Please contact Regan Davis at rdavis@novam.org or 703-533-5505 x13 if you are interested in hosting a pre-party or attending the event, or would like information on volunteer opportunities to ensure the evening goes off without a hitch.
2.08.2007
Celebrate with Northern Virginia AIDS Ministry at IMAGINE 2007 - April 28, 2007
Please contact Regan Davis at rdavis@novam.org or 703-533-5505 x13 if you are interested in hosting a pre-party or attending the event, or would like information on volunteer opportunities to ensure the evening goes off without a hitch.
New Interim Director for LGBT Affairs
Chris is currently an ANC Rep for ANC 2F03. He is the founder of Youth Pride Day and the Youth Pride Alliance. He was a 2006 officer of the Gertrude Stein Democrats. He is also actively involved in the Crystal Meth Working Group. He has raised money for many DC LGBT organizations including SMYAL and has been active in many other local efforts including Capital Pride, which earned him a volunteer award from Whitman-Walker Clinic.
Mayor Fenty is lucky to have Christopher Dyer on board. You can read the official press release right here.
2.07.2007
Today is National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day
New! Download these documents:
C2EA-MetroDC National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day Flyer
Ward 7 National Black HIV/AIDS Day Media Advisory
February 7 is National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness and Information Day (NBHAAD). This annual observance day was created to raise awareness among African Americans about HIV/AIDS and its devastating impact on African American communities. The day is part of a national mobilization effort to get African Americans to learn more about the threat posed by the disease, get tested, get treated and make a commitment to fight HIV/AIDS.
NBHAAD is a day to remember those infected and affected by the HIV/AIDS pandemic-especially African Americans who are disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS. Since 1981 when the first cases were diagnosed, AIDS has killed more than 20 million people, with African Americans accounting for 40 percent of those deaths.
To learn more about the coalition, visit www.blackaidsday.org.
Washington DC Events
Keeping it Real: Youth HIV Rap Session at Eastern Senior High School. 11:30-12:30 PM. Sponsored by the Ward 7 HIV/AIDS Collaborative
Counseling and Testing at Riverside CenterCounseling and Testing available from 3:30 to 5:00 PM. Located at Marvin Gaye Park – 5200 Foote Street, NE. Sponsored by the Ward 7 HIV/AIDS Collaborative.
Community Gathering/Awards Reception: The Ward 7 HIV/AIDS Collaborative will host a reception from 6:00 to 8:00 PM at the Planned Parenthood Ophelia Egypt Program Center, 3933 Minnesota Avenue, NE.
The Max Robinson Center Open House: The Max Robinson Center, located at 2301 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave., S.E., will hold an open house from 3-5 p.m. for the local community to learn about health care services available there.
Whitman Walker Clinic Reception: Whitman-Walker Clinic will hold a community reception at THEARC, 1901 Mississippi Ave., S.E., at 6:30 p.m. The event will include a presentation of a $150,000 donation to Whitman-Walker Clinic by DC Chartered Health, HIV testing and music and refreshments.
Northern Virginia Event: The Alexandria Health Department along with Whitman-Walker of Arlington, K. I. Services, NOVAM, Positive Livin' and INOVA Juniper will host an education/information event which will include opportunities for testing and counseling, in recognition of National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. The event will be held Feb. 7 at 6:30 p.m. at the Alexandria Black History Museum, 902 Wythe Street in the "Olde Towne" section of Alexandria, VA. For more info, please e-mail dakween2@yahoo.com.
NBHAAD is a day to remember those infected and affected by the HIV/AIDS pandemic-especially African Americans who are disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS. Since 1981 when the first cases were diagnosed, AIDS has killed more than 20 million people, with African Americans accounting for 40 percent of those deaths.
To learn more about the coalition, visit www.blackaidsday.org.
Washington DC Events
Keeping it Real: Youth HIV Rap Session at Eastern Senior High School. 11:30-12:30 PM. Sponsored by the Ward 7 HIV/AIDS Collaborative
Counseling and Testing at Riverside CenterCounseling and Testing available from 3:30 to 5:00 PM. Located at Marvin Gaye Park – 5200 Foote Street, NE. Sponsored by the Ward 7 HIV/AIDS Collaborative.
Community Gathering/Awards Reception: The Ward 7 HIV/AIDS Collaborative will host a reception from 6:00 to 8:00 PM at the Planned Parenthood Ophelia Egypt Program Center, 3933 Minnesota Avenue, NE.
The Max Robinson Center Open House: The Max Robinson Center, located at 2301 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave., S.E., will hold an open house from 3-5 p.m. for the local community to learn about health care services available there.
Whitman Walker Clinic Reception: Whitman-Walker Clinic will hold a community reception at THEARC, 1901 Mississippi Ave., S.E., at 6:30 p.m. The event will include a presentation of a $150,000 donation to Whitman-Walker Clinic by DC Chartered Health, HIV testing and music and refreshments.
Northern Virginia Event: The Alexandria Health Department along with Whitman-Walker of Arlington, K. I. Services, NOVAM, Positive Livin' and INOVA Juniper will host an education/information event which will include opportunities for testing and counseling, in recognition of National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. The event will be held Feb. 7 at 6:30 p.m. at the Alexandria Black History Museum, 902 Wythe Street in the "Olde Towne" section of Alexandria, VA. For more info, please e-mail dakween2@yahoo.com.
2.06.2007
Howard University Student Calls for a Semester of Abstinence
Howard University student Carl Miller has a noble goal. He wants to encourage his fellow students to know their HIV status, be informed about HIV/AIDS, and have serious dialogue about HIV/AIDS in the African American community. A noble goal especially considering tomorrow is: National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day,
His approach, however, is a little unusual. Miller is calling for "A Semester of Abstinence and Advocacy".
If the semester of abstinence is a gimmick to get folks talking on campus, I'm all for it. If it's a serious strategy for preventing HIV transmission among sexually active college students, well then it's pretty much a joke.
Every credible piece of research out their prooves: "comprehensive sex education, which teaches both abstinence and contraception, is most effective for young people. Youth who receive this kind of education are more likely to initiate sexual activity later in life and use protection correctly and consistently when they do become sexually active."
Read the original article here
His approach, however, is a little unusual. Miller is calling for "A Semester of Abstinence and Advocacy".
"Howard, we have a problem and it can't be ignored," Carl Miller, a graduate student and social worker, said. "Student leaders and the entire Howard campus need to take up the responsibility of protecting future generations from the issues that we face today."
