Florida Civil Rights Hall of Fame: The Commission is Accepting Nominations!

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
June 10, 2015

CONTACTS:
Frank Penela    (850) 488-7082 ext.1011

Florida Civil Rights Hall of Fame: The Commission is Accepting Nominations!
- Honoring civil rights heroes-

Tallahassee – The Florida Commission on Human Relations (Commission) is now accepting nominations for the Florida Civil Rights Hall of Fame. The deadline for submission of nominations is July 15, 2015. The judges will be looking for individuals who have made significant contributions and provided leadership toward Florida’s progress and achievements in civil rights.

“We are once again excited to be accepting nominations for next year’s Civil Rights Hall of Fame. This program honors leaders and advocates who have tirelessly worked to protect the rights of various populations throughout Florida,” said Michelle Wilson, Commission Executive Director. “We must continue our efforts to honor the civil rights pioneers who came before us and use their heroic stories as a way to educate and empower our next generation.”

Contributions of nominees can include community empowerment, legislative advocacy, grassroots organizing, coalition building, authored publications, organizational leadership, private and governmental entity diversity efforts and multicultural educational initiatives in any area of human and civil rights or related areas. Please visit http://fchr.state.fl.us/outreach/florida_civil_rights_hall_of_fame to view the rules, criteria, nomination form and other relevant information.

The Florida Commission on Human Relations, established in 1969, is the state agency charged with administering the Florida Civil Rights Act and Florida Fair Housing Act. Fair treatment, equal access and mutual respect are the benchmarks of the Commission’s commitment. Through education and partnerships, the Commission works to prevent discrimination and costly litigation through teaching best business practices and fostering understanding amongst Floridians about their rights and responsibilities under both state and federal discrimination laws.

For more information, please visit http://fchr.state.fl.us or on Facebook

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Keller and Steele Selected to Chair and Vice –Chair of Florida Commission on Human Relations

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
May 27, 2015
CONTACTS: Frank Penela  (850) 488-7082 ext.1011

TALLAHASSEE – Recently, members of the Florida Commission on Human Relations (FCHR) unanimously selected Michael G. Keller of Brandon to serve as the chair of the FCHR. Commissioners also appointed to Rebecca Steele of Jacksonville to serve as the Commission’s Vice Chair.

Chair Keller is founding partner, President & CTO of International Direct Selling Technology Corporation (IDSTC), the premier software technology provider to the direct selling industry. Over the past decade, IDSTC has completed more than 500 successful client implementations, supporting millions of people around the world. He is a U.S. Army combat veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom (FL-ARNG) and a graduate of the University of South Florida. He has earned a Certificate in Executive Leadership from Cornell University, a Six Sigma Certificate from Villanova University, and is an ISACA Certified Information Security Manager (CISM). He was appointed to the FCHR by Governor Crist in 2010, and re-appointed in 2011 by Governor Rick Scott. 

Vice-Chair Steele is an Executive Vice President Human Resources and Chief Human Resources Officer of Acosta Sales and Marketing in Jacksonville. She began her career with the Marriott Corporation in Washington D.C., providing Human Resources Support for the Food Service Management Division and Corporate Acquisitions. Her experience also includes Human Resource Management Positions with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Florida, A. Foster Higgins Consulting Firm in California, and First Hospital Corporation. Steele was appointed by Governor Rick Scott to serve the FCHR in 2013.

FCHR works to prevent unlawful discrimination by investigating and working to resolve complaints of discrimination in the areas of housing, employment and public accommodations, as well as whistle-blower retaliation against state employees and state contractors. Since its creation in 1969, the Commission has investigated and closed more than 74,000 cases while enforcing the Florida Civil Rights Act, the Florida Fair Housing Act and the Florida Whistle-blower’s Act. Since 2006, Florida businesses have saved at least $12 million per year by participating in FCHR mediation services and thus avoiding costly lawsuits.

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Three Civil Rights Heroes Inducted into Florida Civil Rights Hall of Fame

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
May 13, 2015

CONTACTS:
Frank Penela    (850) 488-7082 ext.1011

Tallahassee, Fla. – Today, Sallye Brooks Mathis, Edward Daniel Davis and Reubin O’D Askew were officially inducted into the Florida Civil Rights Hall of Fame for 2015.

“Many individuals have made a positive impact on the civil rights movement in Florida, and it brings me great pride to once again recognize them by the induction to the Florida Civil Rights Hall of Fame,” said Florida Commission on Human Relations Executive Director Michelle Wilson. “As someone who has personally and professionally benefited from the works of these pioneers, I join all Floridians in recognizing their contributions that improved our state and country for the better,” concluded Wilson.

