PROJECT INFORM IN OTHER MEDIA ... 2008
Lame duck, lame budget
(mention of Project Inform in bold below)
Bush's 2009 budget proposal was met with hisses and boos by
domestic HIV/AIDS advocates, who decried his decrease in funding
necessary to fight HIV/AIDS and increase in abstinence-only funding.
"While we are not surprised to see another budget that short
changes people with HIV/AIDS, we take comfort in the fact that
it is the final proposal we will have to endure from this President," said
Ryan Clary, Project Inform's director of public policy. "We hope
the years of chronic under funding of HIV/AIDS programs will
soon be over. Congress should reject this budget immediately
and show the leadership desperately needed to make sure people
with HIV have the care and treatment needed to stay alive and
healthy."
The budget includes:
- $28 million increase for abstinence-only education
- $2 million decrease in funding for the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) programs for HIV/AIDS, viral hepatitis,
sexually transmitted infections, and tuberculosis
- $8 million decrease for programs in the communities most
severely affected by the HIV/AIDS epidemic
- $1 million in additional funding for Ryan White CARE Act,
essentially maintaining the same funding levels as fiscal year
2008
- No increase for HIV/AIDS research at the National Institutes
of Health
- Medicare faces cuts totaling $556.4 billion
- Medicaid cuts estimated at $46.7 billion
Some choice statements of disgust:
"Enough is enough," said James Wagoner, President of Advocates
for Youth. "These abstinence-only-until-marriage programs have
failed to meet simple standards of effectiveness. Allocating
another $204 million for FY 2009 is further proof that this President
cares more about conservative ideology than sound science."
"We know that the CDC will soon release data showing that HIV
infections are up as much as 50 percent since the start of the
Bush presidency," said Marjorie J. Hill, chief executive officer
of the Gay Men's Health Crisis (GMHC), in a written press statement. "Data
already show significant increases among gay and bisexual men.
The proposal to cut CDC prevention funding by $2 million in the
face of these data is just incomprehensible."
"While the President's FY 2009 budget carries good news for
addressing the global pandemic, it is terribly inadequate to
address the epidemic in our own backyard. Following a trend now
for several years, this budget will only further destabilize
the prevention of HIV and the care and treatment of people living
with HIV/AIDS in our own country," said Gene Copello, executive
director of the AIDS Institute.
The good news is Congressional leadership basically laughed
in the face of Bush's proposed cuts. "This administration ought
to know that five years' worth of Medicare and Medicaid cuts
totaling $200 billion are dead on arrival with me and with most
of the Congress," said Sen. Max Baucus, the Democratic chairman
of the Senate Finance Committee.