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File #: 160371    Version: 0 Name:
Type: Resolution Status: ADOPTED
File created: 4/28/2016 In control: CITY COUNCIL
On agenda: Final action: 4/28/2016
Title: Congratulating Barbara Ortiz Howard for Leading the Local Women on 20's Campaign to Place a Woman on the Twenty Dollar Bill.
Sponsors: Councilmember Reynolds Brown, Councilmember Green
Attachments: 1. Signature16037100.pdf
Title
Congratulating Barbara Ortiz Howard for Leading the Local Women on 20's Campaign to Place a Woman on the Twenty Dollar Bill.

Body
WHEREAS, On April 20, 2016 the United States' Department of Treasury placed freedom fighter Harriet Tubman on the Twenty Dollar Bill; and

WHEREAS, Women on 20's, an organization founded by Barbara Ortiz Howard working to see that women have representation on paper currency; and

WHEREAS, A woman has never been featured on a piece of U.S. paper currency; and

WHEREAS, Women have only appeared on lower circulated, less popular coins including Susan B. Anthony, whose one dollar coin was minted 800 million times before being taken out of circulation, and the Susan B. Anthony replacement, the Sacagawea one dollar coin which by 2012 saw only 3 million in circulation; and

WHEREAS, Women on 20's, along with a group of prominent women historians selected 100 women from American history, which were then narrowed down to four through a series of voting processes; and

WHEREAS, On May 12, 2015, Women on 20's presented a petition to President Obama to replace the portrait of Andrew Jackson with Harriet Tubman; and
WHEREAS, After more than a year of campaigning to convince the U.S. Treasury to replace the portrait of Andrew Jackson on the $20 bill with the face of a female American hero, Women On 20's is celebrating the Treasury Department's decision to accelerate production of a new $20 bill, revealing its design in time for the 100th Anniversary of women's suffrage in 2020 and working with the Federal Reserve Board to fast-track its issuance into circulation; and

WHEREAS, The United States' Secretary of the Treasury, Jacob Lew's choice of the freed slave and freedom fighter Harriet Tubman to one day feature on the $20 note is an exciting one, especially given that she emerged as the choice of more than half a million voters in the Women on 20's online poll last Spring; and

WHEREAS, Harriet Tubman, born a slave, ...

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