South Carolina Gov. McMaster signs bill outlawing transgender care for trans youth

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South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster signed a bill banning certain medical care for transgender youth on Tuesday.

House Bill 4624, called the “Help not Harm” bill by legislators, prohibits anyone under the age of 18 from receiving gender reassignment surgery or any form of puberty-blocking or hormone therapy. The bill became effective immediately.

The bill also makes it a felony to perform gender reassignment surgery on those under the age of 18.

McMaster said a ceremonial bill signing with legislators would take place in the Upstate next week.

The South Carolina statehouse, where Gov Henry McMaster delivered his "last call" executive order speech during a COVID press conference at the State House in Columbia, S.C. Friday, July 10, 2020. Beginning Saturday, July 11, 2020, South Carolina's 8,000 restaurants, bars, breweries and other establishments will be ordered to stop serving alcohol nightly at 11 p.m., Gov. Henry McMaster said at the press conference.

Under the new bill, minors can still be prescribed puberty blockers or hormone therapy to treat certain conditions like precocious puberty or endometriosis.

The new law also bans the South Carolina Medicaid program from providing coverage for gender reassignment surgery or hormone therapy to adults and minors.

The bill passed on the last day of the legislative session after the House agreed to accept the Senate’s changes to the law. The Senate's major change was an amendment requiring public school principals and vice principals to report students to parents if their child informed officials that they were identifying as a different gender from their assigned sex or using different pronouns.

More: As SC legislature winds down, bill banning transgender youth medical care returns to House

Opponents of the amendment argued the measure would be a forced outing and worried it could put a child in an uncomfortable or potentially dangerous situation if their parent or guardian were not accepting. Supporters of the amendment said parents have a right to know if their children are identifying as transgender or requesting to change their pronouns.

Dr. Elizabeth Mack, president of the South Carolina chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics testified against the bill during a Senate medical affairs subcommittee in February, noting there are “less than 2,000 trans kids in the state.”

Still, supporters of the bill pushed for it, saying its intention was to protect children, while others say it does the opposite.

“We stand in grief and solidarity with LGBTQ South Carolinians, who are increasingly under attack by our own government,” Executive Director of ACLU South Carolina Jace Woodrum said in a statement on X, formerly known as Twitter. “We can put to rest the notion that the government cares about limited government and personal freedom. With a stroke of a pen, he (McMaster) has chosen to insert the will of politicians into healthcare decisions, trample on the liberties of trans South Carolinians, and deny the rights of the parents of trans minors.”

South Carolina joins 25 states to outlaw transgender care for minors. It was also one of the only states that did not have a ban on transgender care in the South, with Virginia now being the lone Southern state with access.

Savannah Moss covers politics for the Greenville News. Reach her at smoss@gannett.com or follow her on X @Savmoss.

This article originally appeared on Greenville News: S.C. bill banning certain medical care for trans youth becomes law