'I feel like I'm showing a lie': Time for X gender option on Manitoba ID, says non-binary advocate
Opposition NDP introduce bill that would place X option on birth certificates, health cards
Sam Kayden MacKinnon is used to being misgendered in public but says not being able to identifyproperly on provincial ID by marking anything other thanmale or female isn't just an inconvenience it's a human rights issue.
"Every time that I look at my identitymarkers or have to produce them for something, I feel like I'm showing a lie. It's not who I am and it's somebody else," said MacKinnon, a non-binary transgender person who was assigned female at birth.
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"That feeling, it's terriblelike, it makes me want to vomit. It feels like somebody is judging me and deciding for me who they think I am, and it's totally wrong because it's not who I am."
'Dismissive' response
The amendment would mean a third,non-binary gender designation could appear on provincial ID like birth certificates, health cards and driver's licences.
The premier didn't respond and MacKinnon instead got a response from a director with Vital Statistics who outlined options for changing sex designation in Manitoba and thanked MacKinnon for writing the letter.
The director's response didn't address the key issue at heart an option for an X designation so MacKinnon and others who are not male or female have a way to identify.
"It felt a little bit dismissive in terms of what I was asking for, especially as in my letter I talked about how this was a human rights issue," MacKinnon said.
MacKinnon also wrote to Manitoba's Opposition NDP, and said they got a reply from Leader Wab Kinew.
NDPwants X option
Wednesday morning, Kinewannounced a private member's bill at the Rainbow Resource Centre that he introducedinthe Manitoba Legislature later that afternoon.
The billwould amend the province's Vital Statistics Act and givenon-binary peoplea way to identify.
It's something that should have happened a long time ago, he told CBCNews Tuesday.
"When you kind of misgender somebodyyou may be causing them some emotional and even physiological harm, and so this is about just doing right," Kinewsaid.
After introducing the bill, Kinewsaid it "might seem like a small change to some, but for others in Manitoba, it will make a world of difference." He asked the Progressive Conservatives to join them in supporting it.
Pallisterdid not immediately commit to supporting the bill after Kinew introduced it, saying that he welcomes efforts to advance inclusion in Manitoba, buthe needed to read thebill before supporting it.
"The NDP, in its history, never failed to create a wedge issue and division where actually unity would have been better," Pallister said."I would also encourage him to respect the traditions of this place by introducing bills in this chamber so that we can look at them before he takes them out for a public relations exercise somewhere else."
The ManitobaLegislatureis the first in Canada to introduce gender-neutral washrooms, Pallistersaid, arguing that is evidence of his government taking action on the issues Kinewraised.
Kinew said he is hopeful the amendment will pass in part because theycreated a gender-neutral washroom at the Manitoba Legislature after coming into office.
He hopes the bill will be passed before the beginning of June and come intoeffect in July.
A spokesperson for Pallister referred a request for comment to Justice Minister HeatherStefanson, whose portfolio includestheVital Statistics Act.
Ongoing discussion: province
Stefanson'sspokesperson said the governmentrecognizes that gender identity and expression is an important and evolving issue, and developments in other jurisdictions are being monitored by the province.
"The Manitoba government is represented on the Vital Statistics Council for Canada, which is an inter-jurisdictional advisory group that meets to discuss best practices and emerging topics related to vital statistics,"the spokesperson said.
Charlie Eau, who was at the NDP's announcement at the Rainbow Resource Centre,would like an X option on their ID. Theysaid the proposed legislation is a good first step but there's more work to do.
"It seems like we might just be talking about legislation to change my ID, [but] really it's a big picture issue of how society treats non-binary people and completely excludes us from many spaces."
MacKinnon said they've been non-binary their whole life but only started truly understanding that identity about four years ago.
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MacKinnon admits they were nervous going into Wednesday's announcement and hopes this doesn't become a controversial issue in Manitoba.
They pointed to other governments in Canada that have alreadytaken action on the matter, including Newfoundland and Labrador and the Northwest Territories, which now have X options available.
With files from Cameron MacLean