If the semester of abstinence is a gimmick to get folks talking on campus, I'm all for it. If it's a serious strategy for preventing HIV transmission among sexually active college students, well then it's pretty much a joke.
Every credible piece of research out their prooves: "comprehensive sex education, which teaches both abstinence and contraception, is most effective for young people. Youth who receive this kind of education are more likely to initiate sexual activity later in life and use protection correctly and consistently when they do become sexually active."
Read the original article here
DC HIV/AIDS Groups: Apply for this Money!
Organizations can apply for up to $35,000 per year for a period of two years and four months (March 1, 2007 through June 30, 2009). The NIH/NIAID/DAIDS initiative is being made available through a subcontract with AED.
Here's the thing. The bulk of this grant involves doing events for AIDS Vaccine Awareness Day. Here in DC, the VRC and Capital Area Vaccine Effort. are already making plans for AIDS Vaccine Awareness Day (read more about our plans here).
The Capital Area Vaccine Effort can't apply for this money because they are not a 501C-3, but we'll be more than happy to work with whatever DC organization gets this grant.
Heck, I can even meet with you and help you write the grant. Just apply for the money. The deadline is coming up February 16th, and despite my best efforts, I haven't been able to get any local AIDS Service organizations to submit a proposal yet.
If you're interested, please contact me ASAP.
Read the full RFP right here.
2.05.2007
C2EA-MetroDC Update

You can read the minutes from our last meeting here. And please be sure to join us for our next meeting on February 12th, starting at 6:00 PM at Housing Works (925 15th Street NW, 2nd Floor, McPherson Square Metro).
Members of C2EA-MetroDC will be at various National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day Events across the city getting the word out. Dorithia & I will set up a table and hand out info at the The Ward 7 HIV/AIDS Collaborative Reception from 6:00 to 8:00 PM at the Planned Parenthood Ophelia Egypt Program Center, 3933 Minnesota Avenue, NE. If you'd like to join us, just let me know.
Thirty Three Days and Counting. Where's our AIDS Czar?
To clarify, that was a rhetorical question and the answer is NO! Because obviously nobody can be the head of the Department of Health and a full time AIDS Czar simultaneously.
I regret the wording, however, because I see the Examiner has set the dangerous precedent of referring to Gregg Pane as the AIDS Czar in a recent article. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Let me make a couple points about this article that need to be said.
First, as head of the Department of Health, Gregg Pane has been the man ultimately responsible for the operations of the HIV/AIDS Administration ever since he was first appointed as Acting Director in August of 2004. Nothing has changed in this regard.
Second, nobody can simultaneously hold two full-time jobs. Gregg Pane simply can't be both a full time head of the DOH and a full time AIDS Czar. He needs to hire a full time, competent and qualified individual to assume leadership of the HIV/AIDS Administration. He simply is not going to be able to accomplish part-time what others have failed to accomplish full-time.
Third, the goals Pane has set for the HIV/AIDS Administration are nothing new. In fact, they are terribly similar to many of the goals laid out by Marsha Martin. We had a previous goal of distributing a million condoms, which we did not meet (Pane's new goal is lowered to 250,000). We had a previous goal for HIV testing which we did not meet.
The challenge is not setting goals, the challenge is in actually accomplishing them; a view that was eloquently stated by Raymond Blanks in his op-ed Between Promises and Performance.
I seriously doubt we can do this without a full time, dedicated Director for the HIV/AIDS Administration. Thirty three days and counting. Where's our AIDS Czar?
2.02.2007
NAPWA Hiring Local Advocates for People Living with HIV
"Consumer Advocates work as an extension of NAPWA professional staff to provide outreach to the Washington DC Eligible Metropolitan Area (EMA) PLWH/A community to help consumers access and maintain Title I services. Consumer Advocates participate in workshops, meetings, events and education for HIV/AIDS services. Duties associated with the position include presenting Title I program related information to HIV + persons across the metropolitan area, including the consumer grievance process, assisting at health fairs/events, assisting with office work, along with other duties as they arise during the Consumer Advocacy Project. Comprehensive training will be provided to familiarize consumer advocates with the Ryan White services available to PLWH/A in the DC EMA, outreach materials, and the consumer grievance resolution process
Consumer Advocates are paid, hourly stipend positions, trained and supervised by NAPWA professional staff. Consumer advocates will report to the Director of Community Affairs, the Community Affairs Associate, or designated NAPWA Staff."
Labels:
consumeradvocacyproject,
HAA,
jobs
2.01.2007
Inspired Yoga Lends a Hand to Food and Friends
Learn more about Inspired Yoga's Community Classes by visiting www.inspiredyoga.com/community.htm
1.31.2007
February ACTION Newsletter Now Online
Crystal Meth Town Hall Meeting: February 26th
For more information, go to www.LetsTalkAboutMeth.org, the organization’s website, which is funded by and supported by the DC Center.
Monday, February 26th
"Let's Talk About Meth" Town Hall Meeting.
7:00 PM
HRC Building: 17th St and Rhode Island Ave
View Party 'n Pay PSA
1.29.2007
HIV/AIDS Job Opportunities in DC
Is it time to look for a new job? There are several interesting opportunities at local and national HIV/AIDS organizations in DC. Here is a peak.
La Clinica Del Pueblo has three job openings for folks who are bilingual. They are looking for a Housing Case Manager. They're also looking for a Program Manager and a Program Coordinator to work on CDC funded prevention programs.
The Women's Collective is seeking a Policy Advocate to work on Microbicide Research Advocacy. Don't know what a microbicide is? Then click here.
The National AIDS Fund is seeking a Program Coordinator to provide leadership for special initiatives, primarily a new philanthropic initiative focused on HIV/AIDS and the criminal justice system.
AED is seeking a Program Manager who will be responsible for supporting the management and implementation of the NIH HIV Vaccine Research Education Initiative (NHVREI).
Get working on those resumes!
Get working on those resumes!
Labels:
jobs,
La Clinica del Pueblo,
Womens Collective
1.28.2007
CAVE Meeting on February 13th
CAVE is the community advisory board for the Vaccine Research Center, and at this meeting we're going to be looking at a new VRC research protocol. We'll also be discussing plans for AIDS Vaccine Awareness Day.
