Current:Home > InvestJudge won’t block North Dakota’s ban on gender-affirming care for children -SummitInvest
Judge won’t block North Dakota’s ban on gender-affirming care for children
View
Date:2025-04-11 13:36:10
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — A North Dakota law banning gender-affirming care for children will continue to be enforced pending a court challenge, but any kids whose treatments began before the law took effect in April 2023 can keep getting the care, according to a judge’s ruling released Wednesday.
Judge Jackson Lofgren denied a preliminary injunction sought by families seeking to overturn the law, as he had previously done in November when the plaintiffs sought a temporary restraining order.
The plaintiffs said a grandfather clause in the law is so vague it led providers to stop treatments in the state, but the judge made clear those minors can continue any medical care they had before the law took effect.
It isn’t clear that the plaintiffs are “substantially” likely to win their case, now scheduled for a November trial, on claims that the law violates rights to parent or to personal autonomy and self-determination, the judge said.
He also sided against claims that the grandfather clause is unconstitutionally vague, and that the plaintiffs have shown irreparable harm. With the current law in effect for more than a year now, Lofgren said “the public interest in maintaining the status quo weighs against granting a preliminary injunction.”
The law took immediate effect when Republican Gov. Doug Burgum signed it in April 2023 after overwhelming approval by the GOP-controlled legislature. It makes it a misdemeanor for a health care provider to prescribe or give hormone treatments or puberty blockers to a transgender child, and a felony to perform gender-affirming surgery on a minor.
“The longer this law is allowed to remain in effect, the more North Dakota kids and families will be harmed by the state’s unfair, unjust, and unconstitutional denial of the essential and life-saving health care they need,” Gender Justice Senior Staff Attorney Brittany Stewart, who represents the families and a doctor challenging the ban.
Republican state Rep. Bill Tveit, who brought the bill, was pleased with the ruling. He said the law protects children from irreversible procedures.
Opponents said the ban will harm transgender kids who face greater risks of depression, self-harm and suicide, and stressed that no one performs such surgeries in the state.
Despite the exception for children who were receiving treatments before the ban took effect, providers have considered the grandfather clause too vague to risk it, so the plaintiff families have had to travel out of state to get gender-affirming care for their children, Gender Justice said.
The judge disagreed, writing that such children “can receive any gender-affirming care they could have received in North Dakota prior to the Health Care Law’s enactment.”
Gender Justice agreed that the clarification “paves the way for providers to resume care for these patients in North Dakota.”
“However, significant barriers to access will remain for most or all children and families seeking care in North Dakota, as doctors who stopped providing care to transgender youth may hesitate to resume care due to concerns over the serious legal threats posed by the law,” the organization’s statement said.
Twenty-five states have adopted bans on gender-affirming care for minors in the past few years, nearly all of them challenged in court. Arkansas is appealing after a court struck down its ban entirely. Courts blocked enforcement of the law in Montana. And the ACLU has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to review whether the bans should remain in effect in Kentucky and Tennessee. The high court has allowed the Idaho law to remain in effect while lawsuits proceed.
___
AP writer Geoff Mulvihill contributed to this report from Cherry Hill, New Jersey.
For more AP coverage of LGBTQ+ issues: https://apnews.com/hub/lgbtq-legislation
veryGood! (5662)
Related
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Google rebounds from unprecedented drop in ad revenue with a resurgence that pushes stock higher
- Northwestern football players to skip Big Ten media days amid hazing scandal
- 'Jeopardy!' champs to boycott in solidarity with WGA strike: 'I can't be a part of that'
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Taliban orders beauty salons in Afghanistan to close despite UN concern and rare public protest
- Biden’s dog Commander has bitten Secret Service officers 10 times in four months, records show
- Pedestrians scatter as fire causes New York construction crane’s arm to collapse and crash to street
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Wildfires that killed at least 34 in Algeria are now 80% extinguished, officials say
Ranking
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- Child labor laws violated at McDonald's locations in Texas, Louisiana, Department of Labor finds
- Booksellers seek to block Texas book ban on sexual content ratings in federal lawsuit
- Biden’s son Hunter heads to a Delaware court where he’s expected to plead guilty to tax crimes
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Small funnel cloud over US Capitol turns into viral photo
- Risk of fatal heart attack may double in extreme heat with air pollution, study finds
- Colorado businessman gets over 5 years in prison for ‘We Build The Wall’ fundraiser fraud
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Malaysia's a big draw for China's Belt and Road plans. Finishing them is another story
Vanderpump Rules' Scheana Shay Details Filming Emotionally Draining Convo With Tom Sandoval
Women's World Cup 2023: Meet the Players Competing for Team USA
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
Kansas football lineman charged in connection with alleged bomb threat
Oil from FSO Safer supertanker decaying off Yemen's coast finally being pumped onto another ship
North Carolina woman wins $723,755 lottery jackpot, plans to retire her husband