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JUNE 5 - JUNE 11, 2022
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Please support my (actual) 3rd ALC Ride from San Francisco to Los Angeles

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ALC 2019
ALC 2019
After a cancelled ride in 2020, which I did solo in and around Palm Springs.  Then no ride in 2021, it is time to start training and fundraising again.  This will hopefully turn out to be the third time I ride down the coast of California raising money for a cause that is important to me. 


Cycling has always been a part of my life since my teenage years. This activity has been a source of physical and mental health, catharsis, adventure, as well as transportation. When I moved to Calgary for University, cycling was my primary transportation. In summer or winter, it was how I got from point A to point B. Cycling has also been a time when I get to be alone, relieve stress, and purge all thought. Sometimes it’s just meditative, other times I have a chance to work out problems.

Cycling has also been a great way to see the world. I spent a year biking and camping through Central America, took my bike along on trips, and utilized bike-share programs in countries worldwide. I currently take a bike with me where ever I travel.  I can think of no better way to explore a new area. I just enjoy being outside and being active. I truly am happiest when I am on two wheels and pedaling, any type of bike and any speed, it just makes me happy!

AIDS has also been a part of my life since my teenage years, and has also shaped who I am as a person. Knowing I was gay as a teenager, and reading how gay men were dying from this disease in the early 80's had an impact on how I lived my life. I committed to a relationship at an early age, and stayed in it longer than I should have because I felt it was safe. During my late teens and early 20's, it was heartbreaking to see my closest friend at that time, multiple other friends, teammates from sports, and acquaintances die. It was such a different experience from my straight friends of the same age at that time. I remember worrying that a sore throat or the slightest cold might mean I was infected and would die.

AIDS has impacted me and shaped me, influenced my decisions, and dictated how I lived my life. Though tragic, it also brought me closer to people. It brought me closer to my gay community of Calgary, and now my new home in Palm Springs. I’d like to contribute with an act of hope.

Below is information on how your donation helps both on a national and world basis.

In the United States

Almost 1 in 8 of those infected with HIV doesn’t know it.  Gay and bisexual men overall account for the majority of all new HIV infections.  The Centers for Disease Control recently released a projection that if current trends continue, half of black gay men will be diagnosed with HIV in their lifetime.  By race, African Americans face the most severe burden of HIV, and represent the majority of new AIDS diagnoses, new HIV infections, people living with HIV/AIDS, and AIDS deaths.

In the World

Since the beginning of the epidemic, almost 78 million people have been infected with HIV and about 39 million people have died of AIDS-related causes.  2.6 million of those people living with HIV are under age 15.  Africa accounted for 66 per cent of the world’s AIDS deaths in 2014. Around 41 per cent of people living with HIV had access to antiretroviral therapy in March 2015 – some 15 million people.

How does your participation help people living outside of California?
The programs and services offered through the Los Angeles LGBT Center and San Francisco AIDS Foundation serve as models of care and prevention around the world. Members of both agencies work with organizations in several countries to share best practices to end the global AIDS epidemic.

The Center’s renowned Clinical Research Program conducts research studies and clinical trials that contribute to scientific knowledge regarding the prevention, intervention, and treatment of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections. The research staff are vital community partners with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, National Institutes of Health, UCLA, USC, UCSF and other institutions. Aligned with the National HIV/AIDS Strategy, the Center’s research focuses on intervening at every stage of HIV infection.

The services provided as a result of this event mean the world to those who receive them, and your support means the world to me.

We’re working together to make HIV/AIDS a thing of the past. Will you support me by making a donation today?

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Desert Roadrunners
Personal Progress:
of Goal
$7,518 Raised
$7,500.00
Fundraising Honor Roll
Alastair Watson
$103
Allan Greaves
$257
Anonymous
$515
Anthony R Felice
$103
Bill Bean + Greg Wagoner
Casey Sprock & Don Kuharevicz
$103
Curt Ryan and Mark Quintana
$257
Dean Day and Bill Vitale
$257
Dennis Olson
$154
Dick Gaunt
$500
Don Callahan
$154
Gary Sandquist
$103
Henry + Bob Wong
$128
Ian MacLeod
$515
John Shields
$628
John Wilhelmi
Kathy Shields
$154
Lenovo
$141
Leslie Mason
$154
Mark Van Laanen
$515
Michael Grogan
$155
Portlinn Pangburn
$515
Rebecca Pelkey
$103
Terese and Dan Heintzelman
$150
Todd Frisch
$51
Tom Fitzgerald
$515
Walt Disney Company Foundation
$515
Walter Crowley
$103

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AIDS/LifeCycle benefits, and is jointly produced by, San Francisco AIDS Foundation (Tax ID # 94-2927405) and Los Angeles LGBT Center (Tax ID # 95-3567895), each of which is a nonprofit, public benefit corporation recognized as tax exempt under IRS Code Section 501(c)(3). Donations to AIDS/LifeCycle are deductible for income tax purposes, to the extent permitted by law.