[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 197 (Tuesday, December 20, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H10002-H10003]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WARREN HELLMAN
(Ms. PELOSI asked and was given permission to address the House for 1
minute.)
Ms. PELOSI. Mr. Speaker, it is with great sadness that I rise to pay
tribute to the passing of a man whose legacy to San Francisco is a
great one. I rise to pay tribute to the life and legacy of Warren
Hellman, a community leader, a San Francisco legend, and an American
success story. Sadly, Warren passed away on December 18, surrounded by
his loving family. That was the way he lived, surrounded by his loving
family.
Warren was a tremendously successful businessman. And it was his
business acumen that allowed him to pursue his true fashion,
philanthropy. He was a Renaissance man. That's how his daughter
described him, and that's how we all saw him. With his deep generosity,
intellectual curiosity, and his visionary dynamism, he changed the face
of San Francisco. His legacy will live on through his contributions to
education, to music, to civic life, and to the memory we all happily
have of him being such a modest athlete, something he took great pride
in.
[[Page H10003]]
{time} 1650
When Warren Hellman saw an opportunity to enrich our city, he acted
upon it. He strengthened and beautified Golden Gate Park. He worked to
end homelessness. He supported the San Francisco Free Clinic, many of
those people availing themselves of the services there being homeless.
Concerned about dwindling local news coverage in the Internet age, he
helped form the Bay Citizen online journalism site. Warren served on
the board of Mills College and the University of California at
Berkeley's Haas School of Business. He was in a leadership role in
everything that he did.
I mentioned that he was an athlete. He endowed aquatic sports at U.C.
Berkeley, where he had played on the water polo team as a student.
Whether it was bicycling, swimming, running, skiing, you name it,
Warren was the best.
He was a lover of music, a lover of family, and a lover of life. The
3-day concert he founded--well, it used to be called Strictly
Bluegrass; but as the program expanded and more entertainers wanted to
participate and the audience turned out for them in the hundreds of
thousands, it was changed to Hardly Strictly Bluegrass. So it wasn't
strictly bluegrass. It is held each year at Golden Gate Park and has
allowed hundreds of thousands of fans each year to enjoy the music that
he loved--mostly bluegrass. And it was all free. Warren was involved in
every aspect of the festival, including personally recruiting musicians
he admired; and an invitation from Warren was one that was warmly
responded to by the biggest names in music. It is so fitting that
Speedway Meadow, the site of the festival, was renamed Hellman Hollow
just last week. Just last week. So I know this pleased him and his
family immensely.
I mentioned his interest in education and the arts. He and his wife,
Chris, were really such magnificent patrons of the San Francisco
Ballet. It's hard to match or surpass the contributions they have made
intellectually and by way of encouragement in every way and certainly
philanthropically.
With the passing of Warren Hellman, San Francisco has lost a beloved
champion. We honor his memory and his enthusiasm by celebrating his
many contributions. I said that he was good at everything he did; and
that included being a friend, a friend to so many who will miss him so
much. I am proud to call Warren a friend; and I hope it is a comfort to
Chris, his wife, and his family whom he cherished. And he couldn't talk
enough about them. He was so very proud of them and rightfully so. I
hope it is a comfort to them that so many people mourn their loss and
are praying for them at this sad time.
Tomorrow there will be a public service to honor his life and legacy.
It will represent an outpouring of people from every aspect of San
Francisco life, every economic strata, from homeless people to the most
privileged and successful in terms of their measure of success. But it
will also represent people in the public and private and nonprofit
sectors. This was a very special person, and I want everyone who
follows the work of Congress and the pride that we all take in
representing our districts and our constituents to know how proud we
all were of the life and leadership of Warren Hellman.
____________________