Arizona 2024 Regular Session

Arizona Senate Bill SCR1005 Compare Versions

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11 Senate Engrossed Sandra Day O'Connor; death resolution State of Arizona Senate Fifty-sixth Legislature Second Regular Session 2024 SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION 1005 A Concurrent Resolution on the death of the honorable sandra day o'connor. (TEXT OF BILL BEGINS ON NEXT PAGE)
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810 State of Arizona Senate Fifty-sixth Legislature Second Regular Session 2024
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4549 A Concurrent Resolution
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4953 on the death of the honorable sandra day o'connor.
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5963 Former Arizona State Senator and United States Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor passed away on December 1, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona, at the age of 93. From simple beginnings in Arizona's ranching country to historic service in the Arizona State Senate and as the first female justice on the United States Supreme Court, Justice O'Connor earned her rightful place in the history of this state and nation. She was born in 1930 in El Paso, Texas, and spent her early years in Arizona on the remote Lazy B Ranch founded by her grandfather in the 1880s, where she displayed a penchant for hard work. When she reached school age, she lived with her grandmother and attended school in El Paso during the school year and continued to spend summers working on the ranch. After graduation from high school, Justice O'Connor earned both undergraduate and law degrees from Stanford University. She graduated third in her law school class of 102 students in 1952, yet experienced firsthand the reluctance of law firms to hire women as attorneys when her only job offer was that of a legal secretary. Justice O'Connor declined the secretarial position and instead embarked on a career in public service as a deputy county attorney in California. She realized early on her enjoyment of public service and she continued in that realm almost exclusively for the remainder of her career. Even when Justice O'Connor became a full-time mother to her three sons, she was active in numerous worthwhile volunteer endeavors, including writing questions for the Arizona bar exam, helping to establish the Arizona bar's lawyer referral service, serving as a member of state and local commissions and committees and volunteering with the Arizona State Hospital and the Salvation Army. She continued her public service in 1965 when she was hired as an assistant Arizona attorney general. In 1969, she was appointed to the Arizona State Senate went on to be elected to the Senate in 1970 and 1972. She was selected by her peers to serve as Majority Leader of the Arizona State Senate in 1972, becoming the first woman to serve as majority leader in a state legislature. Justice O'Connor's judicial career began in 1974 when she was elected as a judge on the Maricopa County Superior Court, and she was appointed to the Arizona Court of Appeals in 1979. Justice O'Connor made history in 1981 when President Ronald Reagan appointed her to the United States Supreme Court. As the Court's 102nd justice, Justice O'Connor displayed a solid understanding of separation of powers and federalism that had its roots in her service in all branches of government. Throughout nearly twenty-five years on the Supreme Court, Justice O'Connor served with distinction and sought to interpret the Constitution with careful and restrained reasoning. She established herself as a principled and independent thinker and demonstrated diligence and integrity in all her efforts. In 2006, Justice O'Connor retired from the Supreme Court, in part to care for her ailing husband. Yet she remained active for years in such worthwhile endeavors as the Iraq Study Group, the American Bar Association's Central European and Eurasian Law Initiative, and she served on the boards of the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, the National Constitution Center and the William H. Rehnquist Center. Justice O'Connor founded iCivics in 2009, a web-based nonprofit that provides educational games to middle school students to teach about the three branches of government and the relationship between the federal government and the states. She was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom that same year in recognition of her lifetime accomplishments. Justice O'Connor distinguished herself as an outstanding Arizonan and American, and it is with gratitude that we honor her tremendous record of service to our state and nation. She will be greatly missed by her family, her many friends and her peers and colleagues around the country. Therefore Be it resolved by the Senate of the State of Arizona, the House of Representatives concurring: That the Members of the Legislature express their deepest sympathies at the passing of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and extend their condolences to her surviving family members.
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6165 Former Arizona State Senator and United States Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor passed away on December 1, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona, at the age of 93.
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6367 From simple beginnings in Arizona's ranching country to historic service in the Arizona State Senate and as the first female justice on the United States Supreme Court, Justice O'Connor earned her rightful place in the history of this state and nation. She was born in 1930 in El Paso, Texas, and spent her early years in Arizona on the remote Lazy B Ranch founded by her grandfather in the 1880s, where she displayed a penchant for hard work. When she reached school age, she lived with her grandmother and attended school in El Paso during the school year and continued to spend summers working on the ranch.
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6569 After graduation from high school, Justice O'Connor earned both undergraduate and law degrees from Stanford University. She graduated third in her law school class of 102 students in 1952, yet experienced firsthand the reluctance of law firms to hire women as attorneys when her only job offer was that of a legal secretary. Justice O'Connor declined the secretarial position and instead embarked on a career in public service as a deputy county attorney in California. She realized early on her enjoyment of public service and she continued in that realm almost exclusively for the remainder of her career.
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6771 Even when Justice O'Connor became a full-time mother to her three sons, she was active in numerous worthwhile volunteer endeavors, including writing questions for the Arizona bar exam, helping to establish the Arizona bar's lawyer referral service, serving as a member of state and local commissions and committees and volunteering with the Arizona State Hospital and the Salvation Army. She continued her public service in 1965 when she was hired as an assistant Arizona attorney general. In 1969, she was appointed to the Arizona State Senate went on to be elected to the Senate in 1970 and 1972. She was selected by her peers to serve as Majority Leader of the Arizona State Senate in 1972, becoming the first woman to serve as majority leader in a state legislature.
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6973 Justice O'Connor's judicial career began in 1974 when she was elected as a judge on the Maricopa County Superior Court, and she was appointed to the Arizona Court of Appeals in 1979. Justice O'Connor made history in 1981 when President Ronald Reagan appointed her to the United States Supreme Court.
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7175 As the Court's 102nd justice, Justice O'Connor displayed a solid understanding of separation of powers and federalism that had its roots in her service in all branches of government. Throughout nearly twenty-five years on the Supreme Court, Justice O'Connor served with distinction and sought to interpret the Constitution with careful and restrained reasoning. She established herself as a principled and independent thinker and demonstrated diligence and integrity in all her efforts.
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7377 In 2006, Justice O'Connor retired from the Supreme Court, in part to care for her ailing husband. Yet she remained active for years in such worthwhile endeavors as the Iraq Study Group, the American Bar Association's Central European and Eurasian Law Initiative, and she served on the boards of the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, the National Constitution Center and the William H. Rehnquist Center. Justice O'Connor founded iCivics in 2009, a web-based nonprofit that provides educational games to middle school students to teach about the three branches of government and the relationship between the federal government and the states. She was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom that same year in recognition of her lifetime accomplishments.
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7579 Justice O'Connor distinguished herself as an outstanding Arizonan and American, and it is with gratitude that we honor her tremendous record of service to our state and nation. She will be greatly missed by her family, her many friends and her peers and colleagues around the country.
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7781 Therefore
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8185 That the Members of the Legislature express their deepest sympathies at the passing of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and extend their condolences to her surviving family members.
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83- UNANIMOUSLY ADOPTED BY THE HOUSE JANUARY 8, 2024. UNANIMOUSLY ADOPTED BY THE SENATE JANUARY 8, 2024. FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE JANUARY 8, 2024.
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99-FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE JANUARY 8, 2024.