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AIDS Legal Referral Panel Celebrates 21 Years
by Reid Dennis for the San
Francisco Spectrum
The AIDS Legal Referral Panel [ALRP] had some good news and bad
news at their 21st annual reception held in the War Memorial Veterans
Building Green Room on October 6th. Bill Hirsh, ALRP Executive Director,
lamented that, like so many other AIDS service organizations over
the past year, funds were drastically cut when they lost the Ryan
White Care Act grant. That amounted to losing almost 50% of their
budget when this occurred. But the good news was that several people
and foundations pitched in, and ALRP is in the recovery stage now.
“Now is not the time to sit on the sidelines. We need to make
sure people with AIDS have the healthcare, housing, and services—especially
legal services—that they need,” said Hirsh. “Tonight
we are here to recognize people who have been at the forefront of
the AIDS struggle since the very beginning and at the same time
to welcome new folks who have just stepped up to meet the challenge
of serving the legal needs of people living with HIV/AIDS.”
Ross Woodall, who has been volunteer coordinator for ALRP and served
on the board of directors of the SF AIDS Foundation, presented to
Pat Christen the highest award ALRP can give, the Clint Hockenberry
Award, named in honor of the first executive director of ALRP, which
is bestowed in recognition of a long career of service advancing
the rights of people with HIV/AIDS.
“For 18 years Pat has been on the very forefront of the battle
against AIDS,” said Woodall, citing some of Christen’s
biography. She graduated from Stanford University having studied
for pre-med (She was going to be a doctor) and also political science.
She joined the Peace Corps and began service in Kenya, where she
helped set up clinics and taught biology. This set her on her career
path for the next two decades. In 1985 Pat joined the staff of the
AIDS Foundation serving as the media relations officer, director
of the AIDS hotline, and eventually director of public policy. In
1989 at the height of the AIDS pandemic she was named executive
director of the AIDS Foundation.
Woodall said Christen has never pulled back from any major challenge.
In 1989 she saw the government was not responding to AIDS as it
should, so she put together a group of people who formed the legislation
that ended up being the Ryan White Care Act, passed in 1990. Since
then it has provided more than $20 billion in direct services and
medication for people with AIDS. Soon after, Christen realized the
injection drug community, which was seen as expendable by the government,
was being devastated by HIV. So she formed the HIV Prevention Project,
better known as the needle exchange program. The result was that
the incidences of mother-to-child transmission basically disappeared.
In 2001 Christen realized AIDS was not just a local issue but also
a worldwide one, so she helped start the Pangaea Global AIDS Foundation,
which convinced the government in South Africa that AIDS existed
and needed services, treatment, and education. In the coming weeks
the foundation will be opening a state of the art health facility
in Rwanda. Pangaea also operates programs in China and Uganda.
“Pat truly cares about every person living with HIV, who
might become HIV-positive, and their caregivers,” Woodall
said. “As a person with AIDS as I am, many of us owe our lives
to her and the programs and policies she has instituted.”
Christen told an anecdote when she first came to SF AIDS Foundation,
she was a hotline volunteer and for six weeks kept getting calls
from a gay man in Mississippi whose partner was dying of AIDS and
couldn’t get access to his lover in the hospital, so she got
him in touch with ALRP to successfully help him through the legal
process. She told a second anecdote concerning later when she was
responsible for training hotline volunteers, she asked Hockenberry
to assist with volunteers learning to deal with pressing legal issues
for people with HIV. “His clarity, passion, and great calm
was a tremendous comfort to the volunteers who were extremely anxious
about taking their first call,” she said.
Jill DiGiovanni presented Attorneys of the Year awards to Yosef
Peretz and Cary Kletter. “This team has worked with nearly
3,000 claims for ALRP, helping clients from marginalized socio-economic
backgrounds who are facing employment discrimination or struggling
against eviction or fighting real estate fraud,” said DiGiovanni.
Peretz said they their practice is mostly based on public interest
law. A typical client can be found in someone they helped a few
days ago. The client has had AIDS for 15 years, just lost his job
he has been working at for six years, and is facing homelessness
now. “We look forward to many more years working with ALRP.
My message to everyone here is to not be afraid to take public interest
cases,” he said.
Peter Borkon, ALRP board co-chair gave out the Firm of the Year
award to Buchalter Nemer Fields & Younger. The firm is 150 attorneys
throughout the state. It has generously given a $25,000 grant, allowing
ALRP to enter the highly competitive world of locating law firms.
“We can now pay them to help us with our organization and
our clients. The money will be used to directly serve our community,”
said Borkon.
Wells Fargo Foundation received the Community Partner Award, presented
by board member and fundraising development co-chair Jenna Whitman.
She said Wells has come to their rescue this year and for many years
in the past. For over 150 years Wells has contributed to various
causes. They prioritize their giving to benefit communities with
people of low income, which works well with ALRP, whose clientele
amounts to over 80 percent whose income is less than $20,000 a year.
“Wells has always been there for ALRP and our clients,”
Whitman said. Lisa Stevens of the Wells Foundation accepted the
award. “As the regional president for the Bay Area, I want
to thank ALRP on behalf of myself as well as the other 7,000 members
in the Bay Area,” she said. “I would like to congratulate
all the honorees this evening. You’re the reason that we have
such an amazing community. It’s the efforts of the individuals
that create the greatness of the community.” She shared some
startling figures. According to the Center for Disease Control,
African American women represent a grossly disproportionate percentage
of new HIV infections among women. In 2002, African American women
made up 64 percent of reported new HIV infections. According to
CDC, young women account for 58 percent of all new HIV cases among
young people. “I’m so proud that the Wells Foundation
over the last three years has given over $5 million in our footprint
for AIDS and HIV organizations. But we must continue to give and
volunteer so organizations like ALRP can continue to help people
in times of need.”
Representative Nancy Pelosi sent certificates of special Congressional
recognition to all the awardees and a special message to ALRP: “Congratulations
to ALRP as you celebrate 21 years of service and to tonight’s
honorees for your tireless efforts on behalf of persons living with
HIV/AIDS. For more than twenty years ALRP’s volunteers and
staff attorneys have provided free and low-cost legal assistance
for those most devastated by the AIDS epidemic. I am grateful for
your dedication and service. Earlier this year I wrote to the U.S.
Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson expressing my
strong concern about the $4 million reduction in SF’s Ryan
White allocation in seeking an explanation. This cut has had a devastating
impact on HIV/AIDS services in the Bay Area, including the vital
legal services provided by ALRP. I am proud to have secured language
in an appropriation bill passed by the House of Representatives
that would protect San Francisco and other major metropolitan areas
from drastic cuts in the Ryan White funding in the future by directing
HHS to revise its scoring process. This language will allow members
of Congress to hold HHS accountable for future reductions in Ryan
White funding in San Francisco and other metropolitan areas and
will prevent disruption to essential ongoing services such as those
ALRP provides.”
She concluded, “Congratulations to all. Working together
we will defeat this epidemic and its devastating effect on our community.”
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