Showing posts with label Reinstate Gender Reassignment Surgery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reinstate Gender Reassignment Surgery. Show all posts

Monday, April 13, 2009

Edmonton woman leads Gender Reassignment funding lawsuit

Edmonton woman leads Gender Reassignment funding lawsuit
5:00PM 4/12/2009

As Alberta dives into a recession many things had to be cut from the
provincial budget. That includes cutting funding for gender
reassignment surgeries for Albertans with Gender Identity Disorder.
The move saves about $700,000 in the provincial budget.

Edmontonian Sarah King, 33, is meeting with lawyers this week to file
a lawsuit against the Alberta Government. Her own surgery was
scheduled for next January, but without funding she won't be able to
afford the procedure she says is way more than just cosmetic. "Without
the surgery, we're caught in transition, we're caught as abnormal
people in society. We're discriminated against. People have lost jobs,
they have been disowned by family, they have lost friends. The surgery
is so important, that without it, people could die. It's called
suicide."

King hopes to get an injunction that would force the government to
fund gender reassignment. She says about 20 people have joined the
class-action lawsuit, and more sign up every day.

The Government of Alberta plans to spend $36.4 billion in the 2009
budget. King says the $700,000 needed to fund gender reassignment is
petty change in comparison.

Meanwhile, King is urging all Albertans to support and sign a petition
to re-list Sex Reassignment Surgery Funding in Alberta

. (jg,ly,blb)

Copyright © 2008 CHQT-AM. All Rights Reserved.
http://www.inews880.com/Channels/Reg/LocalNews/story.aspx?ID=1081409

Sunday, April 12, 2009

'I felt so trapped'

Edmonton Sun, Canada
Sun, April 12, 2009

'I felt so trapped'
Transgendered individuals to launch lawsuit to get surgery funding reinstated
By CLARA HO, SUN MEDIA

Sarah King lost jobs, friends, relatives and, most devastatingly,
custody of her daughter when she made the decision to transition from
a male to a female.

But like many other transgendered individuals, it was a decision King
needed to make in order to survive.

And for many, the transition cannot be done without gender reassignment surgery.

Now the 33-year-old self-employed businesswoman is spearheading a
class-action lawsuit against the Alberta government after it announced
it would no longer fund gender reassignment surgeries to save about
$700,000 in its budget.

"By delisting gender reassignment surgery, the government is
performing capital punishment or execution on that person," King said.

She cited examples of transgendered individuals hurting themselves
because of their gender identity disorder.

King said she will go to court on Wednesday in the hope of obtaining
an injunction that will force the province to approve funding for
everyone on a gender reassignment surgery waiting list and then
eventually relist funding.

King and other members of the local transgendered community are in
talks with the same law firm that represented Delwin Vriend, a gay
teacher who took his case to the Supreme Court when he was fired from
his job for his sexual orientation.

The landmark case forced the province to protect gays in its human
rights legislation more than 10 years ago.

Currently, more than 16 people are represented in the lawsuit -- and
that number continues to grow by the day, said King, who was recently
notified that funding for her own gender reassignment surgery,
scheduled for January, had been cancelled.

Dominic Scaia is one of those individuals fighting to have the funding
reinstated.

"Somebody stole our hope away," said the 26-year-old.

Scaia moved from British Columbia to Alberta two years ago to have all
the necessary surgeries to fully transition from a female to a male.

When he was living as "Donna" years ago, Scaia said he was deeply
depressed, very self-destructive, and promiscuous, and was taking
drugs and cutting himself.

A friend helped him realize that if he didn't transition, he would
eventually harm himself. He immediately started taking the necessary
steps to become a male.

He saw a psychiatrist, took hormones, lived as a man for two years,
and obtained funding approval from the province to have chest surgery,
scheduled for November.

Now he's unsure if that approval still stands.

"I bawled my eyes out," he said when he heard the funding had been
cut. "I felt so trapped."

CLARA.HO@SUNMEDIA.CA
Copyright © 2009, Canoe Inc. All rights reserved.
http://www.edmontonsun.com/News/Alberta/2009/04/12/9088846-sun.html

Sex change funding cut may take heavy toll

Edmonton Sun, Canada
April 11, 2009

Sex change funding cut may take heavy toll

By MICHAEL PLATT

For Michelle Ann Duff, it wasn't a choice. Sex-change surgery was a
decision between an early grave or a new life as a woman.

"I had two choices: number one was to make a gender change, and number
two was to jump in front of a subway car," said Duff, 69.

The Ontario woman faced a much bigger leap of lifestyles than for the
relatively few Canadians who undergo the life-altering switch every
year.

In 1985, as the soon-to-be "she" boarded a plane to Belgium for a date
with a sex-change specialist, Michael Duff was a world-acclaimed
motorcycle racing star, Canada's own record-setting grand-prix hero.

Retired and with three children from two marriages, Duff abandoned the
uber-macho world of pistons and leather to start a new life as a
woman.

"I hate that overused cliche, a woman trapped in man's body, but
that's basically it," said Duff. "It's been shown time-and-time again
that the only way to connect for a person with gender dysphoria is to
make the outside the same as the way they feel inside."

Gender dysphoria is a recognized psychological condition which causes
distress and depression. In Alberta, the condition is considered
serious enough to qualify victims for sex-change surgery, paid for by
the province for the past decade. Or, at least, it was.

On Tuesday, while hiking the price of beer and cigarettes, the
province also yanked funding for transgender surgery, supposedly to
cut $700,000 a year out of a $13-billion purse. Petty doesn't begin to
describe the few pennies saved by cutting funding to the 10 to 20
Albertans who undergo the surgery each year.

Already, there's talk of a human rights complaint -Ontario faced a
similar challenge and lost in 2008 - but those awaiting their turn for
change are devastated.

"I've been on hormones for two years and dressing as a female, and
then they do this - how is this even possible?" said Paris, a Calgary
male-to-female gender converter, who asked her name be changed to
avoid recognition. "I've been waiting to get on the waiting list - now
I have no idea what I'm supposed to do."

Those who have started the surgery, which can take more than one
operation, will have their change covered by Alberta Health. But those
like Paris, who are still functionally of their birth gender, are out
of luck.

"It's not the same as getting a boob-job," said Paris, who describes
the change as essential to a person's identity, unlike cosmetic
surgery.

A Facebook group, Reinstate Gender Reassignment Surgery Funding in
Alberta, already has in excess of 300 members, and a campaign has
started a letter of complaint, along with 19 cents, to the province.
That 19 cents represents the per-Albertan cost for funding the
surgery, highlighting the pittance at stake, cash-wise.

On the human front, the cost could be incalculable: the Facebook group
already contains messages from despondent patients hoping to undergo
surgery, which they can't afford without funding.

"My chest surgery date is coming up in November, and if it's not
covered at that time.. I will not be able to pay for it myself ... so
I'll have to go without ...which will most likely result in me feeling
hopeless and suicidal," wrote Dominic Scaia.

Kristopher Wells, a researcher at the University of Alberta, said the
province is facing a serious legal battle, which will end up costing
far more than $700,000.

"They made this cut without understanding the personal and legal
implications," said Wells. "A human rights complaint will be filed -
that's the talk in the community at this point."

MICHAEL.PLATT@SUNMEDIA.CA
Copyright € ¦© 2009, Canoe Inc. All rights reserved.
http://www.edmontonsun.com/Comment/2009/04/11/9081746-sun.html