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10 Foreword I have known Avel Gordly since we were third graders in a Portland public school. That would have been about 1955-56, shortly after passage of Oregon’s Public Accommodations Act in 1953. The first page of this memoir shows Avel holding a photo of the members of the N.A.A.C.P. Portland Branch who lobbied for that Act and the legislators who sponsored it on the day the Act was passed. Members of the N.A.A.C.P. lobbied for eighteen legislative sessions—that’s thirty-six years—before they succeeded in having a law passed that prohibited discrimination in public accommodations. Prior to the Act, African Americans were prohibited from most restaurants, hotels, swimming pools, amusement parks, and even hospitals. My parents Otto and Verdell Rutherford were leading the organization at the time the Act was passed and they are in the picture. I am honored that Avel has paid tribute to my parents and their comrades for their volunteer service and that she has asked me to write this foreword. It is fitting that Avel has chosen to include this picture for a couple of reasons. First, the picture conveys Avel’s feeling that she is standing on the shoulders of those who came before her and that she has carried the legacy of those early activists forward in her roles as activist, legislator, and educator. Second, the picture shows the results of a collaborative effort. This memoir is also the result of collaboration between Avel and Patricia Schechter, her friend and colleague from Portland State University. Patricia interviewed Avel as a participant in an oral history project. The interview has evolved into this book—an opportunity for the reader to see the private face behind a public person. Avel’s public life is a matter of public record. For a complete professional biography, see http://www.pdx.edu/blackstudies/ avel-gordly-biography. Briefly stated, Avel served in the Oregon State Legislature from 1991 to 2008. After serving three terms as 11 a member of the House of Representatives, Avel was elected as Oregon’s first female African American State Senator in 1996. She retired from that position in 2008. In addition to serving on various task forces and committees, during her tenure in office Avel was the chief petitioner for a constitutional amendment that removed racist language from the Oregon Constitution and for Oregon’s minimum wage law. She also sponsored the Expanded Options Bill, which many educators and advocates believed was the singular educational achievement of the 2005 legislative session; the Oregon Legislative Assembly’s Day of Acknowledgment, renouncing Oregon’s legacy of institutional racism; and the first legislation in the nation to address the issue of children abducted by family members or others into whose care the children had been entrusted. Among other legislation she sponsored were bills: — proclaiming Juneteenth, June 19 of each year, the day on which slavery was abolished in Texas in 1865, as a day for celebration statewide of dignity and freedom of all citizens; — creating the Governor’s Environmental Justice Task Force, which requires state agencies and the governor to work on issues of environmental justice in Oregon; —requiring every county police force to be trained in the use of appropriate deadly force; —creating the statewide Office of Multicultural Health; —requiring the availability of health care interpreters and the inclusion of people of diverse backgrounds on state health licensing boards. Avel introduced resolutions honoring the lives, achievements, and heroism of Oregon citizens, including my parents, McKinley Burt, Bill McClendon, Ruth Ascher, Hon. Roosevelt Robinson, and Hon. Mercedes Deiz. Moreover, she organized a ceremony marking the fiftieth anniversary of the passage of the Public Accommodations Act, and honoring U.S. Senator Mark Hatfield, who carried the bill to passage as a young state legislator and is among those pictured in the photograph on the first page. [3.129.23.30] Project MUSE (2024-04-24 04:19 GMT) 12 She also served on the Public Commission on the Legislature (appointed by Senate President) and the Mental Health Alignment Work group (appointed by Governor Kitzhaber). Avel’s personal story is one of faith and perseverance in the face of adversity, while dealing with clinical depression. Anyone who has battled depression while holding down a responsible position will identify with Avel’s observations. Anyone who is faced with doubts about whether he or she is up to the challenge of single parenting or any single parent who...

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