Container
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Title
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Subseries: Federal Government, 1990-1999
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Subseries: Ryan White Care Act,
1993-1999ARCW advocacy with the federal government began with participation on
the Board of Directors of the national AIDS Action Council whose
mission is to bring AIDS public policy advocacy to Congress and the
Executive branch. From 1992 to 1996, ARCW President and CEO Doug
Nelson was a member of the board of directors of the AIDS Action
Council. ARCW COO Mike Gifford served on the board from 1997 to
2002. This participation engaged ARCW in federal government advocacy
with significant influence in the development of the national AIDS
policy agenda and its implementation by the federal government. Congress enacted the Ryan White CARE Act in 1990 to improve the
availability of care for low-income, uninsured, and under-insured
people with HIV. The funding formulas in the legislation awarded
significantly more AIDS funding to a few large cities hardest hit by
the AIDS crisis—San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles, and
others—and less funding to those with fewer AIDS cases. When the legislation was up for reauthorization in 1994, ARCW
examined the funding formulas and discovered that some states
received up to $4,000 more per AIDS case than Wisconsin. As a member
of the AIDS Action Council, ARCW urged a change in the funding
formulas to achieve more equitable Ryan White funding per AIDS case
throughout the country. Large AIDS service organizations (ASOs) from
high-funded states, however, were in control of the Council and
consistently opposed ARCW-recommended changes. In its quest for equitable AIDS funding, ARCW organized the Campaign
for Fairness, a national coalition of ASOs in 47 states that
supported equitable funding. Representing the Campaign, ARCW leaders
Doug Nelson and Mike Gifford made the case for equitable funding to
Congress and the Clinton Administration. Two years of advocacy
resulted in a Congressional victory for more equitable funding
formulas. When President Clinton signed the Ryan White CARE Act in
1996, the new equitable formulas allocated millions more in AIDS
funding for HIV services throughout the nation.
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103rd Congress,
1993-1995
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Box
3
Folder
1-5
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Physical
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Electronic Folder
\01_Advocacy\
Box_03\
Folder_03\
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Digital 2 digital files (105 MB) : Digitized sample of folder
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Box
3
Folder
6-8
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104th Congress,
1995-1997
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Box
4
Folder
1-3
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104th Congress,
1995-1997
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Box
4
Folder
4-5
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106th Congress,
1997-1999
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Box
4
Folder
6
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Background, 1990-1994
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Box
5
Folder
1-2
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Background, 1990-1994
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Subseries: Federal Housing, 1997-1999 In 1997, ARCW led a national effort to restore housing funds
for non-urban areas in the Housing Opportunities for People With
AIDS (HOPWA) program. The formula was changed and the funds were
restored and the improved bill was signed by President
Clinton.
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Box
5
Folder
3
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Housing Opportunities for People With AIDS (HOPWA),
1997
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Box
5
Folder
4
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State of AIDS Forum,
1997
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Subseries: Medicaid Expansion,
1994-1997 : ARCW lobbied the federal Health Care Financing Administration to
expand the Medicaid program to include low-income, newly diagnosed
individuals with HIV disease. With costly new HIV treatments
patients needed early medical intervention to avoid progression to
AIDS, to remain healthy and to avoid intensive and costly AIDS
treatments. By changing the Medicaid eligibility policy to eliminate
the disability requirement and to expand coverage to all low income
HIV patients, Medicaid would help to assure HIV patient access to
essential care thus reducing progression to AIDS and treatments that
would be costly for Medicaid.
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Box
5
Folder
5
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ACRW and AIDS Action Council Advocacy,
1996-1997
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Box
5
Folder
7
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Medicaid Background, 1994, 1996
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Box
5
Folder
6
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Surveys of Health Care Access,
1997
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