1.27.2007
Three Minutes to Say Whatever You Want
Frustrated with the state of HIV/AIDS in the United States and around the world? Here's a chance to have your say. The Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS (PACHA) will hold a meeting. This meeting is open to the public. The meeting takes place February 27, 2007, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and February 28, 2007, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Hubert H. Humphrey Building, 200 Independence Ave., SW., Room 705A, Washington, DC 20201.
Members of the public will have the opportunity to provide comments at the meeting. Public comment will be limited to three (3) minutes per speaker. Public attendance is limited to space available and pre-registration is required for both attendance and public comment. Any individual who wishes to participate should register at www.pacha.gov.
For further information contact: Dana Ceasar, Program Assistant, Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS, Department of Health and Human Services, Hubert H. Humphrey Building, 200 Independence Avenue, SW., Room 733E, Washington, DC 20201; (202) 690-2470.
Members of the public will have the opportunity to provide comments at the meeting. Public comment will be limited to three (3) minutes per speaker. Public attendance is limited to space available and pre-registration is required for both attendance and public comment. Any individual who wishes to participate should register at www.pacha.gov.
For further information contact: Dana Ceasar, Program Assistant, Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS, Department of Health and Human Services, Hubert H. Humphrey Building, 200 Independence Avenue, SW., Room 733E, Washington, DC 20201; (202) 690-2470.
1.26.2007
Guess Who is Coming to DC?
They will be performing in DC on February 14th at the Rock and Roll Hotel, so mark your calendars now. The performance that evening will benefit HIPS in DC.
The show is an eye-popping evening performance art created by people who work in the sex industry, to dispel the myth that they are anything short of artists, innovators, and geniuses! The show features burlesque, spoken word, music, and multimedia performance art. Intelligent and hot, disturbing and hilarious, the performances offer a wide range of perspectives on sex work, from celebration of prostitutes' rights and sex-positivity to views from the darker sides of the industry.
This year's incredible lineup of performers includes international burlesque sensation Miss Dirty Martini; acclaimed Whitney Biennial artist Julie Atlas Muz; author of Happy Baby and My Girlfriend Comes to the City and Beats Me Up Stephen Elliott; stripper historian and burlesque professor Jo Weldon; member of the internationally renowned Japanese performance collective Dumb Type, Cono Snatch Zubobinskaya; enigmatic operatic musician Reginald Lamar; feminist smut purveyor and queer film star Amber Dawn; filmmaker and performer Bridget Irish; tour founder and ringmaster Annie Oakley; and of course my friend and award-winning author of How I Learned to Snap Kirk Read.
Youth Pride Day: April 28th
Washington DC's Youth Pride Alliance hosts Youth Pride Day at Rock Creek Park, at the corner of P and 2rd Streets NW, followed by the Infatuation Youth Dance. Details will be posted shortly on the Youth Pride website: www.youthpridedc.org.
1.25.2007
Campaign to End AIDS Meeting on Monday

You can see minutes from our last meeting right here
1.24.2007
Sister Circle: Now Twice Each Month
For more information, please download this flyer and be sure to share it with other people in your neighborhood who may be interested.
HIV in DC: Around the Blogosphere
Drowsy Grad Student admits he obsessed with reading the Craigslist personal ads, although he adds "Oft times, I'm disgusted by the unsafe sex that it seems like most of the people in the DC metro area seem to be wanting" Read More Here
Sprite is in desperate need of some motivation to finish knitting a scarf for Food & Friends annual scarf drive. Read More Here
West finds himself frustrated with the issue of condom availability in prisons, writing: "It saddens me when people allow religion, homophobia, or residual ignorance to trump the value and potential of human life." Read More Here
Sprite is in desperate need of some motivation to finish knitting a scarf for Food & Friends annual scarf drive. Read More Here
West finds himself frustrated with the issue of condom availability in prisons, writing: "It saddens me when people allow religion, homophobia, or residual ignorance to trump the value and potential of human life." Read More Here
1.23.2007
Northern Virginia National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day Event
For more information on National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, click here.
1.22.2007
Twenty Days and Counting
It makes me wonder whether or not the plan to restructure the Department of Health (as mentioned in Fenty's 100 Day Plan) includes eliminating the position all-together.
Does that leave us with Gregg Pane (pictured left) as our new AIDS Czar/DOH head? I'm not convinced that Gregg Pane is focusing on HIV/AIDS. And I'm definitely not convinced that we are better off now (without a director) than we were when Marsha Martin was in office.
Mayor Fenty, I thought HIV/AIDS was a top priority for your administration. What's going on?
Twenty Days and counting. I suggested at the last Campaign to End AIDS Metro DC meeting that if the silence continues for 99 more days, we should plan a protest on day 100. I hope something happens soon, but if not, you know where I'll be on April 13th.
1.21.2007
Washington Times Op Ed
The following op-ed appeared in the Washington Times.
Dr. Gregg Pane, the director of the D.C. Department of Health, has named himself the interim director of the Administration for HIV Policy and Programs and has named Marie Sansone (currently in charge of HIV surveillance) as his chief of staff. Dr. Pane told the Washington Blade recently that his decision to take on the temporary role stemmed from wanting to "get to the bottom of the problems" the AIDS administration has seen in the past. We hope that Dr. Pane's 20-plus years of experience in the public health sector will revamp the AIDS agency, as the staggering infection rates in the District warrant urgent action.
In what appears to be a step in that direction, the Washington Free Clinic closed its doors yesterday after nearly 40 years and will move its 12-person staff to the Whitman-Walker Clinic's Elizabeth Taylor facility so that comprehensive health care for the underserved continues. Health-care and insurance policies continue to undergo significant changes, and it has become increasingly difficult for small clinics "to stay viable," Gardiner Lapham of the Washington Free Clinic said.
Whitman-Walker, no stranger to financial struggle, had been looking to incorporate primary care into its current operations to the homosexual community with a focus on HIV/AIDS care. The goal is to retain that mission, but to also expand its capacity. Both clinics have done tremendous work in the District. Advocates hope that, by joining forces, they will be better equipped to reach more people and provide more comprehensive health care.
In terms of policy, it is long past the time for the city to stare down the atrocious HIV rate: 1 in 20 residents. Mayor Adrian Fenty has not yet articulated his administration's overall health-care policies, but we do support his decision to replace the Williams administration HIV/AIDS administrator. The District has to do far more than "blanket" the city with condoms to reverse the current HIV/AIDS crisis.
