Latest NewsNews Joplin MOTrending

Texas files anti-trans treatment bill modeled off of Oklahoma’s

A Texas state representative filed a bill earlier this month that would ban transgender procedures in the state for anyone under age 26 and allow for doctors who provide such treatment to be stripped of their medical licenses and prosecuted.

House Bill 4754, also known as the “Texas Millstone Act,” was filed in the Texas House of Representatives by Republican state Rep. Tony Tinderholt on March 10 and referred Wednesday to the House Committee on Public Health.

The Texas bill is modeled and named after the similar Oklahoma “Millstone Act of 2023” filed in that state’s Senate in January by Republican state Sen. David Bullard.

The Oklahoma bill prompted large protests at the Oklahoma State Capitol and threats of litigation from the American Civil Liberties Union and Lambda Legal.

Omar Gonzalez-Pagan, counsel and health care strategist at Lambda Legal, told news outlets that the bill would “selectively target a population for having no access to this care that is otherwise provided and allowed for other people.” The name of the Oklahoma bill has since been changed and its age limit lowered to 18.

Both bills as originally filed would prohibit health care providers from administering puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones and sex change surgeries to anyone under 26, punishable by a state jail felony.

Those who believe they have been harmed by such procedures can file suit for damages, according to the bills, which would also cut off public funding and Medicaid reimbursement for such procedures.

Tinderholt said that he had been seeking to draft legislation with the “intent of stopping gender modification and mutilation” in Texas when he came across the Oklahoma bill. “As we looked at this bill, it had everything we wanted, and it was just a smart idea to replicate [Bullard’s] bill versus reinventing the wheel,” said Tinderholt, noting that the Oklahoma bill “covers every single thing that anyone could ever think of…it talks about social medical care, psychological medical care, physical medication, gender mutilation, this bill covers at all,” he said.

Tinderholt also noted that he did not come up with the name of the bill but said he believes “it’s named very well.”

Both Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton have claimed that transgender procedures on minors could classify as child abuse under Texas law. “I think that we’re going to see by the end of May when our 88th Legislature ends, we will have something on the books that will stop the chaos of permanently harming children,” he said.

Show More
Back to top button