About

Mission

The mission of Southern AIDS Coalition (SAC) is to end the HIV and STI epidemics in the South by promoting accessible and high-quality systems of [HIV and STI] prevention, treatment, care, housing, and essential support services.

History

We can change the course of HIV in the South.

We’ve done it before. When we started in 2001, the HIV epidemic in the South was largely ignored. In those early years, we were just a handful of extraordinary advocates working together to demand more resources to address the HIV and AIDS state of emergency in our states. We assembled a number of case studies and released the first-ever Southern States Manifesto in 2002. These case studies were presented nationwide, garnering national attention from the media, funders, and policymakers.

We then turned our attention to the Ryan White Program, determined to change the legislation to create more equitable funding for southern states. After three years of meetings, press conferences, and congressional hearings, H.R. 6143 was passed in 2006. The reauthorization included many significant changes including modifying the distribution formula from cumulative AIDS data to actual living HIV and AIDS cases, redirecting an approximate $30 million to the South.

Since this victory, SAC’s advocacy efforts around equitable and increased funding have continued laying the groundwork for the more recent announcement of the Care and Prevention in the United States (CAPUS) funding in 2012. This new funding initiative, dedicated to reducing HIV and AIDS related morbidity and mortality among racial and ethnic minorities living in the United States, was a result of the powerful, well-organized advocacy of SAC and our vital partners in the HIV-community, including the Southern HIV/AIDS Strategy Initiative (SASI), the 30 for 30 Campaign, the President’s Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS (PACHA), and many others.

Our Team

Headshot of Nayasia Coleman

Nayasia Coleman (They/She)

Executive Affairs & Partnerships Manager
Headshot of Nichole Davis

Nichole Davis (She/Her)

Director, Finance

Miguel Garcia (He/They)

Community Organizer and Advocacy Manager
Headshot of Mardrequs Harris

Mardrequs Harris, MAEd (He/Him)

Deputy Director
Headshot of David Wyley Long

David Wyley Long (He/Him)

Special Initiatives Manager
Headshot of Brady Maiden

Brady Maiden (She/Her)

Community Science Programs Manager
Headshot of Tiffany Patterson

Tiffany Patterson (She/Her)

Administration & Operations Manager
Headshot of Will Ramirez

Will Ramirez, MPA (He/Him)

Public Policy & Advocacy, Director
Headshot of Justin Searcy

Justin Searcy (He/Him)

Grants Manager
Headshot of Torrie Shepard

Torrie Shepard (She/Her)

Communications Manager
Headshot of Dafina Ward

Dafina Ward, JD
(She/Her)

Executive Director

Board

Angela Johnson – Chair

NASTAD

Washington, DC

Randevyn Piérre – Vice Chair

ViiV Healthcare

Atlanta, GA

Lee Storrow – Secretary

Community Education Group

Chapel Hill, NC

Cathalene Teahan – Treasurer

Georgia AIDS Coalition

Snellville, GA

P.J. Moton-Poole – Development

ViiV Healthcare

Dallas, Texas

Reginald Vicks – Governance

CrescentCare

New Orleans, LA

Carolyn McAllaster – Strategic Visioning

Duke University School of Law (Retired)

Durham, NC

Jay Adams

West Virginia Ryan White Part B

Wheeler, WV

Samuel Burgess

Louisiana Department of Health

New Orleans, LA

Bambi Gaddist

Joseph H. Neal Wellness Center

Columbia, SC

Kathie Hiers

AIDS Alabama

Birmingham, AL

Aryah Lester

Transgender Strategy Center

Hampton, VA

Butch McKay

OASIS

Fort Walton Beach, FL

Donna Sabatino

The AIDS Institute

Flagler Beach, FL

Darwin Thompson

Gilead Sciences

Washington, DC

Robin Webb

Mississippi Positive Network

Cleveland, MS

Members

Our coalition includes individual and organizational members committed to ending the epidemic. Our 2021 organizational members are:

Funders

Southern Vision

Southern Vision: We envision a South where every person has access to high-quality health care and essential support services (including safe, decent, affordable housing), free from stigma and discrimination. We also envision a South where every person understands HIV transmission, receives routine screening, and has access to a full range of prevention interventions and harm reduction services.