91制片厂

漏 2025 91制片厂

1375 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44115
(216) 916-6100 | (877) 399-3307

WKSU is a public media service licensed to and operated by 91制片厂.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Legislation on transgender issues convinced an Ohio family to leave the state

Blaze and Dani Beale in front of church
Jeff St.Clair
Blaze, 12, is is the transgender daughter of Dani Beale. They're standing in front of the Unitarian Universalist Church in Kent, a community they left for Western New York because of the Ohio legislature's move to ban gender-affirming health care for trans youth.

Lawmakers this month passed House Bill 68, which bans gender-affirming health care for transgender minors and forbids trans girls from playing on girls' and women's scholastic sports teams.

Gov. Mike DeWine has yet to sign the bill.

Dani Beale and her family, including 12-year-old trans daughter Blaze, left Ohio for Western New York because of what they see as the anti-trans actions of Ohio lawmakers.

Beale said her family felt it had no choice but to leave when Republican lawmakers introduced legislation that became earlier this year.

鈥淲e started to see the language in the bills and we realized that we weren鈥檛 going to have a choice about it if we were going to be taking care of our kid in the way that we think is necessary for her,鈥 Beale said.

鈥淭he moment came for me was when Blaze said, 鈥業 don鈥檛 want to live in a state that doesn鈥檛 want me.鈥 That really got me when she said those words out loud," she said.

Blaze said she and other trans people feel targeted by lawmakers.

鈥淭his has been blown way out of proportion. It鈥檚 like 2% of people are trans," she said. "It鈥檚 not affecting a lot of people, but the people that it is affecting, it鈥檚 affecting them so much.

Medical care the chief concern

The Saving Adolescents from Experimentation Act, or SAFE Act, bans gender-affirming healthcare, including puberty blockers and hormone replacement therapies. Critics say it also effectively bans counseling for trans youth. That act was combined in HB 68 with the Save Women鈥檚 Sports Act, which bans trans girls from girls' and women's scholastic sports.

"We are not the parents who they want to allow to have rights.鈥

Among other restrictions currently under consideration in Ohio is the so-called bathroom bill, which would block students from using restrooms or locker rooms designated for other than the sex registered on their birth certificate.

鈥淓ach of those are, in different ways, discriminatory toward my child. But, ultimately, for us, it was the medical care," Beale said. "We needed to make sure she could get medical care and we needed to make sure that we wouldn鈥檛 be penalized or be at risk of being able to parent our kid, and in a state like Ohio, it seems like that could be a problem for us.鈥

Beale and other advocates cite the National Institutes of Health, the American Medical Association and numerous other groups that support gender-affirming care, which they say has been .

Beale said it鈥檚 the right treatment for Blaze.

鈥淲hat puberty blockers do is basically let you hit pause and it just stops puberty from happening and gives us a few more years to talk with her, for her to grow up and feel her way into herself and be sure this is what we want to do," she said.

Beale and her family chose Western New York because the state does not have such restrictive laws.

鈥淧eople can have their opinions about what we do as parents or what we think is OK with our kid, but crossing the line into legislating for what I, as a parent, can choose for my child is a major problem for me, especially in a state where parents rights are considered to be really important to a lot of people, but we are not the parents who they want to allow to have rights,鈥 Beale said.

The politics of gender

Blaze knew early that she was a girl.

鈥淚 would say since I could think, I鈥檝e known that I wasn鈥檛 really meant to be a boy,鈥 she said

But she鈥檚 not preoccupied with gender.

鈥淏eing trans or being LGBTQ has never been my personality," she said. "I play the euphonium, I鈥檓 on a basketball team, I used to be on a jump rope team, those are the things I want people to think about when they see me, not the fact that I used to be a boy because it doesn鈥檛 matter.鈥

She believes the legislature is so focused on the politics of gender that they鈥檝e missed her humanity.

鈥淚 wish they could see past my name and past my gender and look deep and see that I鈥檓 not just a trans girl," she said. "I am just a human.鈥

Jeff St. Clair is the midday host for 91制片厂.