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Oświadczenie w sprawie odrzucenia przez Sąd Okręgowy 11. Okręgu wniosku rodzin z Alabamy o ponowne rozpatrzenie orzeczenia zezwalającego na wejście w życie zakazu opieki zdrowotnej dla osób transpłciowych

W spornej opinii komisji z 2023 r. uchylono opinię federalnego sądu rejonowego, w której przyznano powodom nakaz tymczasowy blokujący egzekwowanie prawa

W związku z tym, że czterech z jedenastu sędziów wyraziło sprzeciw, Sąd Apelacyjny Jedenastego Okręgu wydał dziś decyzję oddalającą wniosek rodziców i dzieci kwestionujących Zakaz opieki zdrowotnej dla nastolatków transseksualnych w Alabamie aby cały sąd ponownie rozpatrzył sprawę.

 W głosowaniu, w którym było wiele głosów sprzeciwu, minimalna większość sądu odmówiła rozpatrzenia opinii komisji z 2023 roku, stwierdzając, że zakaz w Alabamie nie dyskryminuje osób transpłciowych ani nie narusza podstawowego prawa rodziców do podejmowania decyzji medycznych dotyczących ich dzieci. Opinia komisji z 2023 roku uchyliła opinię federalnego sądu okręgowego, przyznającą powodom tymczasowy nakaz sądowy blokujący egzekwowanie prawa.  

W zdaniu odrębnym sędzia Rosenbaum napisał:

„[P]ogląd komisji jest niebezpieczny i błędny. Nie ma co do tego wątpliwości: dopóki opinia komisji pozostaje w mocy, żadna współczesna metoda leczenia nie jest bezpieczna przed błędną decyzją państwa o jej delegalizacji, niemal niezależnie od uzasadnienia. Co gorsza, jeśli państwo zakaże metody leczenia stosowanej po 1868 roku, żaden pacjent nie będzie miał możliwości prawnej, aby zapewnić swojemu dziecku niezbędną, ratującą życie opiekę medyczną w tym okręgu. A jeśli dana osoba nie może uzyskać dostępu do leczenia ze względu na płeć lub status transpłciowy, również nie ma możliwości prawnej”.

Sędzia Jordan również wyraził odmienne zdanie i napisał:  

„Decyzja komisji oznacza, że podstawowe prawo rodziców do zapewnienia swoim dzieciom leczenia obejmuje wyłącznie procedury i leki, które istniały w 1868 roku, a nie takie współczesne osiągnięcia, jak szczepionka przeciwko polio (opracowana w latach 50. XX wieku), operacja serca (po raz pierwszy przeprowadzona w 1983 roku), przeszczepy narządów (zakończone sukcesem w 1954 roku) i leczenie raka, takie jak radioterapia (zastosowana po raz pierwszy w 1899 roku) i chemioterapia (rozpoczęta w latach 40. XX wieku)”.

Sędziowie Wilson i Jill Pryor również nie zgodzili się z odmową ponownego rozpatrzenia sprawy.

Sprawa powódek, domagających się stałego nakazu sądowego blokującego ustawę, wciąż czeka na rozstrzygnięcie przed sądem okręgowym. Na początku tego roku Sąd Najwyższy Stanów Zjednoczonych zgodził się rozpatrzyć sprawę kwestionującą podobną ustawę z Tennessee, która również zakazuje opieki medycznej osobom transpłciowym. Sprawa ta zostanie rozpatrzona jeszcze w tym roku, a decyzja spodziewana jest w 2025 roku.  

Oświadczenie prawnika reprezentującego rodziców powoda i młodzież kwestionującą prawo Alabamy:  

„Jesteśmy rozczarowani tą decyzją, ale cieszy nas fakt, że prawie połowa składu sędziowskiego wyraziła sprzeciw wobec odmowy ponownego rozpatrzenia sprawy. Cieszy nas również zdecydowana liczba zdań odrębnych, zgodna z poglądami większości sędziów, którzy orzekali w podobnych sprawach w całym kraju. Jak podkreślają sędziowie, którzy złożyli zdania odrębne, decyzja składu orzekającego jest nie tylko błędna, ale i niebezpieczna. To rodziny, a nie rząd, powinny podejmować decyzje medyczne dotyczące dzieci. Dowody przedstawione w tej sprawie jednoznacznie wskazują, że zakazane metody leczenia przynoszą ogromne korzyści nastolatkom, którzy ich potrzebują, a rodzice podejmują odpowiedzialne decyzje dotyczące własnych dzieci. Będziemy nadal kwestionować tę szkodliwą decyzję i reprezentować interesy tych młodych ludzi i ich rodziców. Takie przepisy nie mają miejsca w wolnym kraju”.