Kim Mills, director of communications for Whitman-Walker, said she is confident that the Fenty administration will continue to spread the message of testing and prevention. We are reserving comment until we see the mayor's concrete plans.
Going forward, the city and nonprofit groups need to take a head-on approach to HIV prevention and work diligently to ensure policies and public dollars are spent on practices that work. New directors and a new direction, coupled with the growing efforts at Whitman-Walker, are good first steps.
Dr. Gregg Pane, the director of the D.C. Department of Health, has named himself the interim director of the Administration for HIV Policy and Programs and has named Marie Sansone (currently in charge of HIV surveillance) as his chief of staff. Dr. Pane told the Washington Blade recently that his decision to take on the temporary role stemmed from wanting to "get to the bottom of the problems" the AIDS administration has seen in the past. We hope that Dr. Pane's 20-plus years of experience in the public health sector will revamp the AIDS agency, as the staggering infection rates in the District warrant urgent action.
In what appears to be a step in that direction, the Washington Free Clinic closed its doors yesterday after nearly 40 years and will move its 12-person staff to the Whitman-Walker Clinic's Elizabeth Taylor facility so that comprehensive health care for the underserved continues. Health-care and insurance policies continue to undergo significant changes, and it has become increasingly difficult for small clinics "to stay viable," Gardiner Lapham of the Washington Free Clinic said.
Whitman-Walker, no stranger to financial struggle, had been looking to incorporate primary care into its current operations to the homosexual community with a focus on HIV/AIDS care. The goal is to retain that mission, but to also expand its capacity. Both clinics have done tremendous work in the District. Advocates hope that, by joining forces, they will be better equipped to reach more people and provide more comprehensive health care.
In terms of policy, it is long past the time for the city to stare down the atrocious HIV rate: 1 in 20 residents. Mayor Adrian Fenty has not yet articulated his administration's overall health-care policies, but we do support his decision to replace the Williams administration HIV/AIDS administrator. The District has to do far more than "blanket" the city with condoms to reverse the current HIV/AIDS crisis.
Kim Mills, director of communications for Whitman-Walker, said she is confident that the Fenty administration will continue to spread the message of testing and prevention. We are reserving comment until we see the mayor's concrete plans.
Going forward, the city and nonprofit groups need to take a head-on approach to HIV prevention and work diligently to ensure policies and public dollars are spent on practices that work. New directors and a new direction, coupled with the growing efforts at Whitman-Walker, are good first steps.
1.20.2007
DC Black Pride: May 25-27th
1.19.2007
Damien Ministries Retreat: February 12-15
More information is available on the Damien Ministries Website. The application deadline is January 29th.
1.18.2007
Kudos to Donald Blanchon
Judging by the comments on The DCist, it's not a popular decision, but it is the right thing to do.
Whitman-Walker has made a historic commitment to reduce or end their participation in any event that has a disproportionately high administrative cost-to-fund-raising ratio (i.e., 50 percent or greater).
Those who participate in the AIDS Marathon in recent years have enjoyed running in exotic destinations like Florence, Dublin, and Honolulu. Much of the money raised goes to support the extensive training program, staff, and trips. The donors are the ones getting duped. When your friend asks you to make that online donation, you probably don't realize that less than half of the money is going to help people living with HIV/AIDS, and the rest is supporting your friend's marathon/vacation.
Simply put, there is a code for ethical fundraising. Organizations that stand the test of time like the United Way or the Red Cross adhere to those guidelines. I'm glad to see Whitman-Walker moving in that direction as well.
Of course the obvious challenge for the Clinic will be the annual AIDS Walk. In years where participation in the walk has been high, they have fallen well below the 50% mark. However, in years where participation has not been as strong, the cost-to-fundraising ratio for this event has been questionable as well.
The most shocking example was in 2001 when the AIDS Walk grossed $485,000 but expenses came to $481,000. That year less than a penny of every dollar donated actually went to help people living with HIV/AIDS, while the rest went to overhead.
In recent years the AIDS Walk has fared much better. Personally, I plan to participate in the AIDS Walk this year to show my support for the clinic and their strengthened commitment to ethical fundraising.
1.17.2007
These Cowboys Can Dance
Metro Weekly magazine has described the Cowboys’ style as a “trademark combo of Broadway-caliber verve, sizzling sex appeal, and rugged good looks.”
And these cowboys have a heart, too. They perform regularly at events that raise money to provide services to people living with HIV/AIDS as well as for AIDS prevention programs. (Maybe I can get them to perform at the AIDS Vaccine Awareness Day Reception this year).
In addition to some great numbers from the DC Cowboys, you can enjoy a night of dancing, free give aways, and a live auction. And if you play your cards right you might just be the lucky person who get's to rip the tank-top right off the cowboy of your choice and have a dance with him shirtless.
And on a personal note, this will be the very first performance for the newest member of the DC Cowboys Dan O'Neill, who just happens to be a friend of mine. If the rest of the cowboys are half as nice as Dan, it's going to be a very fun night.
Out of Control: AIDS in Black America
For more information, download the flier here
1.16.2007
Gregg Pane off to a Rocky Start
We got two indications last week however, that Greg Payne is not going to be quite as "hands on" as expected.
First, he was a no-show at last week's HIV Community Planning Group Meeting. The previous month, Marsha Martin had come on board as the co-chair of this planning body. Personally, I think his presence at the meeting would have left a strong signal that we are not going to be left hanging in the wind while there is no director in at AHPP. And who did they choose to replace Marsha Martin? Marie Sansone. The woman who is already so swamped with work that she can't keep track of AIDS cases in the District. I don't mean to be unkind to Sansone. I just believe giving her additional responsibilities means it's going to take even longer to get those AIDS cases counted.
Secondly, Greg Payne is holding up approval of the new HIV Community Planning Group Members. Without approval of the new member,s the CPG is barely able to function (they couldn't get a quorom until 20 minutes into the meeting). To fully understand the frustration, you have to understand these community volunteers first applied to serve on the CPG in August of 2006. They have been waiting more than six months now to be approved. This is completely unreasonable. Granted, not all the delay can be attributed to Payne. But the delays make waiting an extra month or two for his approval all the more frustrating.
We either need Greg Payne to step up, or we need a new Director of AHPP as soon as possible. Since hiring a new Director of AHPP was not included in Fenty's 100 Day Plan, I can't help but be concerned.
