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1 | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois Senate are saddened to | ||||||
3 | learn of the death of Helen Miller, who passed away on March 5, | ||||||
4 | 2019; and
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5 | WHEREAS, Helen Miller was born in Louisville, Mississippi | ||||||
6 | on May 26, 1936; she graduated from Central Colored High School | ||||||
7 | in Louisville (now Central High School) in 1955 and moved to | ||||||
8 | Chicago; and
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9 | WHEREAS, Helen Miller began working in industrial | ||||||
10 | laundries and worked in laundries for over 15 years; in the | ||||||
11 | late 70s, she began working as a homecare provider for the City | ||||||
12 | of Chicago and State of Illinois' Department of Rehabilitation | ||||||
13 | Services; she later worked for private agencies caring for | ||||||
14 | seniors under the State's Community Care Program; she retired | ||||||
15 | in 2007; and
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16 | WHEREAS, In 1984, Helen Miller became active with the | ||||||
17 | then-fledgling Local 880 of the United Labor Unions; she served | ||||||
18 | in every capacity, including as a rank-and-file member, a | ||||||
19 | member-organizer, a steward, a political organizer, and then as | ||||||
20 | an officer; she became treasurer in 1986, vice-president in | ||||||
21 | 1989, and president in 1999, serving until her retirement in | ||||||
22 | 2007; she retired as the longest serving president in the |
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1 | history of Local 880; in addition, she was elected to the SEIU | ||||||
2 | Illinois Council in 1999 and as sergeant-at-arms in 2003; and | ||||||
3 | WHEREAS, Helen Miller was continuously involved in the | ||||||
4 | fight for higher wages for homecare workers and childcare | ||||||
5 | providers; she also took part in the fight against predatory | ||||||
6 | lending, utility shutoffs, and for a living wage in Chicago and | ||||||
7 | statewide; and | ||||||
8 | WHEREAS, Helen Miller was elected to the SEIU International | ||||||
9 | Executive Board at its convention in 2004, the first homecare | ||||||
10 | worker to serve on the SEIU International Executive Board; and | ||||||
11 | WHEREAS, Helen Miller was also active politically; she | ||||||
12 | frequently knocked on doors to get out the vote, oversaw phone | ||||||
13 | banks, and interviewed candidates for office; in 1995, she led | ||||||
14 | Local 880's endorsement for Barack Obama when he first | ||||||
15 | announced his intent to run for State Senate; she worked on | ||||||
16 | several of his State Senate and Congressional campaigns, as | ||||||
17 | well as his run for U.S. Senate in 2004; on the date of her | ||||||
18 | retirement in 2007, then-Senator Obama sent her a | ||||||
19 | congratulatory letter noting how honored he was to have worked | ||||||
20 | with her and how her work improved the lives of thousands; and | ||||||
21 | WHEREAS, Helen Miller was the 2004 recipient of the Ms. | ||||||
22 | Foundation's GLORIA award and a 2005 recipient of the Women's |
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1 | E-News award for her leadership in ensuring that homecare | ||||||
2 | workers are "invisible no more"; she received the Operation | ||||||
3 | PUSH Bridge Builder Award presented by Rev. Jesse Jackson at | ||||||
4 | the PUSH convention in June 2005; and | ||||||
5 | WHEREAS, Helen Miller served in her church in Chicago and | ||||||
6 | the Bethany Presbyterian Church in Louisville, Mississippi; | ||||||
7 | and | ||||||
8 | WHEREAS, In 2003, Helen Miller and her co-workers signed | ||||||
9 | their first collective bargaining agreement with the State of | ||||||
10 | Illinois; she led busloads of members into the Capitol Building | ||||||
11 | and up to the Governor's office singing one of her favorite | ||||||
12 | songs, Victory Is Mine; her Local had its greatest period of | ||||||
13 | growth during her presidency, growing from seven members to | ||||||
14 | 70,000; she campaigned vigorously for higher pay and health | ||||||
15 | care and benefits for many groups in Chicago, in Illinois, | ||||||
16 | across the Midwest, the East and West Coasts and in the South; | ||||||
17 | therefore, be it
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18 | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED FIRST GENERAL | ||||||
19 | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn the passing of | ||||||
20 | Helen Miller and extend our sincere condolences to her family, | ||||||
21 | friends, and all who knew and loved her; and be it further
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22 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be |
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1 | presented to the family of Helen Miller as an expression of our | ||||||
2 | deepest sympathy.
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