The city council finds and declares that:
A.
The medical condition known as Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, (commonly known as AIDS/HIV infection), is a deadly communicable disease and has the potential to affect every segment of our city's population.
B.
AIDS/HIV infection was first recognized in 1981 by the United States Public Health Services Center for Disease Control.
C.
AIDS, in the opinion of the scientific and medical community, is caused by a virus, known as HIV infection (human immunodeficiency virus) (or in the past, HTLV-III or LAV), which attacks and cripples the body's immune system and neurological system, thereby leaving the body vulnerable to opportunistic infections, certain cancers and neurological diseases.
D.
A person afflicted with AIDS/HIV infection can suffer a variety of bacterial, viral and/or fungal caused illnesses, cancers, protozoan and neurological conditions which debilitate the body resulting in a high mortality rate within several years after diagnosis.
E.
The transmission of the virus has occurred through transfer of body fluids, for example, blood, blood by-products, body organs and semen. Body fluids can be transferred through intimate sexual contact, through the sharing of hypodermic needles used in drug injections and to a fetus and/or newborn infant from the mother.
F.
No evidence exists to indicate the spread of the virus through casual contact, such as contact at work or at school, through the air or water or through the handling of food by persons having the AIDS virus.
G.
Medical studies of family groups in which one or more persons having been diagnosed with AIDS/HIV infection show no spread of the virus except through the exchange of body fluid such as through sexual intimacy, through mother's milk, or through the exchange of blood, such as mother to fetus.
H.
A public health danger represented by the HIV virus and its subsequent manifestation as AIDS is caused by the lengthy incubation period during which period an apparently healthy but infected individual may spread the disease to other persons through the transfer of body fluids such as blood, blood by-products, body organs, semen, or vaginal/cervical secretions, perinatally or through the sharing of hypodermic needles used in drug injections.
I.
AIDS/HIV testing, in the opinion of the scientific and medical community, is a vital factor in protecting public health because individuals who test positive benefit from early diagnosis and treatment, and other members of the public benefit when persons who have tested positive for AIDS/HIV take affirmative measures to prevent the inadvertent spread of the disease to others.
J.
AIDS has been recognized as a national public health emergency with a large proportion of the cases diagnosed in California.
K.
AIDS, in the opinion of the scientific and medical community, will continue to be a problem within our city for the foreseeable future.
L.
Persons with AIDS, including persons infected with the HIV virus who may not show AIDS symptoms, or those perceived to fall into one of the above-stated categories, are faced with potential discrimination, and such potential for discrimination is sufficient to justify a city ordinance to prohibit those discriminatory practices which are not currently adequately addressed by federal and state law.
(Ord. 11-01 § 4, 2011)