The European Court of Human Rights has ruled in
favour of Christine Goodwin's
case for the right to respect for private and family life, the right to marry and to found
a family in relation to her status as a transsexual person. The judgement is binding on
the Government who will have to legislate. I have asked Parliamentary Questions
about how the Government will proceed: please click here to
view the answers. For information on what to do in the meantime, I attach a document
from Press for Change, which I hope is useful.
UPDATE OF THE MEETING OF THE PARLIAMENTARY FORUM ON TRANSSEXUALISM
Thursday 23 May 2002
- Matters arising from the minutes not covered elsewhere on the Agenda
Death Certificates Update
Lynne Jones received a letter from the Registrar General, Len Cook detailing the
guidance that he had sent out to Registrars on the registration of the deaths of
transsexual people. Some concerns were raised about the guidance containing unnecessary
sections and a lack of clarity over the use of discretion. It was agreed that it should be
based on the same simple principle that is used for passports. The Forum will write back
to the Registrar General to highlight their concerns (and pointing out the impact of the
recent ECHR judgement).
Police Guidelines
The TS policy for Essex Police was launched on the intranet but unfortunately lacked
the details on searching prisoners, which was probably the most important paragraph. Work
is ongoing on this issue.
Concerns were raised anecdotally about what appear to be varying practices on the
employment of TS people as police. Once the Essex guidelines are complete and ready for
official dissemination, it may be appropriate to do a survey of the employment practices
of police forces.
- Academic Studies
Responses from deans on medical schools teaching material
A report on deans responses to a letter from Lynne Jones about their teaching
material was discussed. The report highlighted both good and bad practice with suggestions
for improvements. Discussion centred around the reliance on opportunistic learning and the
use of out of date and inappropriate teaching materials and the concern that patients are
likely to be disadvantaged as a result. Despite serious concerns the good news was that a
number of centres welcomed the enquiry and some responded in a proactive way. The Forum
will circulate the final version of the report to the deans who got the original letter
from Lynne Jones.
The Forum will assemble a comprehensive collection of existing documents and examples of
good practice in the care of transsexual people. It was noted that there is already some
excellent material of this kind that has been produced by individuals and groups,
including Gender Identity Research and Education Society (GIRES). It was agreed that at
the head of the document it should be stressed that this is a rapidly evolving area and
that it is important to always be informed by how patients want to be treated (and also at
the given time, as this may change and this should be respected). The Forum also agreed
that it is crucial that the document has an adolescent section.
- Good Practice
Royal Society of Medicine Conference on 16 April discussion of Royal College of
Psychiatrists guidelines for Health Authorities
A number of Forum members attended the conference. The Forum and Trans-people
representative outlined that some surprising views were expressed. For example, a
consultant psychiatrist in the audience suggested that exorcism or prayer could be used to
cure transsexualism and another consultant psychiatrist, speaking from the platform,
suggested that group therapy was always appropriate and gave examples of patients who had
been in such therapy for twelve to eighteen years. The Forum agreed that it is a cause of
concern that such unacceptable statements should be made at a professional conference of
this level and go largely unchallenged. The Forum agreed that evidence-based medicine and
clinical effectiveness should be at the heart of the NHS and noted the absence of any
evidential basis on how the clients perceive the process of treatment from the conference.
The lack of research data into Transsexualism and the diversity of approaches displayed by
the speakers at the conference shows the need for both qualitative and quantitative
research. It was agreed that patient satisfaction is a key starting point as interventions
that work save the NHS money the Forum to follow up by considering ways and means
of carrying out a patient satisfaction survey and to return to the next Forum with
suggestions for implementation.
Forum Guidance to Health Authorities
The Forum was informed that the likely timescale for Standards of Care being devised
by the Royal College of Psychiatrists was around 2 years. It was therefore proposed that
the Forum finish our guidelines independently.
- Campaigning to take forward the Departmental Working Group
Note from Lynne Jones: Since the Forums last discussion on this issue events
have obviously moved on! The Interdepartmental Working Group is to be reconvened to give
further consideration to issues affecting transsexual people I was informed of this
in a letter on 20 June 2002 from Rosie Winterton MP, the Minister responsible at the Lord
Chancellors Department. Clearly the Government saw the Goodwin judgement coming and
realised the necessity of a change in the law. I have asked Parliamentary Questions about
how the Government intends to proceed. The Forum will do all it can to influence civil
servants and Ministers and to bring about the necessary legislation as soon as possible.
