Showing posts with label Congressional Gold Medal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Congressional Gold Medal. Show all posts

Thursday, June 19, 2014

Pallone Recognizes Shannon Wedel of Monmouth Beach with Congressional Award Gold Medal



WASHINGTON, DC – Today, Congressman Frank Pallone, Jr. (NJ-06) presented Shannon Wedel, of Monmouth Beach, New Jersey, with the Congressional Award Gold Medal. The medal is given in recognition of the work Shannon has done to better her community and the goals she has set for her own personal development. The Congressional Award is the highest honor bestowed upon America’s youth. To earn the Award, recipients must set and achieve goals in the four program areas: voluntary public service, personal development, physical fitness, and expedition/exploration. Congressman Pallone recognized Shannon’s achievements at the 2014 Gold Medal Award Ceremony held in the U.S. Capitol.

“I’m pleased to present Shannon with this Congressional Gold Medal today, and I commend her for her extraordinary service to our community, especially all her work helping people recover from Superstorm Sandy” said Congressman Pallone. “She is an outstanding young adult, and I am confident that her proven abilities to set goals and achieve them will lead to a very bright future. I also hope that Shannon’s service will inspire others to find ways to give back to the community as well. I wish Shannon all the best and know we will see great things from her in the years to come.”

To earn her Congressional Award Gold Medal, Shannon completed over 400 hours of voluntary public service by assisting at a local food bank, working with the Family Promise program for the homeless, and helping businesses and families recover in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy. To complete the physical fitness requirement, Shannon was an active member of her high school dance team, performing at football and basketball games. She also hiked Haleakala Mountain in Hawaii to fulfill the exploration component.

Established in 1979, the Congressional Award was created by Congress to promote and recognize achievement, initiative, and service in America’s youth. The Congressional Award is open to all young people ages 14 to 23.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

To Those Who Need It

The following is from Congressman Rush Holt's newsletter:

“Banker,” “revolutionary,” and “visionary” are not words often associated with each other. Yet all apply to Dr. Muhammad Yunus, who this week was honored with our nation’s highest civilian honor, the Congressional Gold Medal, under legislation that I wrote and helped pass with help from many New Jerseyans.

Born and educated in what is today Bangladesh, Dr. Yunus discovered that impoverished people could not get ahead because of the predatory lending practices of money-lenders. Starting with just $27 of his own money, Dr. Yunus showed that, contrary to the old, cynical saying than bankers “loan money only to people who don’t need it,” it could be profitable to loan money to poor people who had not shown marketable skills or facility in handling money. In the face of skepticism and opposition, he built a microcredit banking business that thrived, lifted millions of people out of poverty, and provided a model for similar work around the world.


In 2006, New Jerseyans who were inspired by Dr. Yunus’s work – organized through RESULTS NJ – urged me to help honor his contributions and raise awareness of microcredit by working to award him a Congressional Gold Medal. Awarding the medal was not easy; we had to work for four years and talk one by one to hundreds of lawmakers. I feel certain that the effort has generated awareness and durable support in Congress for anti-poverty microfinance programs.

Now Dr. Yunus is developing his model for eliminating poverty – not simply alleviating poverty, but eliminating poverty. Does this sound preposterously idealistic? To many it does. However, we would do well to listen to someone who has such a clear, remarkable record of exploding long-cherished myths about business, money, and poverty.

A Receipt for Your Taxes

As you know, Monday was the deadline to file your 2012 income taxes with the Internal Revenue Service. I encourage you to take a few moments to visit the White House’s 2012 Federal Taxpayer Receipt, which will show you how your tax dollars are being spent.

You may be surprised to learn, for instance, that the clear majority of tax dollars go to support just three programs: Social Security, Medicare, and the Department of Defense. As the economist and Central New Jersey resident Paul Krugman has often commented, the United States government is, from a budgetary perspective, “an insurance company with an army” – an insight that we would all do well to bear in mind when considering the anti-government rhetoric so prevalent in Washington today and when considering possible changes in the federal budget.

“Precious – Almost Sacred”

The history of American elections is a story of an expanding right to vote. The franchise was once extended only to land-owning whites, but over centuries, America has expanded it far more broadly: to non-landowners, to women, and to minorities. Over the years, through various laws we have made it more difficult to exclude people from registering and voting.

One of the heroes in that long story is my friend John Lewis, the Georgia congressman who suffered grave injuries during his nonviolent protests that helped inspire the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. This week he joined me and other New Jersey officials to call on Gov. Christie to take the next step in expanding the franchise: bringing early voting to New Jersey.

The flaws of a one-day-only voting system were all too obvious last November. Many voters across the nation had to wait in long lines on Election Day, and many New Jersey voters affected by Hurricane Sandy could not make it to the polls at all.

The rational, simple solution to this problem – already embraced by more than 30 states – is to allow voters to cast their ballots any time during a period of days or weeks leading up to Election Day. The state legislature has already passed a bill to give New Jerseyans 15 days to vote early. Now, we just need Gov. Christie to sign it into law.

As Rep. Lewis said, “The vote is precious – almost sacred. It is the most powerful nonviolent tool that we have in a democratic society to bring about change. It is my hope that the governor of the state of New Jersey will do what is right, what is fair and what is just, and sign this piece of legislation.”

Sincerely,

Rush Holt
Member of Congress

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Congressman Pallone Presents Piscataway Marine with Congressional Gold Medal




Honored for his service during WWII as a Montford Point Marine

NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ – Congressman Frank Pallone, Jr. (NJ-06) today presented Corporal Charles Brown, Jr. of Piscataway with a Congressional Gold Medal for his distinguished achievements as a Montford Point Marine during World War II. The Congressional Gold Medal is the nation’s highest civilian award. The ceremony was held at Parker’s Landing Lane Care Residence in New Brunswick where Cpl. Brown now resides.

In 1941, President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802 which required the armed services to accept African Americans recruits, but the military remained segregated. Montford Point Camp was created in North Carolina as a separate training camp for African-American Marine Corps recruits and nearly 20,000 Marines passed through Montford Point between 1942 and 1949. The Marines who trained there went on to fight for the U.S. overseas in WWII and pave the way for generations of African-American marines and servicemen.

“This is a long overdue recognition of the sacrifices and bravery of the Montford Point Marines. The 20,000 Montford Point Marines, including the approximately 420 living today, were trailblazers, in many circumstances fighting abroad for freedoms and civil rights that they did not enjoy at that time in the U.S.,” said Pallone. “I am honored to present a Congressional Gold Medal to one of these heroes from my Congressional district, Cpl. Charles Brown.”

Cpl Charles Brown, Jr. entered the Marines on January 28, 1944 and trained at Montford Point. He honorably served during WWII until 1946 in the Pacific Theatre of Operations, including Iwo Jima. When Cpl. Brown returned from the war he settled in Piscataway to raise a family and work as an electrical technician.

To honor the contributions of the Montford Point Marines Congress passed H.R. 2477, which granted them the Congressional Gold Medal. It was signed into law by President Obama in November 2011. A formal ceremony took place in Washington DC on June 27, 2012, at which nearly 400 surviving Montford Point Marines were presented with the Congressional Gold Medal.

“Corporal Brown and the rest of the Montford Point Marines are true patriots. I am proud to have co-sponsored the legislation that grants these national heroes the Congressional Gold Medal, to ensure their sacrifices and contributions to the success of our nation are recognized and their tremendous legacy is never forgotten,” added Pallone.