Join us: Jan 22 for the first International Day of Solidarity with Trans Prisoners #transsolidarity #transprisoners http://thndr.me/FrUhNP
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@jenkateshields
Join us: Jan 22 for the first International Day of Solidarity with Trans Prisoners #transsolidarity #transprisoners http://thndr.me/FrUhNP
I just supported Trans Prisoner Solidarity on @ThunderclapIt // @4TransPrisoners
as part of the leadup to international day of solidarity with trans prisoners on the 22nd of jan a thunderclap is happening on the 27th nov at 5pm est!
itâs pretty vital for ppl to sign up for this - currently we have a reach of 150k which is pretty great but we can definitely do better. as well as raising awareness of the upcoming day of solidarity the amount of ppl signing up to this will provide a really useful tool for activism both on an international and local level!!
The Ministry of Health this morning responded to an Official Information Act request made in August by A.D Tait requesting "any correspondence, briefings, summaries or presentations related to chan...
The Ministry of Health this morning responded to an Official Information Act request made in August by A.D Tait requesting âany correspondence, briefings, summaries or presentations related to changing the current level of funding for Sexual Reassignment Surgery (SRS)â as well as âany assessments, briefings or correspondence between the Ministry of Health, DHBs and overseas providers of Male-to-Female SRS, in regards to sending patients overseas for treatment,â as discussed in the Ministryâs response to another OIA request in April.
The outlook is bleak.Â
First off, the Ministry is withholding three emails (falling under the second half of the request, about overseas treatment) between them and âthe DHBâ on the grounds of âmaintain[ing] the effective conduct of public affairs through the free and frank expression of opinionsâ (OIA Section 9(2)(g)(i)). What does âfree and frank expression of opinionsâ mean in this context and why do they need to be withheld? Considering Andrew Little and coâs comments earlier this year and the fact that in the Ministryâs own communications released in this OIA they refer to trans surgeries as âelectiveâ I donât have high expectations. Hopefully a complaint to the Ombudsman gets them to release those emails, or at least give some detail as to the content of them.
The first email in the release is to the Chairperson of the Health Select Committee, Simon OâConnor, from Dr Don Mackie, Chief Medical Officer, about the petition recently delivered by Tom Hamilton and 435 others. The first section is basically a summation of how crap we have it â services arenât standardised, theyâre sparse, and weâre often forced into the expensive private sector for what should be basic healthcare. The second talks about surgeries, overseas options, and the waitlist, and is basically what we already know â 73 people are on the combined AMAB/AFAB waitlist; 5 on the AMAB waitlist who have been already approved will be sent overseas âas soon as the Ministry can confirm an overseas providerâ. The final section admits that âthere has been little consideration of the provision of a comprehensive gender dysphoria service nationallyâ and âacknowledges that it is time to review the numbers publicly funded for GRS, and how these may be managed in a timely mannerâ (though itâs worth noting that in a later email in this release they state they have no timeline for this review).
The second email is, quite frankly, pretty horrific. Itâs from a surgeon in Australia (Brisbane from the looks of it) who the MoH are considering as their overseas provider for AMAB GRS. He spends 99% of the email talking about his AFAB GRS experience and practice, stating only that he is âinterested to expand this service for MtF [sic] patients at a later stageâ. He makes zero mention of any experience performing AMAB GRS. If this is the Ministryâs choice, how can they justify it? A surgeon with no experience who currently doesnât even perform the procedure theyâre looking for? Are they willing to accept an even longer wait for trans fem people? An even longer wait for those 5 people already approved waiting for a provider?
The last email from MoH is in response to a doctor requesting information and clarification for a client about the waitlist and its criteria. The client made a complaint about the âlack of action on making a referralâ for GRS. The doctor asks:
âI am aware that the only surgeon in NZ performing this surgery has now retired. In this context, can you please tell me exactly what level of gender reassignment surgery is currently funded via the SHCTP [Special High Cost Treatment pool]? Can you also tell me how you manage the referrals for such surgery and the large waitlist that I suspect must inevitably result. Assuming we are funding some small number of surgeries (in Australia perhaps?), are we able to share what number of people are already on a wait list for surgery so that a newly referred person knows that the wait will be a very, very long time and is [sic] public health funding is probably not a realistic solution for them.
