[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 157 (2011), Part 6] [Extensions of Remarks] [Pages 8155-8156] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]ALDERMAN MARY ANN SMITH--A REMARKABLE RECORD OF ACHIEVEMENT ______ HON. JANICE D. SCHAKOWSKY of illinois in the house of representatives Wednesday, May 25, 2011 Ms. SCHAKOWSKY. Mr. Speaker, I would like to honor Alderman Mary Ann Smith, who [[Page 8156]] represented Chicago's wonderful 48th Ward for 21 years before her retirement this May. Alderman Smith has dedicated over 30 years of her life to public service. As Alderman, she was especially active in public safety, community- directed development, transit and walkability, lakefront planning, animal rights, health care, seniors' issues, affordable housing and public sector accountability. Her recent groundbreaking advocacy to combat Medicare and Medicaid fraud and the exploitation of the mentally ill has helped make nursing homes and our communities safer. Alderman Smith was chair of the City Council Committee on Chicago Parks where she worked to restructure the Chicago Park District and its management, improve programming, secure the parks and increase access to recreation for all Chicagoans with an emphasis on teenagers and youth. She was also a member of the City Council Committees on Traffic Control and Safety, Buildings, Rules and Ethics, Budget, Finance, Historical Landmark Preservation, License and Consumer Protection and the Mayoral Task Forces on Lake Michigan and on Transportation. She served on the city's Advisory Council on Chicago ``Green'' development and as a commissioner of both the Northeastern Illinois Plan Commission and the Chicago Plan Commission. Mary Ann is extremely proud of the diversity of the 48th Ward. She worked to integrate immigrant groups into the mainstream business, financial and social structure of the neighborhood. An early supporter of the Human Rights Ordinance, she interacted closely with advocacy groups to protect the rights of all people. She served as vice chair of the Illinois Citizens for Better Care, a group which advocates for nursing home residents' rights and was founder of the Committee Against Nursing Home Election Fraud. Internationally recognized as a leader on building livable communities and protecting the environment, particularly around Chicago's lakefront, Alderman Smith represented the city of Chicago on the International Council on Local Environmental Initiatives. She served as vice-chair of the City Council Subcommittee on the Chicago Lakefront, as a vice-chair of the Lake Michigan Federation (now the Alliance for the Great Lakes), and was a founding member of PCB's Gone. Her leadership on environmental issues earned her a United Nations Environment Programme Award for Citizen Action to Protect the Global Environment and a fellowship from the German Marshall Fund of the United States to study urban planning in several European cities. Alderman Smith's commitment to employ new alternative energy and flood control technologies in the 48th Ward includes the installation of the nation's first water-permeable alley in 2001 and the creation of rain gardens. Her work on public safety and transportation in the community include unsnarling long-standing traffic and transportation problems. She was instrumental in helping to organize the state's first city/suburban traffic and transportation and in obtaining funding for a project to improve pedestrian safety and neighborhood walkability. Alderman Smith is a passionate advocate against cruelty to animals, and, in response to information about the cruel treatment of elephants by trainers, she introduced legislation that would outlaw the use of disciplinary methods that inflict pain and/or cause injury to the animal. I have had the pleasure of sharing an office with Alderman Smith since 1999, and our offices have collaborated closely on issues and projects including environmental concerns, animal rights, community safety, nursing homes and seniors, education, and youth. I consider her a treasured friend and wish her fulfillment and success as she embarks in a new direction. Mary Ann and her husband Ronald, a professor at John Marshall Law School who recently served as chairman of the American Bar Association Criminal Justice Section, have lived in the Edgewater and Uptown communities for more than 30 years. They have two sons, Michael, a software engineer in Portland, Oregon, and Matthew, a clinical psychologist who also lives in the 48th Ward, and many beloved pets. ____________________