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By Karen Ocamb
Phill Wilson, who turned 50 on April 29, was diagnosed with
HIV in 1985 and with full-blown AIDS in 1989. The executive
director of the Black AIDS Institute (www.blackaids.org),
Wilson was an early activist and co-founded several important
organizations, including the National Black Lesbian & Gay
Leadership Forum, and with friend Michael Weinstein and Wilson's
lover Chris Brownlie, the AIDS Hospice Foundation and its
Chris Brownlie Hospice. In 1990, a year after Brownlie died,
Wilson was appointed AIDS coordinator for the city of Los
Angeles. By then, Centers for Disease Control (CDC) reported
179,000 AIDS cases since 1981, of which more than 113,000
(63 percent) died. In 1990, the CDC reported 43,339 AIDS
cases, a 23 percent increase from 1989. Gay/bisexual men
and IV-drug users represented more than three-fourths of
reported cases.
Michael Weinstein, now president of AIDS Healthcare Foundation,
came up with the idea to have an AIDS coordinator for the
city of Los Angeles, Phill Wilson told IN Los Angeles magazine.
Wilson was among those who suggested it to L.A. Mayor Tom
Bradley.
"Mayor Bradley was the first keynote speaker of the
first Black Gay and Lesbian Leadership Conference in 1986,
so I had a good relationship with him," said Wilson. "From
the beginning there was controversy around my appointment.
I was publicly living with AIDS and (first AIDS Coordinator]
Dave Johnson left because of his health. A reporter asked
Mayor Bradley if it was wise to appoint someone in my health
condition, and the mayor, without missing a beat, said, 'We
appoint the best people to the job and I'm confident Phill
will do a great job, whether he's here for a day or for 10
years.' And it was just such an affirming response and so
typical of Mayor Bradley."
The position dealt with HIV/AIDS policy and implementation
and with using the mayor's bully pulpit to address discrimination
and HIV/AIDS awareness. Wilson also addressed HIV/AIDS in
people of color communities. "The epidemic had been
clearly an aggressive force in people of color communities
from the very beginning," said Wilson. "But there
had not been policies and specific and explicit attention
paid to people of color communities. And that was the bulk
of the work that we did under my stewardship from 1990 to
1993."
Wilson conducted training sessions for all city employees,
including police, fire fighters, and paramedics. To his surprise,
Wilson discovered he also had to raise HIV/AIDS awareness
among the city councilmembers as well.
"Councilman Nate Holden came to the council with a
purported case of people attempting to deliberately transmit
HIV by contaminating salads in restaurants," Wilson
recalled. "The theory was that someone could cut themselves
either by accident or deliberately and blood would get into
the salad and then the virus could live that way and thereby
infect people."
Wilson held information hearings in the council chambers
and called medical experts to provide HIV/AIDS education.
By the time he left office, Holden supported the city's AIDS
programs. "I think that was, in part, because we took
the time to do the education," said Wilson who credits
Councilmember Joel Wachs as a "huge hero" during
this time, along with Wendy Gruel, Bradley's point person,
and Jan Perry, Councilmember Mike Woo's deputy.
"The late '80s and early '90s were some of the worst
times for people living with AIDS. There was a series of
false hopes around treatment issues and huge numbers of us
died. My biggest memory is of the repeated calls in the middle
of the night and all of the memorial services and night vigils
and the deathbed watches. I think people forget that up until
1996 with the advent of the protease inhibitors and the triple
combination cocktails, people died. And so much of our time
was trying to provide some amount of dignity for people in
that process," Wilson said.
That year Wilson almost died. "My doctors basically
felt that it was over. My family was called and everyone
was notified that it was going to be just a matter of days
before I died. And I came out of that and the message for
me was that there was something that I still needed to do.
And that's why I'm still here," Wilson said.
Wilson returned to work in 1999. "It seemed to me
that the unique offering I could make was to focus on the
epidemic in black America and that's why we founded the Black
AIDS Institute. It was undeniably clear that African Americans
and other people of color were hugely disproportionately
impacted by the disease and by and large, that fact was being
ignored."
In 2006, AIDS in America is a black disease, Wilson said. "We
represent roughly 10-12 percent of the U.S. population but
we represent nearly 50 percent of the 1.3 million Americans
living with AIDS in America today. We represent 54 percent
of the new HIV/AIDS cases in America; AIDS is the number
one killer of black women between the ages of 24-34; and
an estimated 46 percent of black gay and bisexual men in
some of our urban cities may already be HIV positive and
two-thirds of them don't even know it."
Meanwhile, Wilson said, "the fight against AIDS on
the domestic front has been undermined over the last six
years. The response has been one of either flat funding or
reduction in funding ... [while] the epidemic is still having
a devastating effect. The question for the LGBT community
is: What did we mean when we said, 'Until there's a cure?'
It is truly a moral challenge to us to be in the fight as
aggressively as we were in the mid-'80s because if we abandon
this battle now, then we were really only interested in us.
And, as they say, justice cannot be 'just us.' And if we
believe ourselves to be a people in a justice struggle, then
we really have to be there until this epidemic is over."
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