A
transgender boy has received a new birth certificate from the Canadian
province of Alberta officially recognising his sex as male.
Wren
Kauffman, who at only 12 years old, finally received the birth
certificate at a pride brunch with Edmonton's mayor. He had previously
filed a complaint with the Alberta Human Rights Commission because he
could not change the sex listed on his birth certificate.
Until
Kauffman's complaint, Alberta only allowed a person's sex to be
switched legally if sex reassignment surgery had been completed.
Increasingly the view that SRS is necessary or can be legally required
is changing. In Kauffman's case, a judge ruled that Alberta's
requirements were outdated and unfairly discriminated against
transgender people, but the Premier of Alberta, Dave Hancock, had
actually said the requirement would be dropped a week before that
ruling.
Such
complaints have also been filed in three other provinces: British
Columbia, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. The requirement has already been
dropped in Ontario.
A small bit of misreporting
by The Canadian Press, however, is annoying. According to how the story
is reported on Global News, The Canadian Press insists on saying,
"Wren, who was born a girl, had said it was stressful being listed as
female" and Global News titled the piece, "Alberta gives new birth
certificate to 12-year-old boy who was born a girl."
Wren was not "born a girl," any more than I was "born a boy." Is major media ever going to get this one right? When we get new birth certificates, is that not enough recognition for the errors made
when we were assigned a gender marker at birth? Wren may have his new
birth certificate, but The Canadian Press seems to have trouble
recognising the truth that the birth certificate represents. Ugh.
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