Do postępowania sądowego przystąpiły również Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD) oraz Human Rights Campaign (HRC) wraz z kancelariami prawnymi King & Spalding LLP i Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC.

Dowiedz się więcej o Boe przeciwko Marshallowi.

Aktualności

Parents Challenging Alabama Transgender Health Ban Oppose State’s Effort to Bypass Trial

Plaintiffs’ filing refutes false claims about the well-established standards of care for transgender adolescents and highlights how purposeful discrimination against transgender people, not concern about health or safety, was at the root of the criminal ban

Plaintiff families challenging Alabama’s ban on health care for transgender adolescents have asked the court to deny the State’s request to rule on the lawfulness of the ban before a full trial.

The plaintiffs’ filing meticulously refutes false claims made in the State’s motion for summary judgment about the established standards of medical care for transgender adolescents. The plaintiffs’ brief cites expert evidence about the rigorous development of those standards, the careful assessment and multidisciplinary approach involved in the delivery of care to transgender adolescents in Alabama, and the well-established benefits of care for transgender adolescents suffering from gender dysphoria.

The families challenging the ban argue that rather than short-circuit the process as the State requests, the case must be allowed to proceed to trial to ensure full consideration of the factual record on the safety and efficacy of transgender health care, the harm suffered by transgender adolescents when they are denied necessary care, and the purposeful discrimination against transgender people that motivated the sweeping ban.

Dowiedz się więcej o Boe przeciwko Marshallowi

Aktualności

GLAD Responds to Unprecedented Alabama Supreme Court Ruling Undermining Access to Family-building Healthcare 

Today, GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD) issued the following statement from Polly Crozier, GLAD’s Director of Family Advocacy, on the Alabama Supreme Court decision in LePage v. Center for Reproductive Medicine. 

“Fertility healthcare enables many Americans to have children and build a family. Bringing children into your family is about love, hope, and nurturing the next generation.  

“That’s why the Alabama Supreme Court decision in LePage v. Center for Reproductive Medicine is so sad and shocking. It seeks to prevent people from having children in a safe, effective, and common medical procedure—in vitro fertilization—that so many rely on. In an unprecedented ruling, the Alabama court concluded that a frozen embryo, created by hopeful parents with assistance from medical providers to build their family, is legally a child. This has untold, devastating, and heartbreaking consequences for people seeking to have children. The journey of infertility is stressful emotionally, physically, and financially, and this ruling threatens to snatch the opportunity of a family from many. Already, at least three clinics in Alabama halted their IVF services out of fear of running afoul of the ruling. 

This case is yet another terrible outcome of a broader effort to control not only women, but to dictate how all Americans should actualize the most intimate parts of our lives, including when and how to form a family.  

“Those who want to take us backward are working overtime to advance an extremist agenda: a complete ban on abortion, criminalization of fertility healthcare and healthcare for transgender people, reversing marriage equality, targeting LGBTQ+ parents and young people, and inserting government into our most personal and family decisions – with frightening implications for all of us. 

“We must also work overtime, collectively and with urgency to protect our common values of freedom and family autonomy. GLAD remains deeply committed to working in collaboration across movements to keep fighting for these shared values. We will continue our work to expand access to healthcare for family building—as we have done in Maine and are currently working on with partners in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont, and federally—and also protect children born through assisted reproduction and surrogacy through vitally needed protections like the Massachusetts Parentage Act.”

Aktualności

11th Circuit Order Allows Alabama Transgender Adolescent Medical Ban to Take Effect

Today the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals issued an order allowing Alabama’s ban on medical care for transgender adolescents to take effect. This order grants a request by the state of Alabama to stay the trial court’s 2022 decision blocking the law from being enforced while the challenge against it proceeds.

