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<?I50 PUBLIC LAW 118–88—SEPT. 26, 2024?>


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<?I50 PUBLIC LAW 118–88—SEPT. 26, 2024?>
<?I51 PUBLIC LAW 118–88—SEPT. 26, 2024?>
<?I52 PUBLIC LAW 118–88—SEPT. 26, 2024?>


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<meta><dc:title>Public Law 118–88: To award a Congressional Gold Medal to Billie Jean King, an American icon, in recognition of a remarkable life devoted to championing equal rights for all, in sports and in society.</dc:title>
<dc:type>Public Law</dc:type><docNumber>88</docNumber>
<citableAs>Public Law 118–88</citableAs><citableAs>138 Stat. 1554</citableAs>
<approvedDate>2024-09-26</approvedDate>
<dc:date>2024-09-26</dc:date>
<dc:publisher>United States Government Publishing Office</dc:publisher><dc:creator>National Archives and Records Administration</dc:creator><dc:creator>Office of the Federal Register</dc:creator><dc:format>text/xml</dc:format><dc:language>EN</dc:language><dc:rights>Pursuant to Title 17 Section 105 of the United States Code, this file is not subject to copyright protection and is in the public domain.</dc:rights>
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<preface><page display="no">?1553</page><note role="coverPage"><centerRunningHead>PUBLIC LAW 118–88—SEPT. 26, 2024</centerRunningHead>
<coverTitle>BILLIE JEAN KING CONGRESSIONAL GOLD MEDAL ACT</coverTitle>
</note>
<page identifier="/us/stat/138/1554">138 STAT. 1554</page>
<dc:type>Public Law</dc:type><docNumber>118–88</docNumber>
<congress value="118">118th Congress</congress>
</preface>
<main>
<longTitle>
<docTitle class="centered fontsize12" style="-uslm-lc:I658005">An Act</docTitle>
<officialTitle class="indentUp0 firstIndent1 fontsize8" style="-uslm-lc:I658011">To award a Congressional Gold Medal to Billie Jean King, an American icon, in recognition of a remarkable life devoted to championing equal rights for all, in sports and in society.<sidenote><p class="centered fontsize8" id="xe50bf118-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" style="-uslm-lc:I658076"><approvedDate date="2024-09-26">Sept. 26, 2024</approvedDate></p><p class="centered fontsize8" id="xe50bf119-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" style="-uslm-lc:I658076">[<ref href="/us/bill/118/s/2861">S. 2861</ref>]<?GPOvSpace 08?></p></sidenote></officialTitle>
</longTitle>
<enactingFormula style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><i>  Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representa­tives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,</i></enactingFormula><sidenote><p class="leftAlign firstIndent0 fontsize8" id="xe50bf11a-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" style="-uslm-lc:I658180">Billie Jean King Congressional Gold Medal Act.</p><p class="leftAlign firstIndent0 fontsize8" id="xe50bf11b-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" style="-uslm-lc:I658180"><ref href="/us/usc/t31/s5111">31 USC 5111 note</ref>.</p></sidenote>
<section id="d1634e102" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s1" style="-uslm-lc:I658146"><num class="bold" value="1">SECTION 1. </num><heading>SHORT TITLE.</heading><content style="-uslm-lc:I658120">  This Act may be cited as the “<shortTitle role="act">Billie Jean King Congressional Gold Medal Act</shortTitle>”.</content></section>
<section id="d1634e112" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2" style="-uslm-lc:I658141"><num class="fontsize12" value="2">SEC. 2. </num><heading>FINDINGS.</heading><chapeau class="indentUp0 firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="xe50cdb7c-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" style="-uslm-lc:I658120">  Congress finds the following:</chapeau><paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb7d-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/1" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="1">(1) </num><content>Billie Jean King, born Billie Jean Moffitt on November 22, 1943, in Long Beach, California, demonstrated athletic prowess from a young age. She was introduced to tennis at the age of 11, and soon after, Billie Jean purchased her first tennis racket using money she earned working various jobs in her neighborhood.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb7e-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/2" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="2">(2) </num><content>Billie Jean broke numerous barriers to become a number one professional tennis player. She dominated women’s tennis with 39 Grand Slam singles, doubles, and mixed doubles titles, including a record 20 championships at Wimbledon. She also was a member of 3 World TeamTennis championship teams.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb7f-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/3" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="3">(3) </num><content>After growing in prominence, Billie Jean used her platform as a celebrity to fight for equal rights and opportunities for equality for all in sports, and society, in the United States.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb80-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/4" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="4">(4) </num><content>Billie Jean played an instrumental role in the passage of title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972 (<ref href="/us/usc/t20/s1681/etseq">20 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.