In the meantime, please see the attached note from Press for Change about where we go from
here.
- AOB
Lynne Jones circulated a letter she received from Stephen Timms, Minister for Schools
regarding identification for people applying for teacher training or student support. The
response was not adequate as it stated that whilst a birth certificate was not necessary,
a passport would be accepted "if the applicants circumstances warranted it"
this would require a trans-person to out themselves to explain their circumstances!
Lynne Jones has written back to point this out, asking the Minister to provide guidance
that a transsexual person could point to, without having to reveal their transsexual
status, outlining that there is no legal requirement to provide a birth certificate and
that acceptance of a passport is sufficient.
Note from Lynne Jones: (Hopefully this problem will soon be rectified when we get
the expected legislation).
- Date of Next Meeting: Thursday November 14 2002
MESSAGE FROM PRESS FOR CHANGE
instructions after ECHR judgment
12.07.02
What to do following the ECHR decision:
============================
1. Write to
The General Register Office,
Corrections and Re-registration section
Room D209, Smedley Hydro,
Trafalgar Road, Birkdale,
Southport, PR8 2HH
Telephone: 44 (151) 471 4806
email: corrections.&.re-reg.section@ons.gov.uk
2. State your full new name, old name, date of birth and place of birth and
(if you have it) the number of your birth certificate (send a photocopy if
you can)
3. State what date you commenced living full time in your new gender
4. State you have undergone gender reassignment treatment (Please DO NOT
indicate your operative status or what surgery you have had, and that you
wish to apply for a change to your birth certificate in the light of the
ruling of the ECHR in Goodwin & I v UK Government.
5. Include your statutory declaration of name change and your doctors letter
indicating that the change has been PERMANENT
6. Copy all the correspondance to your Member of Parliament, at the House of
Commons, London WC1A 1AA
7. Include a cover note to your MP asking that they chase up this matter and
ensure it is expedited in view of the long time you have had to wait to date
for this
I think the Registrar General will write back saying they cannot do this
until english statutory law is changed - we might then have to have a class
action seeking judicial review of the refusal to do this. but in order to
get that we need as many of you as possible to apply NOW
MESSAGE FROM PRESS FOR CHANGE TO PARLIAMENTARY FORUM FOR INFORMATION
Dear Parliamentary Forum
I think even WE were taken aback by the unanimity and unequivocal nature of the
findings, which (coming from a fairly conservative Grand Chamber) should leave nobody in
any doubt about the seriousness with which the behaviour of successive UK administrations
is now viewed.
The next challenge is to turn this judgement into practical reality though .. and in
that respect we do not intend to sit around and wait like wallflowers at the college
dance.
When the report of the Indepartmental Working Group was published in July 2000 we were
perhaps a little naive and trusting that action would then follow words .. and I take a
large slice of the blame for that, thinking it quite reasonable that officials and
politicians would need time to study the report .. and then allowing that action would
have to wait until the general election campaign was over. In fact it is now clear that
that trust was cynically exploited. As exposed in the Bellinger appeal last October, the
Government took the report, stuck it on a shelf and then proceeded to forget about it
until obliged to take action three weeks ago when, like us, they saw this landmark
judgement coming.
I would like to say at this point that our relationship with the officials we've dealt
with during and after the original working group has always been excellent, and continues
to be. I don't personally hold any anger towards them as individuals and in the last ten
days we have bent over backwards to provide them with advice and guidance .. not to
mention the best possible warning about what to expect on Thursday. We look forward to
continuing the constructive and mutually respectful relationship which has enabled us to
map out for the Government's advisors an entirely fair, comprehensive and workable
solution which can be implemented as quickly as Ministers wish. Quite simply there ARE no
problems or things to go away and think about now, because we have liased already to solve
them.
However, we are not going to take a passive approach in the follow-up this time. Once
bitten, twice shy.
