[Congressional Record Volume 168, Number 48 (Thursday, March 17, 2022)]
[House]
[Pages H3815-H3817]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]





                           ISSUES OF THE DAY

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Torres of New York). Under the Speaker's 
announced policy of January 4, 2021, the gentleman from Illinois (Mr. 
Danny K. Davis) is recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the 
majority leader.
  Mr. DANNY K. DAVIS of Illinois. Mr. Speaker, I yield to the 
gentlewoman from New Mexico (Ms. Stansbury).
  Ms. STANSBURY. Mr. Speaker, I rise this evening as the proud daughter 
of New Mexico to discuss the transformative impacts of the American 
Rescue Plan for our State on this beautiful St. Patrick's Day during 
Women's History Month to highlight the impacts the American Rescue Plan 
has had for our working families, our kids, and for our entire Nation.
  It has been a difficult year--a difficult several years--as our 
communities have experienced the impacts of the pandemic and the 
economic struggles that have come with it. When we think back to even a 
year ago, last year at this time, we were unable to gather safely, 
unemployment was at an all-time high, so many of our families were 
struggling, and businesses closed.
  One year ago, this body passed the American Rescue Plan. One year 
later, people are still struggling in our country, and supply chains 
and our economy are still recovering, but so much has changed. Our 
economy is growing at a faster rate than at any point since the 1980s. 
More jobs have been created in 1 year than ever in our Nation's 
history. Wages are up and more small businesses are opening up across 
the country than ever before.
  Because the American Rescue Plan changed the way in which families 
put food on the table, provide for their families so that our parents, 
and women in particular, can return to work and has helped our schools 
stay open and our families and small businesses stay afloat.
  Let's get to the heart of the matter today, which is how this 
particular piece of legislation has transformed the lives of so many 
New Mexicans and how our communities have benefitted from these 
historic policies.
  The people of New Mexico, especially our women, are strong, resilient 
centers of our families, and the roots of our communities. Our women 
carry us, nurture us, and work hard every day so that we can succeed--
like the women in my own life, my own mother, my sister, and the 
trailblazing women who came before us and support us every day in our 
communities.
  But the challenges and burdens of this pandemic in the past 2 years 
have fallen unequally and disproportionately on women who have exited 
the workforce in unprecedented numbers, and on our kids who are 
resilient, yet still struggling.

  As families struggle to make ends meet, keep a roof over their heads, 
and put food on the table, women have had to dig deep and find creative 
solutions. These burdens have fallen disproportionately, in particular, 
on our Latina and Hispano women, on our indigenous women, our Black 
women, and women struggling economically every day to make ends meet.
  There are countless stories of struggle and resilience and survival 
in our communities and the impacts of the American Rescue Plan. One 
from New Mexico's First Congressional District is that of April 
Trujillo and her four boys in Albuquerque.
  After losing her husband in September of 2020, Derrick Trujillo, a 
small business owner, who owned a small carpet cleaning business, their 
family struggled in a way that they had never done so before. They were 
ultimately able to keep a roof over their heads and keep food on the 
table because of the transformative impacts of the child tax credit and 
rental assistance programs provided by the American Rescue Plan.
  It is by no means a stretch to say that these programs helped to 
catch this family as they faced potentially becoming homeless at one of 
the most difficult moments in their life. That is exactly what this 
American Rescue Plan was designed to do and why we must put these 
transformational investments in childcare, in the child tax credit, in 
housing, in food assistance, and our community well-being, and continue 
them into the future.
  They catch families like the Trujillo family when they need it most. 
It will help to lift up Americans who are facing economic struggles and 
create opportunities for families for generations to come.
  As we celebrate the 1-year anniversary of the American Rescue Plan 
and celebrate the passage of the historic infrastructure package a few 
months ago, and crucial budget legislation just this last week, these 
bills have had a transformational impact on our economy, on jobs, and 
families across the country, and we acknowledge that the work is not 
over.
  We must extend the child tax credit. We must expand programs to 
tackle housing and hunger. We must invest in a universal childcare 
system and caring for our elders. We must tackle drought and climate 
change. We must stand with Ukraine and global democracy. This is the 
work ahead and we stand together united to get it done.
  Mr. DANNY K. DAVIS of Illinois. Mr. Speaker, I have been taught and 
told from an African proverb that when a tall tree falls in the forest 
it makes a lot of noise, it gathers a lot of attention, everybody and 
every entity in the forest knows that something has happened.
  A few days ago, a tall tree fell in the ``Chicagoland'' community 
where I live. A gentleman, Mr. Pervis Spann, spent the last day of his 
life. Pervis Spann, to all of us, is known as the ``blues man'' because 
he was a great artist who projected, promoted, and entertained us for 
years.

