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Protests Against SRS Cuts in Ontario

People's Voice
December 1998

By Chris Frazer

Transsexuals and intersex persons are the latest victims in the Harris government�s orgy of health-care slashing in Ontario.

On October 2, senior government officials confirmed that Tory health minister Elizabeth Witmer is cutting all funds for sex-reassignment surgery (SRS) from OHIP. The cutback will "save" about $122,000, based on figures from 1997-1998 when the Ontario Health Insurance Plan subsidized eight operations.

The cutback formalizes an earlier decision by the ministry which suspended SRS payments more than a year ago, pending a review of OHIP.

The move has delighted reactionaries and bigots in the government and the media, but has outraged transgender activists who are mobilizing to reverse the cutback.

The amount of money devoted to SRS "is such a measly figure when you consider that the Mike Harris government spends more than that on a cocktail party," said Michelle Ren�e of the Ottawa-based Task Force for Transgendered Law Reform, in a letter sent to the Sun newspaper chain.

Both the Sun and the Ontario government have denigrated SRS as cosmetic surgery. Their statements have angered transgender activists and have drawn criticism from the Ontario Human Rights Commission.

The cause of transsexuality (known as Gender Identity Dysphoria in the medical literature) is hotly debated, but there is a consensus among transgendered persons and their health-care providers that sex-reassignment is necessary for male and female transsexuals, and for many intersex persons (those born with ambiguous genitalia).

Transgender activists have raised the possibility of a court challenge. One source suggested that the Ontario cuts, "may go against the Canada Health Act, in spirit if not in fact, by denying people who cannot afford it access to treatment for a �recognized� medical condition."

The cutback to SRS funding reflects the intolerance, fear, and bigotry that infest the Ontario Tories and some segments of Canadian society. It sends a clear message that the interests and needs of transgendered people are not worthy of social support, and it will certainly encourage trans-phobia.

"People who need the surgery most, and who cannot afford it, will suffer the most," said Sarah Martin of the Toronto chapter of Transsexual Menace, a transgender rights group. "More people will end up using understaffed and unapproved clinics and surgeons."

Under OHIP, candidates for SRS had to travel to Britain or the USA for the procedure. However, OHIP coverage only paid for surgery itself, and patients were required to pay travel expenses, and all other aspects of their transition including electrolysis and ongoing hormone therapy.

Some transgendered persons can afford high quality surgery and care in private clinics. Those who cannot will face high-risk choices between two evils: foregoing surgery, or opting for dangerous alternatives to quality subsidized care. For those who forego SRS, the decision of Witmer�s ministry will mean an increase in despair, depression, and suicide attempts, said Lynn Lefevre, an activist with the Task Force on Transgendered Law Reform.

Meanwhile other observers predict a rise in transgendered prostitution, pointing to an already-established link between the inaccessibility of sex-reassignment surgery and the market demand for so-called "she-male" sex workers.

Reduced access may also lead to more frequent reliance on the services of pseudo-medical quacks who prey on the desperation of cash-strapped transgendered persons.

The most infamous of these medical predators is San Diego�s John Brown, also known as "Butcher Brown", who has a lengthy history of botching operations, mutilating his patients and sometimes killing them. Brown was recently been jailed in the USA for operating without a license, which was revoked in 1977.

According to Lynn Lefevre, one of the bitterest ironies of the cutback, is that "it�s likely going to cost the system a lot more than $122,000 per year [in counselling, therapy, and other medical services, and perhaps policing] to treat those who now have lost all hope."

Both the TS Menace and the Canadian Task Force on Transgendered Law Reform are considering plans to fight the cutback with a campaign of letter-writing, protests, and media events. They are encouraging supporters to contact their MPPs and Ontario Health Minister Elizabeth Witmer to protest the cutback.

For more information visit the website of the Toronto TS Menace , or the Canadian Task Force on Transgendered Law Reform .


� People's Voice, 1998


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