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HR1661 |
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| HOUSE RESOLUTION
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| WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of |
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| Representatives are deeply saddened to learn of the death of
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| our friend and colleague, State Representative Wyvetter H. |
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| Younge of East St. Louis, who passed away on December 26, 2008; |
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| and
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| WHEREAS, Wyvetter Younge was born in St. Louis, Missouri on |
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| August 23, 1930; she was a lifelong resident of East St. Louis |
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| and one of the longest serving, dedicated, and passionate |
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| legislators in history of the Illinois House of |
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| Representatives; she was first elected to the House in 1974 and |
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| served until her death; and
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| WHEREAS, She built a strong reputation for working hard to |
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| provide members of her community with better schools and |
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| educational opportunities, affordable housing, and access to |
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| health care; she also was a zealous advocate for revitalizing |
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| her district through economic development and the creation of |
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| new job opportunities; and
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| WHEREAS, She became well-known for her responsive |
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| constituent service office and her intense focus on issues |
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| affecting the quality of life for district residents; she was |
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| so committed to serving her constituents, raising her family, |
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| and caring for her late husband when he became seriously ill, |
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| that she drove 90 miles each way to Springfield every day that |
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| the House was in session so that she could return to her |
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| community and help those in need; and
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| WHEREAS, She believed that education was the key to |
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| breaking the cycle of poverty and that every child deserves a |
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| quality education regardless of family income; a cornerstone of |
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| her work was her fight for better educational opportunities for |
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| the State's children; among the education initiatives she |
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| supported was the recalculation of the school funding formula |
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| to increase funding for Illinois' downstate schools; she fought |
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| valiantly to establish the East St. Louis Community College |
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| Center in East St. Louis;
she was a visionary who initiated the |
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| concept of the East St. Louis Action Research Project as a |
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| means of providing tangible resources from the University of |
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| Illinois at Urbana-Champaign to East St. Louis and the |
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| surrounding communities; because of her commitment to |
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| providing better opportunities for future generations, |
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| Wyvetter Younge Middle School in East St. Louis was named in |
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| her honor; and |
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| WHEREAS, She fought for health care access for all because |
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| she knew in her heart that being healthy was not only for the |
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| privileged, but a basic right; an advocate for working families |
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| and senior citizens, she supported legislation requiring HMO |
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| reform and health care coverage for children and low-income |
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| working families; she co-sponsored legislation to reduce the |
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| cost of prescription drugs, expanded home-based elder care |
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| programs, and broadened the State's family and medical leave |
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| laws; and
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| WHEREAS, She was a living witness to the civil rights |
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| movement and a fighter for equality; she provided assistance to |
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| the NAACP in its efforts to ensure that minority workers were |
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| employed on the Martin Luther King Bridge rebuilding project; |
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| and
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| WHEREAS, She made urban revitalization and rebuilding |
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| inner-city economies among her top priorities; she fought for |
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| better paying jobs, because she understood that good jobs help |
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| build strong communities and healthy families; she ardently |
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| sought funding for a variety of redevelopment projects across |
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| her district, including the expansion of the Katherine Dunham |
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| Centers for Arts and Humanities in East St. Louis; and
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| WHEREAS, She was a tireless supporter of the East St. Louis |
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| Business Incubator, industrial parks, and other job-creating |
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| efforts; she drafted job-producing legislation like the |
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| "Economic Bill of Rights" to seek alternatives to welfare |
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| dependency and to increase the State's power to provide |
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| economic justice; she backed measures to increase the minimum |
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| wage and make child care more affordable; and |
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| WHEREAS, She passed a bill that paved the way for the |
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| development of the Metro East Citizens Land Cooperative, a |
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| citizen-owned, for-profit community investment corporation |
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| intent on connecting Illinois residents with land and |
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| technology through ownership; she helped the cooperative to |
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| revive and expand an East St. Louis renaissance plan developed |
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| in the 1970s by famed architect R. Buckminster Fuller; and
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| WHEREAS, She worked tirelessly to combat poverty, to care |
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| for the sick and the homeless, and to help those battling |
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| addiction problems because she felt our society is judged by |
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| how we treat our least fortunate; and
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| WHEREAS, She was not only focused on finding big solutions |
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| to big problems, but also dedicated to helping every individual |
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| constituent in need, oftentimes giving constituents cash from |
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| her wallet to pay their utility bills; and
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| WHEREAS, Her efforts on behalf of the State of Illinois |
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| have garnered recognition from a wide array of organizations, |
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| including the Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville School |
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| of Nursing, United Auto Workers, Katherine Dunham Centers, |
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| Illinois Agricultural Association, American Council Society, |
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| NAACP, East St. Louis School District 189, and Gamma Phi Delta; |
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| and |
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| WHEREAS, She graduated from Lincoln Senior High School in |
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| East St. Louis; she studied at Hampton Institute in Virginia, |
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| where she received her Bachelor of Science degree in 1951; she |
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| furthered her education by earning a law degree in 1953 from |
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| St. Louis University School of Law and later a Master of Law |
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| degree from Washington University School of Law in 1972; and
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| WHEREAS, From 1955 to 1957, she served as an assistant |
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| circuit attorney in St. Louis; and
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| WHEREAS, She was affiliated with the Missouri Bar |
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| Association and the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority; and
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| WHEREAS, During her historic tenure in the House, she was |
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| named Assistant House Democratic Leader in 1995 and Assistant |
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| Majority Leader in 2005, and served as one of the most |
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| respected and effective legislators in State history; and |
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| WHEREAS, She was a beloved community leader; the residents |
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| of East St. Louis and other surrounding Metro East communities |
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| as well as all the people of Illinois have benefitted immensely |
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| from her unquestioned professionalism, enormous integrity, |
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| deep principles, compassionate advocacy, and untiring work |
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| ethic; and
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| WHEREAS, She was preceded in death by her husband of 49 |
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| years, Richard Younge, Sr.; her daughter, Ruth Younge; and her |
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| sister, Cecile Edwards; and
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| WHEREAS, Representative Younge is survived by her |
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| daughter, Margaret Hewitt of East St. Louis; her son, Torque |
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| Younge of East St. Louis; her two stepsons, Richard Younge, Jr. |
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| of Lithonia, Georgia, and Roland Younge of St. Louis, Missouri; |
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| her sister, Ruth H. Hill of O'Fallon, Illinois; her two |
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| brothers, Roscoe Hoover of St. Louis, Missouri and Herbert |
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| Hoover of Lutz, Florida; her eight grandchildren; and her many |
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| friends and constituents; therefore, be it
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| RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE |
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| NINETY-FIFTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we |
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| mourn, along with her friends, family, and constituents, the |
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| passing of a truly caring individual and monumental presence in |
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| her community, State Representative Wyvetter H. Younge; and be |
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| it further
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| RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be |
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| presented to the family of State Representative Wyvetter Younge |
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| as a symbol of our sincere sympathy and sorrow for their loss.
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