The Illinois legislatureโs spring session ended with it signing off on a series of measures setting up protections for LGBTQ+ people, trans foster youth and those seeking abortions โ though progressive lawmakers are still looking ahead at where gaps may lie in state law.
One bill would prevent hormone therapy and medication abortion from being tracked by the stateโs Prescription Monitoring Program, while another would give patients greater control over medical data that is ported to nationwide databases.
Gov. JB Pritzker has already pledged to sign both bills. Still, legislators said there is some way to go โ and they need to get creative as federal and state governments clash on other issues.
โWe have to protect as many people as we can, for as long as we can, as reliably as we can,โ said Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago. โInherent in that statement is an admission of the limitations of our powers. Nothing is going to stop a federal subpoena or protect against a federal ban. โฆ Weโre making a safety net as we fly.โ
Protections for reproductive rights and gender-affirming care were enshrined in state law in January 2023, putting Illinois on the side of people who risk prosecution by traveling to the state for treatment and also protecting the licenses of Illinois doctors who provide care thatโs illegal elsewhere. The Illinois Human Rights Act also protects against discrimination based on gender identity.
But the Donald Trump administration has claimed gender-affirming care is โharmful,โ putting it at odds with dozens of major medical organizations, but still leading many hospitals across the nation, including in the Chicago area, to cut treatment for thousands of patients out of fear of reprisals from the federal government.
Some bills make progress on goals some legislators had laid out when Trump was elected for a second time. Cassidy said the prescription tracking bill was put together after lawmakers heard that prosecutors planned to go after doctors who were prescribing painkillers for pain, and saw how it could be used to target residents otherwise.
The health privacy bill came out of legislatorsโ fear that patient data could be leveraged by other states or the federal government in order to prosecute people for getting care thatโs legal in Illinois. Last May, suburban Mount Prospectโs police department was probed by the state for sharing license plate reader data with Texas police tracking a woman whose family alleged she had a self-administered abortion.
The Department of Justice has also issued more than 20 subpoenas for patient data regarding their gender-affirming care; no charges were announced, but the impact had a chilling effect.
โEverything we do is constantly watching the horizon, listening for context clues of what theyโre going to do next, and then reverse engineering how to protect against that,โ Cassidy said. โSometimes we have to knit stuff together like that to catch as much as we can. โฆ Itโs a constant game of Whac-a-Mole.โ
โWe have to protect as many people as we can, for as long as we can, as reliably as we can,โ said Rep. Kelly Cassidy.
Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times
An adjacent piece of legislation would require insurance providers to cover at least six monthsโ supply of estrogen prescriptions starting in 2028. Senate debates reduced the original yearlong requirement to half of that, and testosterone couldnโt be included since itโs federally marked as a Schedule III drug.
Itโs the latest in an ongoing search for ways in which the state could supersede a federal ban on gender-affirming care after one such attempt which was struck down in federal court earlier this year.
One of the billโs sponsors, Rep. Katie Stuart, said she was disappointed to not get the 12-month proposal through but was glad that constituents facing stigma for their hormone therapy and menopause prescriptions would be able to get more of their medications.
โUltimately, my bill is an insurance bill,โ said Stuart, D-Edwardsville. โA medical doctor prescribed it, itโs the right care for the patient, and we fight this battle all the time because the insurance is supposed to pay.โ
The fourth bill creates a framework for planning when foster care youth are moved out of state.
For trans youth, moving to a foster home out of state currently means they have no voice in a decision that could cut them off from their medicine. When the bill is signed into law, the state will dedicate workers to keeping in touch with kids after they move and appoint counsel for youth at risk of being deprived of healthcare.
โIf thereโs reason to place a kid out of state, a family placement or congregate care, thereโs also an obligation on the state as that stand-in parent to have a plan for that kidโs care,โ Cassidy said.
For Cassidy, thereโs more work to do. She still wants to expand data privacy laws, specifically around medical data, and hopes to make the name change process easier and cheaper. She wants to return to those issues in the fall.
โThe idea of living in this world right now, constantly vulnerable to a document check, is something that gives me nightmares,โ Cassidy said. โSo we need to get that across the finish line and get rid of those hurdles.โ
Violet Miller
Violet is a news reporter at the Chicago Sun-Times after starting as an intern and later a freelancer. She was previously a breaking news correspondent for The Daily Herald.



Leave a Reply