Lawyers representing parents of transgender adolescents who are challenging the ban issued the following statement:

“Alabama’s transgender healthcare ban will harm thousands of transgender adolescents across the state and will put parents in the excruciating position of not being able to get the medical care their children need to thrive. The district court issued its preliminary order blocking the ban after hearing days of testimony from parents, doctors, and medical experts about the devastating impact of this ban and the lack of any medical justification for it. Today’s ruling will hurt parents and children in the state. We will continue to challenge this unlawful ban and to support parents and their kids in pushing back against the dangerous reality of being denied access to necessary, best practice medical care.”

On August 21, a three-judge panel of the 11th Circuit reversed the district court’s May, 2022 decision preventing the ban from taking effect. In a request for rehearing filed in September 2023, the plaintiffs argued the full court should review the panel decision because it conflicts with Supreme Court and 11th Circuit precedent dictating that all laws discriminating based on sex should be subjected to heightened scrutiny under the Equal Protection Clause, and because the ban violates parents’ longstanding right to make medical decisions for their children, rather than cede that power to the state. That request for rehearing en banc is still pending. A full trial on the constitutionality of the ban is planned to take place in federal district court in August 2024.

Powodowie w Boe przeciwko Marshallowi are represented by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), and the Human Rights Campaign (HRC). They are joined in the litigation by co-counsel King & Spalding LLP and Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC.

Alabama families looking for support can reach out to www.southernequality.org/ALresources

Aktualności

Rodzice z Alabamy proszą cały 11. Okręg o rozpatrzenie decyzji komisji, która pozwala stanowi na zakazanie ich dzieciom niezbędnej opieki medycznej

Decyzja komisji uchylająca blokadę zakazu karnego dla osób transpłciowych w Alabamie podważa fundamentalne prawo rodziców do zapewnienia swoim dzieciom ustalonej opieki medycznej i jest sprzeczna z wyraźnym precedensem, zgodnie z którym przepisy skierowane przeciwko osobom transpłciowym dyskryminują ze względu na płeć

Rodziny z Alabamy kwestionują stanowy zakaz opieki medycznej dla swoich dzieci transseksualnych zwrócił się do 11. Okręgowego Sądu Apelacyjnego o dokonanie przeglądu decyzja komisji stwierdzająca, że zakaz może wejść w życie, dopóki trwa ich sprawa.

Zakaz w Alabamie jest blokowany od maja 2022 roku na mocy nakazu tymczasowego wydanego przez federalny sąd rejonowy po wielodniowej rozprawie dowodowej, podczas której sąd wysłuchał zeznań rodziców, pracowników służby zdrowia i ekspertów medycznych. Po rozpatrzeniu dowodów sąd rejonowy orzekł, że świadczenie tych metod leczenia stanowi ugruntowaną opiekę medyczną, a odmowa ich świadczenia naraziłaby nastolatków transpłciowych na poważne szkody. W opinii sądu rejonowego stwierdzono, że prawo Alabamy, skierowane przeciwko młodzieży transpłciowej, prawdopodobnie narusza federalną Klauzulę Równej Ochrony, a także podstawowe prawo rodziców do podejmowania decyzji medycznych dotyczących ich dzieci.

21 sierpnia trzyosobowy skład sędziowski 11. Okręgu uchylił decyzję sądu rejonowego. We wniosku o ponowne rozpatrzenie sprawy, powodowie argumentują, że pełny skład powinien rozpatrzyć decyzję składu, ponieważ jest ona sprzeczna z precedensami Sądu Najwyższego i 11. Okręgu, które nakazują, aby wszystkie przepisy dyskryminujące ze względu na płeć podlegały wzmożonej kontroli na mocy Klauzuli Równej Ochrony, a także dlatego, że zakaz narusza wieloletnie prawo rodziców do podejmowania decyzji medycznych dotyczących ich dzieci, zamiast scedować tę władzę na państwo. 

Rodziny z Alabamy kwestionują prawo reprezentowane są przez organizacje GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders, National Center for Lesbian Rights, The Southern Poverty Law Center i Human Rights Campaign.

