Have you ever felt like throwing up your hands in frustration? Sometimes it can feel like “nothing” is working or “everything” is against you. Each of us has strengths. Even if the odds are truly against us, there are actions we can take.
The Mayor’s Office of Homeless Services has declared a winter shelter warning for Tuesday, January 14, 2025 at 4 pm until Thursday, January 14, 2025, at 9 am. Call 211 (available 24/7) or 443-984-9540 to connect with shelter. Get more info here.
04.22.24
The Trans Rights Advocacy Coalition (TRAC) has been the driving force in championing trans rights policy changes in Maryland. Due to stigma and structural discrimination, transgender people—particularly transgender people of color—experience high rates of homelessness. Following the implementation of the Trans Health Equity Act in January, we talked with TRAC leadership about their work and community.
Formed in 2022, TRAC is a colition led by trans and gender-expansive Marylanders with the goal of improving the well-being of trans communities in Maryland. TRAC members include people with lived experience, medical professionals, lawyers, researchers, religious leaders, and allies. TRAC advocates for policies to ensure that all Marylanders are able to live safe, affirming, and prosperous lives— including those behind bars.
Access to affordable, high-quality gender-affirming care is incredibly important to the well-being of trans and gender-expansive people. It is linked to lower rates of suicide and addiction. Access to gender-affirming care makes us less likely to be discriminated against when it comes to employment and housing. It very tangibly reduces the danger of violence and harassment. Gender-affirming heatlh care is life-saving. Still, health care is only one part of the constellation of issues relevant to the trans community.
The passage of THEA sends the message that Maryland is one of the few states willin gto acknowledge and protect trans people against the wave of anti-trans hate. Many have fought to access this care for years, and it is incredible to see Maryland's Medicaid program follow the medical science and begin providing full coverage for gender-affirming care. Although the legislation was fully implemented only a few months ago, several individuals who are part of TRAC have begun accessing the newly covered care. We know that when trans people have supportive care, it makes a world of difference. To be able to see yourself and be seen by others is a life-changing, health experience when that authentic connection is paired with real protections against discrimination and violence.
The national landscape on trans issues is bleak. In the past few years, 25 states have passed legislation that restricts trans peoples' access to care and our right to participate in society as full citizens. The reality is that all trans people, and increasingly the people who care for and about us, are under attack. States are legislating the clothes we can wear publicly, making gender marker changes illegal, viciously attacking trans youth, and restricting funding for entities that affirm trans people. This is all on top of the violence and harassment that trans people face every day, which is also getting more severe. Maryland is leaps and bounds ahead of most states when it comes to protecting trans people. Maryland's gender-affirmign care providers have seen an increase in trans people coming from other states to receive care here.
There's still a lot of work to be done in Maryland. This session, we helped pass SB119—which protects gender-affirming care patients, providers, and support networks from out-of-state litigation and harrassment. TRAC also continued our campaign to improve the safety and well-being of trans folks behind bars. We hope to see progress towards the Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services' compliance with legal requirements and ultimately healing and liberation for our communities.
Some of the TRAC leadership team, from left to right: Brige Dumais (they/them), Maya Holiday (they/she), Ngaire Philip (she/they), Jamie Grace Alexander (she/they), Sam Williamson (they/them). Not pictured: Alexis Blackman (she/her), Devon Ojeda (he/they).
Have you ever felt like throwing up your hands in frustration? Sometimes it can feel like “nothing” is working or “everything” is against you. Each of us has strengths. Even if the odds are truly against us, there are actions we can take.
Send one email today to advocate for housing that serves all Marylanders. Let Governor Moore know that more permanent supportive housing is a good thing—and urge him to stay the course.
At our annual staff holiday party, we take time to honor and celebrate staff members who best represent our Core Values and one HCH-er at Heart.
Larrice is a mother, grandmother, teacher, cook and storyteller who was recently featured in our original documentary, “Taking Care: Portraits from Baltimore.”