Louisiana 2020 2020 Regular Session

Louisiana Senate Bill SR16 Introduced / Bill

                    SLS 20RS-700	ORIGINAL
2020 Regular Session
SENATE RESOLUTION NO. 16
BY SENATOR HARRIS 
COMMENDATIONS.  Commends Chief Justice Bernette Joshua Johnson on a distinguished
career as a jurist and a life of public service to Louisiana.
1	A RESOLUTION
2 To commend Chief Justice Bernette Joshua Johnson on a distinguished career as a jurist and
3 a life of public service to Louisiana.
4 WHEREAS, on February 1, 2013, Bernette Joshua Johnson was sworn in as the
5 twenty-fifth Chief Justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court, its second female Chief Justice,
6 and its first African American Chief Justice; and 
7 WHEREAS, Justice Johnson was born in Donaldsonville, Louisiana, and received
8 a Bachelor of Arts degree from Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia, and later received an
9 Honorary Doctorate in Law from Spelman in April 2001; and
10 WHEREAS, Justice Johnson was one of the first African-American women to attend
11 the law school at Louisiana State University (LSU), where she received her Juris Doctorate
12 degree in 1969; and
13 WHEREAS, while in law school, Justice Johnson worked summers for the Legal
14 Defense Fund (LDF) and as a law clerk for the Civil Rights Division of the United States
15 Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., handling cases filed by the department to
16 implement the 1964 Civil Rights Act; and
17 WHEREAS, Justice Johnson also served as a federal observer during elections in
18 Greenwood, Mississippi; and
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SLS 20RS-700	ORIGINAL
1 WHEREAS, after receiving her Juris Doctorate degree, Justice Johnson became the
2 managing attorney with the New Orleans Legal Assistance Corporation, where she provided
3 legal services to clients in socioeconomically deprived neighborhoods; and
4 WHEREAS, prior to her election to the bench, Justice Johnson spent much of her
5 legal career working in the public sector as a legal services attorney, a Deputy City Attorney
6 for the city of New Orleans, and as a law clerk with the U.S. Justice Department, Civil
7 Rights Division; and
8 WHEREAS, Justice Johnson also worked as a community organizer with the
9 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) Legal Defense and
10 Educational Fund in New York City and with community groups in Alabama, Mississippi,
11 Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Louisiana, disseminating
12 information about recent school desegregation decisions and encouraging parents to take
13 advantage of newly desegregated schools; and
14 WHEREAS, Justice Johnson also helped to organize household workers so they
15 would receive social security benefits and a minimum wage; and
16 WHEREAS, Justice Johnson's judicial career began in 1984, when she was elected
17 to the Civil District Court of New Orleans as the first woman to hold that office, and she was
18 re-elected without opposition in 1990 before being elected Chief Judge by her colleagues in
19 1994; and
20 WHEREAS, as a civil trial judge, Justice Johnson was first assigned to Domestic
21 Relations Court, where she established a system to refer custody, alimony, and child support
22 issues to mediation prior to court appearances and provided that such mediation be provided
23 to needy families based on a sliding scale system for payment of fees; and
24 WHEREAS, Justice Johnson was elected to serve on the Louisiana Supreme Court
25 in 1994 and was re-elected without opposition in 2000 and 2010; and
26 WHEREAS, on the bench, Justice Johnson emphasizes principles of fairness and
27 equality, has served on the Court's Legal Services Task Force, has served on the National
28 Campaign on Best Practices in the area of Racial and Ethnic Fairness in the Courts, and she
29 has also championed many successful initiatives, including the training and certification of
30 the Limited English Proficiency Interpreters in the courts and the implementation of an
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SLS 20RS-700	ORIGINAL
1 electronic filing system for the Louisiana Supreme Court; and
2 WHEREAS, Justice Johnson provided extraordinary leadership to the Louisiana
3 Judiciary in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina by facilitating the efforts to restore the
4 operations of all courts in the New Orleans area; and
5 WHEREAS, as a dedicated jurist and public servant, Chief Justice Johnson is widely
6 recognized as a trailblazer in the judiciary and is the recipient of numerous highly coveted
7 awards including receiving the prestigious Joan Dempsey Klein Award by the National
8 Association of Women Judges in October 2013, joining U.S. Supreme Court Justices Sandra
9 Day O'Connor, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Sonia Sotomayor; and
10 WHEREAS, in 2010 the American Bar Association recognized the value of Chief
11 Justice Johnson's service by awarding her the Spirit of Excellence Award from the ABA's
12 Commission on Racial and Ethnic Diversity in the profession as well as the 1998 Margaret
13 Brent Women Lawyer of Achievement Award; and
14 WHEREAS, Chief Justice Johnson has received many other notable awards,
15 including the 2019 Gertrude E. Rush Award from the National Bar Association for her
16 leadership in the community and in the legal profession; the 2013 Martin Luther King
17 Unsung Hero Award presented by LSU; the 2012 National Urban League President's Award;
18 the 2012 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Award; the 2012
19 Exceptional Leadership Award presented by the Louisiana State Bar Association Diversity
20 Committee; the 2009 Distinguished Jurist Award presented by the Louisiana Bar
21 Foundation; the 2000 Medal of Honor presented by the Mayor of the city of New Orleans;
22 the 2000 Women of Wonder Award by the National Council of Negro Women; and the first
23 ever Ernest N. Morial Award presented by the New Orleans Legal Assistance Corporation;
24 and
25 WHEREAS, in recognition of Chief Justice Johnson's impact on the judiciary, the
26 Louisiana State Bar Association Board of Governors unanimously voted to combine the
27 Trailblazer and Human Rights Awards into the Louisiana State Bar Association Chief Justice
28 Bernette Johnson Trailblazer Award; and 
29 WHEREAS, Chief Justice Bernette Joshua Johnson's professional career has been
30 full of accomplishments, she is most proud to be the loving mother, mother-in-law and
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SLS 20RS-700	ORIGINAL
1 grandmother of her son David Johnson, an accountant; her daughter, Orleans Parish Civil
2 District Court Judge Rachael Johnson; her son-in-law Telley Madina; and grandchildren
3 Joshua, Neyah, Noah, Lacey, Byron, and Telley Jr.; and 
4 WHEREAS, Chief Justice Johnson is a dedicated and loving mother, mother-in-law,
5 grandmother and friend, a jurist in the true sense of the word, an administrator, a civil rights
6 advocate, and a public servant in the finest sense and is totally involved in her community,
7 state, and country on behalf of the betterment of her fellow man.
8 THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Senate of the Legislature of Louisiana
9 does hereby commend Chief Justice Bernette Joshua Johnson on a distinguished career as
10 a jurist and a life of public service to Louisiana.
11 BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a copy of this Resolution be transmitted to
12 Chief Justice Bernette Joshua Johnson.
The original instrument and the following digest, which constitutes no part
of the legislative instrument, were prepared by Michael Bell.
DIGEST
SR 16 Original	2020 Regular Session	Harris
Commends Chief Justice Bernette Joshua Johnson on a distinguished career as a jurist and
a life of public service to Louisiana.
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