</ref>), a law that mandates equal funding for women’s and men’s sports programs in schools and colleges. This legislation has unlocked a world of opportunities for girls and women in education and sports.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb81-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/5" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="5">(5) </num><content>During Billie Jean’s career, the pay difference between prize money for men and women in tennis continued to expand. By the early 1970s, the pay gap in prize money reached ratios of as much as 12 to 1. Fewer and fewer tournaments were hosting women’s events. Billie Jean harnessed the energy of the women’s rights movement to create a women’s tennis tour that would elevate women’s tennis and establish pay equity within the sport. Along with 8 other women tennis players, she formed an independent women’s professional tennis circuit, the Virginia Slims Series.<page identifier="/us/stat/138/1555">138 STAT. 1555</page></content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb82-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/6" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="6">(6) </num><content>In 1973, Billie Jean founded the Women’s Tennis Association, today’s principal governing body for women’s professional tennis.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb83-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/7" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="7">(7) </num><content>Billie Jean helped found womenSports magazine and founded the Women’s Sports Foundation. Both have been at the forefront of advancing women’s voice in sports.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb84-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/8" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="8">(8) </num><content>Billie Jean successfully lobbied for equal prize money for men and women at the 1973 US Open Tennis Championships. It would take another 34 years for the other 3 major tournaments to all offer equal prize money.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb85-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/9" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="9">(9) </num><content>In 1973, Billie Jean played a tennis match against Bobby Riggs, a former World Number 1 player who sought to undermine the credibility and prominence of women in sports. Billie Jean defeated Riggs in what became a firm declaration of women’s role in sports and society.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb86-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/10" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="10">(10) </num><content>Billie Jean King was the first tennis player and woman to be named Sports Illustrated’s Sportsperson of the Year, one of the “100 Most Important Americans of the 20th Century” by LIFE magazine, was the recipient of the 1999 Arthur Ashe Award for Courage, and has been admitted to the International Women’s Sports Hall of Fame, the International Tennis Hall of Fame, and the National Women’s Hall of Fame.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb87-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/11" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="11">(11) </num><content>In 2006, the United States Tennis Association recognized Billie Jean’s immeasurable impact on the sport of tennis by renaming the site of the US Open in her honor as the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, which is located in Flushing Meadows Corona Park in Queens, New York. This was the first time a major sporting complex was named after a woman.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb88-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/12" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="12">(12) </num><content>In 2009, Billie Jean was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor in the United States, by President Barack Obama for her impactful work advocating for the rights of women. She was the first female athlete to receive this honor.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb89-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/13" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="13">(13) </num><content>In 2014, Billie Jean King founded the Billie Jean King Leadership Initiative to empower companies and individuals to create inclusive work environments that celebrate and promote diversity and equality in the workplace.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb8a-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/14" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="14">(14) </num><content>In 2020, Fed Cup, the world cup of women’s tennis, was renamed the Billie Jean King Cup, making it the first global team competition to be named after a woman.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="ye50cdb8b-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s2/15" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="15">(15) </num><content>Billie Jean King’s extraordinary courage, leadership, and activism helped propel the women’s movement forward, and open doors for countless people in the United States. On and off the court, Billie Jean has served as an inspiration to millions of people the world over. Few women and men have had a greater impact on their sport and on our society than Billie Jean King.</content></paragraph>
