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J00489 Summary:

BILL NOJ00489
 
SAME ASNo Same As
 
SPONSORSTEWART-COUSINS
 
COSPNSRADDABBO, ASHBY, BAILEY, BASKIN, BORRELLO, BRISPORT, BROUK, BYNOE, CANZONERI-FITZPATRICK, CHAN, CLEARE, COMRIE, COONEY, FAHY, FELDER, FERNANDEZ, GALLIVAN, GIANARIS, GONZALEZ, GOUNARDES, GRIFFO, HARCKHAM, HELMING, HINCHEY, HOYLMAN-SIGAL, JACKSON, KAVANAGH, KRUEGER, LANZA, LIU, MARTINEZ, MARTINS, MATTERA, MAY, MAYER, MURRAY, MYRIE, OBERACKER, O'MARA, ORTT, PALUMBO, PARKER, PERSAUD, RAMOS, RHOADS, RIVERA, ROLISON, RYAN C, RYAN S, SALAZAR, SANDERS, SCARCELLA-SPANTON, SEPULVEDA, SERRANO, SKOUFIS, STAVISKY, STEC, TEDISCO, WALCZYK, WEBB, WEBER, WEIK
 
MLTSPNSR
 
 
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J00489 Text:

 
Senate Resolution No. 489
 
BY: Senator STEWART-COUSINS
 
        COMMEMORATING   the  60th  Anniversary  of  Bloody
        Sunday and the Selma-to-Montgomery march across  the
        Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, which served
        as  a catalyst for passage of the 1965 Voting Rights
        Act
 
  WHEREAS, The Selma to Montgomery march was part of a series of civil
rights protests that occurred in 1965 in  Alabama,  a  state  which  was
deeply  entrenched  in  racist  policies, in an effort to register black
voters in the South; and
 
  WHEREAS, On March 7, 1965, some 600 people assembled at  a  downtown
church,  knelt briefly in prayer, and began walking silently, two-by-two
through the city streets; protestors marching  the  54-mile  route  from
Selma  to  the  state  capital of Montgomery were confronted with deadly
violence; and
 
  WHEREAS, With Hosea Williams of the  Southern  Christian  Leadership
Conference (SCLC) leading the demonstration, and John Lewis, Chairman of
the  Student  Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), at his side, the
marchers were stopped as they were leaving Selma,  at  the  end  of  the
Edmund  Pettus  Bridge,  by  some 150 Alabama state troopers, sheriff 's
deputies, and white vigilante groups, who ordered the  demonstrators  to
disperse; and
 
  WHEREAS,  One minute and five seconds after a two-minute warning was
announced, the troops advanced, wielding clubs, bullwhips, and tear gas;
John Lewis was one of 58  people  treated  for  injuries  at  the  local
hospital;  less  than one week later, John Lewis recounted the attack on
the marchers during a Federal hearing at which the demonstrators  sought
protection for a full-scale march to Montgomery; and
 
  WHEREAS,  The  day is remembered in history as "Bloody Sunday," when
footage of the violence collectively shocked the nation  and  galvanized
the fight against racial injustice; and
 
  WHEREAS,  As  the world watched, the protesters under the protection
of federalized  National  Guard  troops  finally  achieved  their  goal,
walking  around  the  clock for three days to reach Montgomery, Alabama;
the historic march, and Martin Luther King, Jr.'s participation  in  it,
raised awareness of the difficulties faced by black voters, and the need
for a national Voting Rights Act; and
 
  WHEREAS,   Even   after   the  Civil  Rights  Act  of  1964  forbade
discrimination in voting on the basis of race, efforts by  civil  rights
organizations  such  as the Southern Christian Leadership Council (SCLC)
and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating  Committee  (SNCC)  to  register
black  voters were met with fierce resistance in southern states such as
Alabama; and
 
  WHEREAS, On March 17,  1965,  as  the  Selma-to-Montgomery  marchers
fought  for  the  right  to  carry  out  their protest, President Lyndon
Johnson addressed a joint  session  of  Congress,  calling  for  federal
 
voting  rights  legislation  to  protect African Americans from barriers
that prevented them from voting; and
 
  WHEREAS, That August, Congress passed the Voting Rights Act of 1965,
which guaranteed the right to vote, first awarded by the 15th Amendment,
to all African Americans; and
 
  WHEREAS, Specifically, the Voting Rights Act of 1965 banned literacy
tests  as  a requirement for voting, mandated federal oversight of voter
registration in areas where tests had previously been used and gave  the
U.S.  attorney general the duty of challenging the use of poll taxes for
state and local elections; and
 
  WHEREAS, Along with the Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act  was
one of the most expansive pieces of civil rights legislation in American
history; it greatly reduced the disparity between black and white voters
in the United States and allowed greater numbers of African Americans to
participate  in politics and government at the local, state and national
level; and
 
  WHEREAS, Recent actions by the  federal  government  to  weaken  the
protections  outlined  in  the  Voting Rights Act of 1965, including the
immobilization of the Act's preclearance requirement through the Supreme
Court's decision in Shelby County v. Holder,  remind  us  that  we  must
continue  to  commemorate  the  bravery of those who marched in Selma on
that day, or we risk forgetting that their fight is  not  yet  finished;
and
 
  WHEREAS,  To  commemorate  the 60th Anniversary of Bloody Sunday and
the historic march, a myriad of events were held  in  Selma  and  across
this  great Nation to remember and recall that pivotal day which forever
changed the lives of each and  every  American  citizen;  in  New  York,
marchers  walked  over the Brooklyn Bridge and the Mario Cuomo Bridge on
March 9 to honor those who fought  and  continue  to  fight  for  social
justice; now, therefore, be it
 
  RESOLVED,  That  this Legislative Body pause in its deliberations to
commemorate  the   60th   Anniversary   of   Bloody   Sunday   and   the
Selma-to-Montgomery  march  across  the  Edmund  Pettus Bridge in Selma,
Alabama, which served as a catalyst  for  passage  of  the  1965  Voting
Rights Act; and be it further
 
  RESOLVED,  That  a  copy  of this Resolution, suitably engrossed, be
transmitted to L. Joy Williams, President, National Association for  the
Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), New York State Conference.
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