BILL REQ. #:  S-0080.1 



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SENATE BILL 5033
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State of Washington60th Legislature2007 Regular Session

By Senators Prentice, Parlette, Kohl-Welles, Rasmussen, Regala, Fairley, Rockefeller, Kline, Haugen, Weinstein, McAuliffe, Spanel, Kastama, Franklin, Keiser, Shin, Hatfield, Pridemore, Hargrove, Jacobsen, Berkey, Poulsen, Kilmer, Murray, Fraser, Marr, Kauffman and Roach

Read first time 01/08/2007.   Referred to Committee on Government Operations & Elections.



     AN ACT Relating to women's suffrage day; amending RCW 1.16.050; and creating a new section.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:

NEW SECTION.  Sec. 1   The legislature recognizes and finds that:
(1) Elizabeth Cady Stanton devoted her life to the women's suffrage movement that advanced women in employment and educational opportunities, property rights, and increased social freedoms;
     (2) July 19, 1848, was the first Women's Rights Convention where American women declared themselves equal under the law;
     (3) These convention participants signed and adopted a Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions that called for women to have equal rights in voting, property, education, and other matters;
     (4) Citizens who are bound by the law should have a voice in creating these laws as voting is a defining right of United States citizenship;
     (5) As president of the National Woman Suffrage Association, Elizabeth Cady Stanton was determined to give women the right to vote, make the divorce process easier, and end discrimination in employment;
     (6) Many supporters organized marches, picket lines, and other forms of protest in congressional districts and the nation's capital for the right to vote;
     (7) The women's suffrage movement inspired and empowered thousands of Americans including young people and working-class women across the nation;
     (8) In 1893, individual states began to grant women the right to vote beginning with Colorado, followed by Utah, Idaho, Washington, California, Arizona, Kansas, Oregon, Illinois, Nevada, and Montana;
     (9) In 1920, the nineteenth amendment to the Constitution was adopted and women were granted the right to vote; and
     (10) The nineteenth day of July should be recognized as Women's Suffrage Day to honor great American women for their past, present, and future accomplishments of furthering equal rights of all American women.

Sec. 2   RCW 1.16.050 and 2003 c 68 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
     The following are legal holidays: Sunday; the first day of January, commonly called New Year's Day; the third Monday of January, being celebrated as the anniversary of the birth of Martin Luther King, Jr.; the third Monday of February to be known as Presidents' Day and to be celebrated as the anniversary of the births of Abraham Lincoln and George Washington; the last Monday of May, commonly known as Memorial Day; the fourth day of July, being the anniversary of the Declaration of Independence; the first Monday in September, to be known as Labor Day; the eleventh day of November, to be known as Veterans' Day; the fourth Thursday in November, to be known as Thanksgiving Day; the day immediately following Thanksgiving Day; and the twenty-fifth day of December, commonly called Christmas Day.
     Employees of the state and its political subdivisions, except employees of school districts and except those nonclassified employees of institutions of higher education who hold appointments or are employed under contracts to perform services for periods of less than twelve consecutive months, shall be entitled to one paid holiday per calendar year in addition to those specified in this section. Each employee of the state or its political subdivisions may select the day on which the employee desires to take the additional holiday provided for herein after consultation with the employer pursuant to guidelines to be promulgated by rule of the appropriate personnel authority, or in the case of local government by ordinance or resolution of the legislative authority.
     If any of the above specified state legal holidays are also federal legal holidays but observed on different dates, only the state legal holidays shall be recognized as a paid legal holiday for employees of the state and its political subdivisions except that for port districts and the law enforcement and public transit employees of municipal corporations, either the federal or the state legal holiday, but in no case both, may be recognized as a paid legal holiday for employees.
     Whenever any legal holiday, other than Sunday, falls upon a Sunday, the following Monday shall be the legal holiday.
     Whenever any legal holiday falls upon a Saturday, the preceding Friday shall be the legal holiday.
     Nothing in this section shall be construed to have the effect of adding or deleting the number of paid holidays provided for in an agreement between employees and employers of political subdivisions of the state or as established by ordinance or resolution of the local government legislative authority.
     The legislature declares that the twelfth day of October shall be recognized as Columbus Day but shall not be considered a legal holiday for any purposes.
     The legislature declares that the ninth day of April shall be recognized as former prisoner of war recognition day but shall not be considered a legal holiday for any purposes.
     The legislature declares that the twenty-sixth day of January shall be recognized as Washington army and air national guard day but shall not be considered a legal holiday for any purposes.
     The legislature declares that the seventh day of August shall be recognized as purple heart recipient recognition day but shall not be considered a legal holiday for any purposes.
     The legislature declares that the second Sunday in October be recognized as Washington state children's day but shall not be considered a legal holiday for any purposes.
     The legislature declares that the sixteenth day of April shall be recognized as Mother Joseph day and the fourth day of September as Marcus Whitman day, but neither shall be considered legal holidays for any purpose.
     The legislature declares that the seventh day of December be recognized as Pearl Harbor remembrance day but shall not be considered a legal holiday for any purpose.
     The legislature declares that the nineteenth day of February be recognized as civil liberties day of remembrance but shall not be considered a legal holiday for any purpose.
The legislature declares that the nineteenth day of July be recognized as women's suffrage day but shall not be considered a legal holiday for any purpose.

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