Puerto Rico Governor Jennifer Gonzalez Colon, a Republican and member of the new Progressive Party, is the strictest law in the United States that prohibits providing gender-affirming care to anyone under the age of 21, and has imposed a sudden fine for violations.
The law places a $50,000 fine and a maximum of 15 years in prison for each violation by a medical professional who provides gender-affirming care to minors and young people. Criminals also report losing their medical license and permission and being permanently banned from practicing medicine in Puerto Rico hill.
“Miniers are not yet attained the necessary emotional, cognitive and physical maturity, but are particularly vulnerable to making decisions that could result in irreversible results,” the company is set to take effect in October. “It is therefore a state’s obligation to ensure comprehensive well-being.”
Puerto Rican laws start at 21, the age of the majority, or legal adulthood. This will make the new ban on gender maintenance care the most stringent in the United States.
26 US, including Puerto Rico, have enacted bans on gender-maintaining care. Movement Progress Project. Two additional states, New Hampshire and Arizona, prohibit surgical procedures only for minors.
The LGBTQ organization has vowed to lawsuit, claiming that the law violates Puerto Rico’s constitution.
Pedro Giulio Serrano, president of Puerto Rico’s LGBTQ+ Federation, criticised Gonzalez Colon for signing the law, saying her actions solidified her reputation as “the most anti-equal governor in history.”
Serrano told a transgender journalist Erin Reed It warned that the law was intentionally “ambiguous” and could be weaponized against parents of transgender minors who affirm the gender identity of their children.
Serrano also said the law was promoted through Congress during a series of private hearings. He allegedly Victor Ramos Otaleo, appointee of Gonzalez Colon, urged the governor to include an amendment that allowed the “grandfather clause” for adolescent blockers for minors already undergoing gender-affirming treatment.
“[Ramos] I said it violently [González-Colón] To include that language in the bill or not sign the bill,” Serrano told Reed. “Then she signed the bill, so she ignored her health secretary.”
Source: Metro Weekly – www.metroweekly.com

