After a tormented
existence as a father, a husband, a Coast Guardsman,
and a construction worker, a 57-year-old suburban Boston man
underwent a sex-change operation. Then she wrote off
the $25,000 in medical expenses on her taxes.
But the Internal
Revenue Service disallowed the deduction, ruling the
procedure was cosmetic, not a medical necessity, in a
potentially precedent-setting dispute now before the
U.S. tax court.
Rhiannon
O'Donnabhain is suing the IRS in a case transgender rights
advocates are hoping will force the tax agency to treat
sex-change operations the same as appendectomies,
heart bypasses, and other deductible medical
procedures. The case is set to go to trial July 24.
An estimated
1,600 to 2,000 people a year undergo sex-change surgery in
the United States, according to the Gay and Lesbian Medical
Association.
O'Donnabhain said
she could have paid back the approximately $5,000 she
received in her tax refund but decided to challenge the IRS
because she believes the ruling against her was rooted
in politics and prejudice.
''This goes way
beyond money,'' O'Donnabhain said in an interview with
the Associated Press. ''If I were to give the money back, it
would be saying it's OK for you to do this to me. It
is not OK for them to do this to me or anyone like
me.''
The U.S. tax
court has never issued an opinion in a similar case, said
Jennifer Levi, an attorney with Gay and Lesbian Advocates
and Defenders, the Boston-based legal organization
representing O'Donnabhain. But the IRS has ruled
against allowing the deduction in at least one other case.
In a 2005 case
the IRS ruled that the costs of a woman's gender
reassignment surgery and related treatments were not
deductible as medical expenses.
The IRS cited the
section of the tax code that says cosmetic surgery or
similar procedures are deductible only when they are needed
to improve a congenital abnormality, an accident or
trauma, or a disfiguring disease.
In a 1983 case,
however, the IRS allowed a father to deduct his
transportation costs when he accompanied his college-age son
to a clinic where he received a sex-change operation.
Levi argues that
because gender identity disorder is a recognized mental
disorder that is generally treated with hormones and
surgery, the costs are legitimate medical deductions.
''Every mental
health textbook and medical dictionary recognizes the
legitimacy of both the diagnosis and course of treatment,''
Levi said.
IRS officials
declined to comment, citing the upcoming trial.
Robert Adelson, a
Boston tax attorney, said the IRS ''might take the
position that you were dealt a particular hand, you are the
gender you are, and if you want to now change the
gender, should the government now subsidize you to do
so?''
Others say the
IRS has made a mistake.
''The IRS ruling
is pure bias, since scientists agree that gender
transition services are medically necessary and not
cosmetic,'' said Joel Ginsberg, executive director of
the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association.
O'Donnabhain
(pronounced oh-DON-oh-vin) will not disclose her original
name to protect her family's privacy. She said she struggled
with uncomfortable feelings she could not identify
while growing up in an Irish Catholic family.
''There was a
definite feeling I wanted to be female, but there was no
language for it,'' she said. ''It was confessions on
Saturdays and Mass on Sundays. We didn't talk about
those things.''
O'Donnabhain, now
63, served in the Coast Guard, got married, raised
three children, and worked as a supervisor at various
engineering and construction jobs, including Boston's
colossal Big Dig highway project.
''I always
thought the feelings would go away. If I date, the feelings
will go away, if I marry, they'll go away, if I do male
stuff, they'll go away. But of course, they never went
away,'' she said. ''I finally reached a point where I
just couldn't contain this anymore. I felt like my
life was unraveling.''
In 1996,
O'Donnabhain began seeing a psychotherapist, who eventually
diagnosed her with gender identity disorder. Five years
later, her therapist recommended sex-change surgery,
finding it was a medically necessity. A psychologist
who examined O'Donnabhain concurred.
O'Donnabhain
claimed the expenses on her 2001 tax return. The IRS denied
the deduction in 2003.
Kenneth Vacovec,
a tax attorney from Newton, said O'Donnabhain could have
a strong case because of the psychological component of
gender identity disorder.
''If you were
going to a psychiatrist and you had a bipolar condition,
and you were taking medication and getting treatment and it
made you function better in society, how is that
different from having a sex-change operation that
allows you to function better and be more comfortable
in society?'' Vacovec said. (AP)
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