Project Inform
   

Press room ... 2002 archive

Bush Administration Not
Making the Grade in the War on AIDS

March 13, 2002

Washington, DC—The polls may show that President Bush is getting good grades for his war on terrorism, but he is not making the grade in the war on HIV/AIDS, according to a national coalition of AIDS organizations from throughout the United States. As the AIDS pandemic enters its third decade, the coalition, in a letter to the President, states that there are few other issues that need the Administration's immediate attention more than ending the toll of HIV/AIDS. There are an estimated 40 million people living with HIV/AIDS throughout the world. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that there are approximately 950,000 HIV infected people in the U.S.

The coalition released its assessment of the Bush Administration today, on the eve of the first meeting of the newly appointed Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS (PACHA). The coalition grades the Bush Administration on funding and leadership in the following areas:

  • Healthcare
  • Housing
  • Minority HIV/AIDS Initiative
  • Prevention
  • Research
  • Global AIDS
  • Executive Office of the President
  • and Leadership

In the letter to the President, the coalition members spell out their concerns, ranging from a lack of leadership in the fight against AIDS at home and abroad, to funding for AIDS prevention, research, and treatment programs, and filling key government healthcare positions that are vacant or will soon become vacant. The most notable positions are at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health, and the Food and Drug Administration.

In its assessment, the coalition commends the Administration for retaining the PACHA. However, the coalition expresses its concern about some of the individuals appointed to PACHA. These members have public track records of supporting HIV/AIDS policies that are at odds with science, public health experts, people living with HIV/AIDS, and community-based providers. They have also made statements viewed as homophobic and discredited sound, proven HIV prevention strategies.

The coalition calls on the President to exert his leadership to help end the suffering caused by AIDS. The coalition expresses its desire to work with the Administration and asks for a meeting with Mr. Bush and key officials to discuss the issues related to AIDS.

The report can be viewed online here, or PDF.

Coalition Press Contacts

AIDS Action Committee of Massachusetts
Contact: Chris Viveiros
617-450-1230
AIDS Foundation of Chicago
Contact: David Ernesto Munar
312-922-2322 x264
AIDS Project Los Angeles
Contact: Nicole Russo-Okamoto
213-201-1363
AIDS Services of Dallas
Contact: Don Maison
214-941-0523
AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition
Contact: Chris Collins
917 952 5356
Columbus AIDS Task Force
Contact: Sue Crumpton
614-299-2437
Florida AIDS Action
Contact: Mary Ann Green
813-232-5886
Gay Men's Health Crisis
Contact: Marty Algaze
212-367-1210
Lambda Legal Defense & Education Fund, Inc.
Contact: Catherine Hanssens
212-809-8585
Lifelong AIDS Alliance
Contact: Chuck Kuehn
206-957-1602
Minnesota AIDS Project
Contact: Bob Tracy
612-373-2459
National Association of People With AIDS
Contact: Ray Daniels
202-898-0414
National Gay & Lesbian Task Force
Contact: Betsy Gressler
202-332-6483
National Minority AIDS Council
Contact: Robert Dabney
202-483-6622
Project Inform
Contact: Anne Donnelly
415-558-8669
San Francisco IDS Foundation
Contact: Gustavo Suarez
415-487-3031
Whitman-Walker Clinic
Contact: Michael Cover
202-797-3590

ARCHIVES

2007      2006

2005      2004

2003      2002

2001      2000

1999      1998

1997      1996

 
     
 

© 2008 Project Inform  1375 Mission Street,  San Francisco, CA 94103  415-558-8669
National HIV/AIDS Treatment Hotline 1-800-822-7422 (415-558-9051 local/int'l) 10a-4p Mon-Fri PST