July 26, 2012 edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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Fire destroys youth center

SFGH: It Gets Better

ARTS

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Project: Lohan

The

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Serving the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender communities since 1971

Garcia discusses ACA, nonprofits by Seth Hemmelgarn

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ore than a year after taking the helm of the San Francisco Department of Public Health, Barbara Garcia, the agency’s director, expressed optimism about the Rich Gerharter city’s future under the national Afford- Barbara Garcia able Care Act and also spoke of keeping an eye on the city’s numerous LGBT health-related nonprofits. In a wide-ranging interview last week, Garcia sounded confident in how the city will fare under the national health care reform law, which was designed to cover more uninsured people and which the U.S. Supreme Court upheld last month. She said the Healthy San Francisco program, the city’s health insurance program for uninsured residents, “put us way ahead,” since “we already know who our uninsured are” and officials have worked to provide them with “medical homes.” “Clients should see a seamless system of care,” Garcia, an out lesbian, said. Garcia said she also wants to see more long-term planning. When it comes to HIV/AIDS prevention, “San Francisco has always been on the leading edge.” However, since the epidemic affects virtually every state in the country, the city, known as a model of HIV care and prevention, “will continue to see a reduction” in federal funding, she said. Earlier this year, Mayor Ed Lee said he would restore millions of dollars that were being lost in federal HIV/AIDS funds, including a reduced share of the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Treatment Modernization Act. The federal cuts hit in the fiscal year that began in July. Garcia noted there’s still a shortfall for 2013-14. Garcia, whose agency’s budget is about $1.6 billion and whose annual salary is $259,000, met with the Bay Area Reporter on Thursday, July 19 at the health department’s Grove Street headquarters. Among some of the work being done to prepare for the future, she discussed the city’s HIV Health Services and HIV Prevention Planning councils having joint planning meetings. In a follow-up email exchange, Garcia said, “The panels are not merging as yet, but that is not off the table.” She added, “I hope, through joint meetings and planning processes, to ensure that we are preparing for the future of See page 16 >>

Vol. 42 • No. 30 • July 26-August 1, 2012

AIDS confab returns to U.S. M by Liz Highleyman

ore than 23,000 researchers, service providers, policy-makers, activists, and people living with HIV gathered in Washington, D.C, this week for the 19th International AIDS Conference, the first time the meeting has been held in the U.S. since the 1990 confab in San Francisco. The conference theme, “Turning the Tide,” reflects a sense of optimism that an end to AIDS is finally within reach if adequate resources are devoted to that goal. “The story being told here this week is that scientifically, when it comes to AIDS, there is more light at the end of the tunnel than there has ever been in the three decades of the epidemic,” said conference co-chair Diane Havlir from UCSF. “The ability to prevent and treat the disease has advanced beyond what many might have reasonably hoped 22 years ago,” concurred Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, whose morning plenary session on Monday called for an “AIDS-free generation.” The largest meeting of its kind, AIDS 2012 combines scientific sessions with a Global Village for community organizations and countless associated events including a display of the AIDS Memorial Quilt on the National Mall, the large Keep the Promise march before the open-

Rick Gerharter

The AIDS Healthcare Foundation organized a march asking leaders to “Keep the Promise” on the opening day of the 19th International AIDS Conference in Washington, D.C.

ing ceremony on Sunday, and the We Can End AIDS mobilization on Tuesday. “We could not let this conference come to the U.S. without showing in some compelling ways that we will never end AIDS if

we continue to put profit for the few over the needs of the many,” said Julie Davids of HIV Prevention Justice Alliance, one of the organizers of the mobilization. See page 10 >>

Protesters greet Obama in Oakland by Elliot Owen

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n response to the continued crackdown on California’s medical marijuana dispensaries by the U.S. attorney’s office, several hundred pro-cannabis protesters marched through downtown Oakland to ensure that President Barack Obama wasn’t the only one delivering a message Monday, July 23. The visit to Oakland was the first that Obama has made since becoming president; as a candidate he spoke at a rally in the city in 2007. Hours before the president appeared at the Fox Theater before 2,000 attendees for an evening fundraising event, storefronts in the area put up green flags to support the pro-cannabis rally. As protesters amassed outside City Hall waiting to march, an early afternoon press conference was held by medical marijuana advocates two blocks away at Oaksterdam University, a marijuana educational facility raided by federal agents in April, to address the Obama administration’s attack of marijuana businesses legal under California law. The commencement of the cannabis crackdown last fall has resulted in numerous medical marijuana dispensaries across the state being closed despite Obama’s 2008 promise to respect medi-

Elliot Owen

Jason David, whose son suffers from Dravet syndrome and is a patient at Harborside, spoke at the Oaksterdam press conference. Another patient, Yvonne Westbrook-White, right, also spoke about the benefits of medical marijuana.

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cal marijuana state laws and a 2009 statement from Attorney General Eric Holder that dispensaries would not be raided. The demonstration also came in timely response to U.S. Attorney Melinda Haag’s recent property forfeiture action against Harborside Health Center, a dispensary with over 100,000 patients and locations in Oakland and San Jose. Standing before nearly 100 people at Oaksterdam’s press conference, Steve DeAngelo, executive director of Harborside Health Center, called for an “immediate freeze” on all federal enforcement actions taken against medical marijuana organizations until the Department of Justice could conclude that only illegal operations were being targeted. “Harborside Health Center is not only 100 percent compliant with all local regulations and state law,” DeAngelo said, “we set the gold standard for the distribution of medical cannabis.” The effect of closing medical marijuana dispensaries on patients was underlined during the press conference by two individuals personally affected by medical cannabis use. Yvonne Westbrook-White, who suffers from multiple sclerosis and depended on OakSee page 16 >>


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