residents to revise the gender designations on their driver’s licenses by providing a letter from a health professional stating they have received counseling, hormone therapy or another form of gender-transition treatment.