Showing posts with label HIV travel ban. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HIV travel ban. Show all posts

Friday, May 14, 2010

Geert & Mel's Story: A Green Card Victory

Congratulations to two of Out4Immigration’s long-time supporters, Mel & Geert! After many years, Geert received his green card last month. This same-sex binational couple (Geert, at the right is from The Netherlands, and Mel, at left, is an American citizen) have been together for more than 30 years. Together they have navigated the US immigration system through many twists and turns, including the HIV travel ban.
The lifting of the ban earlier this year, made Geert’s green card application possible.

Geert & Mel specifically thank all those who write letters and call Congress every week for all you do to keep equal immigration rights and the need for the Uniting American Families Act (UAFA) in front of those who can make a difference. The couple also are greatly indebted to their Congresswoman, Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA-9) for her ceaseless support of UAFA and LGBT immigration rights.

Out4Immigration thanks Geert and Mel for all they do on our behalf – we don’t think they have ever missed a chance to march with O4I here in San Francisco. We also share this story with all of you to let you know that there is always hope. Do not give up on your own personal quests for the pursuit of happiness in America. And, do not give up on grassroots activism. It really does make a difference. If you are in a same-sex binational relationship, call your representatives in Congress today and tell them that you need their help. Even if they have already signed onto UAFA, they can urge their colleagues to do the same – and possibly more.

Monday, January 04, 2010

US HIV Travel Ban Officially Lifted

by Kathy Drasky

Over two years ago, the Bush Administration issued a directive to lift the oppressive HIV travel ban in the United States. Today, January 4, 2010, that ban is officially history.

For 22 years, the US banned people with HIV/AIDS from entering the country unless they had a US family member who could sign a waiver on their behalf. The waiver was to guarantee that the person with HIV would not place any Americans at risk for contracting the disease.

Put into place during the Reagan years, the HIV travel ban was at first an ignorant response to a serious health issue. As time went on, however, the ban became a cruel roadblock aimed particularly against gay men in same-sex binational relationships. US immigration law continues to leave LGBT people out of what constitutes a "family". As a result, a gay American with a foreign partner with HIV/AIDS did not qualify as the "family member" needed to sign the waiver. Only a parent or spouse could do that. And -- at the federal level, the US still only defines "spouse" as one's "opposite-sex partner".

So, good riddance to the discriminatory HIV travel ban, which President Obama says is "a step that will keep families together." It's a start. An LGBT American with a foreign partner with HIV/AIDS most likely is living in exile with that partner, in a country that does not discriminate against gays and lesbians when it comes to immigration rights or health concerns. Circumventing signing a waiver, the LGBT American and his foreign partner who is HIV-positive can now travel to the US for a visit. But they can't stay together here permanently.

For that to happen, the US needs to change its immigration policy to recognize same-sex binational relationships. It needs to add the words "or permanent partner" to existing law wherever the word "spouse" appears. This can happen by Congress passing the Uniting American Families Act (UAFA). It could also happen by UAFA-like language being added to current Comprehensive Immigration Reform bills now in the House like CIR ASAP or inclusion of Rep. Mike Honda's Reuniting Families Act into a Senate version of the RFA. Additional immigration rights bills soon to come from Sen. Chuck Schumer and Rep. Zoe Lofgren will also need to make provisions for gay and lesbian Americans with foreign partners if immigration reform is going to really be "comprehensive."

There are many ways for the US to take another step in the right direction toward fixing its broken immigration system. Lifting the HIV travel ban is long overdue start.

To read more about the lifting of the HIV travel ban, click here.