</section>
<section id="d1634e203" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s3" style="-uslm-lc:I658141"><num class="fontsize12" value="3">SEC. 3. </num><heading>CONGRESSIONAL GOLD MEDAL.</heading><subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="ye50d029c-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s3/a" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="a">(a) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">Presentation Authorized</inline>.—</heading><content>The Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President pro tempore of the Senate shall make appropriate arrangements for the presentation, on behalf of Congress, of a gold medal of appropriate design to Billie Jean King, in recognition of her contribution to the United States and her courageous and groundbreaking leadership advancing equal rights for women in athletics, education, and our society.<page identifier="/us/stat/138/1556">138 STAT. 1556</page></content></subsection>
<subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="ye50d029d-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s3/b" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="b">(b) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">Design and Striking</inline>.—</heading><content>For purposes of the presentation described in subsection (a), the Secretary of the Treasury (referred to in this Act as the “Secretary”) shall strike a gold medal with suitable emblems, devices, and inscriptions to be determined by the Secretary. The design shall bear an image of, and inscription of the name of, Billie Jean King.</content></subsection>
</section>
<section id="d1634e230" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s4" style="-uslm-lc:I658141"><num class="fontsize12" value="4">SEC. 4. </num><heading>DUPLICATE MEDALS.</heading><content style="-uslm-lc:I658120">  The Secretary may strike and sell duplicates in bronze of the gold medal struck pursuant to section 3 at a price sufficient to cover the costs of the medals, including labor, materials, dies, use of machinery, and overhead expenses.</content></section>
<section id="d1634e237" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s5" style="-uslm-lc:I658141"><num class="fontsize12" value="5">SEC. 5. </num><heading>STATUS OF MEDALS.</heading><subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="ye50d29ae-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s5/a" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="a">(a) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">National Medals</inline>.—</heading><content>Medals struck under this Act are national medals for purposes of <ref href="/us/usc/t31/ch51">chapter 51 of title 31, United States Code</ref>.</content></subsection>
<subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="ye50d50bf-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s5/b" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="b">(b) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">Numismatic Items</inline>.—</heading><content>For purposes of section 5134 and <ref href="/us/usc/t31/s5136">section 5136 of title 31, United States Code</ref>, all medals struck under this Act shall be considered to be numismatic items.</content></subsection>
</section>
<section id="d1634e268" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s6" style="-uslm-lc:I658141"><num class="fontsize12" value="6">SEC. 6. </num><heading>AUTHORITY TO USE FUND AMOUNTS; PROCEEDS OF SALE.</heading><subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="ye50d50c0-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s6/a" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="a">(a) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">Authority To Use Fund Amounts</inline>.—</heading><content>There is authorized to be charged against the United States Mint Public Enterprise Fund such amounts as may be necessary to pay for the costs of the medals struck under this Act.</content></subsection>
<subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="ye50d50c1-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" identifier="/us/pl/118/88/s6/b" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="b">(b) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">Proceeds of Sale</inline>.—</heading><content>Amounts received from the sale of duplicate bronze medals authorized under section 4 shall be deposited into the United States Mint Public Enterprise Fund.</content></subsection>
</section>
<action>
<actionDescription style="-uslm-lc:I658030">Approved</actionDescription> <date date="2024-09-26">September 26, 2024</date>.</action>
</main>
<legislativeHistory>
<heading style="-uslm-lc:I658031"><inline class="underline">LEGISLATIVE HISTORY</inline>—<ref href="/us/bill/118/s/2861">S. 2861</ref>:</heading>
<note>
<heading style="-uslm-lc:I658032">CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, Vol. 170 (2024):</heading>
<p class="indentUp4 firstIndent-1" id="xe50d77d2-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" style="-uslm-lc:I658035">May 8, considered and passed Senate.</p><p class="indentUp4 firstIndent-1" id="xe50d77d3-e809-11f0-a1e4-69761a48a15a" style="-uslm-lc:I658035">Sept. 17, considered and passed Senate.</p></note>
</legislativeHistory>
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</pLaw>