These cities are stepping up to provide sanctuary to trans peoplehttps://www.advocate.com/politics/sanctuar-cities-protecting-trans-people 🔗Ryan Adamczeski (4 Nov 2025)
Attacks on transgender rights didn't start with Donald Trump — but neither did the movements resisting them.
Since 2022, 25 states have banned most gender-affirming care for trans youth, six of which make it a felony for doctors to provide the treatment. Two have banned surgery only. While only 14 and the District of Columbia have shield laws protecting the care, a small but growing coalition of "sanctuary cities" for trans people are filling in the gaps.
These cities — of which there are an estimated fewer than 10 in the U.S. — are not superficial "safe spaces." For trans kids and their families, they are meant to ensure that local resources aren't used to aid officials from other jurisdictions prosecuting them or their doctors. They also prohibit officials from sharing information about someone's gender, sex, or health care.
While the resolutions can't overturn state or federal laws, "the closest point to the community is a council," says Eric Guerra, mayor pro tem of Sacramento. The City Council voted unanimously to make Sacramento a sanctuary city in March 2024. It was the first state capital to adopt that status.
There wasn't just one person who came forward and motivated officials to declare Olympia, Washington, a sanctuary city in January.
Democratic-controlled cities passing local ordinances in Republican-controlled states can lead to more complications, like in Kansas City, Missouri.
The City Council there approved a sanctuary resolution for gender-affirming care in May 2023, shortly after the state legislature passed a bill banning the treatment for trans minors. While the city could not overturn state law, Mayor Quinton Lucas, who introduced the resolution, ordered local police and city personnel to make enforcement "their lowest priority."