|
Who Is She?
About Congresswoman Barbara
Lee
Barbara
Lee was first elected to the House of
Representatives for the Ninth District of California in a 1998
special election to fill the seat of retiring Congressman Ron
Dellums. She is currently the Vice Chair of the Progressive
Caucus, Chair of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) Task Force
on Global HIV/AIDS, Democratic Regional Whip for Region 2
(Northern California, American Samoa, Guam, Hawaii), and a
member of the CBC Minority Business Task Force. Congresswoman
Lee came to Washington after serving in the California State
Assembly from 1990-1996 and the California State Senate from
1996-1998.
Throughout her political career, Barbara Lee has sought to bring
her training as a social worker to bear on the problems and
challenges that confront the East Bay, California, and the
nation. She has worked to build bipartisan coalitions to provide
for the basic and inter-related needs of Americans: health care,
housing, education, jobs, and the quest to create livable
communities in a peaceful world. In order to meet these needs,
Americans and their representatives must begin by reordering our
priorities and redefining national security for the post-Cold
War world: a bloated defense budget undermines rather than
enhances our real national security. In Congress, Barbara Lee is
carrying on a long tradition in the Ninth District of
representing the voice of reason and compassion in the fight to
reshape the national budget.
These objectives underlie Lee’s work on the International
Relations Committee (Subcommittees on Africa and Europe) and the
Financial Services Committee (Subcommittees on Housing and
International Monetary Policy). She has emerged as a key leader
in Congress in the fight against HIV/AIDS both at home and
abroad, helping to secure over $5 million in funding for
HIV/AIDS care and services in Alameda County. Recognizing that
national boundaries will not stop the spread of this disease and
that AIDS represents the crucial humanitarian issue of our time,
she has worked successfully to pass meaningful legislation that
will initiate multilateral international efforts to fight this
terrible disease. She was co-author of H.R. 3519, the Global
AIDS and Tuberculosis Relief Act of 2000, which can ultimately
leverage over $1 billion to combat these diseases and which was
signed into law by President Clinton. More recently,
Congresswoman Lee has introduced legislation to increase the
worldwide affordability of AIDS drugs and linking international
debt relief to HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment, and social and
health infrastructure.
Access to healthcare is a basic human right, one that is too
often denied or restricted here in this country. For that
reason, Congresswoman Lee has introduced the Universal
Healthcare Act, authored legislation on benign brain tumors, and
supported expanding prescription drug coverage for seniors and
other Americans.
|
Rep. Lee and Ghanian
Children
|
As a member of the Financial
Services Committee’s Subcommittee on Housing, Lee has played a
leading role in the fight for affordable housing, one of the
most urgent issues facing the Bay Area. She helped secure a $34
million grant from the Department of Housing and Urban
Development for the City of Oakland and, through the
Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, convened a Western
Regional Summit on Housing and Wealth Accumulation in which
Fannie Mae contributed $500,000 to the Northern California Land
Trust for low cost housing. Additionally, Lee has consistently
supported legislation to expand opportunities for home
ownership, improve the quality of public housing in this
country, and assist individuals and families who are homeless.
Education has also always been a very high priority on Barbara
Lee’s agenda. She has worked with teachers and counselors to
craft legislation to provide schools with the means to hire
badly needed counselors and other mental health and social work
professionals. In California schools today there are on average
1100 students for every counselor; the Lee bill would help give
school districts the resources to meet these critical needs.
Additionally, the Congresswoman has also worked to reduce class
size, strengthen after school programs, and increase the amount
of money directed to educational programs and initiatives; for
instance, she has helped to raise millions in federal and local
funds for math and science education at the Chabot Observatory
and Science Center in Oakland and for violence prevention and
environmental education at the Martin Luther King Freedom
Center.
Lee has sought to bridge the digital divide both in our schools
and our communities at large. As a member of the CBC High Tech
Working Group, she has worked with representatives from the high
technology fields to open doors to minorities and women.
Increasing access to technology is a mechanism that can help
achieve both economic development and racial justice. Tackling
digital divide issues is just one component of Barbara Lee’s
efforts to strengthen economic development in the Bay Area,
including the effective redevelopment of area military bases,
and to enhance educational opportunities in the region.
It is important to continue growing our local and national
economy; Representative Lee believes it is also important that
we ensure that growth and expansion bring livability rather than
congestion, pollution, and conflict. Enhancing livability
requires addressing traffic, transportation, and environmental
problems on both a local and a federal level: Lee has worked to
increase funding for mass transit while supporting legislation
to raise fuel economy standards, reduce pollution, and address
environmental racism and introducing a congressional resolution
on global climate change. California’s current energy crisis has
graphically demonstrated the fundamental need for a new energy
policy. Along with other members of the California delegation
and the Progressive Caucus, Lee has sought to forge policies
that will protect both consumers and the environment.
Barbara Lee began her political career by working as an intern
in the office of Congressman Ron Dellums. She later became his
chief of staff. Lee has served as a board member of the
California State World Trade Commission, the California State
Coastal Conservancy, and the District Export Council, and a
member of the California Defense Conversion Council. She created
and presided over the California Commission on the Status of
African American Males, the California Legislative Black Caucus,
and the National Conference on State Legislatures Women’s
Network, and served as a member of the California Commission on
the Status of Women.
Born in El Paso, Texas, Barbara Lee came to California in 1960.
After receiving the Bank of America Achievement Award and the
Rotary Club Music Award, she went on to Mills College,
graduating in 1973, and earning a Master’s degree in Social
Welfare from the University of California, Berkeley in 1975.
While working towards her graduate degree, Lee founded a
community mental health center in Berkeley. She is a resident of
Oakland, California.
STATEMENT OF REPRESENTATIVE BARBARA LEE (D-CA)
IN OPPOSITION TO S.J.RES. 23, AUTHORIZING THE USE OF MILITARY
FORCE
I rise today with a heavy heart, one that is filled with sorrow
for the families and loved ones who were killed and injured this
week. Only the most foolish or the most callous would not
understand the grief that has gripped our people and millions
across the world.
This unspeakable attack on the United States has forced me to
rely on my moral compass, my conscience, and my God for
direction.
September 11 changed the world. Our deepest fears now haunt us.
Yet I am convinced that military action will not prevent further
acts of international terrorism against the United States.
This resolution will pass although we all know that the
President can wage a war even without it. However difficult this
vote may be, some of us must urge the use of restraint. Our
country is in a state of mourning. Some of us must say, let’s
step back for a moment and think through the implications of our
action today so that it does not spiral out of control.
I have agonized over this vote. But I came to grips with
opposing this resolution during the very painful memorial
service today. As a member of the clergy so eloquently said, "As
we act, let us not become the evil that we deplore."
|
|
Will
Barbara Lee's Risky Gamble Pay Off?
Earl Ofari
Hutchinson, AlterNet
California Congresswoman Barbara
Lee, a black Democrat, cast the lone vote against giving
President Bush carte blanche to unleash war against terrorists.
[Read
More]
|
|
|