P1 1WHEREAS, One hundred years after the Emancipation
2Proclamation, on August 28, 1963, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
3and others organized hundreds of thousands of blacks and whites,
4Jews and gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, in a march to the
5Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC where Dr. King made his
6famous “I Have a Dream” speech announcing that the days of
7segregation in the United States were numbered; and
8WHEREAS, Monday, January 19, 2015, marks the 29th national
9celebration of the national holiday for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
10and his fight for civil and human rights; and
11WHEREAS, On Thursday, January 15, 2015, Dr. Martin Luther
12King, Jr. would have been 86 years of age; and
13WHEREAS, On April 10, 1970, California became the first
14state to pass legislation making Dr. King’s birthday a school
15holiday and, subsequently, a statewide holiday; and
16WHEREAS, Representative John Conyers (D-Michigan)
17submitted the first legislation for a national Martin Luther King,
18Jr. holiday, which was signed into law by President Ronald Wilson
19Reagan, on November 2, 1983; and
20WHEREAS, January 20, 1986, marked the first observance of
21Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day; and
22WHEREAS, Dr. King and the Civil Rights Movement helped
23change public policy from segregation to integration, resulting in
24the repeal of the post-Reconstruction era state laws mandating
25racial segregation in the South known as the “Jim Crow Laws,”
26thereby leading to the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the
P2 1Voting Rights Act of 1965, and other antidiscrimination laws aimed
2at ending economic, legal, and social segregation in America; and
3WHEREAS, Dr. King and the Civil Rights Movement helped
4change public policy from legal and socially acceptable
5discrimination and segregation to an open and accessible policy
6of racial integration leading to equal participation and access to
7primary and higher education, housing, employment, transportation,
8federal, state, and local governmental elections, and other aspects
9of public policy relating to human rights; and
10WHEREAS, These public policy changes at the national level
11influenced many changes in California that culminated in the
12passage of the Unruh Civil Rights Act and the Rumford Fair
13Housing Act, in open enrollment and access to higher education
14specifically with respect to the California State University and the
15University of California, and in employment and labor laws,
16transportation policy, election laws, and other aspects of public
17policy; and
18WHEREAS, The unfinished business of Dr. King and the Civil
19Rights Movement was and is the plight of the poor, the fight against
20war and for worldwide peace, and the struggle for a fair, equitable,
21and sensible economic system; and
22WHEREAS, Dr. King and the Civil Rights Movement noted
23that a majority of Americans lived below the poverty line, and that
24the huge income gaps between rich and poor called for “changes
25in the structure of our society”; and
26WHEREAS, Dr. King, in the last months of his life, began
27organizing a Poor People’s Campaign to, among other things,
28assemble “a multiracial army of the poor that would descend on
29Washington--engaging in nonviolent civil disobedience at the
30Capitol, if need be--until Congress enacted a poor people’s bill
31of rights”; and
32WHEREAS, All of the aforementioned concerns and more
33continue to be the quest of civil and human rights organizations
34in the great State of California, across America, and throughout
35the world; and
36WHEREAS, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. fought to change public
37policy from the “self-inflicted wound of segregation to the
38pluralistic diverse democracy” we continue to construct today; and
P3 1WHEREAS, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Civil Rights
2Movement serve as a model for principled leadership and
3forward-thinking, bipartisan public policy; now, therefore, be it
4Resolved by the Senate of the State of California, That Monday,
5January 19, 2015, be observed as the official memorial of Dr.
6Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birth and his work in the Civil Rights
7Movement; and be it further
8Resolved, That this day, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the
9Civil Rights Movement be commemorated for their help in
10changing public policy from segregation to integration, for the
11betterment of this, the great State of California and these United
12States of America; and be it further
13Resolved, That the Senate encourages all Americans to pay
14tribute to the life and works of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. through
15participation in community service projects on Martin Luther King,
16Jr. Day; and be it further
17Resolved, That the Senate recognizes the inherent value of
18community service and volunteerism in the creation of a civil
19society and as a means of nonviolent community progress
20consistent with the works of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.; and be
21it further
22Resolved, That the Senate recognizes the benefits of the
23collaborative work by many organizations that promote, facilitate,
24and carry out needed service projects nationwide; and be it further
25Resolved, That the Senate encourages its members and
26colleagues to urge their constituents to participate in community
27service projects; and be it further
28Resolved, That the Senate acknowledges that, by serving one’s
29country, one’s community, and one’s neighbor, our nation makes
30progress in civility, equality, and unity consistent with the values
31and life’s work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.; and be it further
32Resolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of
33this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.
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