2.18.2008

NHBS Community Advisory Board Meeting

The Center will host the next NHBS (National HIV Behavioral Surveillance) Study community advisory board meeting on March 10th, starting at 5:00 PM.

This year, the NHBS Study will focus on men who have sex with men. Information gained from this study will help guide HIV prevention and HIV counseling and testing services in Washington, DC. It will also help improve overall HIV/AIDS surveillance, and contribute to a better understanding of trends in HIV infection in the District of Columbia. The study is being conducted through a partnership between the DC Department of Health HIV/AIDS Administration (HAA) and the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services (GWU SPHHS).

The NHBS collects important information about HIV, but it is not limited to HIV. Washington DC has the option of adding local questions to our survey that our specific to our community. As this is quite likely the largest and most academically rigorous study of men who have sex with men in our city, this is an important opportunity to also collect other crucial health information about gay and bisexual men in the District. That's why your participation in this meeting is so important.

Please be sure to join us on March 10th, starting at 5:00 PM. The Center is located at 1111 14th Street NW, Suite 350, closes to the McPherson metro stop.

2.08.2008

Barack Obama Talks About HIV in DC

In commemoration of National Black HIV / AIDS Awareness Day, Senator Barack Obama sent a letter to the Black AIDS Institute in Los Angeles, which will be read at their ceremony this evening honoring numerous "Heroes in the Struggle" against this ongoing epidemic. Here are excerpts from the letter, which may also be found at http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/hqblog.

HIV/AIDS is appropriately described as a global challenge. Yet we know that the struggle against HIV/AIDS is not distant – our determination to take action must begin in our own communities.

A report released a few months ago on the state of HIV/AIDS in the District of Columbia makes this point painfully clear. Over 12,500 people living in the District are known to have HIV/AIDS. One in 20 residents has HIV, and 1 in 50 has AIDS – the highest rate of infection of any city in the country. The impact is particularly grave in the African American community, as more than 80 percent of HIV cases identified in the District between 2001 and 2006 were African Americans.

The report correctly describes this as "a modern epidemic." But reports like this not only rouse our collective conscience – they provide us with a real opportunity to understand the challenge before us. A close look at the data reveals that HIV/AIDS infection rates cut across different divides – men and women, young and old, heterosexual and homosexual. This trend is not unique to the District – there are more than a million Americans infected with HIV/AIDS.

Confronting this kind of crisis demands a comprehensive approach. We need aggressive federal action that is matched with state and local initiatives. That starts with testing. Across the nation, we need to prevent the spread of HIV – and get people into treatment – by expanding access to testing.

In preventing the spread of infection, we must not force ourselves to choose between values and science. Abstinence education should always be a core part of any strategy to curb sexually transmitted diseases. We also need to support common sense approaches. Age-appropriate sex education should include information about contraception. The JUSTICE Act – pending in the Congress – would combat infection within our prison population through education and contraception. Local governments can protect public health by distributing contraceptives. Finally, we need to lift the federal ban on needle exchange, which could dramatically reduce rates of infection among drug users.

As the Black AIDS Institute understands better than most, combating HIV/AIDS also demands combating the disparities in our society. The virus often lurks in corners of America – and the world – where poverty, lack of education, and homelessness prey upon people. That's why fighting HIV/AIDS must include making health care affordable and accessible for all Americans, covering low-income HIV patients with Medicaid, and supporting programs to provide housing for people with HIV/AIDS. If we leave people without hope or help, we will not turn the corner against this epidemic. If we work to close the gaps in opportunity that exist in our society, then we can strengthen our public health while lifting up our communities.

One of those gaps is the disturbing prevalence of HIV/AIDS among African Americans. In 2005, 64 percent of women living with HIV/AIDS in America were black. It is not enough for us to call this an outrage, or even to provide more access to education, health care, and economic development. We have to overcome the stigma that surrounds HIV/AIDS in the African-American community – a stigma that is too often tied to homophobia. We need to talk about HIV/AIDS in our homes, in our schools, and in our churches. We need to encourage folks to get tested – which is why my wife, Michelle, and I were tested for HIV during a trip to Kenya. In short, we have to take this on clearly and directly.

What the heroes being honored tonight – and all of us – understand is that every time someone is infected with HIV/AIDS, they are infected with a virus that could have been prevented. Every time someone dies of AIDS untreated, they are dying prematurely. So we have a moral obligation to join together to meet this challenge – in our communities, our country, and around the world – with what Dr. King called "the fierce urgency of now." If we can do that, we can be the generation that reclaims the future from this modern epidemic.