NIGHT STOP: Youth AIDS Team Film Series
This Thursday, please come join the Youth AIDS Team for a film on HIV/AIDS in Mozambique, followed by a panel discussion. The film "Night Stop", produced by Mozambican director Licinio Azevedo, describes the spread of the HIV/AIDS epidemic along a long-distance trucking route in Mozambique called the Corridor of Death. It showcases the lives of the prostitutes who attempt to make a living by catering to truckers who stop at an overnight truck stop.
The film will be followed by a panel discussion with HIV/AIDS experts from the World Bank and representatives from local DC organization HIPS - Helping Individual Prostitutes Survive.
Thursday, January 18th
12:30pm-2:00pm
701 18th St., NW
Room J1-050
RSVP to Emily Horgan: ehorgan@ifc.org
The film will be followed by a panel discussion with HIV/AIDS experts from the World Bank and representatives from local DC organization HIPS - Helping Individual Prostitutes Survive.
Thursday, January 18th
12:30pm-2:00pm
701 18th St., NW
Room J1-050
RSVP to Emily Horgan: ehorgan@ifc.org
1.15.2007
Farewell to the Washington Free Clinic
Today, the Washington Free Clinic prepares to close it's doors. The staff and programs of the Clinic will now become part of the Whitman Walker Clinic, the very organization it gave birth to over 30 years ago. Here are the plans:
1. Washington Free Clinic staff will join the Whitman-Walker Clinic staff in the next two weeks;
2. Whitman-Walker Clinic will integrate the Washington Free Clinic’s primary care expertise into its 14th Street Northwest operations so that Whitman-Walker Clinic can offer comprehensive primary care services to the District’s medically underserved; the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender community; and people living with HIV/AIDS;
3. Clients of the Washington Free Clinic can obtain their medical care at Whitman-Walker Clinic beginning Jan. 29.
The Washington Post reports:
"Changing times now are responsible for its passing. Financial struggles and what board Chair Gardiner Lapham calls 'today's administratively burdensome health-care environment' repeatedly threatened the clinic's viability in recent years. In mid-2005, it nearly shut down after a sudden, major loss of federal HIV-AIDS funding. The crisis ebbed when donors stepped up, but it initiated a board-led soul-searching that culminated last week."
Today’s announcement is another step toward expanding primary health care at Whitman-Walker Clinic. That objective was approved by Whitman-Walker’s board of directors in 2005 to ensure the Clinic’s long-term viability and meet the Clinic’s historic commitment of caring for the LGBT community and people living with HIV/AIDS.
Donald Blanchon, Whitman-Walker’s chief executive officer stated in a press release. “This important development allows us to realize our strategic objective to become the highest quality community health center in the metropolitan Washington area serving the medically underserved; the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community; and people living with HIV/AIDS.”
The jury is still out, however, on whether or not Whitman-Walker's new objective is too broad to maintain a cohesive organization. Since Donald Blanchon was hired as the first straight Executive Director of the Whitman-Walker Clinic, there have been questions raised about the clinic's commitment to the LGBT community. The gay men's health and wellness program, for example, has failed to engage gay men in the district and has struggled over the years with a small staff and high staff turnover rate.
As Whitman-Walker clinic moves to broaden it's commitment to include primary health care for all, it must also clearly define it's commitment to LGBT health.
1.14.2007
DC World AIDS Day 2007: December 1st
World AIDS Day Events
Wednesday November 28th – HIV Town Hall. 6:30 PM at the Armour J. Blackburn Center’s East Ballroom at Howard University (HU). The Blackburn Center is
located at: 2397 Sixth St., N.W., Washington, DC 20059. This event is sponsored by Us Helping Us People Into Living, Inc (UHU), and the Vaccine Research Center (VRC).
Thursday November 29th – Red Hot Night. Kimpton Hotels hosts a World AIDS Day fundraiser at Urbana Restaurant & Wine Bar at Hotel Palomar, 2121 P St., NW, at 6:00 pm. $10.00 cover includes two drink tickets and hors d'ouevres. All proceeds will benefit Whitman-Walker Clinic. For more info, click here
Thursday November 29th –Children's National Medical Center Health Fair. The The HIV Services Department at Children's National Medical Center (CNMC) will commemorate World AIDS Day in the hospital on November 29th. Children's National Medical Center will hold a service provider fair in the atrium of the hospital to share information on ways to keep young people healthy. The fair will run from 10 AM to 1 PM. For more info, click here
Friday November 30th – Rally and Protest at the White House. Friday Nov. 30th, at 1:00pm at Lafayette Square in front of the White House. Read about last year's action here. For more information on this event, click here.
Friday November 30th – WWC Candlelight Vigil. Whitman-Walker's annual candlelight vigil will be Friday, Nov. 30, at 5:30 pm at Dupont Circle.
Friday November 30th – Free HIV Testing. Free HIV testing will be available on Friday, Nov. 30, at the Elizabeth Taylor Medical Center, 1701 14th St., NW, from 8:30 am - 5:00 pm; at the Max Robinson Center, 2301 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave., SE, from 9:30 am - 4:00 pm; and at Whitman-Walker Clinic of Northern Virginia, 5232 Lee Highway in Arlington, from 8:00 am - 5:00 pm.
Friday November 30th - Concert for Life 7:30, Friday, November 30 at the Kenmore Auditorium, 200 S. Carlin Springs Drive, Arington, VA 22204. For more info on this event, click here.
Saturday, December 1st - 2nd Annual 'Everyone's Birthday Friends for a Cause in partnership with Us Helping Us presents a 2007 World AIDS Day benefit featuring 'The Godmother' Lil' Mo and American Idol's Frenchie Davis. For more info on this event, click here.
Saturday, December 1st - MCC NOVA World AIDS Day Event The Metropolitan Community Church of Northern Virginia (MCC-NOVA) is working with Northern Virginia AIDS Ministry (NOVAM), area MCC congregations, Little River UCC, and many others to host a community health fair on the theme of Body, Mind, and Spirit. For more info on this event, click here.
Sunday, December 2nd - Our Lady Queen of Peace World AID Day Event Our Lady Queen of Peace AIDS Ministry & DC Catholic AIDS Network invite you to "STOP AIDS: Keep the Promise – Leadership”, a World AIDS Day Program. The event takes place Sunday, December 2, 2007 at At 4:00 PM at Our Lady Queen of Peace Church, 3800 Ely Place, SE. Fo more details: click here.
