Oregon Drivers Licenses Now Allow "M" "F" or "X" for Sex/Gender Marker

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InkedFutureNullo (imported)
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Oregon Drivers Licenses Now Allow "M" "F" or "X" for Sex/Gender Marker

Post by InkedFutureNullo (imported) »

Of possible interest to some of the eunuch family...

As of this morning, it is now possible to get your driver's license in Oregon without specifying as "male" or "female." The new "X" (rather than "M" or "F") designation technically stands for "unspecified," but was created after a non-binary gendered individual successfully sued to have a proper identifier on their license. The "X" makes sense, since there are many identification terms used by non-binary folks, and this also avoids the earlier nonsense of having to have a doctor sign paperwork "proving" that you'd received proper medical treatment for your gender identity.

I was in line before the DMV opened this morning, and got it done at the first possible moment. So happy to be recognized as Third Gender! 😀D:D
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Re: Oregon Drivers Licenses Now Allow "M" "F" or "X" for Sex/Gender Marker

Post by Uncle Flo (imported) »

Congratulations! Nice one! --FLO--
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Re: Oregon Drivers Licenses Now Allow "M" "F" or "X" for Sex/Gender Marker

Post by Losethem (imported) »

What did you have to do to get the designation? Just ask? Was there paperwork involved from outside the DMV?
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Re: Oregon Drivers Licenses Now Allow "M" "F" or "X" for Sex/Gender Marker

Post by SplitDik (imported) »

British Columbia is doing one better -- issuing birth certificates with gender "U" (presumably for "Unidentified" or "Unknown"). http://www.cnn.com/2017/07/04/health/ca ... index.html

Canadian baby given health card without sex designation

By Zamira Rahim, CNN

Updated 1:19 PM ET, Tue July 4, 2017

New terms are entering the cultural lexicon as people endeavor to codify their sexual orientation or gender. These definitions, which have been edited, are primarily from the LGBTQ advocacy group The Trevor Project. The gender fluid definition is from Dictionary.com. <a href="http://www.thetrevorproject.org/pages/glossary#" target="_blank">Visit The Trevor Project for more details</a>.

Photos: Know your identity terms

New terms are entering the cultural lexicon as people endeavor to codify their sexual orientation or gender. These definitions, which have been edited, are primarily from the LGBTQ advocacy group The Trevor Project. The gender fluid definition is from Dictionary.com. Visit The Trevor Project for more details.

New terms are entering the cultural lexicon as people endeavor to codify their sexual orientation or gender. These definitions, which have been edited, are primarily from the LGBTQ advocacy group The Trevor Project. The gender fluid definition is from Dictionary.com. <a href="http://www.thetrevorproject.org/pages/glossary#" target="_blank">Visit The Trevor Project for more details</a>.

Photos: Know your identity terms

New terms are entering the cultural lexicon as people endeavor to codify their sexual orientation or gender. These definitions, which have been edited, are primarily from the LGBTQ advocacy group The Trevor Project. The gender fluid definition is from Dictionary.com. Visit The Trevor Project for more details.

Searyl Atli has been assigned a health card that leaves the baby's sex unspecified

Authorities have refused to issue a birth certificate

(CNN)A Canadian baby has been issued a health document that doesn't specify male or female, in what campaigners are claiming is a possible "world first."

Searyl Atli Doty was born in British Columbia, "outside the medical system," and did not undergo a genital inspection after birth, campaign group Gender Free I.D. Coalition said in a statement. The group's vision, stated on its website, is "to remove all gender/sex designations from identity documents."

Parent Kori Doty, who is non-binary trans, wants to avoid assigning gender to the child.

"It is up to Searyl to decide how they identify, when they are old enough to develop their own gender identity," Doty said in the statement. "I am not going to foreclose their choices based on an arbitrary assignment of gender at birth based on an inspection of their genitals."

Despite difficulties in obtaining a birth certificate, a health card for the baby with the sex listed as "U" has been issued, with the coalition saying it arrived one day "without explanation." An image of the card shared by the parent includes the "U" designation and the child's name; it says the child was born in November and the card was issued in April.

Health cards entitle Canadians to use of public health care services and need to be shown each time a medical service is used. Canada has a universal health-care system paid for by taxes, and the cards themselves are the responsibility of the individual Canadian provinces.

The Gender Free I.D. Coalition believes that the "U" stands for "unspecified or unknown" and that Searyl is the first child to be registered in such a way without sex or gender being specified.

British Columbia's Ministry of Health did not respond to requests for comment.

The desire to omit a designated gender on the card was partly motivated through Doty's personal experiences.

"When I was born, doctors looked at my genitals and made assumptions about who I would be, and those assignments followed me and followed my identification throughout my life," Doty told CBC.

"Those assumptions were incorrect, and I ended up having to do a lot of adjustments since then."

Separately, Doty is one of eight complainants in a case being heard by British Columbia's Human Rights Tribunal, according to the Gender Free I.D. Coalition.

The complainants are seeking to have gender designation removed from all new birth certificates.

Initially, Doty was unable to receive a medical number for the baby. The child has also been denied a birth certificate.

Doty's lawyer, barbara findlay (who does not use capital letters to spell her name), told CBC that birth certificates in British Columbia use only male or female designations. findlay did not respond to CNN's requests for comment.

Doty has applied for judicial review of the decision denying Searyl a birth certificate, supported by the Gender Free I.D. Coalition.

The parent will argue that "requiring a gender marker" violates the baby's rights "as a Canadian citizen to life, liberty and security of the person."

"I want my kid to have all of the space to be the most whole and complete person that they can be," Doty told CBC.
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