[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 32 (Wednesday, March 6, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Page S1228]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                       TRIBUTE TO BILL ROBERTSON

  Mr. DURBIN. I rise today to say a few words in honor of Bill 
Robertson, an extraordinary man from Rockford, IL, whom we recently 
lost to illness.
  Bill Robertson was a public servant in the best sense of the term. 
For the last few years, he was considered the voice of reason on the 
Rockford, IL, City Council, but his service started well before his 
election to the City Council.
  After college, he served in the Marines before signing up for the 
Rockford Fire Department. To put this another way, after serving in a 
job where he would have been under fire, he decided to take a job 
running into fires. It made sense to him, and he loved it.
  He spent 36 years of his life in that fire department, rising to 
command the department's training academy. He will be remembered for 
always knowing cadets by name and frequently checking in to see how 
recruits were doing.
  He did so well that in 1991 he was asked to be the ninth chief in the 
Rockford Fire Department's 133-year history. He held that job for 17 
years, until he retired in 2008.
  Retirement turned out to be short-lived for Bill Robertson. In 2009, 
he was elected to the Rockford City Council, and he quickly became a 
leader there too.
  His council colleagues recall that, even in a time of bitter and 
occasionally over-the-top politics, Robertson always strove for common 
ground and acted as a voice of reason. Perhaps that is one of the 
reasons one of the many reasons so many people from the Rockford 
community came to pay tribute and celebrate his life when he passed 
away. I am told there were hundreds of well-wishers in attendance, and 
I am sorry Loretta and I were not able to be there to pay our respects 
to this generous leader.
  Each and every one of them were touched by the good work he did 
throughout his life. He will not be forgotten, but he will be missed.

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