[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 154 (2008), Part 2] [Extensions of Remarks] [Pages 1804-1805] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]IN HONOR OF BILL LAMBERT IN RECOGNITION OF HIS EXEMPLARY SERVICE ______ HON. XAVIER BECERRA of california in the house of representatives Thursday, February 7, 2008 Mr. BECERRA. Madam Speaker, it is my privilege to rise today and pay tribute to Bill Lambert, an outstanding educator and passionate advocate for our students and teachers. Bill retired on January 2, 2008, after 45 years of exceptional service to the students of the Los Angeles Unified School District, LAUSD, and the educators of the United Teachers of Los Angeles, UTLA. Uniquely, Bill is a product of the same school district to which he has committed his professional career. Bill is a proud alumnus of several schools in LAUSD and is a graduate of Fairfax High School. His public education served him well on the path toward achieving a bachelor of arts degree and teaching credential from the University of California at Los Angeles and a master's degree from California State University Los Angeles. Bill has enjoyed a distinguished career as a teacher and as a union advocate, all along fighting for greater opportunities for students, teachers, better wages and expanded benefits. He began his career in 1955 as a teacher at Montague Elementary School and later continued educating students at Canterbury Elementary School. Following his early experiences as a teacher, Bill became active in a number of teachers' organizations including a stint as associate executive director of the Los Angeles Teachers' Association. In 1971, Bill played an instrumental role as one of the initial organizers of UTLA. Once UTLA was formed, he dedicated the next 36 years to advocating on behalf of teachers as the director of governmental affairs for UTLA. Today, UTLA represents 44,000 teachers, counselors, psychologists, and nurses in LAUSD. According to a Latin proverb, ``By learning you will teach; by teaching you will learn.'' Bill Lambert certainly embodies these wise words. He spent his life in and out of classrooms learning and teaching, and then walked the halls of the United States Congress and the California State Legislature doing the same. His tireless advocacy on behalf of retired teachers and their pension and Social Security inequities is legendary. It's not an easy task to achieve well over 300 bipartisan co-sponsors on a bill, but through ``pounding the pavement,'' that is exactly what Bill has helped achieve. Learning and teaching, teaching and learning, when combined with Bill's unstoppable energy and enthusiasm, you have a powerful combination. Bill's passionate belief that a public education can he used as a tool for upward mobility by students and communities throughout Los Angeles is also illustrated in his work as an advocate to improve the lives of working families. He has lent a strong, dedicated voice to the educators and students of Los Angeles as a champion for education and labor equity. Further, Los Angeles families are forever indebted to Bill for his instrumental role in addressing racial, ethnic and religious division in Los Angeles. His work organizing the ``Children of the Dream'' outreach program, which brought Israeli-Ethiopians to Los Angeles and took inner-city Los Angeles students to Israel, was successful in creating dialogue and understanding between various communities in Los Angeles. Bill's retirement marks the final chapter in a distinguished career in education that began and ends in Los Angeles. He has always been respected and admired for his dogged commitment to improving the lives of working families throughout Los Angeles, and his wonderfully giving spirit. I wish Bill much luck and leisure in the days to come when he can enjoy his [[Page 1805]] cherished pastime of traveling. I suspect, however, that even in retirement Bill will continue to be a powerful and unyielding voice for children. Madam Speaker, as family, friends, and colleagues gather to celebrate Bill's many accomplishments, it is with great admiration and pride that I ask my colleagues to join me in saluting this exceptional advocate. On behalf of the countless students and educators to whom Bill Lambert has dedicated his career, and the entire labor community which has benefited immensely from his lifelong contributions, I say thank you and may you enjoy many more years of fruitful endeavors. ____________________