Pritzker signs law repealing criminal penalties for HIV transmission
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[July 28, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker signed a
bill into law Tuesday that repeals criminal penalties for people who
transmit HIV to others.
House Bill 1063, by Rep. Carol Ammons, D-Urbana, and Sen. Robert Peters,
D-Chicago, deletes language adopted in Illinois and many other states
during the early days of the HIV epidemic that made it a felony for an
individual to engage in certain activities such as unprotected sex,
donating blood or tissue or sharing nonsterile intravenous needles
knowing that he or she was infected with HIV.
“Research has shown these laws … don't decrease infection rates, but
they do increase stigma,” Pritzker said. “It's high time that we treat
HIV as we do other treatable transmissible diseases, thereby treating
our residents with dignity and furthering our mission to end this
epidemic in Illinois.”
At a bill signing ceremony in Chicago, Pritzker said the legislation is
one more step his administration is taking to ensure equal rights for
members of the LGBTQ community.
Other steps have included providing financial aid to transgender
students who otherwise would not qualify for federal aid, requiring
curriculum in public schools that includes contributions of the LGBTQ
community, and expanding Medicaid to cover gender-affirming surgery.
Pritzker was joined at the ceremony by Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton,
Democratic leaders in the General Assembly who helped pass the bill, the
AIDS Foundation of Chicago and other LGBTQ rights activists.
Peters noted that the law in Illinois did not require that a person
actually transmit HIV to be convicted of the crime, only that they
engaged in activity that could have exposed another person to the virus.
“Too often, when faced with a challenge in society, we seek the hammer
of criminalization,” Peters said. “When we faced the challenge of HIV,
our country reacted out of fear, prejudice and hate, and with that
brought down a violent and horrendous hammer. In turn, this caused more
fear, pain and trauma for people living with HIV. It did nothing to
bring safety or treatment or public health to our world.”
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Gov. JB Pritzker signs a package of bills Tuesday
repealing criminal penalties for HIV transmission and expanding
other LGBTQ rights. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
The bill decriminalizing HIV was one of four bills
Pritzker signed Tuesday that were supported by advocates for LGBTQ
rights.
Pritzker also signed two bills making it easier for transgender
individuals to change their names and gender identity on marriage
certificates.
Senate Bill 139 establishes a process for individuals to change the
gender language on their marriage certificates while House Bill 2590
establishes a uniform standard that county clerks must adhere to for
name changes on marriage certificates. Those bills were sponsored by
Sen. Sara Feigenholtz and Rep. Ann Williams, both Chicago Democrats.
In addition, Pritzker signed a House Bill 3709, which prohibits
insurance companies from imposing restrictions on coverage of
fertility medications and treatments, enabling LGBTQ individuals and
single parents to receive those treatments under the same conditions
as heterosexual individuals. It also reduces the waiting time to
receive those treatments for women over age 35.
That bill was sponsored by Rep. Margaret Croke, D-Chicago, and Sen.
Laura Fine, D-Glenview.
“For decades, our state insurance law discriminated against
countless Illinoisans looking to welcome a child into their family,
putting parenthood financially out of reach for same-sex couples,
single women and others,” Croke said in a statement. “Setting things
right and creating a more inclusive insurance law was long overdue.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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