Transgender people living in Kansas have been ordered to hand back their driver’s licenses
if they do not reflect their assigned-sex-at-birth, under a new law. Residents received letters informing them that the controversial House Substitute for Senate Bill 244 would take effect immediately.
The letter, seen by Erin In The Morning,
a website dedicated to covering issues impacting transgender people,
says that drivers will be issued a new license upon handing in their old
one.
“Please note that the Legislature did not include a grace period for
updating credentials,” the letter reads. “That means that once the law
is officially enacted, your current credentials will be invalid
immediately, and you may be subject to additional penalties if you are
operating a vehicle without a valid credential.” The legislation
was vetoed by Kansas Governor Laura Kelly, a Democrat, earlier this
month, but was then overwritten by a Republican supermajority in the
state legislature.
However, the rapid enactment of the new law has left transgender
residents across the state scrambling to get the correct identification. Iridescent Riffel, a transgender woman who commutes to work, says that she is now worried about getting into her car. “I don’t want to get a misdemeanor just trying to go to work,” she told The Kansas City Star. “I’m salaried. I’m not working hourly, and not everyone has that same privilege as me.”
SB 244 also requires transgender Kansans to use bathrooms and multi-occupancy private spaces in accordance with their sex assigned at birth, while in government buildings. The bill allows private citizens to take legal action against someone
if they suspect them of not using the bathroom that is in accordance
with their assigned sex at birth. If successful, someone who files a complaint against a transgender person in a public bathroom could stand to gain $1,000.
Anyone
found to have used a bathroom not in accordance with their assigned sex
at birth will be given a written warning on their first offense. On
their second offense, they will receive a $1,000 fine. A third offense carries a $ 1,000 fine and a six-month prison sentence. Another change enforced by the sweeping bill relates to the term
“gender,” which has now been defined as a person’s “biological sex at
birth.”
As the law continues to be rolled out, Democratic Representative Abi Boatman has slammed the new legislation. “The persecution is the point,” Boatman told The Kansas City Star.
Kelley Robinson, the president of the Human Rights Campaign, also accused Kansas’s lawmakers of choosing “politics over people.” “Forcing
people into the wrong bathrooms, stripping them of accurate IDs, and
allowing government-sanctioned harassment doesn’t make anyone safer - it
targets transgender Kansans for no reason and will undoubtedly impact
many others who are targeted with animus whether or not they are
transgender,” Robinson said in a press release.
Governor Kelly vetoed SB 244 earlier this month, describing it as poorly drafted legislation. “Not
only will this bill keep brothers from visiting sisters’ dorms and
husbands from wives’ shared hospital rooms, it will cost Kansas
taxpayers millions of dollars to comply with this very vague
legislation,” she added.