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Lawsuit says Georgia Medicaid should cover gender-affirming surgeries triblive.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from triblive.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
LGBTQ activist jumps into Atlanta City Council race projectq.us - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from projectq.us Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
WPC Blends with MLA Compact at HPUMC Easter Service USA – When Highland Park United Methodist Church (HPUMC), based in Dallas, TX, wanted to stage a large-scale Easter Sunday service at a 32,000-capacity stadium, it presented Martin Audio partner Alford Media with some unique challenges. The stadium sits on a university’s campus and while Alford Media has provided audio reinforcement for a number of routine graduation ceremonies at the stadium, the emphasis this time was on providing premium audio, particularly with 600 socially distanced chairs set out for family groups on the field itself, according to Alford’s Audio services manager, Ben MacKinney. ....
Eric Paulk, deputy director of Georgia Equality A bill reforming Georgia’s outdated HIV laws gained bipartisan support in a hyper-partisan atmosphere and came close to final passage during the legislative session this year. But the legislation – Senate Bill 164 – stalled when an unrelated amendment was tacked on during the final day of the legislative session last month. Even though the bill didn’t pass, it moved further along the process than any other HIV reform effort in recent years. That leaves reform advocates encouraged that the bill will pass in 2022. “Sometimes in the work, we forget to celebrate. This was actually something to celebrate,” said Eric Paulk, deputy director of Georgia Equality. ....
State Sen. Chuck Hufstetler, a Republican from Rome. (Photo courtesy Georgia Senate) A Republican state lawmaker leads a bipartisan effort to modernize the stateâs HIV laws, which critics say arenât rooted in science and stigmatize people living with HIV. Sen. Chuck Hufstetler, a Republican from Rome, introduced Senate Bill 164 on Feb. 11. The measure would require prosecutors to show a person charged with exposing someone to HIV through sex had an âintent to transmit HIVâ and posed a âsignificant risk of transmissionâ based on current science. Current Georgia law makes it a crime for people living with HIV to have sex or donate blood without disclosing their status, regardless of whether they intend to transmit HIV or pose any risk. It’s a felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison. State law also criminalizes spitting at or using bodily fluids on law enforcement or corrections officers by a person living with HIV, an offense tha ....