| H.R. No. 1384 | ||
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| WHEREAS, The death of civic leader Fay Sinkin on March 4, | ||
| 2009, at the age of 90, has deeply saddened her family, her friends, | ||
| and her many admirers throughout the San Antonio community and | ||
| beyond; and | ||
| WHEREAS, Born in New York City on March 24, 1918, the former | ||
| Fay Bloom graduated from Syracuse University; she was working at an | ||
| Arthur Murray Dance Studio when a friend from Texas set her up on a | ||
| blind date with a young San Antonio businessman named Bill Sinkin; | ||
| although she made a joke when he proposed marriage partway through | ||
| the evening, the couple exchanged wedding vows less than six months | ||
| later, on May 31, 1942; and | ||
| WHEREAS, Mr. and Mrs. Sinkin raised their two sons in San | ||
| Antonio and supported each other in myriad efforts to improve the | ||
| quality of life in their city; Mrs. Sinkin was particularly | ||
| concerned about public health, and on becoming president of the | ||
| League of Women Voters in 1947, she advocated for the hiring of a | ||
| city sanitary engineer to develop a sewer system; moreover, she | ||
| raised funds for the first citywide Mothers March on Polio, | ||
| organized the Visiting Nurse Association, and later became the | ||
| first woman to serve on the city's Board of Health; and | ||
| WHEREAS, In 1953, Mrs. Sinkin was named Woman of the Year by | ||
| the San Antonio Express-News; her many early accomplishments | ||
| included fund-raising for public television and becoming one of the | ||
| first two women to serve on a grand jury in Bexar County; she | ||
| participated in vital endeavors to further tolerance and diversity, | ||
| organizing educational outreaches, working with her husband to end | ||
| segregation in restaurants, and assisting the Johnson | ||
| administration in the recruitment of minority candidates for the | ||
| diplomatic service; and | ||
| WHEREAS, The threat of heavy development over the Edwards | ||
| Aquifer recharge zone in the early 1970s led Mrs. Sinkin to form the | ||
| Aquifer Protection Association, and she roused the community to | ||
| fight the first of many battles to ensure the safety and quality of | ||
| San Antonio's water supply; she was instrumental in obtaining the | ||
| nation's first Sole Source Aquifer designation under the Safe | ||
| Drinking Water Act of 1974, and she won election as the first female | ||
| board member of the Edwards Underground Water District; during her | ||
| six-year term, she successfully fought the controversial | ||
| Applewhite Reservoir project, advocated for conservation and a | ||
| regional water plan, introduced xeriscaping to the city, and | ||
| oversaw the institution of a water leak detection program; she | ||
| later formed the Edwards Aquifer Preservation Trust and pushed to | ||
| block overdevelopment on the recharge zone by acquiring ranchland, | ||
| playing a key role in the creation of Government Canyon State | ||
| Natural Area on 7,000 acres once slated for a vast housing tract; | ||
| and | ||
| WHEREAS, Acknowledged as "the mother of aquifer protection," | ||
| Mrs. Sinkin continued to devote her time and considerable energy to | ||
| this cause, working with the grassroots Smart Growth Coalition in | ||
| 2002 to oppose construction of a PGA Village over the Edwards | ||
| Aquifer in north central Bexar County; as gracious and persuasive | ||
| as she was passionate, she helped the Save Our Aquifer Campaign | ||
| secure more than 100,000 signatures to call for a referendum | ||
| against the project; together, the Sinkins established the Fay and | ||
| William Sinkin Environmental Fund, which educates young people | ||
| about environmental issues; and | ||
| WHEREAS, Her remarkable achievements earned Mrs. Sinkin | ||
| numerous accolades; she was inducted into the San Antonio Women's | ||
| Celebration and Hall of Fame and received the Headline Award from | ||
| Women in Communication; the Medallion Natural Area was renamed the | ||
| Fay and William Sinkin Nature Preserve in 2009, and The University | ||
| of Texas at San Antonio maintains the William and Fay Sinkin Papers | ||
| in its archives, documenting the importance of their individual and | ||
| joint contributions to civic life; and | ||
| WHEREAS, Ahead of her time in many ways, Fay Sinkin served as | ||
| a steward of the environment and an advocate for social justice; her | ||
| endeavors immeasurably enhanced the world around her, and she | ||
| inspired countless others to work for the causes in which they | ||
| believe and promote positive change; now, therefore, be it | ||
| RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 81st Texas | ||
| Legislature hereby pay tribute to the life of Fay Sinkin and extend | ||
| sincere sympathy to the members of her family: to her husband of 66 | ||
| years, William Sinkin; to her sons, Richard and Lanny; to her | ||
| granddaughters, Patti Leigh, Katherine Hancock, and Amelia Sinkin; | ||
| to her three great-grandchildren, Justin and Jessica Hancock and | ||
| Jennifer Leigh; and to the other relatives and host of friends of | ||
| this esteemed Texan; and, be it further | ||
| RESOLVED, That an official copy of this resolution be | ||
| prepared for her family and that when the Texas House of | ||
| Representatives adjourns this day, it do so in memory of Fay Sinkin. | ||
| Castro | ||
| ______________________________ | ||
| Speaker of the House | ||
| I certify that H.R. No. 1384 was unanimously adopted by a | ||
| rising vote of the House on April 27, 2009. | ||
| ______________________________ | ||
| Chief Clerk of the House | ||