Sallye Brooks Mathis (1912-1982)--Ms. Sallye Brooks Mathis was born in Jacksonville Florida on May 18, 1912. She received an Associate of Arts Degree from Bethune-Cookman University, went on to study at the Tuskegee Institute and graduated from the Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University. She enjoyed a 28-year career as a teacher in the Duval County Public School system, where she taught elementary school students and high school history at Matthew Gilbert High School. She served in the NAACP, leading voter registration initiatives and organizing local events, as well as served as a member of the League of Woman Voters. Her commitment to the cause of civil rights led the local NAACP Chapter to name an annual community service award in her honor. In 1967, she became one of the first women and African-Americans elected to the Jacksonville City Council. While serving on the City Council, she initiated legislation for a Citizens’ Police Review Board, free public toilets and equal job opportunities in public agencies.  She also fought for reduced bus fares for senior citizens. Her service to education was recognized by the naming of a Jacksonville school, the Sallye B. Mathis Elementary School, in her honor.

Edward Daniel Davis (1904-1989)-- Edward Daniel Davis was born in Thomasville, Georgia and moved to Florida at an early age.  An author, educator and businessman, Mr. Davis was best known for his unyielding civil rights crusades that helped desegregate the University of Florida, raise the salary of black teachers to the level of whites and increase black voter registration.

He was educated at Paine College in Augusta, Georgia and Northwestern and Columbia universities. He worked as high school principals in St. Augustine, Tampa and Ocala from 1929 to 1942. He was fired as head of Howard Academy in Ocala in 1942 because he led the Florida State Teachers Association in a legal move to obtain equal pay for black instructors. Starting in 1949, he was instrumental in a nine-year fight that he called one of his ''most frustrating experiences'' to open the University of Florida School of Law to minority students. He founded the Florida Voters League, which was a key factor in black voter registration increasing from about 40,000 in the early 1960s to more than 300,000 in 1964. In 1978, he retired as president, yet remained board chairman, of the Central Life Insurance Company, the only black-owned insurance company in the state. In 1981 he published his book, A Half Century of Struggle for Freedom in Florida, a treatise on his civil rights battles. In 1986, he accepted the first Governor's Distinguished Black Floridian Award at a Martin Luther King Jr. observance in St. Augustine, Florida.

Reubin O’D Askew (1928-2014)--Reubin O’Donovan Askew was born in 1928 in Muskogee, Oklahoma.  In 1937, he moved with his mother and five siblings to Pensacola, Florida.  Mr. Askew served in two branches of the United States military, in both houses of the Florida Legislature, through an unprecedented two terms as Governor, as United States Trade Ambassador and as an Eminent Scholar in Florida Government and Politics at Florida State University.  During his tenure as Florida’s 37th Governor, he became known as a progressive reformer for his forward-thinking leadership on civil rights, tax reform, judicial and executive reorganization and open accountable government. While serving in the Governor’s Office, he brought African Americans more fully into state government leadership.  In 1971, Governor Askew appointed Athalie Range as Secretary of the Department of Community Affairs, making her the first African American since Reconstruction and the first woman ever to head a state agency in Florida. In 1975, he appointed Joseph Hatchett to the Florida Supreme Court; Hatchett was the first African American to serve on the state’s highest judicial body. In 1978, Governor Askew appointed Jesse McCrary Jr., an African-American former assistant attorney general, to fill a vacancy in the office of Secretary of State; McCrary was only the second African American to serve in this position and in the Florida Cabinet.  In addition, Governor Askew appointed McCrary as well as Freddie Grooms, an African-American professor, to the 1978 Constitution Revision Commission.  In addition to many other honors and awards, in 1994, the Reubin O’D Askew School of Public Administration and Policy at Florida State University was named for him and the Reubin O’D Askew Institute on Politics and Society was established at the University of Florida. 

For more information on the Florida Civil Rights Hall of Fame, please visit http://fchr.state.fl.us or on Facebook.

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Gov. Scott picks great-grandfather of City Councilman ‘T.D.’ Davis for honor next week

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For Immediate Release:
May 8, 2015

Contact:
Terence ‘T.D.’ Davis, 561-707-5906, or
Legislative Assistant Regina Williams, 561-201-3460                 
 

The elder Davis to be inducted into state Civil Rights Hall of Fame

Edward Daniel Davis, Sr., was an author, educator and businessman best known for unyielding civil rights crusades that, among other actions, helped desegregate the University of Florida (UF); raise the salary of African-American teachers and force UF’s law school to enroll minority students.

Mr. Davis is also the great-grandfather of Council Chair Pro-Tem Terence ‘T.D.’ Davis, who will be in Tallahassee Wednesday, May 13 when the elder Mr. Davis is inducted into the Florida Civil Rights Hall of Fame.

“My great-grandfather accomplished a lot, but he also suffered through a lot—harassment, a firebombing, attempted assassination,” Councilman Davis said. “But nothing deterred him. Nothing stopped him. That is immensely inspiring to me.”

