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World / Americas

New York City to add gender-neutral option to death certificates

Published: 18 Dec 2019 - 11:34 pm | Last Updated: 03 Nov 2021 - 07:25 am
Commuters walk through the morning bright sunlight coming from the 60 feet high windows in Grand Central Terminal in New York City on March 11, 2019. AFP / Timothy A Clary

Commuters walk through the morning bright sunlight coming from the 60 feet high windows in Grand Central Terminal in New York City on March 11, 2019. AFP / Timothy A Clary

Matthew Lavietes I Thomson Reuters Foundation

NEW YORK:  New York City will start offering a gender-neutral option on death certificates, officials said on Tuesday, as part of a growing movement away from strictly male or female designations.

As of next year, the city's Health Department will include an "X" option for residents who do not identify themselves as male or female.

A growing number of U.S. jurisdictions have allowed people to select a gender neutral or non-binary option on birth certificates, driver's licenses and identification cards.

New York City, the nation's largest city, joins the states of New Jersey, Rhode Island and California in passing provisions for death certificates as well, officials said.

"This will provide transgender and gender non-binary people with dignity in death," said New York City Councilman Daniel Dromm, who chairs the council's LGBTQ Caucus.

"I think that people want to be remembered as who they are rather than some type of marker that society had decided to give them earlier in their life," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

A non-binary "X" designation on birth certificates - meaning someone does not identify as male or female - has been permitted in New York City since 2018.

So far this year 362 people have asked to change the gender designation on their birth certificates, according to the city Health Department.

"What might appear like a small change to some is in fact everything to many," said City Councilman Carlos Menchaca in a statement. "In death as in life, we want dignity and respect."

New York City issues about 54,000 death certificates a year, the Health Department said.