I don't live in Ohio any more.
I saw the note on Dr. Becky's site--I looked at the Ohio Division of Vital Records web site--
http://www.odh.ohio.gov/vitalstatistics/legalinfo/leglname.aspx -- it said to send a certified copy of the court order. I'm sending it along with a letter requesting a name and gender change. I've already prepared myself a form letter template for that in Word because I've been sending out so many name/gender change requests.
They won't change the birth certificate itself, but the change goes into a "computerized abstract," whatever that means, as an attachment to the original, which is then supposed to be a valid legal change of name.
What the hell is wrong with Ohio anyway? How is this discrimination ever going to be overturned?
Posted on: October 20, 2007, 08:34:52 AM
Quote from: Sarah Louise on October 19, 2007, 09:54:08 AMI was born there also.
And how did you handle this, Sarah?
QuoteWrite your congressperson, that is the best I can suggest.
What would a congressperson do? You mean the one where I live now--or the congresswoman of where I used to live in Ohio, the district where my parents live? (Stephanie Tubbs-Jones) Anyway, that's federal and this concerns a state law. Could you explain some more how that would work?
I looked up the Ohio Birth Certificate Project and signed up for their
Yahoo group. They were supposed to be working through the courts to overturn this discrimination. Unfortunately there hasn't been any news in months. Recently the only mail to the Yahoo group has been spam--this suggests that the moderator of the group has stopped paying attention. I wrote to the founder of the project but received no reply. I can't tell if the project has been abandoned. I wish there were even a glimmer of hope on the horizon. I fear when the Read ID Act goes into effect, we Ohio natives will really be screwed as to our ID.