NATIONAL NEWS

The number of Kansas residents changing their gender jumped 300% before a new law began

Jun 28, 2023, 12:44 PM

Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach speaks during a news conference during which he declares that a...

Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach speaks during a news conference during which he declares that a new state law prevents transgender people from changing their birth certificates and driver's licenses to reflect their gender identities, Monday, June 26, 2023, at the Statehouse in Topeka, Kans. The state saw an increase of more than 300% this year in the number of people seeking to change the gender markers on those documents. (AP Photo/John Hanna)
Credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS

(AP Photo/John Hanna)

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The number of people officially changing their gender in Kansas jumped more than 300% this year ahead of a new state law that legally erases their ability to identify with a gender other than the sex assigned to them at birth.

The legislation is part of a raft of measures lawmakers across the U.S. have passed to roll back transgender rights. It has provisions meant to restrict transgender people’s use of restrooms, locker rooms and other facilities and applies to a person’s identity listed on state documents such as birth certificates and driver’s licenses.

The Kansas law takes effect Saturday, but it’s not yet clear how it will play out in the daily lives of transgender people. The new legislation conflicts with a 2019 federal court order directing the state to allow transgender people to change their birth certificates.

Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly, to formally rescind the order.

The attorney general even indicated that the flurry of last-minute changes by transgender people has been for naught: He says the law requires the state to undo any changes that have been made to official documents.

With the legal climate uncertain, the nonprofit legal aid group Kansas Legal Services and LGBTQ+ rights advocates have run seminars for transgender people on how to change their documents. Both birth certificates and driver’s licenses list “sex,” which the new state law defines as a person’s “biological reproductive system” at birth.

“There was a big push … to try and help people get their gender marker changed before July 1,” said Taryn Jones, vice chair and lobbyist for the LGBTQ+ rights group Equality Kansas.

An average of 58 Kansas residents a month have changed their birth certificates so far this year, or 334% more than the average of 13 a month from July 2019 through 2022, according to state health department figures released this week. Since July 2019, more than 900 people have changed their birth certificates, but almost 350 of those, or 38%, did it this year as the Republican-controlled Legislature debated and then passed the new law.

The state motor vehicle department reported this week that 161 people have changed their gender identity on their driver’s licenses so far this year, an average of 27 a month. That’s an increase of 384% over the average of 5 1/2 per month from July 2019 through 2022. Almost 400 people have changed their driver’s licenses since July 2019.

According to the state’s data, 126, or 78% of the changes in gender on driver’s licenses came in May and June, after lawmakers overrode Kelly’s veto.

Some birth certificates have been changed by health care providers who incorrectly recorded the sex assigned a baby at birth. Others were for babies born with intersex conditions, such as ambiguous genitals, who were not initially assigned a sex at birth but had their parents later choose one for them.

Jenna Bellemere, a transgender University of Kansas student, said she changed her birth certificate and driver’s license last year, believing “this anti-trans stuff” was building.

“I didn’t really want to go throughout my life carrying around a document that really was inaccurate and an ID with a name that no one calls me anymore,” she said.

___

Follow John Hanna on Twitter: https://twitter.com/apjdhanna

National News

Associated Press

Bear with 3 cubs attacks man after breaking into Colorado home

LAKE CITY, Colo. (AP) — A black bear with three cubs attacked a man in his Colorado home after they crashed in through a sliding glass door and he was unable to get them to leave. State wildlife managers killed all four bears after the attack Thursday night in Lake City, a southwestern Colorado town […]

1 hour ago

Associated Press

Authorities are investigating after a Frontier Airlines plane lands with fire in one engine

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Federal authorities said Sunday that they are investigating the emergency landing of a Frontier Airlines plane in Las Vegas. The Federal Aviation Administration said Frontier Flight 1326 from San Diego with 190 passengers aboard was in the process of landing Saturday afternoon at Las Vegas’ Harry Reid International Airport when the […]

3 hours ago

Associated Press

Minnesota man arrested after allegedly threatening to ‘shoot up’ synagogue

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A Minnesota man was arrested after allegedly threatening to “shoot up” a Minneapolis synagogue, officials announced on Saturday. Staff at Temple Israel reported to the Minneapolis Police Department on Sept. 11 that they had received several phone calls from a person threatening to “shoot up” the synagogue. Then on Thursday, a special […]

5 hours ago

Associated Press

Tropical Storm Milton could hit Florida as a major hurricane midweek

MIAMI (AP) — People across Florida were given notice Sunday that Milton, for now just a tropical storm off the coast of Mexico, could intensify rapidly into a major hurricane before slamming midweek into the storm-ravaged Gulf Coast. “There is increasing confidence that a powerful hurricane with life-threatening hazards will be affecting portions of the […]

9 hours ago

A makeshift cardboard sign leans up against campaign posters near a relief center on Thursday, Oct....

Associated Press

Voters in North Carolina and Georgia have bigger problems than politics. Helene changed everything

VILAS, N.C. (AP) — Brad Farrington pulls over to grab a case of water bottles being passed out in Vilas, a small rural community tucked away in the Blue Ridge Mountains. He’s on his way to help a friend who lost much of what he owned when Hurricane Helene blew through last weekend. His friend, […]

9 hours ago

Associated Press

Top US trade official sees progress in helping workers. Voters will decide if her approach continues

WASHINGTON (AP) — As the U.S. trade representative, Katherine Tai is ballot in November. Voters are essentially being asked to decide whether it is best to work with the rest of the world or threaten it. Do they favor pursuing worker protections in trade talks, as Tai has done on behalf of the Biden-Harris administration? […]

10 hours ago

The number of Kansas residents changing their gender jumped 300% before a new law began