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Texas politics leave transgender foster youth isolated

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After Kayden Asher told his dad that he was transgender, their relationship fell apart and the teenager entered Texas’ troubled foster care system. As Asher tumbled through several foster placements, Texas leaders intensified their efforts to regulate the lives of LGBTQ+ people.

Credit:
Greta Díaz González Vázquez

A cycle of chaos

“LGBTQ young people are aging out of care and most of them do not even have a single person, let alone a robust support system, who they can count on. It is a type of loneliness unlike anything I’ve seen.”

— Adam McCormick, associate social work professor, St. Edward’s University

In November, Morningstar woke up early to get ready for the day. Before enrolling in a cosmetology program at Palo Alto College in San Antonio, she needed to submit documentation to qualify for a scholarship. Foster youth in Texas are eligible for tuition waivers at select state colleges.

Credit:
Greta Díaz González Vázquez/The Texas Tribune

Morningstar puts the final touches on her makeup before leaving Thrive Youth Center in San Antonio. She wanted to be comfortable in her gender expression for her first trip to Palo Alto College in November. While she was in the care of the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, she wasn’t allowed to wear makeup or feminine clothing.

Credit:
Greta Díaz González Vázquez/The Texas Tribune

Morningstar speaks with Jai Gonzalez Quintero, a case manager at Thrive Youth Center in San Antonio, before leaving for the day. The nonprofit provided educational and career support to Morningstar, along with practical resources like bus passes.

Credit:
Greta Díaz González Vázquez/The Texas Tribune

Morningstar, 22, poses for a portrait in her room at Thrive Youth Center in San Antonio. Morningstar realized she was transgender while she was in the state’s troubled foster care system. “I’m not going to hide who I am just to please y’all. I don’t care if I’m in CPS,” she said.

Credit:
Greta Díaz González Vázquez/The Texas Tribune

Falling dominoes

Morningstar looks at the bus route on her phone outside a car dealership. Morningstar learned that traveling around San Antonio using public transit can take hours longer than driving. She took two buses and walked for 50 minutes to get to her college.

Credit:
Greta Díaz González Vázquez/The Texas Tribune

Morningstar drops off her documentation at Palo Alto College’s financial services office. She has had to jump through multiple hoops to access financial support as a former foster youth because her paperwork was under her name given at birth and not her current legal name.

Credit:
Greta Díaz González Vázquez/The Texas Tribune

Morningstar walks to Palo Alto College. While she was in the state’s care, Texas removed the few affirmations and protections offered foster youth based on their sexual orientation and gender identity. Years later, DFPS removed a page on the agency’s website that listed resources for LGBTQ+ youth in care, including a suicide hotline.

Credit:
Greta Díaz González Vázquez/The Texas Tribune

Aged out and alone

Over the four years Morningstar was in the state’s care, she lived in over 20 different placements, including psychiatric hospitals and unlicensed facilities. Current and former caseworkers and lawyers who worked with foster youth told The Texas Tribune that LGBTQ+ kids are overrepresented in unlicensed homes because less restrictive placements often can’t meet the needs of these young people.

Credit:
Greta Díaz González Vázquez/The Texas Tribune

Morningstar stops at a convenience store to buy food before taking the bus. “I wasn’t given any help when I aged out. I wasn’t given any phone number to help me at all,” Morningstar said.

Credit:
Greta Díaz González Vázquez/The Texas Tribune

An absence of training

Morningstar and Anthony laugh together after she returns from a long day traversing San Antonio. After telling Anthony about her day, Morningstar said, “I did everything by myself, like a big girl.”

Credit:
Greta Díaz González Vázquez/The Texas Tribune

After a whole day out in the city, Morningstar finally makes it back to the dorms at Thrive. She said that during her time in the foster care system, she wasn’t allowed to be around other LGBTQ+ youth, but at Thrive Youth Center, she made good friends.

Credit:
Greta Díaz González Vázquez/The Texas Tribune

Building a life

Asher walks in a park near downtown Austin last year. Earlier this year, Asher moved in with his adoptive parents, whom he met while advocating for LGBTQ+ people at the Texas Capitol in 2021. He plans to stay with his family through his graduation in August.

Credit:
Greta Díaz González Vázquez/The Texas Tribune

 

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