Observance of this day provides an opportunity for governments, national AIDS programs, churches, community organizations and individuals to demonstrate the importance of the fight against HIV/AIDS.
With an estimated 38.6 million people worldwide living with HIV at the end of 2005, and more than 25 million people having died of AIDS since 1981, December 1st serves to remind everyone that action makes a difference in the fight against HIV/AIDS.
Americans should be reminded that HIV/AIDS does not discriminate. With an estimated 1,039,000 to 1,185,000 HIV- positive individuals living in the U.S., and approximately 40,000 new infections occurring every year, the U.S., like other nations around the world is deeply affected by HIV/AIDS.

1.12.2007
Adrian Fenty's First 100 Days
There are a few things I find interesting. First, among the action items are plans to hire several permanent staff members (Director of Dep of Human Services, Director of the Office on Aging, Director for the Department of Disability Services, Director of the Department of Disability Services). The plan does not state, however, whether or not Fenty will hire a new Director for the Administration for HIV Policy and Programs in his first 100 days. This is one action item which is urgently needed.
Also, the plan includes a cryptic goal, "Reorganize DOH to consolidate administrations and improve public health functions" which Fenty plans to do in the next 30 days." I can't help but wonder, what administrations are going to be consolidated in the next 30 days, and why didn't he just come out and tell us? I would think it's unlikely he's referring to the Administration for HIV Policy and Programs, but you never know.
Regarding the other goals on HIV/AIDS, most of the action items are items DC is either already working on, or the action item is worded so broadly (i.e. "exploring") that you don't know if there will be an actual outcome.
Here are some snippets from the plan, but you really should read the whole thing for yourself.
"Preventing of sexually transmitted diseases through exploring implementation of needle exchange programs and broader condom accesibility (100 days)"
"support mental health and wellness as well as offer HIV/AIDS prevention services through DMH provider agencies (100 days)"
"Coordinate with medical service providers, especially those part of the Medicaid/Alliance safety net, to implement routine HIV testing for patients ages 14+ and up (100 days)." (isn't that what AHPP's been doing for the past year?)
"Develop an East-of-the-River HIV/AIDS response capacity-building initiative (1st year)"
"Increase community messages on testing and prevention of HIV/AIDS and explore establishing a medical home for low income residents testing positive (1st year)"
1.11.2007
Today's ACTION Lunch
Today I hosted another ACTION Lunch. This month's topic was 'Community Involvement in HIV/AIDS Research'. We had an excellent panel of four folks who discussed from a personal perspective why they got involved in HIV/AIDS research community advisory boards, their experiences and challenges, and the changes they've seen over the years.
There were folks here from: The Adult AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG), the International Network for Strategic Initiatives in Global HIV Trials (INSIGHT), and the Vaccine Research Center.
It is my hope that some of the 20+ folks who attended today are inspired to join a local community advisory board. If you'd like to find out more about local Community Advisory Boards drop me a line and let's talk about it.
And please join us next month for a presentation by Christine Grady on the Ethics of Clinical Research. Understanding the basic principles of what makes HIV/AIDS research ethical is a key part of being an effective Community Advisory Board Member.
Christine Grady currently heads the section on human subject research in the NIH Department of Clinical Bioethics. We could not possibly have a better speaker on this topic. She will take us through the history of clinical studies in the United States (including Tuskegee, Willowbrook, etc ..) and the evolution of research ethics (and protections for volunteers) over the years.
Download the flyer for this event here, and please print out copies of the flyer and share it with others who may be interested.
1.10.2007
Don't Know Your Future if You Don't Know Your Past
C2EA-Metro DC Meeting on Monday January 15th

We are just getting started, but I'm very excited at this new wave of local HIV/AIDS activism in the District. Read the minutes from the last meeting here, then be sure to come out and join us on Monday.
Oh, and if you haven't already, Be sure to join the C2EA-MetroDC Yahoo Group
1.09.2007
DC HIV Prevention Plan Falls Short / Meeting this Thursday

Sadly, the DC report simply does not measure up when compared to what other Community Planning Groups across the country. We simply don't have the the accurate data we so desperately need in order to make the best decisions about where HIV prevention dollars should be going.
You can make a difference by getting involved in the Community Planning Group. There is an application process for new members but you don't have to be a member to attend the monthly meetings or participate on committees.
The next meeting is this thursday January 11th at 6:00 PM at the Administration for HIV Policy and Programs, 64 New York Ave., NE, 1st Floor. Parking is available at M and 1st Street available for $5.00 The building is also accessible by metro. The closest station is the New York Av on the redlinee. Station.
There's also a code for getting into the building - if you're planning on coming shoot me an e-mail and I will get you all the details.
1.08.2007
Gay and Lesbian Activists Alliance Reception: April 19
GLAA has been a leader on numerous local HIV/AIDS issues in the District of Columbia and deserve much credit for this work. Find out more about GLAA at www.glaa.org.
Details about the 36th Anniversary Reception will be posted on the website in the near future.
Fenty May Strengthen Smoke Free Workplace Law
A while back I wrote a post on Why the DC Smoke-Free Workplace Legislation is Good News for HIV Positive Workers, so I won't repeat what I said in that post. I will say, however, that I think the proposed change is a good idea for the safety of HIV positive workers, and of course all workers in the District.
1.07.2007
Raymond Blanks Opinion Piece in the Post
The HIV/AIDS epidemic in Washington, D.C., "remains disturbing and depressing," and the district's "rate of infection remains 10 times the national rate," Raymond Blanks, a member of the Community HIV Planning Group, writes in a Post opinion piece. According to Blanks, "many thousands of residents with HIV do not know their status" and "[n]early 20,000 of the city's residents are living with HIV."