âI am keen and it would be very helpful to be able to give this client accurate information and a realistic account of what she can expect from the public health system, assuming she meets all eligibility criteria (which Iâm not confident she does anyway).â
Before even getting into the Ministryâs response the attitude towards GRS and trans healthcare in this email really unsettles me. The eligibility criteria referenced is pretty fucked â requiring 2 psychiatric reports, one psychologist report, and âdemonstration of progress in transitionâ including âdealing with work, family, and interpersonal issues as well as significant improvement/stability in mental healthâ. Aside from the gatekeeping and hoop-jumping required by that many psych reports (as Megan says on twitter, does any other population need 3 psych reports to get on a funding waitlist?) the âdemonstration of progressâ shows a real lack of understanding as to trans experiences. My mental health hasnât improved after coming out and starting transition, and itâs not because transition isnât right for me. My MH was bad before, itâs bad now. While for the most part dysphoria is lesser and HRT has helped with gender issues, being an out trans woman means I have to face transmisogyny and violence on a daily basis. Show me any other population that faces daily aggression, micro and macro, without that having an impact on mental health. Same goes for âdealing with work, family, and interpersonal issuesâ â what about those with unsupportive families? Unsupportive workplaces? A social circle that refuses to accept them? What happens to those who end up isolated and alone after coming out? Does this render them ineligible for what is a lifesaving surgery?
Then thereâs the super cavalier attitude to how long the waitlist is â realism is good, most of us already know what the wait will be like, but this email shows little to no concern as to this wait and the impact it has.
The response from the Ministry to this is the one where they talk about the timeframe for the waitlist review â âdue to the increasing W/L we are looking to review these numbers, but no time frame yetâ. Interestingly, they also state that they âshould be able to send the first of the W/L off to the preferred provider this yearâ. This doesnât align with the single provider they claim to have contacted (seeing as the scope of the request included anycorrespondence with overseas providers) who doesnât even perform the procedure yet and likely has zero experience. Unless contact with another provider is in the three emails they withheld (not likely, considering they state these emails are between MoH and DHB) this timeframe seems unlikely, if not irresponsible.
At the very least the Ministry recommend to âalways inform the patient fully [about waitlist times] and place them on the W/L anywayâ.
Overall, the information included in this release is disappointing at best, worrying at worst. They seem to have made little progress as to an overseas provider, have no timeframe for reviewing the forty year long wait list, and discuss an overzealous, gatekeeping, and misinformed set of criteria for funding. The Ministry of Health need to do better, but while attitudes in this country â both public and political â consider GRS ânuttyâ and âelectiveâ I donât hold much hope. I donât think Iâll ever get the surgery I need, publicly or privately.
Press Release: No Pride in Prisons Plans Hunger Strike for Trans Prisoner
Transgender and queer activists are planning a hunger strike, demanding the transfer of an incarcerated trans woman to a womenâs facility. Jade Follett is currently being held in the Rimutaka menâs prison, despite requesting more than two months ago to be transferred to a womenâs prison.
According to the group, No Pride in Prisons, Jade is in a precarious situation. âWeâve received correspondence from Jade saying she requested transfer to a womenâs facility in June, and has yet to see any action taken on behalf of the Department of Corrections,â says spokesperson Jennifer Katherine Shields.
âWe are very worried about Jade. Although sheâs a very strong woman, we know that a menâs prison is not a safe place for a trans woman.â
The group has pointed to a 2007 study which shows that trans women were 13 times more likely than the general population to be sexually assaulted in menâs prisons.
âHowever,â Shields says, âthe reality of the problem for trans people in the New Zealand prisons cannot be fully known. Corrections refuses to collect and release adequate information about trans women in prison, despite numerous Official Information Act requests.â
âWe are also calling on Corrections to release information regarding the number of trans prisoners across the country, including what facilities they are being held in.â
The group has informed the Department of Corrections that if she is not moved before the 27th of August 2015, they will stage a hunger strike.
âEveryone deserves to be treated with dignity. The fact that Corrections hasnât done anything about this for two months shows their complete lack of respect for trans people.â
âWe are calling on corrections to immediately transfer Jade to a womenâs facility for her to serve out the rest of her sentence.â
According to Movement 03.05.04 of the Department of Correctionsâ Prison Operations Manual, all this requires is approval from the Corrections CEO, Ray Smith.
âRay Smith must give immediate approval for Jadeâs transfer.â
Strikers include prominent community figures and advocates, such as Jennifer Katherine Shields, Emilie RÄkete, Aaliyah Zionov, Chase Fox and others.
âWe will hold daily vigils on Aucklandâs KâRoad until Jade has been transferred.â
âWe will not allow corrections to continue its transphobic disregard of Jadeâs safety.â
ENDS
Today Statistics NZ released their decision on creating a new standard for gender identity classification, including "gender diverse" alongside "male" and "female". You'll remember that they held e...
Jennifer Shields on the announcement of the new âgender diverseâ classification option. Thereâs been a few posts in my feed saying WOO but reading Jen and Meganâs tweets made me want to direct some traffic Jenâs way.Â
âŠThis standard separates anyone who identifies as gender diverse from the cis population, only othering us further. As Megan pointed out on twitter, it will capture data on the non-binary population relatively well, but is insufficient for capturing actual data on gender identity overall. It also relies on terminology many in the community refuse to use â such as the typical and frustrating MtF/FtM. It leaves no space for trans women to identify as women, but instead as something Other that relies heavily on âborn a manâ rhetoric.
