Current:Home > reviewsGeorgia agrees to pay for gender-affirming care for public employees, settling a lawsuit -Ascend Finance Compass
Georgia agrees to pay for gender-affirming care for public employees, settling a lawsuit
View
Date:2025-04-11 14:54:17
ATLANTA (AP) — The state of Georgia will start paying for gender-affirming health care for state employees, public school teachers and former employees covered by a state health insurance plan, settling another in a string of lawsuits against Georgia agencies aiming to force them to pay for gender-confirmation surgery and other procedures.
The plaintiffs moved to dismiss their case Thursday in Atlanta federal court, announcing they had reached a settlement with the State Health Benefit Plan.
The December lawsuit argued the insurance plan illegally discriminated by refusing to pay for gender-affirming care.
“There’s no justification, morally, medically, legally or in any other way for treating transgender healthcare as different and denying people access to it,” David Brown, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said in a phone interview Thursday.
The state Department of Community Health, which oversees the insurance plan, did not immediately respond Thursday to an email seeking comment.
The state will also pay a total of $365,000 to the plaintiffs and their lawyers as part of the settlement. Micha Rich, Benjamin Johnson and an anonymous state employee suing on behalf of her adult child all said they spent money out of their own pockets that should have been covered by insurance.
Starting July 1, Georgia legally barred new patients under the age of 18 from starting hormone therapy and banned most gender-affirming surgeries for transgender people under 18. That law, challenged in court but still in effect, lets doctors prescribe puberty-blocking medications and allows minors already receiving hormone therapy to continue.
But Brown said Thursday’s settlement requires the health plan to pay for care deemed medically necessary for spouses and dependents as well as employees. That means the health plan could be required to pay for care for minors outside the state even though it’s prohibited in Georgia.
“The plan can’t treat the care any differently from other care that’s not available in the state,” Brown said.
The lawsuit cited a 2020 Supreme Court ruling that treating someone differently because they are transgender or gay violates a section of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sex. The plaintiffs in that case included an employee of Georgia’s Clayton County.
Affected are two health plans paid for by the state but administered by Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield and UnitedHealthcare.
It’s the fourth in a line of lawsuits against Georgia agencies to force them to pay for gender-confirmation surgery and other procedures. State and local governments lost or settled the previous suits.
The University System of Georgia paid $100,000 in damages in addition to changing its rules in 2019 when it settled a case brought by a University of Georgia catering manager. And the Department of Community Health last year agreed to change the rules of the state’s Medicaid program to settle a lawsuit by two Medicaid beneficiaries.
A jury last year ordered Houston County to pay $60,000 in damages to a sheriff’s deputy after a federal judge ruled her bosses illegally denied the deputy health coverage for gender-confirmation surgery. Houston County is appealing that judgment, and oral arguments are scheduled in November before the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
The plaintiffs in the lawsuit settled Thursday included three transgender men. Micha Rich is a staff accountant at the Georgia Department of Audits and Accounts, and Benjamin Johnson is a media clerk with the Bibb County School District in Macon. The mother of the third man, identified only as John Doe, is a Division of Family and Children Services worker in Paulding County and covers the college student on her insurance.
All three were assigned female at birth but transitioned after therapy. All three appealed their denials for top surgery to reduce or remove breasts and won findings from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission that Georgia was discriminating against them.
“I am thrilled to know that none of my trans colleagues will ever have to go through what I did,” Rich said in a statement.
A court ruling found a similar ban in North Carolina to be illegal; the state is appealing. A Wisconsin ban was overturned in 2018. West Virginia and Iowa have also lost lawsuits over employee coverage, while Florida and Arizona are being sued.
___
Follow Jeff Amy on Twitter at http://twitter.com/jeffamy.
veryGood! (46653)
Related
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- New York City faulted for delays in getting emergency food aid to struggling families
- Politicians, workers seek accountability after sudden closure of St. Louis nursing home
- Results in Iraqi provincial elections show low turnout and benefit established parties
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Group turned away at Mexican holiday party returned with gunmen killing 11, investigators say
- UN votes unanimously to start the withdrawal of peacekeepers from Congo by year’s end
- Climate talks call for a transition away from fossil fuels. Is that enough?
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Zac Efron and Lily James on the simple gesture that frames the tragedy of the Von Erich wrestlers
Ranking
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Philly’s progressive prosecutor, facing impeachment trial, has authority on transit crimes diverted
- 20-year-old wins Miss France beauty pageant with short hair: Why her win sparked debate
- 2 Guinean children are abandoned in Colombian airport as African migrants take new route to US
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Chileans eschew extremes in quest for new constitution and end up with the old one
- With menthol cigarette ban delayed, these Americans will keep seeing the effects, data shows
- Power outage maps: Over 500,000 customers without power in Maine, Massachusetts
Recommendation
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
Snoop Dogg's new smoke-free high: THC and CBD drinks, part of my smoking evolution
Why Sydney Sweeney Wanted a Boob Job in High School
The Excerpt: Gov. Abbott signs law allowing Texas law enforcement to arrest migrants
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Immigration and declines in death cause uptick in US population growth this year
Coyote vs. Warner Bros. Discovery
Georgia man imprisoned for hiding death of Tara Grinstead pleads guilty in unrelated rape cases