AEGiS-BAR: Gay named to head AIDS office Bay Area ReporterImportant note: Information in this article was accurate in 2001. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
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Gay named to head AIDS office

Bay Area Reporter - April 12, 2001
Bob Roehr


The Bush administration has chosen an openly gay man, Scott H. Evertz, to lead the White House Office of National AIDS Policy (ONAP). The announcement came on Monday, April 9, along with other details of how the administration's AIDS activities will be structured.

Rich Tafel, executive director of Log Cabin Republicans, called it "an historic appointment" for a Republican president.

"We are absolutely pleased," said Winnie Stachelberg, political director of the Human Rights Campaign. "I think it is a major sign that the administration is committed to fighting this epidemic on a national and global level."

Terje Anderson, executive director of the National Association of People With AIDS, had a "guardedly favorable" reaction to the appointment. He acknowledged that "having an outside perspective can be good." But he is a little concerned that Evertz "does not have much of a policy background à and could have a steep learning curve."

Evertz, 38, was born in Washington, D.C., and raised in its suburbs. He attended Marquette University and stayed in Wisconsin after graduating. He has worked as a fundraiser for the anti-abortion group Wisconsin Right to Life, a Catholic AIDS ministry, and most recently the Luther Manor Foundation in Milwaukee.

He has been active in Action Wisconsin, a statewide organization protecting the civil rights of gays and lesbians, and the Wisconsin HIV/AIDS Care Coalition that worked to ensure options in the provision of services.

Evertz has strong political ties in Wisconsin, having worked on the 1986 election campaign of former Governor Tommy Thompson, now secretary of Health and Human Services. He also ran unsuccessfully for the state Assembly in 1994, and served in the unpaid position of president of Wisconsin Log Cabin Republicans.

In the latter capacity, last March he issued a press release lambasting the national Log Cabin Republicans for running a radio ad campaign critical of George W. Bush, then campaigning in the Republican primary. That in turn brought censure and a provisionary status for the chapter from the national board of Log Cabin Republicans.

Those internal spats were resolved by the Republican convention last summer. Evertz played a key role as liaison in working with Log Cabin and Thompson, who chaired the platform committee, to reduce anti-gay aspects of the party platform.

Evertz was one of the Austin 12, those gay Republicans who met with Bush last April to discuss issues of concern to the gay community. He also worked with Bush friend Charles Francis to launch the Republican Unity Coalition, a gay-straight alliance to work inside that party.

Other actions

The White House said the AIDS office is being reorganized. The principal change is the additional of an employee from the State Department to coordinate international aspects of the fight against the disease.

Evertz also will sit on the domestic policy council, a traditional White House body that coordinates policy among the various government agencies.

Bush said that Secretary of State Colin Powell and HHS Secretary Thompson would jointly chair a task force dealing with AIDS. On April 6, the Senate passed a budget resolution offered by Senators Bill Frist (R-Tennessee) and Gordon Smith (R-Oregon) to nearly double the U.S. AIDS commitment to Africa, to $1 billion.

A more detailed version of the Bush budget released on April 9 calls for spending $688 million on AIDS programs run by the Department of Health and Human Services, a 7 percent increase from current levels. The largest portion of that increase would go for research conducted by the National Institutes of Health, particularly large-scale trials of preventative vaccines in Africa and Asia.

Spending on Ryan White AIDS services programs would go up less than the cost of inflation, while the number of people seeking those services is projected to increase. Many AIDS advocates feel the need for more money and will lobby Congress to increase appropriations.

NAPWA's Anderson noted that more than half of all Americans living with HIV infection receive care through Medicare and Medicaid, entitlement programs that are not part of the HHS budget. He said that changes in the standard of care - such as guidelines on when to start therapy and strategic interruptions of therapy - are evolving so rapidly that it is difficult to project exactly what the needs will be one to two years from now when these budget funds are being spent.

The gay factor

Evertz is the first openly gay or lesbian appointee of the Bush administration, though the White House press office declined to discuss his sexual orientation as a factor in the appointment.

While AIDS disproportionally affects gay men, the three previous directors of ONAP were heterosexual women. However, several gay men worked on the small staff of the office.

"I'm a little surprised that they appointed a gay man to the position," said Anderson. Recent comments from administration sources had led him to believe that would not be the case. "It says something about them that they were comfortable enough to do this."

"I believe his selection was based upon his qualifications, not on his sexual orientation, which is exactly how people should be appointed to positions. Sexual orientation should not matter," said Stachelberg. "But it should not be lost on anyone that 46 percent of new HIV infections are in gay men."

She emphasized, "We need to balance a response to this epidemic that not only addresses the unique needs of gay men, but of all of the affected populations."

The Gay and Lesbian Medical Association was taking a "wait and see" approach. While they welcomed the appointment, Executive Director Maureen O'Leary questioned how effective Evertz could be "with no additional funds in the president's budget for HIV."

Elizabeth Toledo, executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, called the appointment "an historic, positive step, but it is only a first step." She went on to chastise the Bush administration for not adequately increasing funding for AIDS programs.

The Family Research Council said Evertz's appointment "sends the wrong message to the American people." FRC's president, Kenneth Connor, linked "homosexual sodomy" to the spread of HIV and the need "to deal honestly and openly about the behaviors which are causing the problem."

Previous White House AIDS 'czars'

Kristine Gebbie was the first AIDS "czar." The former secretary of health for the state of Washington was appointed in June 1993 to mixed reviews. She resigned a year after beginning the job, never having gained the political confidence of the White House.

Patricia S. (Patsy) Fleming became an interim and then permanent successor. She had a background on Capitol Hill and as an assistant to former Secretary of Health and Human Services Donna Shalala.

The most successful was Sandra Thurman, who served from April 1997 to the end of the Clinton administration. She had been executive director of AID Atlanta, the principal AIDS services organization in that city, and had strong political ties to the president.


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