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Home / Whanganui Chronicle

Green Party criticises Govt over delay to trans bill, calling it 'deeply disappointing'

Isaac Davison
By Isaac Davison
Senior Reporter·NZ Herald·
25 Feb, 2019 11:21 PM3 mins to read

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Green Party rainbow issues spokeswoman Jan Logie says she is determined to change the law around sex self-identification this Parliamentary term.
Green Party rainbow issues spokeswoman Jan Logie says she is determined to change the law around sex self-identification this Parliamentary term.

Green Party rainbow issues spokeswoman Jan Logie says she is determined to change the law around sex self-identification this Parliamentary term.

The Green Party has criticised the Government's decision to delay a law change which would make it easier for trans people to change sex on their birth certificate.

Rainbow issues spokeswoman Jan Logie said the move, announced last night, was "deeply disappointing".

Internal Affairs Minister and NZ First MP Tracey Martin said yesterday that the law change would be deferred because there had not been enough public consultation and because its wider legal implications needed further consideration.

The proposed amendments would mean trans people could change the identity on their birth certificates by signing a statutory declaration. That was much simpler and less costly than the existing process, which requires a trans person to apply to the Family Court and present medical evidence showing they have changed their physical attributes.

Logie said the proposals were in line with what already happened in New Zealand for passports and driver licences.

"They represent a small, procedural change that would make a huge difference in the lives of some of our most marginalised people."

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The delay to the Births, Deaths and Marriages and Relationships Registration Bill was disappointing because it had already gone through the select committee process, she said. She was determined to get it passed into law during this parliamentary term.

"We encourage the minister to listen to the most important stakeholders on this issue: trans and non-binary people, their families, and human rights advocates."

The proposals relating to self-identification were made after the deadline for public submissions had closed.

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That angered some conservative, religious and feminist groups, who said the implications of such a change had not been fully considered, including the possible impact on women-only spaces like prisons and refuges.

Supporters of the amendments said the ramifications had already been extensively discussed when a select committee considered a petition on the same issue in 2017. Following that petition, the select committee recommended a review to allow self-identification.

When the new Labour-led Government came to power, it referred that to the select committee considering the Births, Deaths and Marriages and Relationships Registration Bill.

When the committee reported back on the bill in August, chairman and National MP Brett Hudson said the committee had taken some effort to assess what harm such a change would create for others. It determined to a high level of confidence that it would not place others at risk, he said.

However, the Crown Law Office has since provided advice to the Government recommending further clarifications be made about when a person's sex or gender might need to be determined independently of the sex shown on their birth certificate.

These circumstances included enrolment in single-sex schools, accessing services at women's refuges and the criminal justice system.

Martin said one of the concerns was that in the absence of a medical check, the self-identification provision could be abused.

While the bill is being held up, she has asked officials to look at interim measures to make it easier and cheaper to change sex on a birth certificate.

Supporters of the law change are dismayed at the delay. Gender Minorities national co-ordinator Ahi Wi-hongi said it made no sense for the sex on different documents to be mismatched.

She believed the decision was influenced by overseas anti-trans lobby groups, which had been vocal in the often-toxic debate around self-identification in the United Kingdom.

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Read more:

Bill making it easier for trans people to update birth certificate deferred

Big Read: A matter of identity

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