As far as I know or can tell, the primary issue, or at least one of the primary issues facing the trans community is the extremely high sucide rate that effect the community. Given that, society should work with that community to try and address that, and implement policies that will reduce that rate.
However, I don't think that increased support for SRS and similar procedures should be one of those things, because the post and pre SRS sucide rates are effectively the same. That goes double for kids, I remember the "huh, Jimmy's acting a bit hyper, time to put him on ritalin" days, and I don't think it would help if we switch out ritalin for puberty blockers.
What does help is acceptance and support of that community. But that's largely the case for the immediate friends and family of trans people, running around on the internet loudly telling everyone how much you support the community doesn't really do much to help them in person. Building a society that treats everyone with respect and kindness is the best way to help vulnerable poeple.
The issue with that is, as usual, how to do so in practice, particularly with kids. If anyone here has heard of the study about "rapid onset gender dysphoria" (ie: kids and teenagers deciding they're trans because it's trendy, because they're young and impressionable, etc), or parents being concerned about things like those Drag Queen story hour events some schools have hosted (because there's a difference between cross dressing. Being trans, and drag, and the latter is something children maybe shouldn't be exposed to) I think you understand where I'm coming from on this, or why some people might oppose them while having no issue with trans people otherwise. Those of you who are familiar with the firestorm of controversy those incidents provoked, or those stories bring used as propaganda fodder by people who do have issues with trans people, I think you can also understand why this topic has to be dealt with carefully, or why the trans community is so defensive about it.
That said, a culture that accepts and supports trans people also needs to have room to criticize bad actors within that community. There's an ongoing case in Canada about a person named Johnathan/Jessica Yaniv, who basically used Canada's laws mandating protection for trans people as a tool to threaten and harass people with bogus antidiscrimation suits, and abused similar laws in order to suppress news and public discussion about their actions. Yaniv is obviously a bad actor abusing those laws and doesn't represent anything close to the average or mainstream trans person, but they do suggest that perhaps we should consider how our current laws are set up and ensure there's a balance between protecting vulnerable people and providing tools for bad actors to use.