Jennifer Levi, starsza dyrektorka ds. praw osób transpłciowych i queer w organizacji GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders, powiedziała:
„Jak orzekł sąd okręgowy po kilkudniowym wysłuchaniu zeznań rodziców, lekarzy i ekspertów medycznych, egzekwowanie karnego zakazu opieki zdrowotnej dla osób transpłciowych w Alabamie zaszkodzi tysiącom nastolatków transpłciowych w całym stanie. Postawi to również rodziców z Alabamy w bolesnej sytuacji, pozbawiając ich dzieci opieki medycznej niezbędnej do prawidłowego rozwoju. Będziemy wspierać tych rodziców i ich dzieci w walce z tą niebezpieczną rzeczywistością na każdym poziomie”.   

Shannon Minter, dyrektor ds. prawnych w Krajowym Centrum Praw Lesbijek, powiedziała:
„Nasi klienci i inne rodziny w Alabamie mają prawo chronić swoje dzieci transpłciowe i zapewnić im niezbędne wsparcie. Decyzja komisji narusza to prawo i jest sprzeczna z jasno ustalonym prawem Sądu Najwyższego i 11. Okręgu. Mamy nadzieję, że pełny skład sądu rozpatrzy tę sprawę i zapobiegnie wejściu w życie tego niszczycielskiego zakazu karnego”. 

Scott McCoy, zastępca dyrektora prawnego ds. praw osób LGBTQ i postępowań sądowych w Southern Poverty Law Center, powiedział:
„Umożliwienie wejścia w życie ustawy SB 184 nie miałoby innego celu niż uniemożliwienie rodzicom uzyskania opieki medycznej, której potrzebują ich dzieci. Każdy federalny sąd okręgowy, który zapoznał się z przedstawionymi dowodami, doszedł do tego samego wniosku: uznane metody leczenia zalecane dla nastolatków transpłciowych są bezpieczne, skuteczne i ratują życie niektórych młodych ludzi, i nie ma uzasadnionego powodu, aby je zakazywać”.

Sarah Warbelow, dyrektor ds. prawnych w Human Rights Campaign, powiedziała:
„To rodzice, a nie rząd, są w najlepszej sytuacji, by podejmować decyzje medyczne dotyczące swoich dzieci. To przekonanie jest głęboko zakorzenione w naszym wspólnym porozumieniu i podstawach prawnych. Wprowadzenie tego zakazu w życie byłoby szokującym odwróceniem ugruntowanego precedensu i rażącą ingerencją w prywatne decyzje rodzinne”. 

Do postępowania sądowego przystąpiły również Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD) oraz Human Rights Campaign (HRC) wraz z kancelariami prawnymi King & Spalding LLP i Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC.

Dowiedz się więcej o sprawie.

Aktualności

Update on the federal challenge to Alabama’s law banning medical care for transgender minors and access to care:

The most important thing to know is that the preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of Alabama’s law is still in effect and will remain in effect at least for the next two to three months, and possibly longer.

As you likely are aware, on August 21, 2023, a three-judge panel of the Eleventh Circuit issued a decision disagreeing with a ruling by a federal district court judge in Alabama blocking enforcement of Alabama’s criminal ban on the prescription or administration of puberty blockers or hormone therapy for transgender adolescents.  

Judge Burke issued his preliminary injunction last May, blocking any enforcement of Alabama’s law since that time.

The most important thing to know is that the preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of Alabama’s law is still in effect and will remain in effect at least for the next two to three months, and possibly longer.

Based on the ordinary legal process, an appellate decision reversing a preliminary injunction by a federal district court judge does not take effect immediately. The federal rules of civil procedure require that the plaintiffs be given 21 days to ask the entire court to review the decision (this is known as seeking rehearing en banc). The legal team representing the plaintiffs in Alabama intends to do so.  

Our petition for rehearing en banc must be filed by September 11. The preliminary injunction must remain in place until the Eleventh Circuit either denies that request or, if they accept the request and agree to review the panel decision, until they issue a decision.

While this process unfolds, the preliminary injunction remains in effect, which means the Alabama ban cannot be enforced. Medical providers in Alabama are continuing to provide care to transgender adolescents and will continue to provide care as long as the preliminary injunction is in effect.    

