There’s a big legal showdown coming in Florida over the Legislature-approved ban on certain types of treatment for transgender individuals that Gov. Ron DeSantis and his administration pushed.
A trial challenging medical board rules and a law that banned treatment for minors and put limits on care for adults is on target to begin Dec. 12. A final pre-conference hearing is slated for this week, and both sides have put out their witness lists and filed dozens of exhibits ahead of the trial.
The case began last March as the parents of transgender minors filed an initial lawsuit against State Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo, Florida’s medical boards and the DeSantis administration, but it has since expanded into a class action legal challenge on behalf of transgender minors and adults.
The legal challenge will go before U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle, who previously blocked the state from enforcing its ban against certain types of treatment for minors but limited that ban to just the families that were part of the initial lawsuit. Hinkle this past summer, after a two-week trial, also struck down a law and rule that invalidated Medicaid from paying for gender-affirming care for individuals. That ruling has been appealed.
But in September Hinkle ruled against a request to also block enforcement of Florida’s law that applies to adults. Hinkle based his decision in part of a federal appeals court ruling that reversed an injunction against an Alabama law that outlawed the use of puberty blockers and hormones to treat transgender children.
The families and individuals suing contend the state’s actions are discriminatory and illegal under federal law. They argue the state relied on biased information to justify its decisions.
“These measures constitute a clear expression of governmental hostility toward transgender Floridians,” states the main trial brief filed earlier this month by attorneys representing the transgender families and adults suing the state. “Collectively they establish an official public policy of disapproval of transgender people, with the goal of preventing transgender Floridians from participating openly or equally in civil society. No other state in the country has enacted as many anti-transgender (policies) as Florida, nor has any other state enacted measures as extreme as some of Florida’s new laws, including its imposition of restrictions even on medical care for transgender adults.”
Attorneys representing the state — including the office of Attorney General Ashley Moody — contend those suing Florida have had their legal arguments undercut after the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the Alabama law. The attorneys also say the adopted restrictions are “reasonable.”
“The Eleventh Circuit held that there’s no fundamental parental right to obtain gender-dysphoria treatments, and that laws that regulate gender-dysphoria treatments are neither sex nor transgender-status discrimination,” states the main trial brief filed by the state. “If anything, this case is about the State’s actions to protect children, to protect patients, to safeguard the medical profession, and to ensure a high quality of medical care for Floridians. Those are more than rational reasons — they are compelling governmental interests — and are advanced by the challenged laws.”
The trial is scheduled to last several days and the initial witness list says those suing plan to call to the stand the parents of two transgender children and doctors who treat transgender patients. But the witness list also says they “may call” Rep. Randy Fine, whose called types of transgender treatments “evil,” as well as some members of Florida’s Board of Medicine and Board of Osteopathic Medicine.
The state plans to rely on a handful of doctors to defend the state rules and law. The trial exhibits will include evidence used in the earlier legal lawsuit that challenged Florida’s Medicaid ban on treatments.
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