By the time we woke up on Friday morning we found that trans people from across the
country were already taking the ECHR judgement as their cue and starting to request
changes to their details. In consequence of that, Press for Change has taken the
initiative and issued specific instructions on how to do this in a way that is compatible
with the application process we've mapped out. We have asked people to make their
applications according to that set formula, to supply the necessary documetary evidence,
to do it quickly and to copy what they have done to their own MP, requesting action on the
MP's part to expedite the application. I resumed my own application on Friday, for
instance, and wrote to Gerald Kaufman to progress this.
If you recall the scale of the response to the DfEE consultation on the SDA in 1998
(about 350 individual submissions in 3-4 weeks) then you will know the minimum level of
activity we expect. As this is the thing which every trans person in the country has been
waiting up to 32 years to be able to do, however, I confidently expect a far larger
response.
At the same time I have explained to the LCD just how much they can do straight away in
response to these applications, without the need for Primary Legislation or even
Parliamentary debate :
1. The Registrar General has the discretion to take the ECHR judgement as new evidence
of the kind he has always demanded, and use that as the basis by which to simply issue
corrected Birth Certificates on receipt of the documentary support which we've
recommended, by annotating the central register. This will not address the core issue
of legal status, which DOES require a formal mechanism and an enabling instrument of some
kind. However the simple physical reissue of corrected birth certificates would be a major
demonstration of good faith from a Government which no longer has any further excuse to
prevaricate. The action of simply altering the paperwork is analagous to the
process already followed by the Passport Agency and DVLA to correct passports and
driving licenses. It is also the process that has been proposed for altering trans
people's details in the recently published consultation upon the Entitlement Card scheme.
Our recommendation therefore produces an immediate short term result of huge symbolic and
practical importance for trans people, demonstrates good faith, and buys a little time to
draft a proper bill and schedule Parliamentary time for action which must now occur.
Conversely, if these multiple applications are declined then the result is likely to be a
class action style Judicial Review, which would import the ECHR judgement into UK law and
serve an order upon the Registrar General to comply. Action would still then have to be
taken to define the process of application.
2. A similar argument applies to the DSS. Again no
Parliamentary action is required to eliminate the problem presented at the core of
Christine Goodwin's case. As the statement of facts in the judgement indicates (para
39-41), the decision in the past NOT to alter trans people's records and allow a
gender-appropriate retirement age has always been at the discretion of the Department, and
the current policy was made internally and then simply approved by the Social Security
Commissioner. There is therefore absolutely nothing to prevent the DSS and Commissioner
therefore making a new policy. Indeed this is what has already happened recently in
the case of a trans woman with a corrected New Zealand birth certificate. This change to
policy can therefore be made in a matter of days, if not hours. The immediate result is
that the Benefits Agency can then proceed to correct the information recorded in
individual NI records, confirm the new retirement age for those individuals, and then
remove the "Nationally Sensitive" flag which draws suspicion upon every trans
person who ever comes into contact with the benefits system.
3. As regards marriage, we know that there is
nothing other than the law of perjury to prevent trans people obtaining a license and
marrying already, and PFC's advice to those making their plans on Friday was to go ahead.
The worst that can happen is that the parties may stand accused of making a false
statement. However, in the light of the ECHR's verdict no court is Britain is going to
convict them. Parliamentary action is still needed to make the marriage legally secure
(that or a House of Lords decision on the Bellinger case, informed by the ECHR ruling on
article 12). Once again, therefore, it is simply in the Government's interest to legislate
quickly, so that an application process can be put around the gender change process to
confirm the legality of such marriages.
These observations therefore provide a clear and simple path for the Government to
follow :
FIRST the Registrar General and Benefits Agency can take the short term actions
recommended, allowing the Government to demonstrate that it has taken immediate action
upon the ruling regarding article 8, and buying a reasonable amount of time to schedule
Parliamentary time for a short bill whose contents have already been extensively
workshopped.
SECOND the debate and passage of that bill will then
fulfil the Government's obligations under the article 12 ruling, secure the legal
certainty for full compliance with article 8, and provide a process to be followed in
future. I have to stress however that this second step can't be left too long, otherwise
there are likely to be a succession of domestic cases on points of ambiguity for
individuals.
I hope that is helpful and provides a constructive way forward. Above all I believe
that these recommendations provide an immediate show of good faith to trans people, will
start eliminating difficulties for trans people straight away, and will help eliminate
further embarassment for the Government whilst it gets its act together properly. Please
would the MPs like to take this up and encourage others to follow suit.
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