February 3, 2010
Woman’s battle to get US tax deduction for sex-change seen as win for all transgender people
Canadian Press Newswire
BOSTON – A woman who battled the U.S. tax system in court to win a deduction for the costs of her sex-change operation says she feels like she won a victory for all transgender people. Rhiannon O’Donnabhain, who was born a man, sued the federal Internal Revenue Service in 2007 after the agency rejected a $5,000 deduction for about $25,000 in medical expenses. The agency had contended the sex-change surgery was a cosmetic procedure and not medically necessary. On Tuesday, the U.S. Tax Court ruled that O’Donnabhain should be allowed to deduct the costs of her treatment for gender-identity disorder, including sex-change surgery and hormone treatments. “The tax court has spoken for my community and has supported my community by saying that this is a proper medical deduction, much the same as an appendectomy or open heart surgery,” O’Donnabhain said in an interview Wednesday. “It certainly is not cosmetic surgery as the IRS contended,” she said.