The "size of this epidemic requires an adequate scope of services to meet current and increasing demands," Blanks writes, adding that despite pledges from Williams, "real progress still eludes the Administration for HIV Policies and Programs." The "deadly health crisis" in the district is "still growing, while the city's ability to combat this disease with effective prevention and treatment services has not increased accordingly," according to Blanks. A report released last year by the DC Appleseed Center "asserted that the city was 15 years behind the scope and quality of services and management necessary to meet this growing health challenge," Blanks writes, concluding, "No appreciable improvements have been attained lately, while this disease continues to grow where people are most vulnerable. It's time for the district to truly deliver on its promises"
The "size of this epidemic requires an adequate scope of services to meet current and increasing demands," Blanks writes, adding that despite pledges from Williams, "real progress still eludes the Administration for HIV Policies and Programs." The "deadly health crisis" in the district is "still growing, while the city's ability to combat this disease with effective prevention and treatment services has not increased accordingly," according to Blanks. A report released last year by the DC Appleseed Center "asserted that the city was 15 years behind the scope and quality of services and management necessary to meet this growing health challenge," Blanks writes, concluding, "No appreciable improvements have been attained lately, while this disease continues to grow where people are most vulnerable. It's time for the district to truly deliver on its promises"
1.06.2007
Going the Extra Mile: March 14th
1.05.2007
Meet Christopher Bates
Over the past 20 years, Mr. Bates has served on numerous national and local Boards and Commissions. He is a founding member of the DC Primary Care Association. He also served as a member of the Board of the Washington Consortium of Agencies, a six-year member of the Executive Committee of the Metropolitan Washington Ryan White Title Planning Council, a member of the Mayor’s Health Policy Advisory Committee and a past Chair of the Mayor’s AIDS Advisory Committee. He is an acknowledged national advocate for AIDS, as well as a provocative civic, gay/lesbian activist in the District of Columbia. He’s a graduate of the University of Michigan, and holds a MPA from Southeastern University in Washington, D.C.
Arts in Action: January 23
Arts in Action will take place Tuesday, January 23 from 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM at the home of Dr. James D'Orta: 3032 N Street, NW (the Harriman Mansion).
For more information about this event, visit the Food and Friends website or call (202) 232-1682.
Dining Out for Life: March 8th
Look for additional details to be posted on the Food & Friends Website in the future.
1.04.2007
2006: The Year in Pictures
Here's some pictures from the first 5 months of www.fighthivindc.org. All these pics are also available on the Fight HIV in DC Flickr Page. If you have any pictures you'd like to see included here, just let me know.
ACTION January Newsletter Now Online
And please be sure to join us for January ACTION Lunch. The free lunch forum is entitled 'Community Involvement in HIV/AIDS Research' and takes place on January 11th, 2007. The presentation begins at 1:00 PM at the DC CARE Consortium, 1156 15th Street NW, Suite 500.
How do we assure that HIV/AIDS research in DC is ethical and reflects the needs of DC residents? How can we make sure that all DC residents have equal access to clinical trials? Join us for this free Lunch forum learn more about the important role of the community in HIV/AIDS research.
Lunch Provided. RSVP Required. To RSVP, click here.
Adrian Fenty's Inaugural Address
"We also say, to our neighbors who are frail, that this Administration joins the residents of this city in decrying miserable health statistics in HIV/AIDS, heart and lung disease, cancer and diabetes that are worse here than in many impoverished nations throughout the globe. If we are serious about being an example to the rest of the world, District of Columbia residents must have access to medicine and physicians and insurance, no matter where we live in the city, nor what our income."
Fenty fails to mention that we must not only treat HIV, but we must also prevent it. Mayor Fenty could create the best health care system any city in the United States has ever had, but it will be stretched to it's capacity with one in twenty DC residents being HIV positive, and it will surely break if our HIV rates continue to increase.
I'm a fan of Adrian Fenty and I'm keeping an open mind. I hope to see some serious action on HIV/AIDS in the coming weeks.
1.03.2007
YOU@fighthivindc.org powered by Google Mail
On the activism front, I'm pleased to report that since last month the Campaign to End AIDS Metro DC Yahoo Group has doubled in size from 15 to 30. Also, several of you have posted or e-mailed your commentson HIV/AIDS to Mayor Elect Adrian Fenty's transition team. Thank you for taking action.
On the site development front, we have moved to an independent server, and the site is now available at www.fighthivindc.org as well as the blogspot site.
I'm also pleased to report that I can also offer all you DC HIV/AIDS advocates with your very own yourname@fighthivindc.org e-mail address. The e-mail service which can be accessed at http://mail.fighthivindc.org and it operates exactly like Google Mail. That's because it is google mail, only with a different domain name.
If you would like your own you@fighthivindc.org e-mail address, just send me an e-mail and let me know. Please include your full name, a number where you can be reached, and the e-mail address you would like. I will set it up and send you a temporary password that you can change at your convenience.
Marsha Martin to leave DC Administration for HIV Policy & Programs
Is anyone else out there as suprised as I am at this news?
During her tenure, AHPP launched an ambitious HIV screening program for the district. The program fell far short of it's goals, and of the 80,000 rapid HIV test kits that were purchased, the majority were either given away or expired without being used. Still, 20,000 were tested for HIV in a five month period which is a significant increase (twice that of an average year).
AHPP appeared to be steadily improving under Martin, and new staff members brought on board by Martin (some very recently) offer a lot of hope for the future. Unfortunately, some problems that plagued the office did continue. HIV/AIDS Surveilance continues to be a major problem. And a recent audit criticized AHPP's monitoring of local HIV/AIDS service organizations.
Yes, there are still many things that need to be fixed at AHPP. That said, I'm sad to see Marsha Martin leave. I felt like under her leadership we were moving in the right direction.
Finding a new Director of AHPP could take several weeks, or it could take several months. Once we do find a new director, there is no guarantee that the staff members Marsha Martin brought on board will want to remain under new leadership.
The thought of going several weeks or several months without a strong leader at AHPP terrifies me. We simply don't have that much time to spare.
1.02.2007
Update: Losing Track of AIDS Cases in DC
Blogger Infinite Present writes: "So how can we justify the fact that the nation's capital, the leader in HIV rates, continues to be completely incompetent in assessing the spread of infection through its various populations? I am scared to live in a world where so little is being done to control a 25-year old epidemic that is ravaging a segregated and at-risk population, a negligence rife with racial, sexual, and homophobic implications."
The article was also picked up on The Circumlocutor and Frozen Tropics.
1.01.2007
Take Action: Call for a State of Emergency
1. Read the Letter to Mayor Elect Adrian Fenty. The letter is available online at: http://www.fighthivindc.org/docs/fentyletter.doc.
2. Contact jenna@communityeducationgroup.org if you or your organization would like to sign on. Please include your full organizational name (or individual name) as you would like for it to be listed on the letter, as well as a contact person who is authorizing the sign-on.
3. Send an email to amfenty@hotmail.com to letting him know you support a State of Emergency. (cc:jenna@communityeducationgroup.org or tyoung@communityeducationgroup.org)
4. Print or write your version of the letter and make it available for others to sign on to at your agency, church, school, etc... Fax those signed letters to the Community Education Group at 202 543-9146 and they will make sure they get to the Mayor Elect.