Mr. Davis was born and raised in Thomasville, Ga. and spent his adult life in Ocala. He was the first black in the state to earn a Master’s degree (from Northwestern University in 1934) and, along with eventual Supreme Court member Thurgood Marshall, worked for years to provide equal education for black children. The two men would continue a years-long relationship, fighting together for human and civil rights.  Mr. Davis would found the Florida State Teachers Association.

He was also a founder and two-term president of the Florida State Conference of NAACP and founded the Florida Voter League which was instrumental in registering the state’s first black voters and, ultimately, more than 300,000 voters. He died in 1989; a year later, a stretch of State Road 441 in Orange County was named for him.

Gov. Scott chose Mr. Davis, along with former Gov. Reubin O’D Askew and Sallye B. Mathis from a list of 10 nominees by the Florida Commission on Human Relations for making significant contributions to the improvement of life for minorities and all citizens of Florida. For more information, visit www.flgov.com

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Florida Civil Rights Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony

CONTACTS:
Frank Penela
(850) 488-7082 ext.1011

Tallahassee– Today, May 13, 2015, the Florida Commission on Human Relations will host the 2015 Florida Civil Rights Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony.

At today’s event, three trailblazers, who helped shape modern-day Florida, will be honored by being enshrined as members of the Florida Civil Rights Hall of Fame. Family members of the three inductees will be joined by other state and local dignitaries.

Details for the ceremony are as follows:

Date:               Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Time:              11:00 a.m. – noon

Location:        The Cabinet Room

The Florida Capitol

                        Lower Level

                        Tallahassee, Florida

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April is National Fair Housing Month

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
March 31, 2015

CONTACTS:
Frank Penela   (850) 488-7082

“It’s Your Right Use It”

Tallahassee–As the nation celebrates National Fair Housing Month, the Florida Commission on Human Relations (FCHR) is holding events across Florida commemorating the 46th anniversary of the passage of the U.S. Fair Housing Act. This year, the Fair Housing Month theme is “It’s Your Right Use It.” This theme supports Floridians who are entitled by law to rent a place to live or to buy a home without discrimination. 

The landmark federal legislation, signed into law on April 11, 1968, prohibits discrimination in the sale, rental and financing of housing based on race, color, national origin, sex, and, as amended, disability or family status. Every April, people across the country are encouraged to learn more about their rights and responsibilities under the Act as a part of National Fair Housing Month.

More than 10,000 people filed housing discrimination complaints last year in the U.S., most from persons with disabilities, according to an annual report released this month by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). HUD also found that race-based housing discrimination was the second most frequent reason individuals filed complaints.

The FCHR Housing Unit has many activities planned during the month of April to celebrate Fair Housing Month 2015 in Florida. Here are a few: 

  • April 21-FCHR in partnership with the City of Tallahassee, Florida Housing Finance Corporation, Leon County Government and Legal Services of North Florida, is hosting a comprehensive workshop examining all aspects of housing, including fair housing rights and what recourse citizens have if their rights are violated. The workshop will take place from 12 – 2 p.m. at the LeRoy Collins Public Library, located at 200 W. Park Avenue, Tallahassee, Florida.
  • April 23- FCHR will take part in a seminar in Sarasota in partnership with the Sarasota Office of Housing & Community Development. FCHR will discuss– who we are, and what we look for in order to accept a complaint.  Also, FCHR legal counsel will discuss Investigations/legal review/Cause/No Cause

The Florida Commission on Human Relations, established in 1969, is the state agency charged with administering the Florida Civil Rights Act and Fair Housing Act. Fair treatment, equal access and mutual respect are the benchmarks of the Commission’s commitment. Through education and partnerships, the Commission works to prevent discrimination and costly litigation through teaching best business practices and fostering understanding amongst Floridians.

For more information on events, please visit http://fchr.state.fl.us or on Facebook and Twitter.

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Governor Rick Scott Appoints Three to Florida Commission on Human Relations

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 19, 2015

CONTACT: GOVERNOR’S PRESS OFFICE
(850) 717-9282
media@eog.myflorida.com

 

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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Today, Governor Rick Scott announced three appointments to the Florida Commission on Human Relations.

J. Jeff Graber, 39, of Longwood, is the president of Alexander Aviation Associates Inc. He succeeds Elena Flom and is appointed for a term beginning February 19, 2015, and ending September 30, 2015.

Jay Pichard, 47, of Tallahassee, is the owner of Pichard Holdings LLC. He succeeds Gayle Cannon and is appointed for a term beginning February 19, 2015, and ending September 30, 2016.

Sandra Turner, 62, of Winter Springs, is the ERPA president of Retirement Plan Specialists Inc. She fills a vacant seat and is appointed for a term beginning February 19, 2015, and September 30, 2017.

The appointments are subject to confirmation by the Florida Senate.

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