-- ANNOUNCEMENTS -
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upport group
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Polio
continued from A 1
mv -AIDS prevention chief, and
o h r tate official id condom
u . ju ta inglep rtof multi
faceted approach to AID pre
vention.
Sin voluntary ting
in tate prisons' in 19 5,
than 7,000 inma have n
ted, with 135 howing posi
tive for the AIDS viru , HIV.
There are 63 HIV-positiv inma
tes in the system right now. Nine
have died of AIDS-related ill
ince 1985.
AID ACTIVI T Tim Hil
lard, a retired veteran television
broadcaster, and everal council
members said condorndistribu
tion m logical and long over
due.
But other council members,
including a clergyman, police
official and local AID preven
tion workers, said it's not that
simple. No straw vo es were
taken Tue day, but several
poke in opposition and others
said t y would need more infer-
Some concerns
SAFETY. Jones said the
prisons are concerned about con
doms being used to smuggle
drugs and other contraband, and
having the potential of· increas
ing sexual assaults among inma
tes. It's very hard for prisons to
distinguish between consentual
x and a rape situation, he said.
o EFFECTIVENE . Dr.
Robert Wood, director of the Se
attle-King County AIDS Control
Program, said he needs more in
formation on the impact of pro
viding condoms.
"In making condoms avail
able, will there be more trans
mission (of the AIDS virus) or
1 ?" he said. "Might there be a
message that ex is more O.K
than it used to be? Is it possible
there might be more sex, but not
more use of condoms?"
MORALITY. The Rev. Joe
Fuiten of Cedar Park Church in
Bothell said authorizing condom
distribution would give the
tate's implied sanction to gay
x, Fuiten is a council member.
NEW PRIVILEGE.
Spokane Police Capt. David An
derson said, "Boiling it down, it's
allowing prisoners to have sex,"
when that and other rights have
been stripped from them as part
of their punishment.
o DATA. A number of council
members complained about the
lack of solid numbers on the
prevalence of Hfv-positive in
mates and the rate of transmis-
ion behind bars.
Several council members said
condoms are just a piece of the
answer to combatting AIDS be-
hind bars. Education and better
prevention efforts, health care,
research, te ting and other
strategies need to be considered
at the same time, they said.
But Hillard said the state
needs to tart omewhere.
"THE EPIDEMI t rted
with one person," he said. "It's
about risk-reduction."
The council ch irman, th
Rev Hobert Fitz rId, aid he'
not impati nt with he pace of
discu ions.
"We certainly timulated con
versation, and tha 's our rol ," h
id.
ons, as d
w
o
t
who quali fy for 2
tabli h from 8-15-94
e
run St. P.O. Box 941
r, MI 49022
qual ou ing Opportunity
L vi' • 560'"
.. 1
you'll w nt 0
ry d y.
rid f r .
Ii s'.
I 24.99.
S' I end.
Sap m r 10.
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