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  82R6126 MMS-D
 
  By: Nelson, et al. S.C.R. No. 16
 
 
 
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
         WHEREAS, Each year, Americans pause during the month of March
  to pay special tribute to the contributions that women have made to
  our national life, and outstanding among the myriad roles that
  women have assumed over the course of this country's history have
  been those undertaken as part of the nation's armed forces; and
         WHEREAS, Long before they gained regular admission to the
  military, thousands of women assisted the uniformed branches in a
  variety of ways; they worked as nurses, water bearers, laundresses,
  and cooks, sometimes served as spies and saboteurs, and on occasion
  even took up arms; and
         WHEREAS, In 1901, the United States Army broke new ground by
  creating an actual nurses corps, and the navy followed in 1908; the
  ranks of these units swelled during World War I, when nearly 23,000
  women served as nurses with the American military; the U.S. Navy and
  Marine Corps enlisted nearly 13,000 additional women as yeomen and
  reservists and assigned them to duty stateside, to free their male
  counterparts for combat at sea and abroad; and
         WHEREAS, The participation of women in the military surged
  during World War II, with more than 400,000 filling posts at home
  and overseas; to more fully utilize their abilities, the army
  established the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps, later known as the
  Women's Army Corps and commanded with consummate ability by the
  Texan Oveta Culp Hobby; the army also created the WASP (Women
  Airforce Service Pilots), while the navy organized the WAVES (Women
  Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service), the Marine Corps
  established the Marine Corps Women's Reserve, and the Coast Guard
  created a reserve unit known as the SPARs; in spite of widespread
  misgivings about their suitability for the work, women proved
  themselves in a wide array of assignments, and in 1948 an Act of
  Congress granted them permanent status in the regular and reserve
  forces; and
         WHEREAS, Barriers to the participation of women in the
  military continued to fall; legal provisions placing a two percent
  cap on the number of women serving and a ceiling on the highest
  grade a woman could achieve were repealed in 1967; by 1972, the
  various ROTC programs were opened to women, and in 1976 women were
  admitted to the service academies; they are now eligible to enter
  more than 90 percent of all career fields in the armed forces; and
         WHEREAS, Women have continued to deploy in times of conflict:
  some 1,000 served in theater during the Korean War and 7,500 during
  the Vietnam War; hundreds saw duty in operations in Central America
  in the 1980s, and in 1991, 41,000 women served in theater in
  Operation Desert Storm; and
         WHEREAS, Today, approximately 344,500 women are serving in
  the U.S. military; they constitute about 14 percent of active duty
  personnel and about 10 percent of the American forces in Iraq and
  Afghanistan; and
         WHEREAS, The operations focused on those two countries have
  placed enormous demands on all who have taken part; like their male
  compatriots, many women have served multiple tours, and large
  numbers have been injured, many grievously; as of mid-January 2011,
  136 women had given their lives in those two wars; and
         WHEREAS, The increased involvement of women in the military
  is reflected by the number of women veterans, which now totals 1.8
  million; Texas is home to more than 150,000 women veterans, the
  second highest number of any state in the nation; and
         WHEREAS, Texans have always honored the selflessness and
  sacrifice of those who perform military service, and these women
  are indeed worthy of that recognition; it is also fitting that needs
  they have incurred in connection with that service be acknowledged
  and alleviated, whether they concern physical or psychological
  wounds or the challenges of caring for their families or
  reintegrating into civilian life; and
         WHEREAS, The women who have served in the United States armed
  forces have demonstrated tenacity, courage, and professionalism,
  and they are deserving of their fellow citizens' deepest gratitude
  and unfailing support; now, therefore, be it
         RESOLVED, That the 82nd Legislature of the State of Texas
  hereby designate the month of March each year from 2011 through 2020
  as Women Veterans Month in tribute to the immeasurable
  contributions that women in the military have made to this nation.