4. Email a copy of this letter to your friends, colleagues, and neighbors asking them to also take action.
12.30.2006
An Overwhelmed D.C. Agency Loses Count of AIDS Cases

In the boxes were records of 2,000 to 3,000 cases that had yet to be entered in the city's database. The records are mostly from 2004 and 2005, some from 2003. Who's getting sicker, who needs treatment, who died. All boxed up.
"Oh, my goodness," Sansone, surveillance chief for the city's Administration for HIV Policy and Programs (AHPP), remembers saying.
"We were flabbergasted, just flabbergasted," adds Sansone's boss, AHPP Director Marsha Martin.
That information is critical to managing a spreading epidemic, now in its 25th year. Under guidelines from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, AHPP is required to collect, maintain and distribute statistics on the disease, which dozens of community-based organizations depend on for their prevention and treatment programs.
City officials acknowledge that the District is behind in tracking new cases of HIV, as well as in reporting the number of deaths from AIDS complications.
Continue Reading this article in the Washington Post:
12.29.2006
DC Young Poz Socials Event This Saturday

DCYPS hosts a semi-private Happy Hour at the Green Lantern on the last Saturday of every month. Join them this Saturday, December 30th from 6:00 to 9:00 PM. Regular Lantern Happy Hour Specials apply.
12.28.2006
Should Homophobic Churches Receive DC HIV/AIDS Funds?
After hearing excerpts from a sermon by Reverend Willie Wilson of the Union Temple Baptist Church I'm not so sure that that is true.
Rev. Wilson delivered what is hands down the most mean-spirited homophobic sermon I've ever heard in my life. Don't take my word for it, click here to listen to excerpts from the sermon and decide for yourself.
Which leads me to ask the obvious question. How is it that a homophobic minister can wind up with so much federal and DC HIV/AIDS Dollars?
We know that from our most recent figures (DC AHPP Surveilance and Epidemiology Division: March 2006) approximately 40% of DC residents living with HIV/AIDS are men who have sex with men, the majority of which are African American men who have sex with men. Nationally, one recent study, suggests that as many as 46% of black gay men are HIV positive.
It's important that churches that primarily serve the African American community in DC be part of the fight against HIV/AIDS, and many are deeply involved and contributing much.
In this case, however, I question whether it's appropriate to use federal and local HIV/AIDS resources to fund an agency which may not be safe or welcoming to gay men.
(If you can provide me with any additional information, please do so.)
12.26.2006
Reflection

December of 2004 brought along with it a new way of living for me. Being that I was diagnosed as HIV positive on November 30th 2004 (the last day of that month), the month of December that followed is always one that I will remember. It is from that place of reflection that I stem as I bring forth this piece.
Continue reading this article on the Brave Soul Collective Website
12.25.2006
MW Profiles Wallace Corbett

''My numbers have remained the same for a very long time,'' says the 45-year-old D.C. native. Though Corbett's carried HIV for roughly two decades, the virus in his system has been as tame as it's been unwelcome.
''I tried a [medication] regimen, and it did not work for me at all. I couldn't work. It had me almost zombie-like, exhausted.'' So Corbett and his doctor came to an agreement: If regular monitoring showed his T-cell counts and viral loads hovering at acceptable levels without medication, he would simply not take any. Since that initial foray into pharmaceuticals, he's remained meds-free and healthy.
Corbett cannot point to any particular reason why his body has kept the virus in check, offering that he puts his faith in, well, faith.
''I'm practicing my belief in Christ. I enjoy volunteering.... My religious belief is that you should help anybody at anytime without asking for gratification. I volunteer the same way I go to my job. The way you treat people every day is God speaking. Treat people kindly. I practice what God tells us to do: Treat others with kindness and help without asking.''
One way Corbett has put his belief into practice is AIDS Rides. He's participated in seven D.C.-based rides.
''The rides taught me kindness, and to push yourself further than you can imagine pushing yourself. When you're on a bicycle, by yourself in an area where you've never been, told to just go in this direction and you can't see the one ahead of you or behind you, the question is: Am I going the right way? Can I make it? What if I fall? Can I push myself?
''Then you complete the event and you say to yourself, 'You know what? There's more to me than what I fear.'''
And there's more to Corbett than his pleasant disposition. Living in Chinatown with his two cocker spaniels, he is a widower who mourns the loss of his partner and best friend, Myron. He mourns for a generation, as well.
''The epidemic has taken some really great minds away -- wonderful designers, and artists, and singers, and people in sports and business. I sometimes wonder what the world would have been if they were still here. Some of the barriers for gay society would not be so difficult. We would not be so slow in reaching things like same-sex marriage, because a lot of those who have gone were truly amazing advocates. They were intelligent, articulate, compassionate advocates who had the skills to motivate others to move forward. Groups like ACT-UP knew how to get the issues on the front page.''
Corbett's sadness over what has been lost is matched in equal parts by his frustration over a lack of kindness, a lack of leadership and ongoing stigma when it comes to HIV. For example, while his church, the Metropolitan Community Church of Washington, D.C., meets his expectations, other churches have fallen short.
''Where is the volunteerism? Churches are there to help the sick, the homeless, the less fortunate. There are churches on every block -- they're like liquor stores. So why are there homeless on these streets?''
Before joining MCC, Corbett attended an African-American church.
''They had cultural issues that are falsely based on their history. You can't say you don't respect homosexuality when your choir, your deacon, about two-thirds of your members are [homosexual]. Those are the things that continue a stigma that continues to affect and erode black culture.''
Moving from the spiritual to the political, Corbett says he wishes the city's leadership -- particularly during this post-election, transitional period -- would lead on HIV by example, lining up to get tested publicly, and encouraging their constituents to do the same.
From his post at the front desk of the George Washington University Hospital's radiology department, however, Corbett says he is constantly reminded to keep things in proportion -- despite the scope of the HIV pandemic, regardless of his good health, no matter the misplaced stigma.
''Life is such a short thing. You have to decide whether to value it or not. Each day, I value it.''
Enjoying each day as if it were the last helps Corbett ''walk in faith and not fear.''
''We will live, and this epidemic will pass, whether I'm on earth or not. We're all on a journey. The question is, in the time that you have, have you made the best choices? Have you done something?''
Read the Complete Article at the Metro Weekly Website
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