Texas judge blocks probes of transgender kids' parents statewide
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[March 12, 2022]
By Andrew Hay
(Reuters) -A Texas judge on Friday
temporarily blocked the state from investigating parents who provide
their transgender children with gender-transitioning medical treatments
that Governor Greg Abbott calls "child abuse."
District Court Judge Amy Clark Meachum imposed a statewide temporary
injunction on investigations that Abbott ordered the Department of
Family Protective Services (DFPS) to carry out, saying the probes
endangered children and their families.
The ruling marked a victory for LGBTQ groups, medical professionals and
civil liberties advocates opposing moves by conservative politicians in
dozens of states to criminalize the provision of gender-transitioning
treatments for trans youth.
Critics of such proposals have accused Republicans of seizing on issues
surrounding gender identity as a wedge issue in the run-up to November's
mid-term congressional elections, with Republicans keen to try and
retake the majority in both the U.S. Senate and House of
Representatives.
The injunction issued Friday in Texas is to remain in place until it is
fully litigated and settled by a judgment or other means. Meachum
scheduled a trial to start July 11.
In her decision following a seven-hour hearing, Meachum said Abbott had
overreached.
“The governor's directive was given the effect of a new law or a new
agency rule, despite no new legislation,” Meachum said, saying the
actions of the governor and the DFPS commissioner violated "separation
of powers by impermissibly encroaching into the legislative domain.”
Abbott's February directive called on doctors, nurses and teachers to
report such treatment or face criminal penalties.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and Lambda Legal lawsuit
challenged Abbott's order on behalf of the family of a 16-year-old
transgender girl targeted for investigation.
The child has taken puberty-delaying medications and hormone therapy.
Her mother is a DFPS employee and was put on paid administrative leave
after asking what Abbott's directive would mean for her family.
Meachum last week temporarily blocked a probe of the teen's parents. At
Friday's hearing, she approved a request to go one step further,
stopping the probes statewide.
'IRREPARABLE INJURY'
Meachum said the plight of the 16-year-old and her parents, whose names
were withheld in the lawsuit, was an example of the "irreparable injury"
that would be caused unless the investigations were stopped, given the
stigma attached to being the targets of a child abuse investigation, as
well as the loss of livelihood.
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Judge Amy Clark Meachum addresses the court as a court hearing is
held on Texas Governor Greg Abbott's order that parents of
transgender children be investigated for child abuse, in Austin,
Texas, U.S. March 11, 2022. REUTERS/Sergio Flores
Representing the state, assistant
attorney general Courtney Corbello argued that gender-transitioning
procedures constituted child abuse, saying they involved
administering controlled substances that physically and mentally
impaired children.
The position was countered by doctors, testifying as expert
witnesses, who said procedures like puberty blockers and hormone
therapy were safe, reversible medical treatments.
Andrea Dalhouse, a parent of a transgender child, said she felt
trapped between activists who saw "trans medicine" as "blissful,"
pharmaceutical companies selling products, and Texas politicians
like Abbott who wanted procedures banned.
"It's shut down the possibility of having a civil and compassionate
discussion about the real science that we don't have yet," said
Dalhouse, the mother of a trans-identifying 17-year-old. "We don't
know, if we're jumping all these kids on hormones and lopping off
body parts, what this means longterm."
Over 60 major U.S. businesses, including Apple Inc and Johnson &
Johnson, signed their names to an advertisement that ran in Texas on
Friday opposing Abbott's directive, saying "discrimination is bad
for business."
The DFPS has opened nine child welfare inquiries under Abbott's
directive, a spokesman said.
Abbott, a Republican running for a third term in office, issued the
directive based on the Feb. 18 non-binding legal opinion from Texas
Attorney General Ken Paxton days before a Texas primary election
that Abbott easily won.
The court heard from a DFPS supervisor who said that under the
directive child abuse inspectors were told they had to investigate
parents of transgender children, even if they did not think abuse
had occurred.
"We had to be investigating these cases," Randa Mulanax testified,
adding that she has handed in her resignation letter because she
believed the directive was "unethical."
(Reporting by Andrew Hay in Taos, N.M.Editing by Donna Bryson,
Matthew Lewis, Rosalba O'Brien, Aurora Ellis and Leslie Adler)
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