Susan's Place Logo

News:

According to Google Analytics 25,259,719 users made visits accounting for 140,758,117 Pageviews since December 2006

Main Menu

The "New" NJ Trans Driver License Regs: A Step Forward, If You Can Afford To Tak

Started by Shana A, June 04, 2009, 10:27:11 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Shana A

The "New" NJ Trans Driver License Regs: A Step Forward, If You Can Afford To Take It
Filed by: Rebecca Juro
June 3, 2009 6:00 PM

http://www.bilerico.com/2009/06/the_new_nj_trans_driver_license_regs_a_s.php

Last Friday, I drove down to New Jersey Motor Vehicle Department headquarters in Trenton and tried to take advantage of the new, less oppressive identity regulations for gender markers on New Jersey driver licenses. I got a pretty rude awakening when I arrived, though. When this new regulation was released, everything we were told about it led one to believe that all that would be required to change the gender marker on a New Jersey driver's license in the future was a signed affidavit attesting to the fact that the driver intended to live a certain gender identity and the change was not for fraudulent purposes.

Seems perfectly reasonable, doesn't it? It did to me too...until I actually tried to do it.

I was handed a form that required a gender specialist signoff stating that they believe my gender identity to be either male or female and for that to continue for the foreseeable future. If this form had been handed to me even as little as six months ago, I would have had no problem getting it signed.
"Be yourself; everyone else is already taken." Oscar Wilde


  •  

Mister

The law here in CA is similar.  Have your MD or therapist sign off.  I highly doubt New Jersey requires a gender specialist.
  •  

Virginia87106

  •  

Alyssa M.

QuoteThe old policy relied mainly upon the simple presence or absence of certain physical parts. The new policy presupposes that a transsexual person cannot be trusted to know his or her own mind, and that their assertion of their own gender identity must be backed up by someone else.
...

I guess my true core issue here is one of class. This new policy, while far easier to deal with for some, is still an unreasonably high hurdle for low-income transpeople, those who can't afford the services of a gender specialist to obtain that signature on the form.

Okay, let's take this apart. The old policy required some kind of surgury, which you sure won't be able to afford if you can't afford a therapist for six months. Furthermore, access to that surgury requires a therapist to sign off on a statement far more powerful than the one required by NJ.

Now, what level of "gender specialist" is required? The choices are physician, therapist, or social worker. So I imagine that if you can afford an endocrinologist, you should be okay. If you can't, I should hope you can see some doctor, and get them to sign off. I don't know where the social worker would come in. But I'm sure you can find someone "whose practice includes assisting, treating, or counseling persons with gender identity issues," including you, and who can, in their professional opinion, attest that you are who you say you are.

Of course, it would be nice if changing the gender marker were as easy as correcting a mistake or updating a change in eye color, height, or weight. But that just doesn't seem all that onerous to me.
All changes, even the most longed for, have their melancholy; for what we leave behind us is a part of ourselves; we must die to one life before we can enter another.

   - Anatole France
  •  

Janet_Girl

In Oregon, you have to have your therapist sign a letter.  The only problem is the therapist has to be on the state approved list.  Fortunate for me, my therapist is only of the top therapist is the state.

If your doctor is a gender trained doc, have them signed the form.

Janet
  •  

Michelle.

One more concern I had with this story. The doctor moved out of state and left no way for clients to get ahold of their charts?

In Florida, our physicians pay a retainer fee too a records storage company. In case of sale of practice, retirement or death of the doctor; the company takes sealed possesion of the medical files and sends you the information to have your records forwarded to your new doctor.

When this happens I dont even have to pay the postage fee to ship my records to the new doctor.

New Jersey is argueably the most regulated state in the US. I'm suspicious about the Garden State not having a revenue generating procedure in place.
  •  

mickie88

wish we had something even remotely like this in ohio. we have nothing >:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(>:(
  •