Oregon Court Rules That Nonbinary Is A legal Gender

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Oregon Court Rules That Nonbinary Is A legal Gender

An Oregon circuit court has rule that residents can legally change their gender to nonbinary.

Nonbinary is an umbrella term for anyone who does not identify as just male or just female and for the first time in US history, it is being legally recognized as a gender.

Everything was put in motion by Jamie Shupe, an Army vet who has been transitioning gender since 2013, according to the Daily Dot:

In a historic move sure to challenge federal policy, an Oregon circuit court ruled on Friday that a resident could legally change their gender to nonbinary.

The Daily Dot spoke—in an exclusive first interview—with Jamie Shupe, the Portland, Oregon, resident and Southern Maryland native who requested the gender identity change.

“Male and female are the traditional categories, but they fail to properly categorize people like me. So I challenged that,” said Shupe.

Shupe’s petition for sex change, as the court calls it, was filed on April 27. With the help of Portland attorney Lake James Perriguey and armed with two letters from primary care doctors (shared privately with the Daily Dot) stating that Shupe’s gender should be classified as nonbinary, the case was made.

nonbinary_doc

Shupe, who prefers not to use gender pronouns altogether, uses the honorific ‘Mx.’ and is an Army vet who began a gender transition in 2013 at age 49. Assigned a male gender at birth, Shupe initially petitioned to change their gender from male to female, then from female to nonbinary.

jamie-shupe

As far as legal experts are aware, the Oregon court decision is the first time a court in the U.S. has ruled that nonbinary is a legal gender.

The Daily Dot spoke with attorneys at the Transgender Law Center, who noted the historic nature of the case.

“As far as we know, this may be the first ruling of its kind in the U.S.,” said Transgender Law Center’s Legal Director Ilona Turner in an email to the Daily Dot. “This is an important step toward ensuring that nonbinary members of our community have access to identity documents that reflect who they are, just like everyone else.”

Mik Kinkead, a staff attorney at New York’s Sylvia Rivera Law Project, called the Oregon court’s decision “wonderful news.”

“To my knowledge, many cities and a few states have options where an ID card does not need to declare a gender (such as the NYC ID card or the NYS Benefits card),” Kinkead told the Daily Dot in an email, “but I have never heard of a system where someone’s nonbinary gender is actually affirmed on the card itself.”

Sasha Alexander, SRLP’s membership director, also celebrated the news.

“Many trans, gender nonconforming, and intersex (TGNCI) people identify as nonbinary or along a gender fluid spectrum, but due to the nature of ID documents and discrimination, many of us have no way to see our gender identity reflected so this is amazing news,” Alexander said in an email.

At the moment, it’s unclear how the court’s decision will play out in terms of identity documents. Shupe told the Daily Dot their “first goal is to tackle the Oregon DMV.” But even if the state agrees to issuing a nonbinary driver’s license, federal identity documents currently only allow for male or female gender markers.

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