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PRESS
FROM CITY COUNCIL REPORT ON EMERGENCY HOUSING FOR HOMELESS PEOPLE
LIVING WITH AIDS:
Newsday
Report: Subsidized Housing Needs Repair
http://www.nynewsday.com/ny-bc-ny--hiv-aidshousing0627jun27,0,4573808.story?coll=nyc-homepage-headlines
NY
POST AIDS HOUSING: A HORROR
http://www.nypost.com/news/regionalnews/26409.htm
INDYMEDIA
NEW YORK CITY COUNCIL FINDS EMERGENCY HOUSING FOR HOMELESS
PEOPLE LIVING WITH AIDS INADEQUATE, UNSAFE AND POTENTIALLY ILLEGAL
http://newswire.indymedia.org/en/newswire/2004/06/804895.shtml
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Press
about NYCAHN's involvement in the
Still
We Rise Coalition:
Alternet
Magazine: Defying Convention
City
Limits: Battling Bush
Brooklyn
Rail: Echoes of Chicago '68?
The
City and Activists Gear Up for the RNC
http://www.thebrooklynrail.org/express/march04/echoesof68.html
Indymedia
http://nyc.indymedia.org/newswire/display/94766/index.php
Gotham
Gazette: by, Louie Jones, NYCAHN Board Member
http://www.gothamgazette.com/article/feature-commentary/20040621/202/1011
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Press
about the May 20th, 2004 WAKE UP ABOUT AIDS DEMONSTRATION IN WASHINGTON,
DC

UPI
NEWS:
http://upi.newscom.com/cgi-bin/pub/ips/upi/s?f=UPI%2Fupiarchive&s=AIDS&datestar
t=05%2F20%2F04&dateend=05%2F21%2F04&submit=search
ABC
NEWS:
http://www.wjla.com/news/stories/0504/148283.html
WASHINGTON
POST:
98 Arrested in Capitol Hill AIDS Protest
By Karlyn Barker
Several hundred protesters marched on Capitol Hill yesterday,
and 98 were arrested, during a demonstration that urged the presidential
candidates and Congress to do more for people with AIDS.
The marchers, most of whom arrived on chartered buses from out
of town, chanted, "Fight AIDS now," and, "Bush is a jerk, condoms
work," as they paraded through the streets to Republican and Democratic
party headquarters. They then congregated at the foot of the U.S.
Capitol for a carefully orchestrated civil disobedience demonstration.
The arrests, on charges of unlawful assembly, came after a crowd
of demonstrators lay down in the street where tour buses drop
off visitors. A U.S. Capitol Police spokesman said the offense
is punishable by a $50 fine.
"We need to get loud," shouted Martin Wiley, a protest organizer
from ACT UP Philadelphia. "We need to find a spot of anger for
the loss of people to a disease that should have been cured years
ago."
The demonstration, billed as a "Wake Up, Time's Up" protest and
a new call to action, was organized and endorsed by dozens of
AIDS groups from across the country. Demonstrators carried alarm
clocks that they set off during the arrests.
The intent, organizers said, was to send a message that the AIDS
crisis is not over simply because there are medications to treat
the virus. They said more needs to be done to provide AIDS care,
including affordable generic drugs and housing, and to stem the
spread of the disease in developing countries and among vulnerable
populations in the United States, particularly nonwhite, low-income
men.
The protesters called for the federal government to spend billions
more on health care and scientific research on HIV treatment and
prevention in the United States and abroad.
"We are here in Washington today because our national priorities
are screwed up," Terje Anderson, executive director of the National
Association of People With AIDS, told the demonstrators. He said
President Bush and Congress have spent millions of dollars on
the war in Iraq and tax breaks for the wealthy but have not kept
pace with the needs of the AIDS crisis.
Federal spending on the AIDS Drug Assistance Program increased
from $714 million in 2003 to $749 million this year, and Bush
has proposed adding $35 million next year. But about 40,000 new
cases of HIV infection are diagnosed each year, according to a
current survey, and there are waiting lists for discounted medications
that help keep the virus in check.
Yesterday's marchers stopped at the Republican National Committee
headquarters first, shouting, "Shame, shame, shame," at what protesters
said was the GOP's failure to take the AIDS problem seriously
and the emphasis by the Bush administration of abstinence instead
of other effective preventive measures, such as condoms.
The protesters then marched to the Democratic National Committee
headquarters, where they warned Democrats not to take their votes
for granted unless they do more to fight AIDS.
Chairman Terry McAuliffe was among DNC officials who watched the
demonstration from the building's office balconies and terraces.
Staff members circulated in the crowd, handing out fliers detailing
support for AIDS-related programs by Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.),
the party's presumptive presidential nominee.
Among the first to be arrested was Leigh O'Donoghue, 43, a social
worker from Bethesda who contracted HIV in 1996. She said she
is concerned that drugs that help mange the virus are not available
to everyone and that current drugs have such side effects as heart
disease and liver and kidney damage.
"Whatever happened to finding a cure?" O'Donoghue asked. "If I
had cancer, people would have compassion. With AIDS, I get stigma,
and that's not fair."
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