1.27.2008

Pediatric AIDS/HIV Care Open House

Pediatric AIDS/HIV Care will mark February 7th, National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, by holding an open house to honor supporters of families with HIV/AIDS. For more information visit the Pediatric AIDS/HIV Care Website

1.25.2008

Town Hall Meeting on HIV/AIDS

Us Helping Us and Transgender Health Empowerment co-sponsored a town hall meeting on HIV/AIDS that was held on January 15th and focused on new strategies to fight HIV in DC. Pictures from the event our available on The Center Flickr Photo Stream.

Panelists included City Council Member Jim Graham, Acting Director of the Office of HIV/AIDS Policy Department of Health and Human Services Christopher Bates, Director of the HIV/AIDS Administration Dr. Shannon Hader, and the DC HIV Community Planning Group Community Co-Chair A. Toni Young.

Much of the discussion focused around the new report on HIV/AIDS in DC released by the HIV/AIDS Administration. The report showed the District’s rate for newly reported AIDS cases is higher than rates in Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York City, Detroit, or Chicago. 1 in 20 people in the District is living with HIV/AIDS.

Joey DiGuglielmo from the Washington Blade writes: "LAST WEEK’S AIDS town hall meeting was a sobering, eye-opening experience. It raised a bounty of murky, dire issues and offered no easy answers."

>> Continue reading Joey's article, A City in Crisis

>> The Facts: Men who Have Sex with Men and HIV in DC

1.08.2008

Team Food and Friends Kick-Off Party at Nellies

You're invited to join Food & Friends for the 2008 TEAM Food & Friends Kick-Off Party. You will not want to miss this evening of hors d' oeuvres, cocktails, catching up with old friends and the chance to meet your future teammates. If you register for this year's ride at the party, you'll receive $20 off your registration fee.

continue reading this article at the DC Center Blog

1.04.2008

Town Hall Meeting on HIV/AIDS in the District

Transgender Health Empowerment, Inc, Us Helping Us, and other local organizations are hosting a town hall meeting January 15 to discuss new strategies to fight HIV in DC.

continue reading this article at the new DC Center Blog

1.03.2008

Washington, D.C. To Invest $650,000 in Needle-Exchange Programs

From Kaiser Daily: Washington, D.C. plans to invest $650,000 in needle-exchange programs to help prevent the spread of HIV among injection drug users in the city, officials announced Wednesday, the Washington Post reports (Nakamura, Washington Post, 1/3). The announcement comes after President Bush last week signed a $555 billion fiscal year 2008 omnibus spending bill (HR 2764) that effectively lifts a ban on city funding for needle-exchange programs in the district. Since 1999, the district has been the only U.S. city barred by federal law from using local funds for needle-exchange programs. A report released in November by district health officials found that injection drug use was the second most common cause of HIV transmission in the city (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 1/2).

"This program goes to best practices to combat one of our greatest health problems," district Mayor Adrian Fenty said at a news conference at the headquarters of PreventionWorks!, which operates the district's only needle-exchange program. PreventionWorks! will receive a $300,000 city grant, and the remaining $350,000 will go toward creating new needle-exchange programs, Fenty said. Ken Vail of PreventionWorks! said that the organization serves about 2,000 people at 12 locations in the city and that it exchanged 200,000 needles last year.

Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.) in a statement said, "The district's AIDS rate is artificially elevated" because of the former funding ban, adding, "Now we have a lot of catching up to do." Council member David Catania, chair of the Committee on Health, said the public investment will be cost-effective in the long term if the exchange programs are successful. "The cost of infection is immeasurably higher [then needle-exchange programs] in terms of dollars and lives," he added. Shannon Hader, head of the district's HIV/AIDS Administration, said she expects the city to establish a variety of new needle-exchange programs, such as mobile clinics, outreach initiatives and fixed-site programs. Fenty said everyone should "be concerned" about HIV/AIDS when asked how he would respond to residents who might object to having needle-exchange programs in their neighborhoods (Washington Post, 1/3). "HIV and AIDS are such well-known public health problems in the District of Columbia that people understand we have to have programs and services in the neighborhoods," he added (AP/International Herald Tribune, 1/3).

