
You cant catch HIV from a toilet seat.
You cant catch HIV from kitchen utensils.
You cant catch HIV from everyday contact with the people around you.
Old news, right? In fact, all of those points were made in , the health information pamphlet mailed to every American household by Surgeon General C. Everett Koop in 1988. But apparently the message was lost on folks at the (ADOC).
TIMELINE
The Fight Against Segregation of Alabama Inmates with HIV 罈
In 2012, ADOC still bars prisoners living with HIV from participating in a host of prison programs and activities存uch as working in some of the prison kitchens, and in the free-world poultry processing plant where other prisoners on work release are able to get paying jobs. Alabama officials say they know theres no actual health risk associated with HIV-positive people working in , but that their policy is justified for security reasons meaning that others would react violently if a person with HIV touched their food.
ADOC also confines all male prisoners living with HIV in a designated area at , and instructs Limestones guards that Routine physical contact with [HIV unit] inmates should be kept at a minimum at all times. Thats even though public health authorities have been explaining since the 1980s that routine physical contact . And when prisoners living with HIV participate in residential drug treatment programs that are supposed to provide an immersion experience, ADOC makes them return to the HIV segregation area to sleep, to eat, and allegedly even to use the bathroom.
These are among the issues in Henderson et al. v. Thomas et al., a class action lawsuit brought by the 勛圖眻畦s AIDS Project and National Prison Project, together with the , on behalf of all Alabama prisoners living with HIV. Were arguing that ADOCs policies of segregating and excluding HIV-positive individuals violate the and a similar federal law called the Rehabilitation Act. in the case begins today before Judge Myron Thompson in federal court in Montgomery.
Its sickening that ADOC continues to forcefully advocate policies that fuel irrational fears about HIV transmission. Its sad that ADOC has so little confidence in the ability of its prisoners and staff to overcome prejudice and adapt to change. Its also silly for Alabama to claim that its policies are necessary to prevent unrest, when dozens of states, , have ended their prisons HIV exclusion and segregation policies without incident. And its chilling how much this situation calls to mind for integration and equal opportunity in the Deep South.
Im honored to be part of the trial team in this case, and I look forward to helping prove that neither health nor security concerns excuse blanket discrimination and pandering to ignorance.
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