FRANKFORT, Ky. — Kentucky is under no legal requirement to use taxpayer money to cover the costs of gender-affirming surgeries for people incarcerated in state prisons, Attorney General Russell Coleman said Thursday.
The Kentucky Department of Corrections requested the opinion from the state's Republican attorney general as the agency amends its administrative regulations regarding medical care for people in prison.
Coleman was asked whether the constitutional prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment means the department is required to pay for gender-affirming surgeries for transgender people in prison when the procedure is deemed ''medically necessary'' by medical professionals.
''Common sense dictates that it is not ‘cruel and unusual' for the department to decline to spend taxpayer dollars on such controversial medical procedures," Coleman's opinion said. "Fortunately, there is no controlling legal authority that compels the department to abandon common sense.''
Coleman said the opinion should settle the question "once and for all.''
''The idea that Kentucky taxpayers should be forced to pay for gender surgeries for convicted criminals was simply absurd," he said.
Chris Hartman, executive director of the Fairness Campaign, a Kentucky-based LGBTQ+ advocacy group, said the attorney general's opinion was "disappointing but predictable."
''All inmates get medically necessary care — whether it's for cancer, diabetes or any other condition,'' Hartman said in a statement. ''Transgender inmates should be treated no differently. When in the custody and care of the state, it is federal law for inmates to be given health care when it is medically necessary, which gender-affirming surgery sometimes is for transgender inmates.''