Sunday, December 9, 2018

U.S. States begin offering non-binary Driver’s Licenses


 
Several U.S. states are allowing their non-binary residents, who don’t identify as male or female, to obtain identity documents that accurately reflect their gender identity. 

Over the past year and a half, several states have adopted policies that allow their residents to obtain a Driver’s License or State ID that identifies them as non-binary. Jurisdictions that have or will soon have these policies in place include Oregon, Washington D.C., California, Maine, Minnesota, Arkansas, and Colorado. 
 



On June 15, 2017, Oregon became the first state in the country to adopt a policy that allows its residents to obtain a Driver’s License or State ID with an “X” gender marker, which stands for either non-binary or unspecified. 
 
The policy was approved by Oregon’s state Transportation Commission and went into effect in early July 2017. 
 
 
 

While Oregon was the first U.S. jurisdiction to approve a policy allowing its residents to obtain non-binary State IDs, Washington D.C. was the first to begin issuing them. 
 
Washington D.C. issued its first non-binary Driver’s Licenses June 27, 2017, after its Mayor announced the policy the previous week. 
 
 
 

California Governor Jerry Brown signed a law on Oct. 15, 2017 that will allow people applying for a Driver’s License or ID to be identified as male, female, or non-binary. 
 
That part of the law will be implemented Jan. 1, 2019.

 
 
 
The office of Maine’s Secretary of State released a press release June 11, 2018, which states that in July 2019, the state will allow residents to obtain Driver’s Licenses and IDs with an “X” gender marker. 
 
In the meantime, stickers for State IDs will be available that read, “Gender has been changed to X — Non-binary.” 
 
 
 

Minnesota began using a new driver’s license software in early October that allows residents to select an “X” gender marker. 
 
 
 

Arkansas issued gender-neutral state IDs to at least two people in October. 
 
The Director of Communications for the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration told “Into,” a news website that covers LGBT issues, that the IDs were issued pursuant to a policy that was implemented by a former state official in December 2010. 
 
That policy allows people to change the gender on their driver’s license, “as requested, no questions asked, no documentation required.” 
 
Into reported that the 2010 policy change was adopted without a formal announcement. 
 
 
 

In November, the Denver Post reported that the Colorado Department of Revenue, which oversees the Division of Motor Vehicles, had decided to allow residents to use an “X” gender marker on their Driver’s Licenses beginning Nov. 30. 
 
The Department’s Executive Director told the newspaper that the policy change was adopted in part because Colorado residents have filed lawsuits, against other government agencies, to change their sex or gender markers on official documents.

In one of those cases, Colorado resident Dana Zzyym sued the U.S. State Department to receive a passport with an “X” gender marker. 
 
In September, a federal judge ruled the State Department’s gender marker policy, which only allows for a male or female gender marker, violated the Administrative Procedure Act, a law that governs how federal agencies adopt rules and regulations. 
 
The judge ordered the State Department to issue Dana a passport with an X gender marker. 
 
The U.S. State Department has appealed the judge’s ruling. 
 
 
 
 

Given the pace of these changes, it's likely that more states will soon adopt similar policies that will allow their non-binary residents to obtain State IDs that accurately reflect their gender identity. 
 
 
 

Monday, November 19, 2018

Judge orders State Dept. to issue passport to non-binary citizen


 
A federal judge has ordered the U.S. State Department to issue a passport to an intersex American citizen who doesn’t identify as either male or female.

On Sept. 19, Judge Richard Jackson ruled the State Department violated the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), because its policy against granting a passport with a sex designation other than male or female was arbitrary and capricious, and exceeded its statutory authority.

Thus, the judge ordered the State Department to issue a passport for Dana Zzyym with a marker designating their sex as “X” for unspecified, rather than an “M” for male or “F” for female. I first covered Dana’s lawsuit against the State Department on this blog in April.

 
 
Dana was born intersex, meaning they had biological characteristics between those typical of either boys or girls. 
 
Dana’s parents raised them as a boy and didn’t tell them that they were born intersex. 
 
Later on, Dana adopted their current name, before they learned that they were born intersex. 
 
Today, Dana doesn’t identify as either male or female and has chosen to use the pronoun “they” to refer to themselves rather than “he” or “she”. 
 
