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On the evening of August 20, 2001, representatives of many school and
community groups working for passage of the Dignity for All Students Act
gathered at the New York State Capitol to speak out publicly in support of
the bill currently pending in the New York State Legislature. Over 100
participants rallied.
REMARKS
TERRY O'NEILL, ESQ.
DIGNITY FOR ALL STUDENTS ACT VIGIL
NEW YORK STATE CAPITOL
20 AUGUST 2001
Good evening. My name is Terry O'Neill. I'm a
lawyer with a long and very broad experience in
state government. I came to Albany twenty
three years ago on the invitation of Fred Miller, a
distinguished attorney who retired last year.
Fred is probably the most knowledgeable person
I ever met about the legislative process. He
certainly taught me everything I know about it.
In fact, he teaches a seminar on the process at
Albany Law School. He calls it "There Ought To
Be A Law."
Obviously, there are many here this evening who
feel that the Dignity for All Students Act "ought
to be a law." I predict that when it is, you'll all
qualify for credit for Fred's course because
getting a law enacted is a lot of work and you
learn a great deal in doing it.
It's almost two years now since John Myers of
the Coalition for Safer Schools called me up in
his usual restless state and told me about the
recent passage of the California version of this
proposal. "Do you think it might fly here?" he
asked.
I've heard that question before. I am a veteran
of many successful legislative campaigns. They
all had two things in common. They were ideas
whose time had come and they were backed by
people who were intensely committed to make
them happen.
I sensed that those two forces were converging
over this issue.
First, there was the recent success of the Hate
Crimes Bill and that coincided with huge public
concern over school violence. I hasten to
compliment Lt. Governor Mary Donohue and
Albany Mayor Gerry Jennings for their efforts to
combat the latter.
Second, I noted the appearance on the stage of
people like Nick Lanni and Graham Murphy, the
courageous co-chairs of this event, Ross Levi
and the staff of the Empire State Pride Agenda,
the rapidly expanding coalition of supporting
organizations and people from far afield like
Steve Cozza and his Dad with their closely
related Scouting for All initiative.
I'd like to compliment John Myers in particular.
John retired in recent years from a federal job
and has become a tireless activist in making the
schools safe for young people of all persuasions.
He founded the Capital Region Chapter of
GLSEN. Later he went on to organize the
Coalition for Safer Schools.
Getting back to the bill, through the good offices
of former Assistant Assembly Speaker Edward
Griffith, we drafted legislation and passed it on
to a newly-elected State Senator, Tom Duane.
We knew Senator Duane would not rest until the
Governor signed the bill into law.
In the Assembly, the sponsor is Education
Committee Chair Steve Sanders, one of our
nation's most respected and effective leaders in
education policy.
This is very important legislation. It goes much
further than the Hate Crimes Law. That law
punishes crimes motivated by bias and teaches
a lesson to those who might be similarly
inclined; but it does not address the far more
pervasive, insidious and self-perpetuating
existence of bias itself at its very roots. This
act will help to do that.
I can see that a lot of highly motivated people
have coalesced around this Act. That's what it
will take to get it passed. But then the real
work begins. If it is to be more than just some
words in a statute book, you have to be ready to
follow up by advocating its implementation in
every school district in the state.
You may think that the people in positions of
authority in all these government buildings can
just snap their fingers and get things done. Not
so. Not without public interest and support. Let
me give you one example that should resonate
with many of you.
In 1987, when I was first getting to know him, I
had a private meeting one day with the man who
was then Superintendent of the New York State
Police -- Tom Constantine. He happened to
mention in passing his frustration over a series
of homicides of older gay men at a resort area
upstate.
His frustration was because local police were
not pursuing these cases aggressively and
would not accept state police investigative
support. That troubled him greatly.
You see, years before there was a hate crimes
law in New York, our top cop stood ready to do
something about what were likely hate crimes --
and he did, when he could. But to make it
possible to do that in every such case with over
six hundred individual police agencies in the
state took years of advocacy, work and new
laws won by people like you who asserted a
changed public attitude and a new sensitivity to
the fact that justice denied to one is justice
denied to all.
Fairness and impartiality -- whether it's on the
part of the police officers who enforce the laws
and protect civil rights on streets and highways
or the teachers and staff responsible for
maintaining a safe and orderly learning
environment in the schools -- I hear you asking
for no more and willing to accept no less.
I would like to close by saying that I am not here
representing any particular interest or group,
although I do provide legal and legislative
advice to the Coalition for Safer Schools. It's
hard to say no to Mr. Myers.
And yes, the bill does single out for its special
protection those groups who have historically
borne the burden of discrimination on the basis
of race, religion, sex, sexual preference,
disability, etc. But I hope this goes a lot further.
Because there are people I've been thinking of
since Mr. Myers first approached me with this
Act. I'm not sure if they'd all be considered
specifically covered under the bill, but I hope
they are.
I want to mention some of them in closing.
There was tiny girl from a very poor family I
knew when I was in first grade. She lived in a
shack without plumbing and wore rummage sale
clothes. Her name was Faith. She had a
noticeable overbite that led to the cruel
nickname "Gopher."
There was a guy named Steve who had an
unpronounceable Polish name. He had more
trouble pronouncing it than anyone else because
of a speech impediment. He got ridiculed and
picked on.
In high school there was a guy named Paul
who was very portly. You know what that led to.
Another guy named Chuck was small, scrawny,
had a pointy nose and close-set eyes that
earned him the nickname "Mole" and a special
dispensation from the requirement of showers
after athletics. Chuck went on to endure and
overcome horrific problems with drugs and
alcohol.
There was another guy who was far from the
most athletic person in the school. Nor was he
exactly the epitome of stereotypically male
behavior and deportment. And unfortunately his
name rhymed with "queer." And rhyme it did;
day after day.
There are many reasons why kids get singled
out for cruel treatment in elementary and
secondary schools. Not one of those reasons is
justified or to be tolerated. Because, as the law
enforcement officers like Mr. Constantine I've
been privileged to know over the years know
better than anyone else, bias leads to violence.
And that is the message of the Dignity for All
Students Act.

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Capitol Station
Albany, NY 12224-0223
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