                              {time}  1700

  Pervis was born in Itta Bena, Mississippi. Like many other African 
Americans who were born in Itta Bena, Mississippi, and anyone else in 
Mississippi, individuals migrated to other places. Thousands and 
thousands and thousands of them made their way to Chicago, Illinois.
  As a matter of fact, we fondly say that the only place where there 
are more Mississippians than there are in Chicago is in Mississippi 
itself. Many individuals left the delta area. So did Pervis Spann. He 
went to Michigan; worked in Gary, Indiana; and joined the military. But 
eventually he made his way to Chicago.
  He came to Chicago and used his GI Bill to go to broadcasting school, 
and he got to be very good at it, not only as a broadcaster but also as 
a promoter.
  Ultimately, the Stack brothers bought a radio station, and they named 
that station WVON. Eventually Mr. Pervis Spann, Vernon Jarrett, Wesley 
South and a woman named Gwendolyn Hayes ended up acquiring the station. 
Spann was the blues part of it. As a matter of fact, he entertained and 
promoted, entertained and promoted.
  The station also became a pioneer in talk radio. As a matter of fact, 
before there was talk radio, Wesley South, one of the partners, had a 
talk radio program called ``On Target''. And this was years and years 
and years ago. ``On Target''. It is hard to believe that talk now 
dominates in many places. So WVON was a pioneer of talk radio.
  It also has become the powerhouse of communication in the Chicagoland 
area, especially for African Americans. Talk all day long about 
whatever is going on in the community, whatever is going on in Chicago, 
and whatever is going on in the world, WVON. As a matter of fact, many 
of my neighbors and friends wait to wake up in the morning so that they 
can listen to WVON especially, beginning at 6:00 o'clock in the 
morning.
  But not only was Pervis Spann a tremendous promoter, but he also was 
a tremendous businessman period. Ultimately the station came into the 
hands of his daughter, Melody Spann-Cooper, who has taken it to new 
heights. If it is not heard on VON, it did not happen if it was not 
part of the discussion on WVON. So it is much more than entertainment. 
It is the community's townhall all day long, every day, whatever it is, 
WVON leads the way.
  So I simply wanted to express condolences to his family on his 
passing and also let his family know how much Pervis Spann has meant to 
Chicago, how much it has meant to the socialization of the community, 
how much it has meant to the business promotion of the community, and 
how much it has meant to the spirituality of the community. On Sunday 
afternoons there is kind of a gospel-political atmosphere created, so 
that some people can hardly wait to get home from church so they can 
turn on VON so they can listen to

[[Page H3816]]

