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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 Henry Lueders Henderson, who passed away |
4 | | on November 5, 2018 at the age of 66; and
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5 | | WHEREAS, Henry Henderson was born in Granite City on May 5, |
6 | | 1952; he grew up in a heavily industrialized area of the town, |
7 | | where he and his friends found they could light on fire the |
8 | | water that seeped into basements after storms; that experience, |
9 | | along with many days spent at the Field Museum and a summer at |
10 | | the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, pushed him |
11 | | toward a career of protecting the environment and public |
12 | | health; and
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13 | | WHEREAS, Henry Henderson earned a bachelor's degree in |
14 | | philosophy and theology from Kenyon College in 1974; he then |
15 | | studied in England, where he earned a master's degree in |
16 | | philosophy from Oxford University; in 1976, he moved to Chicago |
17 | | and completed coursework for a doctorate at the University of |
18 | | Chicago; after finding himself drawn more to politics and law, |
19 | | he moved to St. Louis and earned a law degree at Washington |
20 | | University in 1982; and
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21 | | WHEREAS, Henry Henderson worked in the City of Chicago's |
22 | | law department, where he focused on environmental issues; he |
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1 | | served as the staff director of Mayor Harold Washington's |
2 | | Shoreline Protection Commission in the late 1980s; after taking |
3 | | office in 1989, former Mayor Richard M. Daley selected him to |
4 | | be the first environment Commissioner for the City of Chicago; |
5 | | in this role, he helped launch the city's blue-bag recycling |
6 | | program, helped shut down illegal garbage dumps, and oversaw |
7 | | the Chicago Brownfields Initiative, an effort to clean up |
8 | | abandoned industrial sites; he also helped lead the fight to |
9 | | preserve the North Park Village Nature Center and proposed |
10 | | stiffer fines and jail time for companies caught dumping |
11 | | construction waste in residential areas; and
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12 | | WHEREAS, According to Richard M. Daley, Henry Henderson was |
13 | | a "great leader during a vital time in Chicago's history"; he |
14 | | also noted, "Henry proved to be instrumental in the |
15 | | environmental movement here, long before other cities were |
16 | | acknowledging the need for such initiatives"; and
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17 | | WHEREAS, After leaving the City's Department of the |
18 | | Environment in 1998, Henry Henderson joined the Great Cities |
19 | | Institute at the University of Illinois at Chicago as a senior |
20 | | fellow in an environmentally-oriented research and |
21 | | administrative post; he left UIC to start his own firm, Policy |
22 | | Solutions Ltd., and later served as an assistant attorney |
23 | | general for the State of Illinois, again focusing on the |
24 | | environment; and
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1 | | WHEREAS, In 2007, Henry Henderson was tapped to serve as |
2 | | the director for the newly-opened Midwest office of the Natural |
3 | | Resources Defense Council, a New York City-based international |
4 | | nonprofit environmental advocacy group; according to Mayor |
5 | | Rahm Emanuel, in that role Henderson's time "was spent holding |
6 | | polluters, governments, and City Hall accountable"; Mayor |
7 | | Emanuel also noted that "Chicagoans and all Midwesterners owe a |
8 | | debt of gratitude to Henry for his leadership and service"; and
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9 | | WHEREAS, United States Senator Dick Durbin stated, |
10 | | "Without Henry and his dogged work at NRDC, we would have never |
11 | | been as successful at addressing manganese pollution in |
12 | | Southeast Chicago or taking on contamination issues from BP |
13 | | Whiting"; he also noted, "His dedication to leaving this planet |
14 | | better and cleaner for the next generation will be long |
15 | | remembered"; and
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16 | | WHEREAS, Henry Henderson created the Chicago Greencorps, a |
17 | | job-training program that turned vacant lots into community |
18 | | gardens and built planter medians around the City; he felt |
19 | | strongly that to build a sustainable community, the most |
20 | | vulnerable populations had to be better served; and
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21 | | WHEREAS, Henry Henderson will be remembered as an architect |
22 | | of Illinois's Future Energy Jobs Act, one of the most |
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1 | | aggressive state-led climate efforts in the nation, and as one |
2 | | of the loudest and most persistent voices calling for the |
3 | | resuscitation of the Chicago River; under his leadership, NRDC |
4 | | initiated a lawsuit that forced water regulators to stop |
5 | | dumping water rife with human waste into the river; this |
6 | | cleanup effort precipitated the development of the Chicago |
7 | | Riverwalk; and
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8 | | WHEREAS, Henry Henderson is survived by his wife, |
9 | | Jacqueline; his sons, James and Ben; and his sister, Ann Tonks; |
10 | | therefore, be it
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11 | | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED FIRST GENERAL |
12 | | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn the passing of |
13 | | Henry Lueders Henderson and extend our sincere condolences to |
14 | | his family, friends, and all who knew and loved him; and be it |
15 | | further
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16 | | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be |
17 | | presented to the family of Henry Henderson as an expression of |
18 | | our deepest sympathy.
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