By John Riley on November 29, 2021 @JRileyMW
An Iowa district court has declared a Republican-led effort to bar Medicaid funds from being used to cover the cost of transition-related surgery for transgender recipients unconstitutional.
Polk County District Judge William Kelly found that a longstanding rule prohibiting Medicaid from covering medically necessary surgery to treat gender dysphoria is discriminatory, unconstitutional, and a violation of the Iowa Civil Rights Act, which prohibits discrimination based on a person’s gender identity.
Kelly also found that the subsequent law, passed by Republicans on a party-line vote in 2019, that sought to cement that insurance exclusion into effect after the Iowa Supreme Court ruled it unconstitutional.
Kelly’s decision comes after a five-year-long fight over Iowa’s insurance exclusion prohibiting public dollars from being used to cover transition-related procedures, based on the outdated idea that such surgeries or treatments are unnecessary or “cosmetic” in nature, rather than medically necessary.
The American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU of Iowa, and the global law firm Nixon Peabody LLP filed a lawsuit challenging the original insurance exclusion as unconstitutional, a finding upheld by the Iowa Supreme Court two years later.Β
However, just months after the Iowa Supreme Court’s decision, Republican lawmakers, led by Gov. Kim Reynolds, passed a new law that carved out a section of the Iowa civil rights law’s protections for transgender people by permitting local governments or state agencies to refuse to spend public dollars on transition-related care. The ACLU subsequently sued, leading to Kelly’s decision last week.
“This is a historic win for civil rights in Iowa,”Β Rita Bettis Austen, the legal director of the ACLU of Iowa, said in a statement. “It recognizes what we’ve long known, that transgender Iowans must not be discriminated against, and that they are protected by the Iowa Constitution’s guarantee of equal protection, as well as by the Iowa Civil Rights Act.”
“We are so relieved for our brave clients that the court has ordered the state to allow them to finally get the gender-affirming surgical care that all their doctors agree is medically necessary for them,” Bettis Austen added. “We are honored to represent them and the transgender clients who have come before them in this fight, in their long journey for themselves and for all other transgender Iowans to be treated equally and fairly under the law.”
Every mainstream medical association, including the American Medical Association, currently holds that gender-affirming surgery is medically necessary, effective at treating gender dysphoria, and can be life-saving for some people.
The two lead plaintiffs in the case, Aiden Vasquez, a 53-year-old trans man from southwest Iowa, and Mika Covington, a 30-year-old trans woman from central Iowa, both qualify for Medicaid and have personal care providers who agree that gender confirmation surgery is essential to treating their gender dysphoria. But with the Republican-approved law in place, both plaintiffs, as well as all other transgender Medicaid recipients, could be forced to pay exorbitant out-of-pocket costs or forego surgery altogether.
Related: LGBTQ plaintiffs sue Iowa over transgender Medicaid exemption
With Kelly’s ruling, Vasquez and Covington can now move forward with their fight to force Amerigroup, which oversees all publicly-funded health programs in the state, to cover the costs of their surgeries.
“I am so glad to be able to take the next step forward,” Vasquez said in a statement. “I desperately need this surgery. For me, it’s nothing short of life-saving. Β The fact that I have had to jump through hoops and just to try to get coverage for a surgery that could save my life has been mentally, emotionally, and physically draining. It is very hard for me to know that the state has gone out of its way to discriminate against me just because I’m transgender.”
“I would like everyone to understand that this is not cosmetic surgery. It is not a whim,” Vasquez added. “This has affected my whole life in a negative way and has affected my well-being. Not all transgender people need surgery, but I do. I am a man, but I was born into a body that I experience as not being who I am without this surgery. That’s why this surgery will be life-changing. I have seen too many other transgender people suffer because they can’t get the care they need. I’m doing this for them, too.”
“I have been suffering in this body and with gender dysphoria for so long. As with so many other transgender people, because of the lack of medical care, this has been so heavy on me mentally and physically,” Covington added. “This care will be life-saving for me because I’m constantly bombarded every day with giving up, with suicidal thoughts, and thoughts of self-harm. The way transgender people are treated in our society and the way they are denied care is deeply painful. I am so glad we have gotten this recognition of the fundamental right of transgender people for medically necessary care. It’s a huge step forward.”