the ``Gospel with Pam Morris Walton'' show.
  So Pervis may have been the bluesman, and he may have entertained all 
the greats. Pervis Spann was noted and known as the person who named 
Aretha Franklin the ``Queen of Soul''. He gave her that designation, 
and it stuck. So Melody will carry on in the tradition of her father as 
VON is the voice not just of the Negro--that was what the VON stood 
for--but the voice of the Nation, WVON, Pervis Spann.
  Of course, Mr. Speaker, this month is Women's History Month, and we 
celebrate Women's History Month because of the tremendous progress that 
has been made.
  I am always reminded that when a group of men sat in the room and 
stated that we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are 
created equal, they didn't really mean all men. They meant some men. 
They meant the men whom they felt had enough knowledge, enough 
resources, and enough interests to make decisions for the country. 
Therefore, all men were not in the room.
  As a matter of fact, African-American men who were in slave States 
were not even considered as a full man. African-American slaves were 
considered as three-fifths. They had something called the three-fifths 
compromise which meant that they would only count African-American 
slaves as three-fifths of a person when they were counting up for the 
Census, not all men and no women.
  As a matter of fact, women didn't get the right to vote in this 
country until a little more than 100 years ago. Yet, as a result of 
suffrage, protests, struggle, and changes, now a woman is the Vice 
President of the United States. So there has been movement, although 
not nearly enough and not nearly what there has to be. So the struggle 
will continue so that ultimately there will be levels of equity in this 
country for women, Blacks, and other citizens who don't have it and 
have not had it.
  The woman that I chose to mention at this time is a woman, Merri Dee, 
who was an icon in broadcasting and philanthropy. Merri Dee was born in 
Chicago in 1936, the youngest of six children. She was only 2 years old 
when her mother died. Her father ultimately became sick and, of course, 
he had remarried. She was adopted by her stepmother, and she maintained 
that life was pretty rough for her until she got to the fifth grade and 
met a wonderful teacher who helped to change her life.
  She stated in an interview that this teacher, a Mrs. Robinson, told 
her that she would be great. She believed in that teacher, and then she 
went on and became great.
  She graduated from Englewood High School, went back to New Orleans 
and enrolled in Xavier University where she studied business 
administration. She, of course, dropped out and took a job at IBM to 
help her other brothers and sisters. She then worked, got married, got 
divorced, had a daughter, got a good job, and she just felt that she 
was spending too much time away at her job and from her child, so she 
quit that job, and somebody told her: You have a gift for gab.
  She decided to study broadcasting and journalism.
  She did, and she got so good at it, eventually she got her first 
show, a radio show. She did that for a bit, and then she got a 
television show, became excellent at it, and became one of the top 
female broadcasters in the United States.
  As a matter of fact, she was so good, she did that, then she ran into 
a little difficulty. She and one of her guests were kidnapped leaving 
the show, robbed, shot, left for dead, and with two bullets in her head 
she crawled up to the highway where someone picked her up, took her to 
the hospital, and she stayed hospitalized for a year.

  As a matter of fact, she was told that she wouldn't make it and had 
two last rites given to her, one by the Reverend Jesse Jackson who was 
indeed a friend of hers. But she prevailed and lived and was in the 
hospital for a year. She came back, got hired by WGN Television, and 
she became an anchor. She did that for 11 years. Then they asked her to 
take the job as director of community relations and public affairs and 
their children's charities, and she did.
  She generated $31 million for the charities and for the philanthropic 
work. She just kept doing it. I have never known anybody who was more 
open and more giving. I must have gone to at least hundreds of 
charitable events over the years where Merri Dee was the announcer. She 
was the facilitator. She was the person making it happen.
  So when we design and define what greatness is, Merri Dee was 
obviously a great woman, a great broadcaster, a tremendous 
communicator, and a person who could stir audiences and groups and 
convince people to give thousands of dollars for needy causes.
  So, Mr. Speaker, I salute Merri Dee. I salute her, and I revere her. 
I know that if people go up that way, that she is up there walking 
among the angels and putting on events and activities and waiting for 
other people to come.

                              {time}  1715


                     Remembering Harold Washington

  Mr. DANNY K. DAVIS of Illinois. Mr. Speaker, finally, I will mention, 
although it is Women's History Month, I will mention now an African-
American male who was a transformative figure in the life, especially 
of a big city that was the third largest city in the United States of 
America, a gentleman named Harold Washington, who became the first 
African-American mayor of the city of Chicago.
  Harold, if he was alive now, would be celebrating his 100th birthday. 
He would be 100 years old.
  Harold was a transformative figure in the political life of Chicago. 
Chicago was known as the city of the big shoulders, known as many 
things. But it was a patronage-laden city. Patronage guided the 
politics of Chicago.
  For a long time, it had a tradition that if somebody went to city 
hall or to State government or county government to get a job, the 
saying was: ``Don't bring nobody, didn't nobody see it,'' basically 
meaning that unless you had a letter from a ward boss or from some 
elected official who was part of the system, even if it was a job that 
you had ten times the qualifications for, you wouldn't get it. You 
wouldn't get it because you didn't have the hook-up; you didn't have 
the connection.
  We actually convinced Harold Washington, I am sure, to run for mayor. 
He had become a Member of Congress. He had been the Democratic lead on 
the voting rights bill. Of course, in the mid `60s and `70s, that was 
still hot, just as it is hot today.
  It is amazing that we can't get the voting rights extension granted, 
especially when all politicians in this country basically suggest that 
they believe in democracy, that they believe in democratic principles, 
and that they believe that everybody should have a right to participate 
and express themselves. Then we go through this process of wrangling to 
make it happen.
  But somehow or another, there seems to be a block. I don't know; 
maybe people have changed their minds from what they learned in grammar 
school or in high school or what they read in the Constitution and all 
of that. It seems that way.
  Nevertheless, Harold Washington was convinced by people like Lou 
Palmer, people like Vernon Jarrett, people like myself and others, to 
run for the mayor of the city of Chicago. He said: Well, if you guys 
really want me to run for mayor, you have got to show it. If you don't 
show it, I won't do it. You have got to get some people registered to 
vote, and you have got to raise some money.
  I remember sitting in a room in Lou Palmer's basement, eating 
watermelon, as a matter of fact, about 10 or 12 of us. We then said to 
Harold Washington: Well, Harold, you can go on to your next meeting. 
And we set out to generate the conditions and meet the conditions that 
he had set.
  Harold was so astute, such a charmer, such an intellectual, but he 
also liked to walk the streets and talk to people in the alley and talk 
to people who other people probably wouldn't.
  I never will forget that I had set up a meeting with a bunch of 
motorcycle riders for Harold to go to, and some of his campaign people 
didn't want him to come. Motorcycle riders, the Born Losers, the 
Buzzing Bees, and Dragons. Harold said: I will be there. Of course, he 
came, and everybody had donned their leather jackets and all those 
things.
  After he got elected, we ended up with some plaques that the 
motorcycle

