Canadian AIDS Society

The Canadian AIDS Society (CAS) is a national coalition of community-based AIDS service organizations across Canada. Registered as a charity since 1988, CAS has a mandate to improve the response to HIV/AIDS in Canada across all sectors of society, and to support people and communities living with HIV/AIDS.[1]

Canadian AIDS Society
AbbreviationCAS
Formation1988
TypeRegistered Charity
HeadquartersOttawa, ON
Location
  • 170 Laurier West #602, Ottawa, ON
Official language
English, French
Key people
Gary Lacasse (Executive Director) Greg Riehl (President)
Websitecdnaids.ca

History

Establishment

CAS was established after the first two national conferences on HIV/AIDS in Montreal (1985) and Toronto (1986) to act as a national umbrella organization for AIDS service organizations in Canada.[2] The original founding member organizations were:

  • AIDS Calgary Awareness Association
  • AIDS Committee of London
  • AIDS Committee of Ottawa
  • AIDS Committee of Thunder Bay
  • AIDS Committee of Toronto
  • AIDS Committee of Windsor
  • AIDS Network of Edmonton
  • AIDS Regina
  • AIDS Saskatoon
  • AIDS Vancouver
  • AIDS Vancouver Island
  • Comité sida aide Montréal (C-SAM)
  • Metro Area Committee on AIDS (Halifax)
  • Newfoundland and Labrador AIDS Association
  • Winnipeg Gay Community Health Centre

Before CAS became a registered charitable organization with paid staff in Ottawa in 1988, a voluntary secretariat steered the organization operating out of the AIDS Network of Edmonton office.

Objective

CAS's objective is to strengthen the response to HIV/AIDS in Canada and enrich the lives of people and communities living with, and affected by, HIV/AIDS.[3]

Structure

Member Organizations

CAS represents AIDS service organizations across Canada in almost every Province. A full list of member organizations is available on CAS's website.

National Partners

CAS collaborates with other nationally-focused organizations the address HIV/AIDS in Canada. These partners include:

  • Canadian Association for HIV Research (CAHR)
  • Canadian Public Health Association (CPHA)
  • Interagency Coalition on AIDS and Development (ICAD)
  • Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network
  • realize (formerly CWGHR)
  • CATIE
  • CTAC
  • Canadian Aboriginal AIDS Network
  • CIHR Canadian HIV Trials Network

Governance

CAS is governed by a board of directors that includes two representatives from each region of Canada, one of whom must by HIV-positive. Additionally, CAS has two at-large board of director seats for one man and one woman to ensure gender diverse representation at the board level. There is also one board of director seat reserved for an HIV-positive young person.[4]

Funding

CAS has historically been funded by the Federal government through Health Canada and/or the Public Health Agency of Canada, however since the Liberals reorganized funding priorities for HIV and Hepatitis-C in 2016 CAS has received no federal funding.[5] This change in funding, and the general under-funding of HIV/AIDS service organizations in Canada more broadly, resulted in sharp criticism of the Liberal government, particularly by CAS's national partner, the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network.[6]

Notable Programs and Campaigns

AIDS Awareness Week & World AIDS Day

From 1991-2001 CAS ran an annual AIDS Awareness Week campaign with support from various governmental, corporate, and charitable organizations including Health and Welfare Canada, the Public Health Agency of Canada, the Canadian Hemophilia Society, Levi Strauss & Co., and others. AIDS Awareness Week took place in October, but after this project came to an end when the Public Health Agency of Canada stopped funding for it, CAS's awareness campaigns largely revolved around World AIDS Day of each year. Each year's AIDS Awareness Week campaign, was organized around a theme. Ads were often developed by Ottawa creative agency McMillan and appeared in wide-circulation magazines and periodicals including MacLean's, L'actualité, and The Globe and Mail.[7]

AIDS Memorial Quilt

The Canadian AIDS Memorial Quilt was a project initiated by AIDS activists in Halifax, NS who organized a tour of the American AIDS Memorial Quilt throughout Canada in 1989 which resulted in the creation of hundreds of Canadian quilt panels.[8] In 1992, the activists that began the project passed stewardship of the quilt onto CAS, but in 1994 The NAMES project | le projet des NOMS - Canada was established with Lawrence Eisener as the founding Executive Director.[9] John Mactavish and John Stinson were also involved in the establishing of the organization which took over stewardship of the quilt.[10] The NAMES project - Canada maintained and grew the quilt from 400 panels in 1993 to over 600 panels today.[11] The quilt was response to the AIDS epidemic affecting the country at the time. Central goals of the quilt were: 1) To commemorate the lives of Canadians who had died of AIDS-related illnesses; 2) to raise funds for community-based AIDS service organization. In 2013 The NAMES project - Canada dissolved and once again CAS became the steward of the quilt.[12] A new digital version of the quilt was launched by CAS in 2018 and is available online at quilt.ca.[13]

AIDS walk

Since 1988, Canadian AIDS Society participate in numerous walks to raise money for the organization and to raise awareness on HIV/AIDS.

National HIV Testing Day

On June 27, 2017 CAS launched a national initiative to encourage people to be tested for HIV. Over forty community organizations participated across all regions of Canada by offering free HIV tests to anyone who wanted one.[14] National Testing Day in Canada, much like its American counterpart that was established in 1995, encourages the use of Point-of-Care Testing (POCT) where participants can get their results in a few minutes as opposed two-weeks later.[15] A 2016 study on the efficacy of National Testing Day in the United States indicates that the program successfully tested more people from priority populations and identified more previously undiagnosed HIV-positive people than during control weeks.[16]

References

  1. "Canadian Revenue Agency's Charity Listing". Retrieved 2018-09-20.
  2. "History of Canadian AIDS Society". Canadian AIDS Society. Retrieved 2018-10-12.
  3. "About us - Canadian AIDS Society". www.cdnaids.ca. Retrieved 2018-10-24.
  4. "Board of Directors - Canadian AIDS Society". Canadian AIDS Society. Retrieved 2018-10-12.
  5. "Dozens of HIV/AIDS organizations struggling from lost funding - iPolitics". iPolitics. 2018-04-24. Retrieved 2018-10-24.
  6. Elliot, Richard. "The Missing Millions: Stopping and Reversing the Steady Erosion of Federal HIV Funding". Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network. Retrieved 2018-10-24.
  7. "Reuters". 2008-12-01. Retrieved 2009-02-13.
  8. The NAMES project - Canada (2003-06-12). "The Canadian AIDS Memorial Quilt Event Brochure" (PDF). Grand River Rainbow Historical Project.
  9. "Federal Corporation Information - 304037-2 - Online Filing Centre - Corporations Canada - Corporations - Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada". www.ic.gc.ca. Retrieved 2018-10-22.
  10. "20 Questions with John Stinson". Winnipeg Sun. 2015-10-17. Retrieved 2018-10-22.
  11. "AIDS group mulls how to preserve a Canadian quilt | CBC News". CBC. Retrieved 2018-10-22.
  12. "AIDSmemorial.info - Canadian AIDS Memorial Quilt". www.aidsmemorial.info. Retrieved 2018-10-22.
  13. "The Canadian AIDS Memorial Quilt: Website Launch!". AIDS Activist History Project. 2018-02-13. Retrieved 2018-10-22.
  14. Britneff, Beatrice. "Canadian AIDS Society lives to see another year, launching national 'HIV testing day'". Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2018-10-12.
  15. "HIV Testing Day - Canadian AIDS Society". www.cdnaids.ca. Archived from the original on 2018-10-22. Retrieved 2018-10-22.
  16. "National HIV Testing Day". CAITE. Retrieved 2018-10-22.
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