1.02.2008

Bush Signs Spending Bill: Lifts DC Needle Exchange Ban

From Kaiser Daily: President Bush last week signed a $555 billion fiscal year 2008 omnibus spending bill (HR 2764) that effectively lifts a ban on city funding for needle-exchange programs in Washington, D.C., the New York Times reports. Since 1999, the district has been the only U.S. city barred by federal law from using local funds for needle-exchange programs. A report released last month by district health officials found that injection drug use was the second most common cause of HIV transmission in the city (Urbina, New York Times, 12/27/07).

Mayor Adrian Fenty in a recent statement said the city plans to include needle exchanges in a larger program to reduce the spread of HIV/AIDS. About $1 million in city funds will be allocated for needle-exchange programs in 2008. District City Council member Jim Graham said a city-funded needle-exchange program will have a significant impact on the city's high rate of HIV/AIDS. He added, "This program will save lives" (Manning, AP/Google.com, 12/27/07).

Rep. Jose Serrano (D-N.Y.), chair of the House Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government, said, "For too long, Congress has unfairly imposed on the citizens of D.C. by trying out their social experiments there." He added, "The ban on needle exchanges was one of the most egregious of these impositions, especially because the consensus is clear that these programs save lives" (New York Times, 12/27/07).

12.30.2007

Center Submits Proposal to Organize Capital Pride

On December 11, The Center submitted to the Whitman-Walker clinic one of three proposals to organize Capital Pride, DC's annual GLBT Pride Celebration. The other proposals were submitted by Westminster Presbyterian Church's Southwest Renaissance Development Corporation, a non-profit business set up to foster economic developement in low-income neighborhoods, and by a new entity called Capital Pride Alliance. Whitman-Walker's decision to withdraw as the event's producer was announced October 11. For more information, see this article in the Washington Blade.

12.18.2007

12/13/2007 Community Planning Group Meeting Re-Cap


At Thursday's CPG meeting, members of the committee were provided the results of the DC Appleseed report. For more details, check out the blog by David. The next Report card will be issued this summer and will most likely measure the same content areas.


While at the HIV Prevention conference in Atlanta, GA, Tiffany West had the opportunity to exchange ideas with other jurisdictions regarding the development of the Community Services Assessment for DC. Bidding on the contract for the completion of the CSA will begin next year. The prevention plan will still be completed by the September/October timeline.


A. Toni Young also reports that at the UCHAPS meeting held during the prevention conference, there was discussion around the move to combining HIV, STD, TB and Hep bureaus within various levels of government within different jurisdictions. At the meeting, there was discussion around beginning to think of ways to prepare CBOs to increase their capacity to focus on more than one of the aforementioned health issues. The concern is that if local governments merge resources, that CBOs will be expected to increase their capacities, and that those who can not keep pace, may lose funding. Ms. Young also informed us that the CDC is releasing both the Latino and African-American Heightened Responses to HIV in cities across the US.


The CPG will be testing out a new meeting format that will increase CPG member activity in committee's as well as minimize volunteer hours, thus maximizing the productivity of the CPG. The CPG meeting will be still begin at 5:30, but the entire meeting time will be extended by 30 minutes. During the first 1.5 hours, the CPG members will meet with their committees, after which the full CPG will convene and go over committee reports. The new meeting format will begin in January, at which point it will be tweaked as needed (less time in committees and more time as full CPG or vice versa). Many of the CPG members present at the meeting expressed positive thoughts about the new plan as it will enable members who were not able to make committee meetings previously, to be able to more fully participate.


The next meeting of the CPG will be January 10, 2008 at 5:30 PM with various committee meetings to be held in various rooms (posted in the building lobby) of 64 New York Ave NE. The full CPG will convene at approximately 7:00 PM. All are welcome to sit on on both or either part of the meeting. Thank you.

12.15.2007

Mayor Promises Continued Momentum as City Improves HIV/AIDS Report Card Grade

On Thursday, Mayor Adrian M. Fenty and DC Appleseed Executive Director Walter Jones released a third “report card” that assesses the government’s performance in 11 areas around HIV/AIDS in the District. As a follow-up to DC Appleseed’s August 2005 report, HIV/AIDS in the Nation’s Capital: Improving the District of Columbia’s Response to a Public Health Crisis, DC Appleseed has periodically issued report cards to monitor the District’s progress.

The District’s release of the 2007 HIV/AIDS Epidemiology Annual Report included the first-ever data on HIV in the District and updated AIDS statistics, earned the District an “A”. The report is also being praised as providing the city a critical tool that will be used for targeting a response.

“This is not a time to rest on our laurels and congratulate ourselves for our success,” said Mayor Adrian M. Fenty. “All progress is good progress, but we have much farther to go.”

