Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
National

Effort To Remove Infant's Gender From Health Card Advances Equality, Experts Say

10 Jul, 2017 10:47 AM
    VANCOUVER — A parent's request to exclude their child's sex on government-issued identification is pushing past the boundaries of gender stereotyping, experts say.
     
    Kori Doty, a B.C. parent who identifies as transgender and prefers the pronoun they, refused to provide the sex of their child Searyl to the government when they were born in November.
     
    Doty said it was a victory when Searyl's provincial health card arrived in the mail in April displaying a "U" instead of an "M" or "F" to designate the child's sex.
     
    Vancouver-based lawyer barbara findlay, who advocates for gender-free identification, said race is no longer recorded on birth certificates or other identification because it's personal information and gender should be treated the same way.
     
    "One's sex, one's gender identity is as personal a piece of information as how you identify your race and it shouldn't be on ID documents," said findlay, whose legal name is not capitalized. 
     
    Historically, the government used information about gender to distinguish who — specifically men — could own property or vote, findlay said. Since those barriers no longer exist, she said it's unnecessary to continue displaying gender on ID documents.
     
    Aaron Devor, chair in transgender studies at the University of Victoria, said an infant's gender identity may not develop as expected. Assigning gender may also force intersex babies into a category in which they don't belong.
     
    There shouldn't be a need to identify someone by gender on their ID at all because discrimination is prohibited, he said.
     
    People also shouldn't be "labelled and pigeonholed" to a particular stereotypical set of gender expectations, Devor said.
     
    Stereotyping is especially damaging to people who are transgender and whose identity cards don't match the gender in which they present.
     
     
    "They're subject to any number of unpleasant circumstance, which could range simply from being looked at funny to being denied service that they require to being abused verbally or even physically," he said.
     
    It's because of those restrictive stereotypes that Doty didn't want to prescribe a gender to Searyl. Instead, Searyl can determine their own gender identity when the time comes and not be limited by societal expectations of how boys and girls should be, Doty said.
     
    "I'm not imposing a non-binary gender identity on my kid, I'm just holding the space for them to figure out who they are without the application of a rigid assumption," Doty said.
     
    Jen Marchbank, a professor of gender, sexuality and women's studies at Simon Fraser University, said studies have shown that infants are treated differently when labelled a boy or girl with babies dressed in blue getting played with more than those dressed in pink.
     
    Raising a child without an assigned gender could help avoid people imposing their biases, Marchbank said, adding it would be impossible to avoid stereotypes entirely.
     
    "Even if it's not being imposed on them, they will witness my friend Patsy, who is a girl, is treated this way and my friend Bobby, who is a boy, is treated that way," Marchbank said.
     
    Efforts to do away with the male-female binary would benefit everyone, but simply offering a third option isn't the solution. Marchbank said she knows many people who feel their gender is fluid, rather than permanently fixed as male or female, and a third option wouldn't necessarily represent them.
     
     
     
    A third option displayed on government ID would unnecessarily "out" someone as being either transgender or intersex, putting them at risk of discrimination, said Marchbank, who works with transgender youth in Vancouver.
     
    In Ontario, gender was removed from health cards in June 2016 while driver's licences have "X" as an option.
     
    It's a move Doty and other advocates for gender-free ID want to see implemented for all government documents.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Premier, B.C. Cabinet To Be Sworn-In As Steps Toward Minority Government Proceed

    Premier, B.C. Cabinet To Be Sworn-In As Steps Toward Minority Government Proceed
    VICTORIA — Premier Christy Clark and her cabinet will be sworn-in today in what is expected to be a short-lived Liberal government in British Columbia.

    Premier, B.C. Cabinet To Be Sworn-In As Steps Toward Minority Government Proceed

    Terror Victim Christine Archibald Remembered At Memorial In Castlegar, B.C.

    Terror Victim Christine Archibald Remembered At Memorial In Castlegar, B.C.
    Deb McIntosh says Christine Archibald's family attended the peace and healing vigil and the 30-year-old's father spoke briefly.

    Terror Victim Christine Archibald Remembered At Memorial In Castlegar, B.C.

    One Dead, One Injured In Shooting At Busy Langley, B.C., Restaurant

    One Dead, One Injured In Shooting At Busy Langley, B.C., Restaurant
    Investigators Are Scouring A Strip Mall In Willowbrook, The Scene Of An Overnight Shooting.

    One Dead, One Injured In Shooting At Busy Langley, B.C., Restaurant

    Vancouver Man Dies After Accidentally Shooting Himself During Pistol Competition

    Vancouver Man Dies After Accidentally Shooting Himself During Pistol Competition
    The man was taking part in a pistol contest at the Target Sports Complex in Kamloops, B.C., when he lost control of his weapon and accidentally shot himself in the torso.  

    Vancouver Man Dies After Accidentally Shooting Himself During Pistol Competition

    N.S. Sailor Jailed Three Years For Sexually Assaulting Woman He Met On Facebook

    N.S. Sailor Jailed Three Years For Sexually Assaulting Woman He Met On Facebook
    HALIFAX — A Halifax-area navy sailor has been jailed three years for sexually assaulting a woman he met over Facebook.

    N.S. Sailor Jailed Three Years For Sexually Assaulting Woman He Met On Facebook

    As Trump Looks Inward, Trudeau Charts Course Forward With Other Allies

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is set to make global action on climate change and sustainable economic development a main thrust of Canada's upcoming year as president of the G7.

    As Trump Looks Inward, Trudeau Charts Course Forward With Other Allies