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  Public Policy & Activism > New York City

GMHC Tells the Mayor that the Recession May Be Over, But the AIDS Crisis Is Not

 

GMHC is very pleased that Mayor Bloomberg's Executive Budget signals NYC's economic recession is over and the proposed $46.9 billion city budget projects a $1.3 billion surplus for the current year that ends June 30.  However, we are disappointed that despite this surplus, the Executive Budget does not propose any significant increases to HIV/AIDS services.  In fact, we are very concerned that the vital $5 million Community of Color HIV Initiative that the Mayor put in the budget last year was not reinstated.  New York City's economic recession may be over, but its AIDS crisis is not.  Since the first cases were identified in New York City in 1981, more than 137,168 New Yorkers have developed AIDS.  Of the estimated 40,000 new HIV infections occurring in the US every year, one fifth are expected to take place in New York City.  Unfortunately, New York City continues to be the epicenter of the nation's HIV/AIDS epidemic.  The number of persons living with HIV/AIDS is at a record high for New York with 83,249 cases.  GMHC is disheartened that the City's Executive budget does not improve the much damaged healthcare infrastructure and furthermore does not make allowances for new HIV/AIDS needs that are driven by increasing client caseloads.

The Executive Budget does not include $5 million for the Community of Color HIV Initiative, thus leaving this critical initiative unfunded in the coming year.  Failure to reinstate this HIV initiative would leave the City prone to the escalating HIV rates among an especially high risk population: communities of color that have been disproportionally hit hard by HIV/AIDS.  Not only should this funding be reinstated, it should be increased and added to the base budget in order to have maximum efficiency in its utilization.

The Executive Budget also does not include adequate provisions for the Take Care New York: A Policy for a Healthier New York Initiative which the City hailed and released a month ago.  Within this aggressively bold public health agenda, there are three priority areas in particular that are vital to the HIV community and necessitate targeted funding:

  1. Increase access to regular doctors or other health care providers. Dependable health insurance, routine doctor visits and access to culturally competent health professionals are essential elements of any health system that aims to promote positive health outcomes. For people with HIV, having access to health insurance is probably the most critical feature of their health care landscape.
  2. Increase HIV testing and opportunities to link people into care.  Better utilization of rapid testing can break down barriers and help people to know their status.  Increased awareness of HIV status and improved risk reduction initiatives can substantially reduce risky behaviors, HIV transmission, HIV-related illness, and AIDS death.
  3. Reduce chemical dependency.  Drug treatment and harm reduction programs, especially designed for clients whom are HIV-positive, need to be established and expanded.

The Executive Budget continues the practice of siphoning off approximately $25 millions of federal AIDS funding via the HOPWA Swipe to pay for HASA caseworkers.  We urge the City to right this wrong by appropriating $25 million of city tax levy funds into the development of new housing for people living with HIV/AIDS.  Also of concern is the unexplained shift of approximately $10 million from HRA's supportive housing category into the SRO housing category.  We believe that this is the reverse direction for the City: NYC should be decreasing our dependency on SRO housing and increasing our capacity for supportive housing.

We also recognize the city budget's need to have provisions that allow improvement to the infrastructure of New York's public health system. In particular, the lack of appropriate funds to the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) and the city hospitals to carry out their basic missions is very disconcerting.   The Department of Health and Mental Hygiene promotes and protects the health and quality of life for New Yorkers.  It enforces compliance of city health codes and operates a broad range of public health services to monitor, prevent and control disease. In particular, DOHMH's HIV-related services focus on public health education, administration of grants and contracts, case reporting, confidential counseling and testing, and direct clinic-based medical care.  The operation of these DOPH functions should be strengthened, but at a minimum, must be maintained.

Finally, we are concerned that HHC receive additional support for HIV/AIDS services.  HHC provides 51% of the City's hospital-based outpatient HIV care to New Yorkers regardless of their ability to pay and it is a vital health care safety net.  The $200 million in additional support that Mayor Bloomberg provided in the Executive budget for HHC is a good first step in supporting the city's public health care infrastructure.  However, more can be done and more must be done to ensure that the vital HIV/AIDS services provided by HHC are not endangered.

A partnership between government, community organizations and consumers representation is the most effective strategy for our city in combating the AIDS epidemic.  We ask and demand that the City reconsider these needs in the budget negotiations process which is currently underway.

 

© 2004 Gay Men's Health Crisis

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