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Vol. 45 • No. 9 • February 26-March 4, 2015
Chiu bills Bills seek to curb drug prices as Kaiser would help takes HIV meds off ‘specialty tier’ LGBTs by Seth Hemmelgarn
by Matthew S. Bajko
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tate agencies would be required to collect LGBT demographic information and laws regarding the rights of parents who use assisted reproduction, as well as sperm donors, would be modernized Jane Philomen Cleland under legislation being Assemblyman introduced Thursday. The lead author of David Chiu the two bills is freshman Assemblyman David Chiu (D-San Francisco), a straight lawmaker who has pledged to make LGBT issues one of his top legislative priorities during his first term. The first bill, the LGBT Disparities Reduction Act, would instruct state agencies to begin collecting data on sexual orientation and gender identity no later than July 1, 2017, according to a draft version of the bill Chiu’s office shared with the Bay Area Reporter this week. “It is high time for LGBT communities to count and be counted in California,” said Chiu. Equality California, the statewide LGBT advocacy group, is sponsoring the bill as it has made LGBT data collection one of its top legislative goals. “Our focus is addressing the disparities in health and well being in our community,” said EQCA Executive Director Rick Zbur. “Without data collection in the state, we have no basis to understand whether or not government programs are meeting the needs of our community.” Governor Jerry Brown vetoed a similar bill in 2013, partly due to the cost associated with having to upgrade state forms and computer systems. Over the ensuing years the number of LGBT advocates, health officials, and academic researchers speaking out on the need for better data about the LGBT community has only grown. “There is something very disconcerting about being invisible to your government. It is a type of institutionalized heterosexism to not have our identity counted,” said Poshi Mikalson, the LGBTQ program director at Sacramentobased NorCal MHA, formerly known as Mental Health America of Northern California. Mikalson, a lesbian married mother of three, is also the director of the LGBTQ Reducing Disparities Project, which is housed at her agency and funded by the California Department of Public Health. She noted that the same concerns about privacy and relevance brought up by those questioning the need for LGBT data collection were also raised years ago about adding questions on race and ethnicity to state forms. “What we oftentimes hear is, ‘Well, we don’t have the money.’ What that really means is we do not value this information enough to See page 3 >>
Francisco and the Bay Area,” and the corporation “cares aiser Permanente has about community health. I stopped charging peothink they took a step back ple more for HIV drugs and realized this was the right and is offering refunds for the thing to do.” exorbitant copays some of its Wiener noted “the broader patients faced. issue” remains of Kaiser and The decision comes as two other health insurance compastate lawmakers have intronies having a more expensive duced bills meant to address classification for any drugs. high drug prices, including “The whole issue of a spethose for HIV medications. cialty tier of drugs is a growKaiser was criticized after it ing problem, that drugs that came to light that it was charging people need to be healthy are people about 20 percent of the turning out to be exorbitantcost of their medications, rather ly expensive for people who than a flat copay. Larry Hickey, Rick Gerharter can’t afford a $600 or $800 chief financial officer of Berke- Kaiser Permanente has reversed itself and will no longer carry HIV copay,” said Wiener. Kaiser’s ley’s Steamworks bathhouse, medication on a “specialty tier,” which led to dramatically higher move last week is “an imsaid earlier this month that an copayments by patients. portant step forward, but a employee came to him after broader step remains.” being “hit with a $900 bill for one He said he still plans to month’s supply” of HIV drugs. drugs off the specialty tier effective last Friday have a board committee hearAs the Bay Area Reporter first reported and issuing refunds to people. ing on specialty tiers within the next month. on its website Friday, February 20, gay San It’s unclear whether Kaiser would have Wiener offered strong praise for Kaiser’s move. Francisco Supervisor Scott Wiener said Kai“Kaiser is a good actor in our community,” made the decision to take HIV medications ser officials informed him at a February 19 he said. “Kaiser is an institution that’s always See page 9 >> meeting that they were moving all the HIV been a core part of public health efforts in San
K
Gay ex-SF cop accused of embezzlement by Seth Hemmelgarn
ance’s board and Evans, through Limbert, “adgay former San Franmitted to have stolen cisco police officer thousands of dollars allegedly embezzled from us and wanted to more than $16,000 from the apologize,” said Shakur. department’s Pride Alliance He said Evans eventually for LGBT officers, a recent paid back almost $15,000 email from one of the group’s and Limbert “accepted members said. the funds which were deThe email, which says Mike posited into our account.” Evans, the ex-officer, has paid However, said Shakur, back several thousand dollars, Limbert used “his posialso accuses current gay Lieution and assertion as tenant Chuck Limbert of trying president” and police lieuto stop others from reporting tenant to order the group the case. Limbert and other po“not to refer this matter to lice officials say the embezzlethe SFPD,” particularly the ment case has been forwarded Pete Thoshinsky Internal Affairs Division, to the district attorney’s office. Former San Francisco Police for criminal and adminisAs of Tuesday, February 24, the Officer Mike Evans trative investigations. DA hadn’t filed charges. Shakur said that he, Evans, who had been the then-board Vice PresiPride Alliance’s treasurer but left the departdent Pat Burley, and then-Treasurer Candy ment several months ago, has denied the alleHilder “vehemently objected” and voiced their gations, while Limbert, the alliance’s president, concerns “regarding how immoral, illegal, and has indicated he did nothing wrong. downright wrong Chuck was to give such an In an email last Tuesday, February 17 to order. Chuck then personally threatened any dues-paying Pride Alliance members that was member of the PA with personal lawsuits if shared with the Bay Area Reporter, Officer we made the result of our audit public to our Andy Shakur said the organization had “conmembers.” ducted a financial audit” of its finances that (According to Shakur, Burley, Hilder, and revealed Evans had embezzled the money. several others have resigned from the alliance. The audit results were presented to the alli- In a brief call last week, Hilder said she couldn’t
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discuss specifics of the case since the investigation is open. Burley couldn’t be reached for comment.) Shakur wrote that after Limbert’s alleged threats, he “immediately contacted” internal affairs and provided the unit with “all required information, regarding a crime committed by a fellow officer.” The division started its investigations, and the criminal probe “is still ongoing,” said Shakur, but the administration part “has been canceled.” “Apparently, we as the Pride Alliance withdrew our admin IA complaint,” he said in the email. “Mind you, there was never a meeting or consultation of you, our members, before this decision is made. I want to let you know, neither Pat, Candy nor I ever visited IA to withdraw our complaint.” Shakur said police administration promised him that the criminal investigation is being completed. That probe “will reveal many things and hopefully justice will be served,” he said. The B.A.R. wasn’t able to reach Evans, who briefly ran for sheriff in 2011, for comment. But KTVU reported that in a phone call, he said, “I didn’t embezzle anything.” The TV station also said that bank records in the case had first been called to the Internal Affairs unit’s attention in August, and that some had been generated by ATM withdrawals from clubs in the Castro, among other places.
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