Peace Corps Agrees To Stop Discriminating Against Volunteers With HIV (7/30/2008)
ACLU Will Keep Close Eye On Agency To Make Sure It Complies With Policy
Change
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
NEW YORK – After pressure from the American Civil Liberties Union, the Peace
Corps has agreed that it will no longer terminate volunteers just because they
have HIV. The ACLU demanded the policy change on behalf of a volunteer who
was sent home from his post in the Ukraine and terminated after he tested
positive for the disease.
"We are very pleased that the Peace Corps has acknowledged that it cannot
legally terminate volunteers automatically merely because they test positive for
HIV," said Rebecca Shore, a staff attorney with the ACLU Lesbian Gay Bisexual
Transgender Project. "But actions speak louder than words, so we're going
to be keeping a close eye on the agency to make sure it lives up to its
promises."
The ACLU sent a letter to the Peace Corps today acknowledging the new Peace
Corps policy barring HIV discrimination, but making it clear that simply
adopting a nondiscrimination policy is not enough. The letter notes that
the agency is bound by the Rehabilitation Act, which bars the agency from
discriminating against people with HIV and requires the agency to make
accommodations for the special needs of those with the disease when
necessary.
The ACLU demanded the change on behalf of Jeremiah Johnson, who served as a
Peace Corps volunteer in Rozdilna, Ukraine, where he taught English to middle
and high school students. During a routine mid-service medical
examination, he opted to take an HIV test which came back positive. After
receiving the diagnosis, he was immediately sent back to Washington, D.C., given
just two days to pack his bags and say goodbye to his students and other people
he met while volunteering. Although further medical testing showed that
Johnson had no health problems, he was told he could not finish his service in
the Ukraine or elsewhere.
After Johnson made his story public, the ACLU heard from other volunteers who
suffered similar discrimination. In 2001, Rebecca Coulborn was
volunteering in Burkina Faso in West Africa. Just days after she tested
positive for the disease, she too was shipped back to D.C. and kicked out of the
Peace Corps.
"While I'm still disappointed that I didn't get to finish the projects I
started in the Ukraine, getting the Peace Corps to acknowledge that volunteers
with HIV shouldn't be discriminated against has helped to remind me why I chose
to volunteer in the first place," said Johnson. "Things certainly didn't
turn out the way I thought they would when I signed up, but at least I was able
to do some good for future volunteers with HIV."
The new policy guarantees that the Peace Corps will not automatically
terminate volunteers who test positive for the HIV. Rather, the agency
will conduct an individual assessment of each volunteer who tests positive to
determine what steps to take to protect the health of the volunteer while also
allowing the volunteer to continue his or her service as required by the
Rehabilitation Act when feasible. The Peace Corps has also given the ACLU
assurances that it will communicate its new policy barring HIV discrimination in
a prudent and appropriate manner.
Volunteers who feel they have been discriminated against by the Peace Corps
because of their HIV status, are encouraged to contact the ACLU at: www.aclu.org/hiv.
A copy of the letter from the Peace Corps acknowledging the change in policy
as well as the response by the ACLU is available at: www.aclu.org/hiv/discrim/34948res20080421.html
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