To watch the live meeting proceedings, please refresh this page at the scheduled meeting time, a link labeled "In Progress" will appear under the Video column
File #: 20-0130    Version: 1
Type: Resolution Status: Adopted
File created: 1/30/2020 In control: Miscellaneous & New Business
On agenda: 2/6/2020 Final action: 2/6/2020
Title: RESOLUTION sponsored by the Board of Commissioners recognizing February as Black History Month and honoring Vice President Barbara McGowan

RESOLUTION FOR BOARD MEETING OF FEBRUARY 6, 2020

 

Title

RESOLUTION sponsored by the Board of Commissioners recognizing February as Black History Month and honoring Vice President Barbara McGowan

Body

 

WHEREAS, the concept of creating Black History Month can be traced back to 1915, when Dr. Carter G. Woodson traveled to Illinois to participate in the 50th anniversary of the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution ending slavery.  Dr. Woodson was among many that participated as an exhibitor during the three-week celebration.  Witnessing the interest, curiosity, and demand for knowledge, Dr. Woodson decided to form an organization whose undertaking would be to encourage the study of Black history and life.  Thus, on September 9, 1915, the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (ASNLH) was formed; and

 

WHEREAS, the first official celebration was held in February 1926 and was known as Negro History Week.  The second week of February was chosen, as this week encompassed the birthdays of two notable figures in Black history: Abraham Lincoln, who signed the Emancipation Proclamation, and Frederick Douglass, who was an escaped slave and devoted abolitionist; and 

 

WHEREAS, in the 1920’s, the ASNLH began creating an annual theme for Negro History Week and in 1937 the Negro History Bulletin was established to promote the annual theme and create a venue for circulating information about Negro History Week on a larger scale; and

 

WHEREAS, in the 1960’s, with the increasing momentum of the Civil Rights Movement, the popularity of Negro History Week exploded.  In many places, including college campuses, instead of celebrating Negro History Week, many students were celebrating Black History Month; and

 

WHEREAS, President Gerald R. Ford became the first president to recognize Black History Week in 1975.  He issued a “Message on the Observance of Black History Week” and encouraged Americans to “recognize the important contribution made to our nation’s life and culture by black citizens”; and

 

WHEREAS, in 1976, Black History Week was officially converted into Black History Month.  In commemoration of this celebration, President Ford issued the first “Message on the Observance of Black History Month”; and 

 

WHEREAS, in 1986, Congress passed Public Law 99-244, designating February 1986 as “National Black (Afro-American) History Month”.  There have also been a multitude of Presidential Proclamations issued in recognition of Black History Month.  Since 1996, a Presidential Proclamation has been issued each year; and

 

WHEREAS, the transformation from a weeklong observance to a month was a major accomplishment for the ASNLH (now Association for the Study of African American Life and History).  The move to a month-long celebration captured Dr. Woodson’s long held belief that Black history should not just be acknowledged one week out of the year, but instead deserved much broader celebration and recognition; and

 

WHEREAS, the District salutes the infinite, dynamic, and illustrious history of African Americans and affirms that the world in which we live would not exist if not for the plenteous contributions that African Americans have made throughout history and continue to make today; and

 

WHEREAS, the theme of this year’s celebration is “African Americans and the Vote”.  This theme was selected to honor the sesquicentennial anniversary of the Fifteenth Amendment (1870) granting African American men the right to vote and the centennial anniversary of the Nineteenth Amendment (1920) granting women the right to vote; and

 

WHEREAS, the District is honored to recognize Vice President of the Board of Commissioners (Board) Barbara McGowan, the District’s first African American Vice President of the Board; and

 

WHEREAS, Vice President McGowan has served proudly and passionately as a commissioner on the District’s Board since 1998.  In January 2011, she was elected as the first African American Vice President of the Board.  She also served as the first interim African American female President of the Board in December of 2012; and

 

WHEREAS, Vice President McGowan is the Chairman of the Affirmative Action Committee and the Procurement Committee.  She is also Vice Chairman of the Public Information and Education Committee and the Real Estate Development Committee; and

 

WHEREAS, as Chairman of the Affirmative Action Committee, Vice President McGowan has been active in ensuring that minority and women contractors have an opportunity to be included in District contracts and are treated equitably.  With the support of the Board, she has taken the lead in introducing changes to the District’s MBE/WBE Affirmative Action Ordinance to include penalties for contractors that are in violation of the standards established; and

 

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that we, the Board of Commissioners of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago, on behalf of ourselves and staff, do hereby recognize the month of February as Black History Month and honor Vice President Barbara McGowan as a trailblazer; and

 

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that this Resolution be spread upon the permanent Record of Proceedings of the Board of Commissioners of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago and that a copy of same, suitably engrossed, be presented to Vice President Barbara McGowan.

 

Dated: February 6, 2020