| R 095 |
| 2018 -- S 2627 Enacted 03/08/2018 |
| S E N A T E R E S O L U T I O N |
| RECOGNIZING MARCH 8, 2018, AS "INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY" IN THE STATE OF RHODE ISLAND |
| Introduced By: Senators Nesselbush, Quezada, Crowley, Sosnowski, and Euer |
| Date Introduced: March 08, 2018 |
| WHEREAS, International Women's Day has been observed since the early 1900s, at a |
| time when women's oppression and inequality were causing women to become more vocal, |
| active, and demanding of change; and |
| WHEREAS, The first National Women's Day was observed in the United States on |
| February 28, 1909, in honor of the 1908 garment workers' strike in New York City, where women |
| protested and demanded shorter hours, better pay, and voting rights; and |
| WHEREAS, The first countries to honor International Women's Day in 1911 were |
| Austria, Denmark, Germany, and Switzerland, where together more than one million women and |
| men attended International Women's Day rallies campaigning for women's rights to work, vote, |
| hold public office, and to end discrimination in general; and |
| WHEREAS, In 1977, the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed, once and for all, |
| throughout the world, March 8th as International Women's Day, a day that is celebrated in the |
| Unites States and worldwide; and |
| WHEREAS, International Women's Day has more recently assumed a new, global |
| dimension for women in developed and developing countries alike; and |
| WHEREAS, Gender parity remains elusive in that the World Economic Forum predicted |
| in 2014 that it would take until 2095 to achieve global gender parity. One year later, in 2015, due |
| to a slowdown in the pace of progress that same group indicated that the gender gap wouldn't |
| close entirely until 2133; and |
| WHEREAS, According to the United States Department of Labor, among full-time |
| workers, women still earn less than men, earning 82 percent of what men earn; and |
| WHEREAS, In 2018, the United Nations has declared the theme for this year's |
| International Women's Day celebration as "#PressForProgress." Fueled by the #MeToo |
| Movement and #TimesUp, now more than ever there is global, national and local momentum |
| striving for gender parity; and |
| WHEREAS, This year Rhode Island has chosen to honor Tina Goncalves, Rhode Island's |
| first female local police chief. Chief Goncalves was recently appointed Chief of the Pawtucket |
| Police Department; and |
| RESOLVED, That this Senate of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations |
| hereby recognizes the elite, few women who have blazed trails and burned down barriers in these |
| non-traditional careers, and encourages all citizens to celebrate and pay tribute to the |
| contributions of these women nationally and in the State of Rhode Island; and be it further |
| RESOLVED, That this Senate hereby recognizes March 8, 2018, as "International |
| Women's Day" in the State of Rhode Island; and be it further |
| RESOLVED, That the Secretary of State be and hereby is authorized and directed to |
| transmit a duly certified copy of this resolution to the first woman Governor of the State of Rhode |
| Island, the Honorable Gina Raimondo. |
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| LC005180 |
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