That said, depending on how the Eleventh Circuit rules, there may come a point at which the preliminary injunction is no longer in effect, so parents of transgender adolescents in Alabama should be prepared for that possibility as one they may have to face down the road. If that were to happen, the law does not bar parents from taking their children out of state to seek care, from getting prescriptions filled in Alabama, or from administering medications to their children. The law in Alabama applies only to doctors and other healthcare providers.

Please stay tuned for more updates, and feel free to reach out with any questions to any of our legal team organizations:

Adwokaci i obrońcy GLBTQ
Legal Help Line: www.GLADAnswers.org
Contact
: Amanda Johnston, ajohnston@glad.org

Narodowe Centrum Praw Lesbijek
Legal Help Line: www.nclrights.org/get-help
Contact
: Shannon Minter, sminter@nclrights.org

Kampania Praw Człowieka
Legal Help Line: www.thehrcfoundation.org/impact-litigation-and-advocacy
Contact: Aryn Fields, aryn.fields@hrc.org

Southern Poverty Law Center
Contact: Kimberly Allen, kimberly.allen@splcenter.org

For direct help navigating care in Alabama, including 1-on-1 conversations about your family’s situation and emergency funding, contact the Southern Transgender Youth Emergency Project, a project of the Campaign for Southern Equality, led in Alabama in partnership with the Magic City Acceptance Center and Prism United. 

Aktualności

Statement on 11th Circuit Ruling Reversing Injunction on Alabama Transgender Healthcare Ban

Today, a three-judge panel of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals issued a decision reversing a federal district court ruling blocking enforcement of Alabama’s law banning medical care for transgender adolescents. The district court opinion, which was issued last spring, held that Alabama’s law likely violated the federal Equal Protection Clause and parents’ fundamental right to make medical decisions for their children. Thus far, every single federal district court to hear a similar challenge has ruled similarly, holding that these state bans discriminate against transgender minors and burden their parents’ constitutionally protected rights. The 11th Circuit panel disagreed, holding that Alabama’s law does not discriminate based on sex or transgender status and is therefore subject only to the lowest level of constitutional review.  

The Alabama families challenging the law in Boe przeciwko Marshallowi are represented by the National Center for Lesbian Rights, GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders, The Southern Poverty Law Center, and Human Rights Campaign, who issued the following statement:

“This is a deeply disappointing decision that is difficult to reconcile with the 11th Circuit’s prior rulings and with the Supreme Court’s clear guidance that discrimination because a person is transgender is sex discrimination. Our clients are devastated by this decision, which leaves them vulnerable to what the district court—after hearing several days of testimony from parents, doctors, and experts–found to be irreparable harm as a result of losing the medical care they have been receiving and that has enabled them to thrive. 

While this is a setback, we are confident that it is only a temporary one. Every federal district court that has heard the evidence presented in these cases has come to the same conclusion: these medical treatments are safe, effective, and lifesaving for some youth, and there is no legitimate reason to ban them. We believe that at the end of the day, our nation’s courts will protect these vulnerable youth and block these harmful laws, which serve no purpose other than to prevent parents from obtaining the medical care their children need. Parents, not the government, are best situated to make these medical decisions for their children. These laws are a shocking example of government overreach and a jarring intrusion into private family decisions. This case is far from over, and we will continue to aggressively seek legal protection for these families.”   

Do postępowania sądowego przystąpiły również Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD) oraz Human Rights Campaign (HRC) wraz z kancelariami prawnymi King & Spalding LLP i Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC.

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Aktualności

Plaintiffs urge the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals not to reinstate a law that would criminalize doctors and parents for ensuring their transgender children can access necessary medical care to support their well-being

MONTGOMERY – Plaintiffs challenging Alabama’s SB 184 today will urge the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit to affirm the district court’s order barring enforcement of the law, which would criminalize doctors and parents for providing transgender children with access to necessary medical care. The law was blocked by a federal district court judge in May 2022 after a two-day evidentiary hearing.

Arguments on Alabama’s appeal of the district court’s ruling will begin at approximately 9:30 a.m. CT on Friday, November 18 at the Frank M. Johnson Jr. U.S. Courthouse in Montgomery. The argument will be live-streamed. More information is available on the court website.