A spokesman for Reynolds told the Longview News-Journal that the governor is “disappointed” with the court’s decision and disagrees that Medicaid should be forced to cover transition-related surgeries. The spokesman also said the governor’s office would be reviewing the decision and exploring all legal options available to them — leaving open the possibility of appealing Kelly’s ruling.Β
But the national ACLU celebrated the ruling, casting Reynolds’ and Republicans’ actions as motivated by animus against transgender people.
“The blatant attack on transgender Iowans that made this case necessary is part of a nationwide effort to use transgender people as political scapegoats,” John Knight, a senior staff attorney with the ACLU’s LGBT & HIV Project, said in a statement. “Aiden and Mika are two heroic transgender Iowans who join a vast group of courageous transgender people and their allies in Iowa and elsewhere who are fighting back. This win is theirs above all else. The district court’s decision recognizes the humanity of our transgender colleagues, friends, and community members as well as their entitlement to basic fairness. We should expect nothing less.”
See also:
Indiana court sides with gay Catholic school teacher fired for entering same-sex marriage
Milwaukee parents sue school district for affirming their childβs gender identity
Russia may suspend Netflix under “gay propaganda” ban
By Maximilian Sandefer on September 2, 2025
A new report published by the Williams Institute at the UCLA School of Law finds that an estimated 2.8 million Americans aged 13 or older identify as transgender.
According to NBC News, that figure represents about 1% of the U.S. population within that age group. The breakdown is nearly even: 34.2% identify as transgender men, 32.7% as transgender women, and 33.1% as nonbinary.
One statistic drew particular attention on social media: younger Americans are far more likely to identify as transgender than older generations. About 3.3% of those ages 13-17 identify as transgender, compared to just 0.3% of those 65 and older.
By John Riley on August 5, 2025 @JRileyMW
Austin police are investigating whether an assault on a transgender woman and a male bystander at Barton Springs, a popular Austin swimming spot, was a hate crime. The incident occurred on July 26, when three men began flirting with the womanβs friends and then allegedly harassed her after she approached them.
"They said something along the lines of 'I don't support that lifestyle,' while pointing at me, which upset all three of us," said the transgender woman, whose name is being withheld for safety and privacy reasons, in an interview with the Houston Chronicle.
By John Riley on August 29, 2025 @JRileyMW
For the second time, a federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit from University of Wyoming sorority members who challenged the admission of a transgender woman, arguing that she did not meet the definition of the word "woman."
"Having considered the issues presented (again), we find that the majority of the claims must be dismissed on the grounds that this Court still may not interfere with the sorority's contractually valid interpretation of its own bylaws," U.S. District Judge Alan Johnson wrote in his ruling.
The case began in 2023, when six members of the University of Wyomingβs Kappa Kappa Gamma chapter sued the sorority for admitting Artemis Langford, a transgender woman, and allowing her to use the campus houseβs common areas -- though not live there -- according to Wyoming Public Media.
These are challenging times for news organizations. And yet itβs crucial we stay active and provide vital resources and information to both our local readers and the world. So wonβt you please take a moment and consider supporting Metro Weekly with a membership? For as little as $5 a month, you can help ensure Metro Weekly magazine and MetroWeekly.com remain free, viable resources as we provide the best, most diverse, culturally-resonant LGBTQ coverage in both the D.C. region and around the world. Memberships come with exclusive perks and discounts, your own personal digital delivery of each weekβs magazine (and an archive), access to our Member's Lounge when it launches this fall, and exclusive members-only items like Metro Weekly Membership Mugs and Tote Bags! Check out all our membership levels here and please join us today!
Washington's LGBTQ Magazine
Follow Us:
· Facebook
· Twitter
· Flipboard
· YouTube
· Instagram
· RSS News | RSS Scene
Copyright Β©2025 Jansi LLC.
You must be logged in to post a comment.