The District’s Department of Health HIV/AIDS Administration (HAA) is developing and implementing strategies to meet the large scale of the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
Some of the District’s promising approaches include:
  • Working to ensure that all medical providers are offering routine HIV testing and all hospitals have rapid testing available in their emergency rooms by 2009.
  • Making local dollars immediately available for new comprehensive interventions as soon as Congress lifts the ban on syringe exchange services in the District.
  • Increasing availability and education about condoms and planning to distribute three million by 2009.
  • Reassuring District taxpayers that HAA has full accountability among its community providers with their services.
  • Collecting accurate data on services and bringing in the technical expertise available from federal and other partners to work with providers.
  • Working on interagency coordination with stronger agreements with sister District government agencies to mainstream HIV prevention, testing and linkages to care and treatment.
      Other areas that were highlighted include the commitment by top city leaders to reforms and the administrations continued HIV testing program and other HIV prevention services at the DC Jail.

Summary: DC Appleseed’s Third HIV/AIDS Report Card
Grades From
First Report Card
Grades From
Second Report Card
Grades From
Third Report Card
LeadershipB-B-B+
Interagency CoordinationN/AC-B-
HIV Surveillance & DataIncompleteBA
Grants ManagementBB-B
Quality AssuranceN/AB-B-
Rapid TestingBBB+
Routine HIV TestingC
Condom DistributionDD+B
D.C. Public SchoolsB-C-D
Syringe Exchange ServicesB-B-B+
Substance Abuse TreatmentD+D+C+
HIV/AIDS among the IncarceratedC+B+A
WebsiteB+N/AN/A

View the entire report card here.

12.14.2007

New Health Education Guidelines Approved!

Thanks to everyone who showed up to testify in support of the DC Health Learning Standards. The DC State Board of Education approved the new standards last night. The Examiner Reports:

Thursday's vote follows a report by the DC Appleseed Center for Law and Justice that said the lack of a comprehensive HIV-AIDS education program was putting District of Columbia students at risk.

The new standards cover such things as mental health, nutrition, fitness and sex ed. Officials say they are a crucial first step in addressing problems like D.C.'s high rate of HIV infection, as well as things like obesity and teen pregnancy.

D.C. health officials have said Washington has the highest AIDS rate among major cities across the country.
Of course this is the beginning, not the end of this process. We need a lot more from Michelle Rhee and the Department of Education:

  • We must go from having standards to enforcing them. According to the 2005 Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS), a survey of DC Public School students conducted by the CDC and DC Public Schools, 17.5% of middle school students and 9.5% of high school students say they were never taught about HIV/AIDS in school. We must make sure that every student in DC public schools is taught about HIV/AIDS.

  • We need a timely release of the 2007 DC YRBS data from DCPS. While we got a preview of the data in September and were promised the data in October, we are STILL waiting for the release. This data would have greatly informed the DC Board of Education hearing, and it's very disappointing that we don't yet have it.

  • We need specific and measurable goals for DC Public Schools to monitor their progress on HIV/AIDS. We can do this by analyzing the 2007 YRBS data and setting goals for improvement when the YRBS is conducted again in 2009.

  • We need a commitment from DCPS to analyze the brand new data on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and questioning (LGBQ) that is included for the first time in the 2007 YRBS. DCPS has said they plan to do this, but again, it's been four months and we're still waiting. We need to know who is going to do this work, what specific health indicators they are going to analyze for potential LGBQ health disparities, and when it will be done by. Set goals. Assign responsibilities. Make it happen!

  • We need the DCPS Youth Risk Behavior Survey Advisory Committee to meet on a regular basis to be part of this process. The advisory board which is supposed to meet regularly hasn't actually met since October 2006. This is unacceptable.

  • We need Mayor Adrian Fenty to reject federal abstinence only funding, which requires us to spend matching DC tax dollars on abstinence-only-until-heterosexual-marriage programs which have been proven to be uneffective. A coalition of DC youth serving organizations has asked Fenty to join the eleven states that reject these funds.
  • 12.13.2007

    January 24th: Home Ownership Workshop for People Living with HIV

    Are you HIV positive and residing in the District of Columbia? Do you know that you may be eligible for up to $77,000 in downpayment and closing cost assistance if you are a a first-time homebuyer in DC? Do you know the advantages and disadvantages of homeownership? Do you want to learn more about the homebuying process?

