Bill Text: FL S1864 | 2020 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Vulnerable Child Protection Act
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Failed) 2020-03-14 - Died in Health Policy [S1864 Detail]
Download: Florida-2020-S1864-Introduced.html
Florida Senate - 2020 SB 1864 By Senator Baxley 12-00581-20 20201864__ 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to the Vulnerable Child Protection 3 Act; creating s. 456.0335, F.S.; providing a short 4 title; defining the term “sex”; providing criminal 5 penalties for health care practitioners who engage in 6 or cause specified practices to be performed on a 7 minor under certain conditions; providing 8 applicability; providing an effective date. 9 10 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 11 12 Section 1. Section 456.0335, Florida Statutes, is created 13 to read: 14 456.0335 Vulnerable Child Protection Act.— 15 (1) This section may be cited as the “Vulnerable Child 16 Protection Act.” 17 (2) As used in this section, the term “sex” means the 18 biological state of being female or male based on sex organs, 19 chromosomes, and endogenous hormone profiles. 20 (3) A health care practitioner who engages in any of the 21 following practices upon a minor, or who causes such practices 22 to be performed upon a minor, for the purpose of attempting to 23 change the minor’s sex, or for the purpose of affirming the 24 minor’s perception of the minor’s sex if that perception is 25 inconsistent with the minor’s sex, commits a felony of the 26 second degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, 27 or s. 775.084: 28 (a) Performing surgeries that sterilize, including 29 castration, vasectomy, hysterectomy, oophorectomy, 30 metoidioplasty, orchiectomy, penectomy, phalloplasty, and 31 vaginoplasty; 32 (b) Performing a mastectomy; 33 (c) Administering, prescribing, or supplying the following 34 medications that induce transient or permanent infertility: 35 1. Puberty-blocking medication, which stops or delays 36 normal puberty; 37 2. Supraphysiologic doses of testosterone, to females; or 38 3. Supraphysiologic doses of estrogen, to males; or 39 (d) Removing any otherwise healthy or nondiseased body part 40 or tissue. 41 (4) This section does not apply to a health care 42 practitioner acting in accordance with a good faith medical 43 decision of a parent or guardian of a minor born with a 44 medically verifiable genetic disorder of sex development, 45 including: 46 (a) External biological sex characteristics that are 47 unresolvably ambiguous, such as the minor being born with having 48 46 XX chromosomes with virilization, 46 XY chromosomes with 49 undervirilization, or both ovarian and testicular tissue. 50 (b) A sexual development disorder whereby a physician has 51 determined through genetic testing that the minor does not have 52 the normal chromosome structure for a male or a female. 53 Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2020.