[[Page H3817]]

riders gave to Harold and to me. I don't know what happened to his. 
Mine is still around.
  But when Harold got elected, the city council organized against him. 
There were 29 people on the other side and 21 of us. We called it the 
29-21. Ultimately, we ended up with a 25-25 split. Every item that came 
up, there would be 25 votes for it and 25 votes against it. Then, of 
course, Harold would get a chance to break the tie.
  He had such a sense of fairness that he went all over the city 
assuring every community that they would be treated the same as every 
other community, that they would get a part of the infrastructure 
money, that their schools would be prepared, and that their sidewalks 
would be repaired and fixed.
  He became bigger than life. As a matter of fact, when Harold died, 
people celebrated in the streets and spent days walking through to pay 
reverence. That is because he helped people understand that government 
belonged to them, and they did not necessarily belong to government.
  When people ask what was the transformation, the transformation was 
that the patronage system was seriously diminished. The transformation 
was the greatest participation, in terms of turnout in elections, would 
occur, because the people felt that they had somebody in the highest 
office who respected and recognized what they had to say.
  Harold would stop on the street and have a townhall, and 15, 20 
people would gather around. It wasn't his intent to stop on the street. 
He just stopped and would spend time.
  Someone asked me what was one of my fondest memories or stories about 
Harold Washington. I told them it was the fact that I drove a car for 
19 years. In 19 years, the car had sort of rusted in the floor, and I 
put a plank there. We were someplace and Harold wanted a ride to tell 
me something or ask me something, so he told his guys to go ahead and 
he was going to ride to the next stop with me. When he got in the car, 
the plank had shifted. He looked down and said: ``What the . . . ''
  I said: ``Mr. Mayor, don't worry about that. Just push that plank 
back over, and you won't even know that there is no floor.''
  He said: ``Why don't you buy yourself a car?'' Well, I didn't get one 
right then. Eventually, I did.
  Harold Washington transformed the politics of Chicago. Harold 
Washington gave being an elected official in Chicago a new meaning, 
that it was not just about glad handing and backslapping. It was about 
trying to serve and serving the people.
  Harold, you did your job, you did it well, and we pray tribute to you 
even during Women's History Month.


                Recognizing Chicago's Ukrainian Village

  Mr. DANNY K. DAVIS of Illinois. Mr. Speaker, as I prepare to close, I 
can't help but be reminded that I represent a community in Chicago that 
we fondly call Ukrainian Village. That is because most of the people 
there are of Ukrainian heritage.
  We have a rally every week. We have everything that you can possibly 
have, with the hope and with the faith that our President, that our 
country, will stay on the course. We have no doubt that we will 
continue to protect Ukraine as a part of the humanity that this 
country, ``My Country, `Tis of Thee,'' needs to express, because we 
know that so goes Ukraine, so goes the other countries nearby, and, 
ultimately, so will go the United States of America.
  Ukraine is a part of us. We are a part of Ukraine. Together, I think 
we will beat back the murderous, cowardly pact. We will be pressed to 
the wall, but always, as Claude McKay would say, always, always 
fighting back.
  Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.

                          ____________________