    If you answered yes to these questions, then you may be eligible to participate in the home prep program and learn how you can become a homeowner.

    Housing Counseling Services, Inc. Home Puchase Readiness Empowerment Program (PREP) is sponsoring a workshop on Saturday January 24th from 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM at the Housing Counseling Services Training Center located at 2410 17th Street NW Suite 100.

    Please call Jill Carmichael or Minerva Lazo from Housing Counseling Services, Inc at (202) 667-2681 for more information and to register. All classes are free but seating is limited.

    12.12.2007

    HIV/AIDS Education in Washington, D.C., Schools Lacking, Other City Efforts Improving, Group Finds

    Kaiser Daily: Delays in implementing a comprehensive HIV/AIDS education program in Washington, D.C., public schools are putting students at risk and undermining the city's efforts to fight the disease, according to a report released Wednesday by the DC Appleseed Center for Law and Justice, the Washington Post reports. The center has given the district's public school system a "D" grade for its lack of progress in providing HIV/AIDS education to students, according to the Post.

    "In the midst of this crisis, students should be getting information in school that will help prevent infection for the rest of their lives," the report said, adding that despite several school board resolutions for immediate action, "fewer and fewer" young people have received HIV/AIDS education in recent years. The group called on school board leaders and Mayor Adrian Fenty's administration to set strong standards and curricula on HIV/AIDS before classes start next fall. "The district's young people are entitled to nothing less," the report said.

    Appleseed Executive Director Walter Smith said the report would have given the school system a failing grade if officials had not committed to making changes. HIV/AIDS education "simply wasn't made a high priority," Smith said. District School Chancellor Michelle Rhee in a statement released Tuesday acknowledged the issues. "Going forward," the school system is "committed to implementing comprehensive health curriculum that includes instruction on HIV/AIDS and other infectious diseases," Rhee said. The school board is scheduled to vote on Thursday on the overall standards that will be the initial steps toward the health curriculum goal, the Post reports.

    Other Evaluations

    According to the Post, the school system's grade is a "glaring negative" in a report card that also reflects signs of improvement in the district's HIV/AIDS efforts. The group issued an "A" to two of the 12 areas evaluated in the report, and six other categories received their highest score to date. This is the third assessment that Appleseed has issued since March 2006. Appleseed said that the scores reflect the district government's success this year "in creating the beginnings of an infrastructure of a properly functioning public health system to address the epidemic, something lacking in the district for quite some time."

    The most recent HIV/AIDS figures for the district found that almost 12,500 people were known to be living with the disease in 2006 and that more than 80% of several thousand new HIV cases since 2001 occurred among black residents, the Post reports. Although the figures "renewed criticism" of the HIV/AIDS Administration's prior handling of the epidemic, they represented an important statistical "breakthrough" for which Appleseed awarded an "A," according to the Post. The report also includes a number of accomplishments on disease surveillance by the HIV/AIDS Administration, such as fixing a HIV/AIDS case backlog and working with community groups, laboratories and doctors for better data collection. The report said that the improvement in HIV/AIDS surveillance "does not by itself advance the city's response to the epidemic" but provides "a much needed new tool for targeting that response."

    The report also noted that the HIV/AIDS Administration now has more than four dozen hospitals, clinics, private doctors and not-for-profit groups doing routine HIV testing during medical care. In addition, the agency increased its distribution of no-cost condoms from 115,000 last year to a projected one million this year, and it responded quickly when groups complained about some of the condom packaging, Appleseed said. HIV/AIDS Administration Director Shannon Hader, who took office in mid-October, has pledged to triple the number of condoms distributed by 2009. Hader expressed satisfaction with the evaluation, adding, "It helps us to have another eye on what we're doing, to give us feedback."

    The district's Department of Corrections received the highest score from the group. About 75% of inmates at the district jail are screened for HIV/AIDS on arrival, the Post reports. Beginning in January, HIV-positive inmates will receive a 28-day supply of antiretroviral drugs on discharge so their treatment is not interrupted. The two initiatives are "at the forefront of the nation," Appleseed's report said. "Enormous progress has been made," Susan Galbraith -- director of the not-for-profit Our Place DC, which assists women who have been incarcerated -- said (Levine, Washington Post, 12/12).

    The report is available online (.pdf).

    12.11.2007

    Dr. Hader to Speak at Stein Democrats Meeting

    The Stein Democrats will be having a special meeting on Monday, December 17, 2007 at 7:00 pm at the John A. Wilson Building, 1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Room 120.

