Hawai'i has joined the growing number of blue states enacting legal protections for gender-affirming care. Governor Josh Green signed House Bill 1875, also known as Act 059, last week, establishing safeguards that shield providers and patients from what the law calls "abusive litigation" originating outside the state.
What the law does
The shield law explicitly extends Hawai'i's existing reproductive health protections to gender-affirming care for transgender people. According to legal experts, shield laws create a legal barrier preventing state actors from aiding out-of-state attacks on lawful care, such as extradition of health care providers. The bill emphasizes that the right to privacy and bodily autonomy, grounded in the Hawai'i State Constitution, applies to minors as well as adults and includes the right to make decisions about gender-affirming health services.
Years in the making
The legislation caps a three-year advocacy effort and arrives as Hawai'i becomes among the last blue states to enact such protections. According to Abby Simmons, Chair of the Stonewall Caucus of the Democratic Party of Hawai'i, the slow legislative process was intentional. Lawmakers wanted to understand the legal implications and hear from stakeholders to ensure the bill could withstand legal challenges. "While that process can sometimes feel slow, it also means that when legislation succeeds, it often has a stronger foundation," Simmons said.
Why it matters now
The law arrives amid escalating federal threats to gender-affirming care programs at hospitals across the country. Earlier this year, a federal court in Texas ordered Rhode Island Hospital, located almost 2,000 miles away, to hand over patient records from its transgender youth care program. Simmons noted that the winning message for HB1875 extended beyond the LGBTQ+ community to focus on patients, families, healthcare provider stability, and Hawai'i's right to self-governance. "The conversation wasn't simply about gender-affirming care," she explained. "It was about preventing out-of-state actors from interfering with healthcare decisions made here in Hawaiʻi."
Source: Erin in the Morning
Cover photo: Aloha102, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons



