MediaAppleseed in the News
District of Columbia

District Continues to Fail the Public on HIV-AIDS
1/4/2007
The promises made by former mayor Anthony A. Williams more than a year ago to bolster the battle against HIV have not been realized. The HIV-AIDS epidemic in the District remains disturbing and depressing. The rate of infection remains 10 times the national rate. African American women make up 90 percent of all infected female residents, and many thousands of residents with HIV do not know their status.
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District's HIV Testing Found to Be Falling Short
12/16/2006
A citywide HIV testing campaign, launched with bold pronouncements that brought the District national attention, has been hampered by poor planning and wasted resources in its first six months, according to a report released today by a public advocacy organization.
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AIDS office director meets with activists
10/1/2006
Shortly after the Appleseed Center released its blistering report on the problems at D.C.’s HIV/AIDS Administration, a new director was chosen to head the agency, former AIDS Action Executive Director Marsha Martin.
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When It Brainstorms, It Pours
5/1/2006
Columnist John Kelley updates readers on some interesting ideas from DC Applseed's "Solving DC Problems" contest.
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Improve D.C., Win Some Cash
4/18/2006
The nonprofit group D.C. Appleseed is betting $8,500 in prize money that people who commute to, and live in D.C., have solutions to some of DC's most pressing issues. D.C. Appleseed is hoping the contest will help to shape the next mayor's political agenda. The tree top prizewinners will be invited to present their ideas at a mayoral forum.
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The AIDS Epidemic in DC
4/17/2006
In Washington, D.C., nearly 10,000, or about one in every 50 people have AIDS, and there is an unknown but even higher number with HIV. D.C. also has the highest rate of new AIDS cases in the country -- 12 times the national average -- and has more people living with AIDS than all but nine states. The D.C. Appleseed Center for Law and Justice, which monitors the city's progress in addressing the disease, issued a report last August that put most of the blame on government coordination and leadership
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CVS Complicates Safe Sex
4/11/2006
No one likes buying condoms. The act, though innocent and perfectly legal, instantly offers an insight into the sexual activity of the purchaser, and, depending on the types of condoms bought, their sexual preferences. And while it's one thing to march into a store and resolutely buy condoms, as embarrassing as that can be, it's a whole other thing to have to sheepishly ask an employee for them. At many local CVS stores, that's exactly what consumers are forced to do.
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Williams Acts on Threat to CareFirst
4/6/2006
Mayor Anthony A. Williams intends to end a special tax break for CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield's District affiliate in fiscal 2007 and to divert the more than $5 million from it to health-care coverage for low-income residents. CareFirst's $1 billion affiliate, which has more than 1.2 million subscribers in the city, Montgomery and Prince George's counties and Northern Virginia, has been under scrutiny since a legal and economic analysis in late 2004 concluded that it fell far short of its civic obligation. The report by the D.C. Appleseed Center for Law and Justice, a nonprofit public policy organization, triggered hearings by a council committee and the city insurance commissioner.
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Contest Looks for 'Cutting-Edge' Solutions
3/31/2006
The D.C. Appleseed Center for Law and Justice is giving away $5,000 for the best idea to solve the District's biggest problems.
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AIDS: Wasted Lives & Money
3/28/2006
What happened to half a billion public dollars? And where is city hall? According to the D.C. Appleseed Center for Law and Justice, which monitors the city's progress in addressing the epidemic, the city AIDS unit responsible for tracking the spread of HIV and AIDS has a staff vacancy rate of greater than 50 percent. D.C. Appleseed also reported this month that the District's annual rate of new AIDS cases is nearly 12 times the national average. That's after spending nearly half a billion dollars.
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Appleseed in the News