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Senator Patrick Leahy to Speak

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Senator Patrick Leahy to be JSC 2008 Commencement Speaker


February 27, 2008

Vermont’s senior ranking Congressional Senator Patrick Leahy will be the Commencement speaker at Johnson State College May 17, 2008.

This year’s ceremony will be held on the south lawn of the campus, beginning at 2 p.m.

“Senator Leahy has been a towering force in representing Vermont, and the nation,” said JSC President Barbara Murphy. “Given his central role in many of the country’s most urgent and important issues in recent years, Senator Leahy was an obvious choice for us, and we’re delighted that he will share this very important day with us all.”

“I was delighted when Barbara Murphy invited me to serve as this year’s commencement speaker,” said Leahy. “As a Vermonter, I am proud of Johnson State College. Its rich history as a teacher’s college and liberal arts institution has not only transformed the lives of its students, but has also made a positive difference to all whose lives have been affected by Johnson graduates.”

Leahy was elected to the United States Senate in 1974 and, until recently, was the only Democrat elected to this office from Vermont. At 34, he was the youngest U.S. Senator ever to be elected from the Green Mountain State, and is now serving his sixth term.

Leahy was born in Montpelier and grew up across from the Vermont Statehouse. He graduated from Saint Michael’s College in Colchester in 1961, and he received his Juris Doctor from Georgetown University Law Center in 1964. He served eight years as State’s Attorney in Chittenden County. He gained a national reputation for his law enforcement activities and was selected in 1974 as one of three outstanding prosecutors in the US. Leahy is the Chairman of the Judiciary Committee and is a senior member of the Agriculture and Appropriations Committees. He ranks seventh in seniority in the Senate.

As a leading member of the Appropriations Committee, Leahy is Chairman of the Subcommittee on State and Foreign Operations and also sits on its Defense, Interior, Commerce-Justice-Science, Transportation-Treasury-Judiciary-Housing and Urban Development, and Homeland Security subcommittees.

Active on human rights issues, Leahy has been the leading U.S. officeholder in the international campaign against the production, export and use of anti-personnel landmines. In 1992 Leahy wrote the first law by any government to ban the export of landmines. He led efforts in Congress to aid landmine victims by creating a special fund in the foreign aid budget, and the Leahy War Victims Fund now provides up to $14 million of relief to these victims each year. He was instrumental in establishing programs to support humanitarian demining and played a key role in pushing for an international treaty banning anti-personnel mines. He also wrote and enacted civilian war victims’ relief programs that are underway in Afghanistan and Iraq.

In the immediate aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11, Leahy headed the Senate’s negotiations on the 2001 anti-terrorism bill, the USA PATRIOT Act. He added checks and balances to the bill to protect civil liberties, as well as provisions which he authored to triple staffing along the U.S.-Canada border, to authorize domestic preparedness grants to states, and to facilitate the hiring of new FBI translators.

Leahy is the chief sponsor of the Innocence Protection Act, which addresses flaws in the administration of capital punishment. Parts of Leahy’s death penalty reform package in 2004 will reduce the risks that innocent people are executed by providing for post-conviction DNA testing and better access to competent legal counsel.

A leader on Internet and technology issues, Leahy was one of the first members of Congress to go online and in 1995 was the second senator to post a homepage. His Web site consistently has been judged one of the Senate’s best and a leading Internet magazine called Leahy the most “Net-friendly” member of Congress. He has been the Senate’s leading champion of open government and the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), and in 1996 was installed in the FOIA Hall of Fame in recognition of his efforts. He is one of only two politicians ever awarded the John Peter Zenger Press Freedom Award.

Leahy has crusaded for the protection of privacy rights, copyright protections and freedom of speech on the Internet. He was a co-founder and remains co-chair of the Congressional Internet Caucus. Leahy chairs the Senate Democratic Task Force on Privacy, formed in 2000, and has taken the lead on several privacy issues, including Internet and medical records privacy. Leahy held Congress’s first hearing in 1994 on privacy concerns relating to electronic medical records.

Always ranked among the top environmental legislators by the nation’s foremost conservation organizations, Leahy successfully opposed attempts to allow oil and gas exploration in wildlife refuges in the United States, including the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska and the Missisquoi Wildlife Refuge in Vermont. At home in Vermont, Leahy has also helped secure more than $70 million in federal funds to clean up Lake Champlain and spearheaded congressional efforts to tackle the dangers of mercury pollution. He has worked to add more than 125,000 acres to the Green Mountain National Forest, an accomplishment matched by few lawmakers of any era.

He led bipartisan efforts to streamline the Department of Agriculture, and the 1994 Leahy-Lugar bill reorganized the U.S. Department of Agriculture by closing 1100 offices and saving more than $2 billion. Leahy also led the successful effort to extend the Conservation Reserve Program, which assists farmers in meeting environmental objectives without reducing income. Leahy’s Farms for the Future program — now the Farmland Protection Program created in the 1990 Farm Bill — has helped preserve more than 350 Vermont farms. He played a crucial role in enactment and implementation of the Northeast Interstate Dairy Compact and also worked with others in the Vermont Congressional Delegation in establishing the Milk Income Loss Compensation (MILC) program, modeled on the compact. Leahy also is the founder of the national organic standards and labeling program, which took effect in 2002.

Leahy co-chairs the Senate National Guard Caucus and has led in ensuring that members of the National Guard in Vermont and across the nation receive the necessary resources to fulfill their heightened missions after September 11. In 2003, the National Guard Association presented Leahy with its highest individual honor, the Harry S. Truman Award, for his “sustained contributions of exceptional and far-reaching magnitude to the defense and security of the United States in a manner worthy of recognition at the national level.”

Patrick Leahy has been married to Marcelle Pomerleau Leahy for 44 years. They have a daughter, two sons, and four grandchildren. The Leahys live on a tree farm in Middlesex, Vermont.