[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 105 (Thursday, July 14, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4605-S4606]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO GERALD M. CHASE
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, it is with great pride that I pay tribute
to a dedicated public servant from my home state of Michigan. Gerry
Chase has devoted his professional life to helping others and improving
the quality of public health in northern lower Michigan for nearly four
decades, and I am pleased to recognize his life's work as he retires
from public service this month. Through his many initiatives as the
Public Health Officer for Northwest Michigan, Gerry has impacted many
by working tirelessly to better the lives of the residents of Antrim,
Charlevoix, Emmet, and Otsego Counties.
Gerry accepted the position of public health officer in 1974 at the
urging of his mentor Roy R. Manty. Shortly after earning his bachelor
of arts and a master's in public health from the University of
Michigan, Gerry embarked on what he initially thought would be a short-
term assignment, but would become his life's work. Thirty-seven years
later, Gerry can look back with pride on a fulfilling and impressive
record of accomplishment.
Charged with the responsibility of promoting wellness, preventing
disease, and providing quality healthcare, Gerry has been at the
forefront of some of the more complex and daunting public health
issues, leading an agency that has grown from 17 in the mid-1970s to
more than 200 employees today. Among Gerry's countless accomplishments
as public health officer is an initiative to provide dental care to
over 20,000 low-income residents, an effort to increase the number of
poor women eligible for cost-free breast and cervical cancer
screenings, and the establishment of a multicounty workplace smoking
ban.
Through these accomplishments and many more like them, residents of
these counties are living healthier and better. In 2007, Gerry was
awarded the Roy R. Manty Distinguished Service Award, Michigan's top
public health award. This honor, which bears the name of his mentor, is
given to a person that embodies the ``values, dedication and spirit
Manty brought to public
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health,'' which is a fitting tribute for a man that has dedicated his
life to the public good.
Gerry is also a loving and devoted husband to his wife of 45 years,
Kay, and an outstanding role model for his children, Gerald, Harold,
and John, and for his grandchild, Taylor. In fact, I am reminded every
day of his efforts in this regard through the work of his son, Harold,
a member of my staff for the last 15 years. Gerry has been an active
member of his community as well, helping to develop the Northwest
Academy, a charter school in Charlevoix County, leading a troop of Boy
Scouts, and serving as a Big Brother.
Gerry has set a high standard and has left a lasting footprint which
will endure for many years to come. I know my colleagues will join me
in congratulating Gerry on his many impressive accomplishments over the
last thirty-seven years. I wish him the best as he begins a new chapter
in life.
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