Bill Text: TX HCR62 | 2021-2022 | 87th Legislature | Comm Sub
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Designating the second week in October as Indigenous Peoples' Week for a 10-year period beginning in 2021.
Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (Democrat 3-1)
Status: (Passed) 2021-06-18 - Signed by the Governor [HCR62 Detail]
Download: Texas-2021-HCR62-Comm_Sub.html
Bill Title: Designating the second week in October as Indigenous Peoples' Week for a 10-year period beginning in 2021.
Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (Democrat 3-1)
Status: (Passed) 2021-06-18 - Signed by the Governor [HCR62 Detail]
Download: Texas-2021-HCR62-Comm_Sub.html
By: Hunter, Pacheco (Senate Sponsor - West) | H.C.R. No. 62 | |
(In the Senate - Received from the House May 12, 2021; | ||
May 12, 2021, read first time and referred to Committee on | ||
Administration; May 21, 2021, reported adversely, with favorable | ||
Committee Substitute by the following vote: Yeas 5, Nays 0; | ||
May 21, 2021, sent to printer.) | ||
COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR H.C.R. No. 62 | By: Johnson |
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WHEREAS, Since the early 1990s, dozens of cities and a | ||
growing number of states have adopted the observance of Indigenous | ||
Peoples' Day to celebrate the history and contributions of Native | ||
Americans; and | ||
WHEREAS, Indigenous Peoples' Day was first proposed in 1977 | ||
as part of the International Conference on Discrimination Against | ||
Indigenous Populations in the Americas; coinciding with Columbus | ||
Day, it has become an important means of focusing attention on the | ||
native peoples of the Americas, past and present, and some | ||
institutions have expanded the observance to encompass a full week; | ||
and | ||
WHEREAS, Over the millennia, ancient peoples built empires, | ||
constructed sophisticated cities, and developed elaborate trade | ||
networks and complex social systems; the area now known as Texas | ||
became home to numerous indigenous tribes with their own unique | ||
cultures and ways of life; and | ||
WHEREAS, Early inhabitants of our state's Gulf Coast included | ||
the semi-nomadic Atakapa, Karankawa, Mariame, and Akokisa, who | ||
lived on the shore for part of the year and moved some 30 to 40 miles | ||
inland on a seasonal basis; the Caddo in East Texas and Jumano in | ||
West Texas were farmers and traders, with economic ties to other | ||
tribes and, later, to Europeans; the Comanche and Apache were | ||
bison-hunting warriors who traversed large regions of the Southern | ||
Plains on horseback; a host of other groups inhabited the Plains | ||
area as well, among them Coahuiltecans, Cocoimes, Chisos, Tobosos, | ||
Tawakonis, Wacos, and Kiowas; and | ||
WHEREAS, Today, the Lone Star State is home to Native | ||
Americans from diverse tribal nations, and the effort to retain | ||
ancestral memories, languages, and cultures is ongoing and vital; | ||
the observation of Indigenous Peoples' Week raises awareness of | ||
this rich heritage and the wide-ranging contributions Native | ||
Americans have made and continue to make to our state and nation; | ||
now, therefore, be it | ||
RESOLVED, That the 87th Legislature of the State of Texas | ||
hereby designate the second week in October as Indigenous Peoples' | ||
Week; and, be it further | ||
RESOLVED, That, in accordance with the provisions of Section | ||
391.004(d), Government Code, this designation remain in effect | ||
until the 10th anniversary of the date that this resolution finally | ||
is passed by the legislature. | ||
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