Guest guest Posted November 1, 2003 Report Share Posted November 1, 2003 The Washington Post November 01, 2003, Saturday, Final Edition SECTION: A SECTION; Pg. A05 More Funds for Fighting AIDS; Vote Brings 2004 Total to $2.4 Billion Helen Dewar, Washington Post Staff Writer In a bipartisan push for more money to combat the global spread of AIDS, the Senate has approved a substantial increase in President Bush's funding request for this year, although the final number could be reduced in negotiations with the House. Voting 89 to 1 late Thursday, the Senate agreed to add $ 289 million to foreign aid spending for fiscal 2004 to fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria in sub-Saharan Africa and Caribbean countries -- most of it targeted for prevention and treatment of AIDS. Together with funds in other spending bills, the increase would provide a total of $ 2.4 billion for AIDS-fighting efforts during the year. Bush asked for $ 2 billion, contending this was all that could be usefully spent in the first year; the House approved $ 2.1 billion. But even the Senate increase falls short of the $ 15 billion, five-year investment -- averaging $ 3 billion a year -- that Congress authorized after Bush proposed it in his State of the Union message in January. The Senate later went on record as favoring $ 3 billion for 2004. Even though the Senate bill failed to meet the $ 3 billion target, it was hailed by AIDS advocacy groups and their Senate allies as a step in the right direction. The Senate-approved increase means the United States can " meet our obligation in providing at least $ 2 billion in bilateral aid and meet our current matching requirement to the global fund " that has been set up to fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, said Sen. Mike DeWine (R-Ohio), chief sponsor of the proposal. It will save " thousands and thousands of lives, " he added. " We're still not where we promised we would be, but we must take this important step forward, " said Sen. J. Durbin (D-Ill.), who pushed unsuccessfully to appropriate the full $ 3 billion. His proposal was rejected, 50 to 42. Zeitz, executive director of the Global AIDS Alliance, said the vote is " welcome news for millions of people living in devastated countries, " and it signals that Congress " is rejecting the president's claim that we cannot spend more to fight global AIDS. " Approval followed a brief dispute over the fact that the additional AIDS money breached congressional budget limits. Budget Committee Chairman Don Nickles (R-Okla.) demanded that cuts be made in other spending to cover the cost of the additional AIDS funding. But DeWine appeared to have enough votes to override the budget objections, and Republican leaders resolved the dispute by agreeing to take the money from unspent defense funds. Sen. Kay Hutchison (R-Tex.) was the lone dissenter in the AIDS vote. An aide said Hutchison thought Bush's proposal was adequate in light of defense and other needs in a tight budget year. In other action on the AIDS proposal, the Senate earlier this week approved an amendment by Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) directing the administration to spend at least $ 75 million to provide greater safety in medical injections and blood transfusions in countries covered by the legislation. " Conservative estimates, based on World Health Organization data, tell us that 1,000 people a day are going to their local health providers and are receiving, in effect, a death sentence in the form of dirty, re-used needles or a tainted blood transfusion that carries the HIV virus, " he said in a statement. The Senate rejected a proposal by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) to provide more flexibility in funding abstinence programs, which critics said could lead to less spending on abstinence efforts. The $ 18.4 billion foreign aid bill was subsequently approved by a voice vote and now goes to a House-Senate conference to work out the differences. In addition to deciding how much to spend on anti-AIDS efforts, negotiators must decide whether to approve or reject a Senate proposal to overturn the administration's ban on financial support for international organizations that perform or promote abortions. The White House has threatened a veto if the Senate provision is included in the final version of the bill. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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