New York City creates gender-neutral 'X'
option for birth certificates
Send a link to a friend
[October 10, 2018]
By Daniel Trotta
NEW YORK (Reuters) - People who were born
in New York City and do not identify as male or female can now opt for a
third gender category of X on their birth certificates.
Mayor Bill de Blasio signed the provision into a law on Tuesday, making
New York City the fifth place to do so after California, Oregon,
Washington state and New Jersey. Three states and Washington, D.C., also
allow gender-neutral driver licenses.
Transgender advocates have been pressing governments to allow identity
documents to be more easily changed to match gender identity. They say
strict male and female categories are a form of discrimination against
transgender people that labels them against their will.
The New York City law allows nonbinary and gender-nonconforming people
to change their birth certificates from the M or F designation they were
assigned at birth to X with a personal affidavit. No document from a
doctor is required.
"This change may seem small but it is monumental," said Tanya Asapansa-Johnson
Walker, a transgender activist who took part in the signing ceremony and
spoke of the anxiety that goes with living with gender-mismatched
identification.
"Imagine having to out yourself over and over and over again to
strangers," Walker said. "Future generations will not have to suffer."
Among those participating in the ceremony was actor Asia Kate Dillon, a
nonbinary person who plays one on the cable television series
"Billions." Assigned female at birth, Dillon identifies as neither male
nor female and uses they, them and their as pronouns.
The gender-neutral birth certificate follows a 2014 law that allowed
transgender people in New York City to easily change the gender on their
birth certificates from male to female or vice versa by removing the
requirements of a legal name change and surgery. Now non-binary people
can choose the third option.
[to top of second column]
|
New York Mayor Bill De Blasio speaks at the Netroots Nation annual
conference for political progressives in New Orleans, Louisiana,
U.S. August 4, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Bachman
The issue of what happens when another state does not recognize the
X designation has yet to be tested in the courts.
To change passport gender, the U.S. government requires a physician
to confirm the person has received clinical treatment for gender
transition. So far there are only male or female designations on
passports, but a U.S. District Court in Denver ruled in September
that the State Department cannot deny a gender-neutral passport to
an intersex person.
De Blasio said the law afforded New Yorkers the freedom to "tell the
government who they are and not the other way around."
"Imagine if you were told you were something that you did not
consider yourself to be," de Blasio said.
To transgender New Yorkers, he said, "You be you. Live your truth.
And know that New York City will have your back."
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; editing by Lisa Shumaker and Cynthia
Osterman)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|