News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Legislation would prohibit transgender Missourians from changing birth certificates
Legislation would prohibit transgender Missourians from changing birth certificates
by Annelise Hanshaw, Missouri Independent
March 5, 2025
A Republican push to bar transgender Missourians from changing the sex on their birth certificates was briefly debated Wednesday morning by a state Senate committee.
The bill’s sponsor, Republican state Sen. Mike Cierpiot of Lee’s Summit, said birth certificates reflect “facts on the day you were born” and should be unchangeable except in cases of sex development disorders.
Cierpiot filed the same bill in 2023, but it was never debated by the full Senate. He did not file the bill last year.
The bill was inspired, he said, by a lawsuit in his district where a transgender student sued the Blue Springs School District in 2015 after being barred from locker rooms and multi-stall bathrooms. A jury awarded the student $4 million, but the case was appealed and is currently awaiting a Missouri Supreme Court opinion.
“The reason this (bill) is needed is because some courts are making decisions partly because of modified birth certificates,” Cierpiot said.
State Sen. Rick Brattin, a Harrisonville Republican, mentioned that some transgender Missourians have changed their gender marker on their driver’s license. The Department of Revenue recently rescinded that policy after pressure from lawmakers.
Cierpiot said he was less worried about driver’s licenses.
“A birth certificate is a historic document,” he said. “If someone wants to change things later in life, this is quiet on that.”
A Senate committee room was full of people waiting to testify on the bill, but the public hearing was cut short after 30 minutes with three speaking in favor and four able to speak in opposition before the committee chair moved to the next bill.
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Sharon Dunski Vermont, a pediatrician from the St. Louis area, told committee members that the bill is dangerous for transgender people.
“People have been attacked, bullied and even killed because their documents don’t reflect who they see themselves to be,” she said.
Brattin asked Vermont about the Washington University Transgender Center, which was the subject of a whistleblower’s affidavit in 2023 and closed after state law made gender-affirming care illegal for minors.
Brattin criticized the center, calling treatments “detrimental to (children’s) health.”
Dunski Vermont, who worked there, said the allegations were untrue.
“I don’t tell you how to be a senator, and I would appreciate if you don’t tell me how to be a doctor,” she said, as Brattin interrupted.
Keith Rose, who is a legal advocate with nonprofit law firm Center for Growing Justice, said he has assisted people changing their birth certificates as part of his work.
He called birth certificates “living documents,” instead of historic.
“It is common sense that birth records should reflect your lived reality,” he said.
Few judges are willing to issue court orders to change birth certificates, Rose said, and it has grown more difficult in the past three years.
The committee did not take action on the bill Wednesday.
Missouri Independent is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Missouri Independent maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jason Hancock for questions: info@missouriindependent.com.
The post Legislation would prohibit transgender Missourians from changing birth certificates appeared first on missouriindependent.com
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
A crowd saw a man get shot. Decades later, nobody claims to know who did it
SUMMARY: A true crime podcast, *Morbid*, revisits the unsolved 1981 killing of Ken McElroy in Skidmore, Missouri. Known as “the town bully,” McElroy was accused of numerous crimes but avoided conviction through intimidation. On July 10, 1981, he was shot in broad daylight in front of around 50 people, yet no one came forward. The community, fed up with his reign of terror, allegedly took justice into their own hands. Despite FBI involvement, the case closed without indictments. Over 40 years later, with many witnesses deceased, the murder remains unsolved, and locals continue to keep the secret.
The post A crowd saw a man get shot. Decades later, nobody claims to know who did it appeared first on fox2now.com
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Joe’s Blog: 90s coming with some nasty storms (6/16)
SUMMARY: Kansas City has yet to hit 90°F this year, though summer’s heat and humidity are building. A very moist atmosphere will fuel possible storms Tuesday into Wednesday, with flooding downpours the main concern. Models show varying rainfall totals and locations, with uncertainty about where storms will hit hardest. Severe storms are more likely late Tuesday night into early Wednesday, but flooding poses the greatest risk due to moisture-rich conditions and possible training storms. There’s also a chance for strong “wake low” winds Tuesday. The first 90° day could arrive later this week or weekend as the pattern shifts.
The post Joe's Blog: 90s coming with some nasty storms (6/16) appeared first on fox4kc.com
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
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What hobbies did you enjoy before social media and technology?
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