    The guest speaker for the meeting is Dr. Shannon Hader, Director of the HIV/AIDS Administration. Please join us!

    The Gertrude Stein Democratic Club is the voice of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) Democrats in the District of Columbia. Stein Democrats recently testified at the State Board of Education on the proposed Health Learning Standards.

    12.10.2007

    Happy Hour Benefits Us Helping Us: January 15th

    The Cherry Fund will be hosting a happy hour on Tuesday, January 15th at Cobalt beginning at 6:30 PM. Cobalt is located at 1639 R Street, NW.

    There is a $10 donation at the door, and all proceeds will benefit Us Helping Us.

    Founded in 1985, Us Helping Us, People Into Living, Inc., is a community-based AIDS service organization committed to reducing HIV infection in the African-American community. Us Helping Us provides HIV counseling, testing, and referrals for everyone. Us Helping Us specializes in providing HIV prevention and support services to gay and bisexual men.

    Since beginning in 1999, the Cherry Fund has donated over $750,000 to LGBT and HIV/AIDS organizations.

    12.06.2007

    Prevention Justice Mobilization: Stopping AIDS Through Unity and Action

    “What do we want? EFFECTIVE PREVENTION! When do we want it? NOW!” shouted HIV/AIDS, women rights, and faith-based advocates as they marched down Pennsylvania Avenue to join a World AIDS Day rally at the White House. as they marched down Pennsylvania Avenue to join a World AIDS Day rally at the White House.

    On Friday, November 30, nearly 200 activists—including community members, students, and people living with HIV and AIDS—brought together local, domestic, and global demands for critical changes to U.S. HIV and AIDS policies. Those rallying called upon the government to cut the red tape on HIV and AIDS programs, with particular emphasis afforded to prevention programs at home and abroad.

    The rally-goers, armed with posters and giant scissors with messages like “Sex Education Saves” and “Cut the Red Tape on U.S. Global HIV Prevention,” weren’t the only people making demands of the Administration. Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton, Washington D.C.’s non-voting delegate in Congress, issued powerful words to President Bush as part of her address to the crowd.

    Read the rest of Kimberly Whipkey's post on the Prevention Justice Mobilaztion's website

    Voice of America Report: HIV in DC

    Just days before the international observance of World AIDS Day December 1, a new report by the government of Washington, D.C., offered some grim statistics. One in 50 people in the nation's capital has AIDS. One in 20 is infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. The city has the highest HIV infection rate in the nation. City officials are calling it a "modern epidemic."

    When Washington, D.C. mayor Adrian Fenty came into office last January, he made HIV/AIDS his number one public health priority. He reaffirmed that commitment this week with the release of the city's first annual Epidemiology Report. "It's the first time the District of Columbia government has its own statistics on the infection rate and, most importantly, it will allow us to do something about it."

    continue reading at Voice of America.

    12.05.2007

    DC Must Watch Needle-Exchange Closely

    From Kaiser Daily: Washington, D.C., Mayor Adrian Fenty and other district leaders should "remain vigilant" as the Senate this month likely will vote on a $21 billion appropriations bill that would lift a ban on city funding for needle-exchange programs, Grant Smith -- legislative assistant for the Office of National Affairs at the Drug Policy Alliance -- writes in a Washington Post letter to the editor in response to a Nov. 30 Post editorial (Smith, Washington Post, 12/4).

    The House in June passed the appropriations bill after lawmakers voted to remove language that prevents the district from financing the programs. The ban was first imposed under a federal law signed by former President Clinton in 1998 that prohibits the district government from using local tax money to fund any organization that operates a needle-exchange program. The House has added the ban each year to the district's appropriations bill (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 7/2).

    According to Smith, the bill has "languished in the Senate since July." District leaders should be aware this month, "when the Senate will be in a rush" to pass the bill, Smith writes, adding that the Senate "should reject any last-minute attempts to restore the ban." Only after President Bush "signs the bill can the district focus on delivering on its promise to infuse critically needed money" into needle-exchange programs, Smith writes, concluding, "We cannot afford to assume Congress and the president will do the right thing" (Washington Post, 12/4).

    Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton

    Here is a great Al Jazeera English piece on the World AIDS Day protest at the White House.

    Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton tells the President to "get serious." She goes on to say that the Republican led Congress had "knowingly killed men, women, and children," by denying the District the ability to fund syringe exchange.

    DC Fights Back Co-chair George Kerr tells the President to "look in his own backyard."