Kelly Ellis makes a relevant point on GayNZ: a binary trans woman may elect to tick âfemaleâ to not Other herself or invalidate her gender, while someone who, for example, does not experience transmisogyny may tick one of the gender diverse options and thus âskew the picture of poverty that transgender people face.â Essentially, this system would require many of us to marginalise ourselves and our identities by selecting an Othered category in order for important data about our lives and experiences to be collected.
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Raising funds for lifesaving surgery. Givealittle is the place to donate and fundraise for causes and charities online.
so dysphoria and trauma has reached the point where i need to do something about it. the public health system will take 40+ years to get me surgery and thatâs unfeasible bc i will be dead by then so iâm asking for help and hoping that it will work
please please please help jen if you can. the average life expectancy for a trans woman is shorter than the wait list for surgery in this country. waiting isnât an option
jen is so important please help
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so a response to an official information act request on the size and status of the waiting lists for grs in nz got released
the waitlist is 61 ppl large - thatâs the list of ppl waiting for final surgical assessment, so theppl whove been through all the psych approval etc
they approve only 3 surgeries every 2 years
so if i were to get on that list right this second itâd take 40 years for me to get surgery. iâd get it in 2055.
40 years. thatâs longer than our combined estimated lifespans. i know like, one trans woman older than 40. i know i wont live that long.
fucked tbh
Iâm a trans boy who is pre-T and Iâve never managed to pass, no matter how much I try.Â
So society treats me like a girl. And you know what that means I can suffer from? Misogyny.Â
Stop telling me and other trans guys that we have male privilege when weâre still treated like the gender we are not.
Youâre a trans boy, youâre pre-T, and donât pass as male. So, society sees you as your assigned gender and treats you like a girl because you donât fit societyâs standards of a man/boy. Society is treating, and gendering, you based on your appearence, not for who you really are. Last time I checked, basing someoneâs gender off of their looks is transphobia, not misogyny.
Whatever misogynistic comments, phrases, actions, etc thatâre thrown at you are completely misdirected and are based on the transphobic idea that âoh this person looks like [insert gender], so they must be [insert gender]!â. Which is TRANSPHOBIC. You donât face misogyny, you do not face the hatred of women, because you ARENT A WOMAN. There is a huge difference between being treated like a woman when you are one and when you arenât one.
Yes, trans men, if they pass or not, have male privilege, at least, inside the trans community because trans men (as well as other cafab trans people) are prioritized over trans women (and other camab trans people). Now, the idea that trans men have male privilege outside of the trans community is a different subject and can only be discussed based on if a trans man passes or not, but a lot of people seem to forget that maleness as an identity is glorified by society, so yes you have male privilege to extent in that regard basd on the fact that your identity, in the end, will be valued over everyone else who isnât a man.
need help (auckland)
yo, reminder that our flat in avondale is still full of disabled queer and trans students barely scraping by, and that there are a couple things you can do for us!
first, if you have a ute/trailer, we still need beds and appliances and in some cases have been promised them but canât transport them - your time and vehicle would be much appreciated.
second, hereâs a list of things we always need:
MEDICINE painkillers of all strengths, cough medicine, antiemetics, lemsip type things, tubigrip/other supportive garments. also, antipsychs/antidepressants/benzos if you have any to spare for people who canât access state mental healthcare for fear of being denied hormones.
FOOD cartons of long-life milk, rice, instant noodles (especially oriental for the vegetarians or mi goreng), juice or powdered/concentrated drink mix (or water filters - our plumbing is bad so the water tastes awful), packets of soup mix or cake mix or other things that will cheaply and easily feed disabled teenagers who canât stand up or lift things for long to assemble things from scratch. (chocolate and chocolate biscuits are also super useful for eating disorder days or self-care or for the house diabetic to get her sugars up quickly!)
HOUSEHOLD STUFF toilet paper and paper towels, toilet cleaner, a mop and bucket, trash bins and bin bags, packets of cleaning wipes (again, a lot easier on disabled kids who donât have the wrist strength to wring cloths out or carry buckets). also, bedding (pillows, sheets for double and single beds, blankets).
BIGGER THINGS weâre still short like three beds. desks, shelves and chairs, lamps and multiboxes and extension cables and old curtains. we also need to source a permanent fridge and washing machine, as the ones we have are on short-term loan from a kind soul.
hit me up for the address! thank you!
on my way to steal your garden veggiesÂ
B. Binaohanâs tweets about TDOV.
While I enjoy how many Black and Brown trans people are on my dash right now, letâs not sit here and pretend like this day isnât based around the wants and needs of white folks.
Front and back, three bros in a tree.