Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Miami Beach Will Offer Transgender Benefits This Fall

Miami Beach joins a small group of just 5 percent of cities across the country that offer transgender benefits.
digital_rex
/
Creative Commons/Flickr
Miami Beach joins a small group of just 5 percent of cities across the country that offer transgender benefits.
Miami Beach joins a small group of just 5 percent of cities across the country that offer transgender benefits.
Credit digital_rex / Creative Commons/Flickr
/
Creative Commons/Flickr
Miami Beach joins a small group of just 5 percent of cities across the country that offer transgender benefits.

The City of Miami Beach will be the first in the state to offer transgender benefits to city employees, starting this October.The Commission voted unanimously last Wednesday to offer the coverage.

"It’s important for us not to bepro-LGBTby word, but more importantly by action,” said Mayor Philip Levine after the Commission's decision. "We want to make [Miami Beach] the most progressive, pragmatic in America. These types of initiatives are part of that vision and our mandate.”

The benefits will include gender-reassignment surgery, such as mastectomies for female-to-male transgendered people, and hormone treatments.

A consultant to the city reported to the Commission that these procedures were not any more expensive than pregnancy care, heart surgery, or other kinds of necessary health expenses.

Miami Beach expects the cost of the transgender benefits to be fairly minimal. The consultant estimated an average of about one claim every three or four years. Not covered by the city’s plan would be electrolysis or voice training.

SteveRothausof the Miami Herald says only 5 percent of cities in the country offer transgender benefits.

Miami Beach’s decision will help it maintaina perfect ranking with the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), a gay-rights advocacy organization. Each year the group ranks how inclusive a city is ofLGBTpeople and considers factors such as whether there are non-discrimination laws and whether a city offers benefits to same-sex partners.

Miami received a 67 percent, Hialeah 58 percent and Wilton Manors 82 percent on HRC's index.

Copyright 2014 WLRN 91.3 FM

Elaine is senior producer of news and public affairs at WLRN-Miami Herald News. She produces The Florida Roundup, a Friday news show, and works on building audience engagement around the issues we cover. Elaine moved from New York City, where she was a lawyer for the city government. She put aside the legal briefs and discovery requests to be back in public radio. Before WLRN, Elaine worked as a producer for public affairs shows at WNYC and WYPR.
Wilson Sayre was born and bred in Raleigh, N.C., home of the only real barbecue in the country (we're talking East here). She graduated from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, where she studied Philosophy.