SB 184 criminalizes parents who seek essential medical care for their transgender children, the doctors who provide this medical care, and anyone else who assists transgender young people to get the care they need. Under the law, which is unprecedented, parents, doctors and others could face up to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $15,000.

The district court blocked enforcement of SB 184 after an extensive evidentiary hearing in May 2022, finding that the law seeks to ban established, effective medical care and that doing so would cause severe harm. The district court found that the State of Alabama presented no credible evidence to contradict testimony from doctors and medical experts on the safety and efficacy of medical care for transgender youth who experience gender dysphoria, including the fact that over 22 major medical organizations recognize the established standard of care for transgender youth.

Garnitur, Reverend Eknes-Tucker v. Marshall, is brought by five parents on the grounds that it strips them of the right to make important decisions about their children’s healthcare. In its order blocking the law from taking effect, the district court agreed that plaintiffs are likely to prevail in their claim that SB 184 unconstitutionally discriminates against transgender minors and violates the fundamental right of parents, rather than the state, to make healthcare decisions for their children.

Plaintiff Megan Poe, mother of 15-year-old Allison of Northern Alabama (both proceeding anonymously):

“Like any parent, I want to provide my children with the support they need. Ensuring that my daughter has access to the medical care she needs has meant that she can be a confident teenager who is happy and optimistic about her future. I hope the court of appeals will see that parents of transgender children simply want our children to be healthy, happy and safe.”

The parent plaintiffs are joined by a private practice pediatrician in rural Southeast Alabama and a clinical psychologist in Birmingham. The U.S. Department of Justice has also joined the suit as powód-interwenient challenging the constitutionality of the law, which would deny established medical treatments to youth who are transgender but not to others.

Additional Alabama parents of transgender children filed a friend-of-the-court brief asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit to uphold the injunction against SB 184. 

In their brief, parents describe the importance of being able to seek the best medical advice and care to support their children’s well-being, and how they have seen their children flourish with access to the right care:

Laura and Brian Coe, parents of 15-year-old Matthew (proceeding anonymously)

As much as Matthew has benefitted simply from being accepted and affirmed by his family, school, doctors, and friends, his medical transition is a critical measure for his well-being…Since obtaining the medical care that he needs, Laura and Brian have seen Matthew begin to “come to life.” The Coes would “worry for Matthew’s safety” if there were a disruption to his care. They are “simply trying to support their child and provide him with the best care possible.”

Melissa Soe, parent of 15-year-old Taylor (proceeding anonymously)

Since coming out and receiving care, Taylor has gone from “an anxious, sad kid who had a hard time getting up in the morning, to a kid who is up and out on their bike, in the woods, and going to camp.” Taylor is finally beginning to remind their parents of the happy-go-lucky kid they were when they were younger, prior to puberty taking its toll…” [It is] very important to Taylor to have continuity of care,” which would be disrupted by implementation of [SB 184]. Simply knowing that such care is accessible has significantly decreased Taylor’s distress.

Cynthia Lamar-Hart, parent of Gwendolyn who began receiving transition-related care while an adolescent living in Alabama and is now in her late 20s. Because access to care was not available in Alabama at the time, the family had to travel out-of-state:

[E]ven with the means to afford and make time for out-of-state treatment, Cynthia witnessed how …  months of delays in Gwendolyn’s care resulted in suffering that she would not have experienced had she been able to visit a clinic in-state. Cynthia quickly saw a change in Gwendolyn after she began receiving transition-related care. Once Gwendolyn began the process of transitioning, she was no longer withdrawn, and became more confident and engaged socially and at school.

Joining these parents in asking the 11th Circuit to continue blocking enforcement of SB 184 are:

Visit the case page to find all friend-of-the-court briefs filed in support of plaintiffs-appellees and other case documents. 

The plaintiffs-appellees are represented by Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC, King & Spalding LLP, GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) and the Human Rights Campaign (HRC).