 
 

Dana Zzyym has sued the U.S. State Department to receive a passport designating their sex as neither male nor female. Dana is shown in the photo above wearing a t-shirt with the symbol for Lambda Legal, an LGBT advocacy organization that is representing them in their case.

 
 
 
I covered intersex people in an earlier article on this blog. Some intersex people identify as male, others as female, and some identify as nonbinary.  I previously profiled several non-binary people who, like Dana, don’t identify as either male or female. Some non-binary people are biologically intersex, others are not. 
 
 
 

In 2014, Dana applied for a passport from the State Department with an “X” in the sex field rather than “M” for male or “F” for female. Their passport application was denied, and Dana sued the State Department.

In November 2016, Judge Jackson ordered the State Department to reevaluate its policy, explaining that the agency could reconsider it or find additional facts to support it.

The State Department issued a memo in May 2017 outlining several reasons for its policy for requiring passport applicants to select either a male or female sex marker. 
 
In his September ruling, Judge Jackson explained why he found each of these reasons unconvincing. 
 
 






The U.S. Secretary of State is one of the defendants in Dana's lawsuit. The legal battle over Dana's passport application has spanned the terms of three Secretaries of State: John Kerry, Rex Tillerson, and Mike Pompeo.


 
 
 
Matching Records

The State Department argued adding a third sex marker would make it more difficult to match its records with those held by other government agencies — which the department said would make it more difficult to verify the identity of a passport holder, determine if an applicant is eligible to receive a passport, and share information with law enforcement.

Judge Jackson stated the State Department conceded that gender is just one of many fields, including social security number, date of birth, and name, that are used to match an applicant’s data with files held by other agencies. 
 
Jackson added the Department also admitted that in some partner agency files, the gender field is either not used or unreliable.

Jackson explained Washington, Oregon, California, and the District of Columbia each issue IDs that allow people to choose a third gender option.

“The Department’s insistence that a binary gender system is necessary to accurately and reliably crosscheck a passport applicant/holder’s identity ignores the reality that some American passport applicants will have gender verification documents that exclusively list a gender that is neither female nor male,” Jackson wrote. 
 
 
 

The State Department also argued that the policy helps ensure that information in passports is accurate and verifiable. 
 
Jackson found this argument particularly unconvincing.

“I find that requiring an intersex person to misrepresent their sex on this identity document is a perplexing way to serve the Department’s goal of accuracy and integrity,” Jackson stated.


 
 
 
 
 
Who would qualify?

The State Department argued there was no generally accepted medical consensus regarding how to define a third sex, which would make it difficult for the department to reliably determine if someone has changed their sex to match their gender identity.

Jackson cites several medial authorities that recognize the existence of intersex traits. He also explains that people who are born intersex would not need to medically transition to become a third sex, because they were already born that way.

While it’s medically difficult to decide what traits qualify someone as intersex, Jackson said it’s also difficult to accurately assign an intersex person as either physically male or female.

Jackson did not address the questions the State Department should consider when a non-intersex applicant, who identifies as non-binary, applies for an “X” gender marker.


 
 
 
 
Time and Money

The State Department’s final argument is that adding a third sex marker would be expensive and time consuming.

Jackson said the Department has not estimated the amount of time and money that changing the department’s systems would require, and thus he found this argument was also unconvincing.

Jackson ruled that the Department’s reasoning was arbitrary and capricious. He also found that the Department had acted beyond its statutory authority.

“Because neither the Passport Act, nor any other law, authorizes the denial of a passport application without good reason, and adherence to a series of internal policies that do not contemplate the existence of intersex people is not good reason, the Department has acted in excess of its statutory jurisdiction,” he wrote. 
 
 
 

Judge Jackson ordered the U.S. State Department to approve Dana Zzyym's passport application in September.

 
 
 
Because Jackson determined the State Department’s decision to deny Dana a passport was illegal under the APA, he didn’t decide whether the Department’s policy also violated the U.S. Constitution.

Based upon the above reasoning, Jackson prohibited the State Department from using its binary-only gender marker policy to deny Dana’s passport application. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
On Nov. 19, lawyers representing the State Department filed a document that states the Department will appeal Judge Jackson's decision to the Tenth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals. 
 
Primary Source: Notice of Appeal