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Are you ready to stand up, speak out and be part of the solution?
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At the close of Part One of Angels in America, the angel descends and proclaims, "the great work begins." Those words from Tony Kushner ring
as true today as when they were written in 1993. As America
inaugurates its 45th president, the HIV movement finds itself in another
moment of great transition. Like everything in this fight, nothing is
easy. We have the science that can build roadmaps to end the epidemic.
Unfortunately, it is at the exact same time we are in the fight of our
lives for healthcare, health insurance, medications and much needed
social services.
HIV prevention is about more than condoms; thanks to treatment as prevention (TasP) and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP),
it now includes healthcare and medication. How can we build the case
for continued if not increased investment in our fight to end HIV? The
lives of 1.2 million Americans living with HIV depends on our ability to
insure the continuity of services and access to healthcare and
medications.
Our movement is dependent on funding government.
We must work with Congress and the new administration to insure support
for these essential services. We may be disappointed by the election
results, but that does not stop our responsibility to fight to end the
epidemic. There is no clear pathway for working with President Trump
and given our movement’s diversity, I am sure there will be multiple
strategies. NMAC will use a variety of tactics to fight. Some will be
obvious; many will happen behind the scenes. Our work requires inside
and outside game plans. It is difficult to put together specifics until
we hear details from the new administration. Until we understand what
repeal and replace means, our maneuvering is about getting ready.
NMAC Will Always Lead With Race
We
are not sitting on the sidelines; we are actively working with HIV
colleagues and other intersecting movements. We took the time between
the election and the inauguration to look at our movement’s capacity and
to work with colleagues to better prepare our agencies for working with
President Trump. We’ve reached out to other intersecting movements to
understand our partnership to fight for health equity and racial
justice. Sometimes the best work happens with no fingerprints.
At the end of the day, our priority must always be people living with
HIV. Our job is to fight for all communities to have access to
much-needed healthcare, social services, and medications. Are you ready?
I
first wrote those words in 2008 as Congress looked to implement
healthcare reform and the Affordable Care Act. I challenged you to
become a federally qualified health center (FQHC).
Those who built FQHCs found great success during the Obama
administration. They expanded their services, budgets, and staffs.
They transformed from small AIDS service organizations (ASOs) into large healthcare providers with multiple services to the diverse communities in their neighborhoods.
In
2017, as Congress looks to repeal healthcare reform, I challenge you to
use this moment to organize and become a political force within your
community. We cannot afford to go back to the world where large
segments of people living with HIV do not have access to what they need
to stay alive.
Are you ready to stand up, speak out and be part of the solution?
Our
movement’s dependence on government funding means that we will always
have to work with the system. Our challenge is to be an active voice in
the decisions that impact our communities. That’s how HIV has always
succeeded. We fought back.
Fighting back may not be the same as it was in the 80’s. Our movement
is now over 30 years old, HIV is not in the same place as AIDS was back
then. In 1982 we fought for access to healthcare because too many
doctors and hospitals refused to provide services for our friends and
lovers. In 2017 we must fight for health insurance because PLWH needs
it to pay for services and medications. The Ryan White Care Act is now
more important than ever. One of our primary jobs is to protect this
important piece of legislation. At the same time, thanks to the science
of TasP and PrEP, we may be able to create roadmaps for ending the
epidemic. We are so close and that is why we must fight for continued if
not expanded funding of CDC’s HIV portfolio. As we have learned,
housing = HIV prevention. Housing for People Living with AIDS (HOPWA)
is essential to our HIV care and prevention agenda. In other words,
one of our primary jobs is to protect the HIV portfolio of the federal
budget.
Are you ready to fight back? Are you ready to be a political force at both the local and national levels? Fighting back is in our DNA. For
me, it started when a funeral home refused to cremate a friend. I need
you to build political capital. To expand bridges that work both
within and outside of the system. To not wait for someone else to save
us, but to save ourselves. Some of that work will happen in Washington,
but a larger portion happens back in the home districts of members of
Congress and with state and local elected officials.
This year's
United States Conference on AIDS is in Washington, D.C. Please come
early on September 6th, 2017 to attend USCA's HIV Action Day. The Federal AIDS Policy Partnership(FAPP) is the primary lead in putting HIV Action Day together.
If you can’t join us on those dates, please attend AIDS Watch on March 27th. Now more than ever we need your voices on the Hill.
Yours in the struggle,
Paul A. Kawata
Executive Director
Read more articlecs from POZ, here.
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