Aktualności

Parents, Medical Experts, Faith Groups, and 21 States Urge Appeals Court Not to Reinstate Alabama Law Criminalizing Healthcare for Transgender Youth

Multiple friend-of-the-court briefs filed with the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in support of Plaintiffs-Appellees in Ksiądz Eknes-Tucker przeciwko Marshallowi

ALABAMA – Parents of transgender children have filed a opinia przyjaciela sądu asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit to uphold the injunction against S.B. 184. The Alabama law, blocked by a federal judge in May 2022, would criminalize doctors and parents for ensuring their transgender children can access necessary medical care. Medical experts, faith groups, and 21 U.S. states also filed briefs urging the Appeals Court to keep the bar on S.B. 184 in place.

The Alabama parents of transgender children described in their brief the importance of being able to seek the best medical advice and care to support their children’s well-being, and how they have seen their children flourish with access to the right care.

Excerpts from the Parents’ brief:

When their children came out to them as transgender, each one of these parents was surprised, scared, and confused. Their very first step was to make sure their child knew that they would never stop loving and supporting them, and then they set out to determine what they needed to do to protect and ensure their child’s health and safety. This included seeking professional medical assistance to determine whether their child was, in fact, suffering from gender dysphoria and, if so, to devise a treatment plan.

Laura and Brian Coe, parents of 15-year-old Matthew (proceeding anonymously)

As much as Matthew has benefitted simply from being accepted and affirmed by his family, school, doctors, and friends, his medical transition is a critical measure for his well-being…Since obtaining the medical care that he needs, Laura and Brian have seen Matthew begin to “come to life.” The Coes would “worry for Matthew’s safety” if there were a disruption to his care. They are “simply trying to support their child and provide him with the best care possible.”

Melissa Soe, parent of 15-year-old Taylor (proceeding anonymously)

Since coming out and receiving care, Taylor has gone from “an anxious, sad kid who had a hard time getting up in the morning, to a kid who is up and out on their bike, in the woods, and going to camp.” Taylor is finally beginning to remind their parents of the happy-go-lucky kid they were when they were younger, prior to puberty taking its toll…” [It is] very important to Taylor to have continuity of care,” which would be disrupted by implementation of [SB 184]. Simply knowing that such care is accessible has significantly decreased Taylor’s distress.

Cynthia Lamar-Hart, parent of Gwendolyn who began receiving transition-related care while an adolescent living in Alabama and is now in her late 20s

Because access to care was not available in Alabama at the time, the family had to travel out-of-state:

[E]ven with the means to afford and make time for out-of-state treatment, Cynthia witnessed how …  months of delays in Gwendolyn’s care resulted in suffering that she would not have experienced had she been able to visit a clinic in-state. Cynthia quickly saw a change in Gwendolyn after she began receiving transition-related care. Once Gwendolyn began the process of transitioning, she was no longer withdrawn, and became more confident and engaged socially and at school.

Joining these parents in asking the Court of Appeals to continue blocking enforcement of S.B. 184 are:

All friend-of-the-court briefs filed in support of plaintiffs-appellees and other case documents can be found on the case page. Oral argument is scheduled for the week of November 14, 2022 at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in Montgomery, Alabama.

The plaintiffs-appellees are represented by Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC, King & Spalding LLP, GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), SPLC Action Fund (SPLC), and the Human Rights Campaign (HRC).

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Parents challenging Alabama’s SB 184 have responded to the State’s appeal of a district court ruling that blocked enforcement of the law in May 2022. SB 184 criminalizes parents who seek essential medical care for their transgender children, the doctors who provide this medical care, and anyone else who assists transgender young people to get the care they need. Under the law, parents, doctors, and others could face up to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $15,000. The State of Alabama has appealed the district court’s May 13 order blocking the law from being enforced to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit.

In their brief filed last night, plaintiffs urged the Court of Appeals to keep the injunction against SB 184 in place, citing the district court’s reliance on well-established, evidence-based medical standards and parents’ fundamental right to obtain medical care for their children. At a May hearing before the district court and in related filings, parents testified that being able to access needed care has had an enormously positive impact on their children’s health and that being forced to stop treatment would create devastating consequences for their children’s wellbeing.

The district court blocked enforcement of SB 184 citing substantial evidence that the law seeks to ban established, effective medical care and that doing so would cause severe harm. In its order the court said that plaintiffs are likely to prevail in their claim that SB 184 unconstitutionally discriminates against transgender minors and violates the fundamental right of parents, rather than the state, to make healthcare decisions for their children.

