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PRESS RELEASE

Council of the District of Columbia


Office of Chairman Vincent C. Gray
The John A. Wilson Building
1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20004
For Immediate Release: Contact: Doxie A. McCoy
202-724-8032; cell: 202-664-9862
dmccoy@dccouncil.us

Chairman Gray Welcomes Major Home Rule Victories in D.C. Appropriations Headed to Final
Passage In Congress

Washington DC – Council Chairman Vincent C. Gray today said he was gratified to learn about
important, long overdue victories for the District of Columbia and its quest for autonomy and expanded
home rule that are included in the city’s federal appropriations approved by a House and Senate
conference committee last night. Gray said the Committees on Appropriations took bold policy steps in
approving the Financial Services bill, which includes the District’s appropriations, to help the city fight
the spread of HIV and AIDS and homelessness, among other things. Final approval is expected on both
the House and Senate floors in the coming days.

The legislation will now allow federal funding to be used for needle exchange programs and does not
include any new restrictions on using this proven weapon against HIV/AIDS beyond what the District
already prohibits, such as no exchange programs near schools. The appropriators also removed the
longstanding rider that bars the District from using its own taxpayer-raised funds to support abortions for
women needing public assistance; and now even allows federal funding in limited instances, a benefit on
par with other states. Gray also applauded the removal of a ban on the use of federal funds for domestic
partnership registration and benefits, and the roadblock that has stopped the District from implementing
the results of a 1998 referendum that approved the use of marijuana for medical treatment.

“These incremental steps are an encouraging signal to the District of Columbia to keep up the battle for
full voting rights, budget and legislative autonomy, and the right for our citizens to be treated like any
other taxpayers in the United States. We are especially pleased when Congress has the wisdom to remove
harmful riders like the needle exchange ban that threatened to set the District back in addressing our
alarmingly high HIV rate,” Chairman Gray said. “I am grateful for the drive and determination of our
Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton in pressing Members to put District lawmaking in the hands of
District lawmakers. Our friends in Congress, especially those on the Appropriations Committees, also
should be commended for bucking their colleagues who would continue to unfairly treat the District of
Columbia differently from other states.”

Gray also welcomed the $17 million in new federal funds for housing programs for the homeless at a time
when this population, more than others, is feeling the effects of the depressed local and national economy;
and $4 million for youth programs, including job training for drop-outs, and services for youth involved
in the court system.

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