[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 40 (Wednesday, March 8, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1687-S1688]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO JOHN MEDINGER
Ms. BALDWIN. Mr. President, today I wish to honor John Medinger on
his retirement from Federal and public service. John has dedicated his
career to improving the lives of individuals in the La Crosse community
and across the State of Wisconsin, most recently as my southwestern
Wisconsin regional representative. I am so pleased to celebrate John's
legacy of dedicated public service and positive social change.
[[Page S1688]]
John was born in La Crosse, WI, and has been the community's
strongest advocate ever since. He graduated from Aquinas High School
and went on to receive his bachelor's and master's degrees from the
University of Wisconsin-La Crosse.
John's public service career began in 1972 with his work at
Volunteers in Service to America, VISTA to combat poverty and racial
inequality in Virginia. During his time in Virginia, John developed a
passion for social justice that guided his future work as a public
servant.
In 1976, John was elected to represent the 95th district in the
Wisconsin State Legislature, where he ultimately served as assistant
majority leader of the assembly. As a State representative, John became
known for fighting domestic abuse. He authored one of Wisconsin's first
domestic violence bills to create safe houses for victims and worked
with Wisconsin police departments to make combating domestic abuse a
top priority. He was also known for his early leadership on gay rights
issues, fighting for marriage equality, and proudly participating in La
Crosse's first PRIDE Fest.
I have known few public servants as dedicated as John in serving the
people he represents. He embodies the true meaning of public service.
No request was too small for his devoted attention. In fact, John was
famous for coming to work on Monday after a weekend of local events
with a fist full of paper scraps covered in scribbled notes from people
he ran into, describing their concerns. John remembered every one of
those concerns as he advocated for his constituents on the assembly
floor. During a time of increasing partisanship, he had a knack for
bringing opposing sides together in the interest of bettering the lives
of Wisconsinites.
After 16 years, John left the State legislature. Although he claimed
his departure was to get away from long legislative speeches, it was
clear he wanted to be closer to the people he cared so much about in
his hometown. Unable to stay out of public service for long, John
announced his campaign for mayor in the Spring of 1997. As mayor of La
Crosse, John adhered to his fundamental belief that he was there to
serve all residents of La Crosse--not just those who supported him.
Guided by his VISTA experience, John created the city's first anti-
racism task force and encouraged people of color to run for local
office. He is especially well-loved by the African-American and Hmong
communities in La Crosse.
Three U.S. Senators, myself included, had the privilege of having
John represent us in southwestern Wisconsin. Although times have
changed and technology has advanced--much to John's chagrin--his
knowledge, dedication, and connections are irreplaceable.
John has taught those lucky enough to have worked with him what it
means to be a true representative of the people: take your work--but
not yourself--seriously, don't hold a grudge, keep your word, and,
above all, put constituents first. I will miss John a great deal, but I
am delighted to wish him and his wife Dee the very best in this new
chapter.
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