In blocking the law, the district court noted that the State of Alabama presented no evidence to contradict testimony from doctors and medical experts on the well-established safety and efficacy of medical care for transgender youth who experience gender dysphoria, including the fact that over 22 major medical organizations recognize the established course of care for transgender youth.

Garnitur, Ksiądz Eknes-Tucker przeciwko Marshallowi, is brought by five parents on the grounds that it strips them of the right to make important decisions about their children’s healthcare. They are joined by a private practice pediatrician in rural Southeast Alabama, a clinical psychologist with the UAB medical system, and Reverend Paul Eknes-Tucker, Senior Pastor at Pilgrim United Church of Christ in Birmingham, all of whom could face severe criminal penalties if the law were allowed to go into effect. The U.S. Department of Justice has also joined the suit as plaintiff-intervenor kwestionując konstytucyjność prawa, które pozbawiałoby dostęp do powszechnie dostępnych metod leczenia osobom transpłciowym, ale nie pozostałym.

Powódka Megan Poe, matka 15-letniej Allison z północnej Alabamy:

“While many people may not understand what it means to have a transgender child, I know any parent can relate to worrying about whether your child is healthy and safe. Stopping SB 184 from taking effect has let my family breathe a little easier as my daughter has continued to get the support and care she needs. This law has shined a spotlight on our family’s personal healthcare decisions that we didn’t ask for, but I’m so glad that the district court heard and understood our experience and the experience of other families like ours. My daughter is a confident, engaged and happy teenager today because we are able to provide her care. I hope the court of appeals will see that, too, and keep the injunction against SB 184 in place until we hopefully see it stopped for good.”

Ksiądz Paul Eknes-Tucker, który od 2015 r. pełni funkcję starszego pastora w historycznym kościele Pilgrim Church UCC:

“Parents of transgender children in congregations I have served are seeking what all parents want, to find the best path to ensure their kids are happy and healthy. I have sat with concerned parents and I have witnessed how finding the right support and individualized care has addressed their questions and allowed their transgender children to flourish. Allowing SB 184 to go into effect would take away Alabama families’ options for support and would put Alabama kids at risk.”

Dr Rachel Koe, pediatra prowadząca prywatną praktykę na obszarach wiejskich w południowo-wschodniej Alabamie:

“The district court’s ruling blocking SB 184 brought overwhelming relief to parents of transgender children in my practice who, like all parents, want to do what’s best for their kids. It would be unbelievably cruel to put families through that fear again, and it would be devastating to put parents in the position of risking prison or stopping treatment that is enabling their kids to thrive.”

The families challenging SB 184 come from across the state and are proceeding anonymously due to the risk of criminal prosecution as well as for their privacy and safety.

The plaintiffs are represented by Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC, King & Spalding LLP, GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), SPLC Action Fund (SPLC), and the Human Rights Campaign (HRC).

Jennifer Levi, GLAD Transgender Rights Project Director:

“The district court recognized that parents, not the government, should make decisions about what’s best for their kids’ health and wellbeing. Parents want what’s best for their kids. That’s why preserving parental rights to make healthcare decisions for their children has been such a long-held American value.”

Asaf Orr, NCLR Senior Staff Attorney and Transgender Youth Project Director:

“As the district court said, governments cannot deny transgender adolescents the ability to obtain essential medical care simply because of who they are. Holding otherwise would allow states to enact discriminatory laws that harm young people and intrude into family life.”

Sarah Warbelow, HRC Legal Director:

“It is absolutely critical that parents continue to have the autonomy to make these crucial, life-saving decisions for their children—not state lawmakers. It is imperative that the injunction remains in place against this unconstitutional, harmful law that strips parents of their ability to act in the best interest of their child.”

Scott McCoy, SPLC Action Fund Interim Deputy Legal Director LGBTQ Rights & Special Litigation:

“Maintaining the injunction against this ill-conceived law is critical to the children and families that rely on this life-affirming and life-saving medical care. We are hopeful that the Court of Appeals will see that the district court got it right in finding that this law is unconstitutional and risks the health and well-being of transgender kids.”

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