#animalwelfare #persistance #voiceforthevoiceless

An Advocate for the Voiceless

Photo by Facebook.

Photo by Facebook.

BY: JULIET SCHULMAN-HALL, SUMMER 2020 COLLABORATOR AT POWER IN PLACE

Every phone call rang for what felt like an eternity, while she waited for someone to pick up and tell her the words she wanted to hear: her student was safe and cared for. 

Monica Martinez was a tenured assistant principal of a middle school, determined to fight for the children she looked after. One afternoon, she realized why one of her sixth graders refused to go home: her home lacked heat or food, and her mother worked two jobs and was often absent as a result. 

With the hopes of helping this child, Martinez called the Department of Social Services. She was left with stinging words in her ear, telling her that there was nothing they could do because she was merely a school administrator. 

It was at this moment she realized she needed to do more for the young people walking the halls of the middle school at which she worked every weekday. 

Martinez was elected as the New York State Senator for District 3 on January 9, 2019 [1]. Her first constituent case after she was elected involved a situation similar to what she had previously experienced with that sixth grader, involving a different child in the same middle school at which she had been an assistant principal. This child, like the last, had no heat at home. It took one phone call from State Senator Martinez to the Department of Social Services, and three hours later the family received oil and had heat in their home. 

She realized in that moment that she could help more people as a politician than she did as an administrator. 

For all of her life, State Senator Martinez has focused on helping women, animals, and those who are often marginalized and voiceless. 

Martinez became the first woman and first Latina to be elected a State Senator from District 3. She has found that politics can be a difficult profession but her family helps her cope and are there for her whenever she needs support. She tries not to take attacks personally, and continues to hold the belief that individuals who try to put her down have something else going on in their lives. Ultimately, Martinez emphasizes that adversity helps her become a stronger and more resilient person and politician. 

Upon taking office she found out that two bills intended to protect women had been stuck in the State Senate for years. The first proposed bill is Shannon’s Law, which requires health insurance to cover mammograms for women starting at age 35, rather than at age 40 or older. The second proposed bill makes it illegal to disseminate or publish sexually explicit images without that person’s consent. State Senator Martinez advocated for the two proposed bills, and ultimately was able to help pass both bills and enact them into law. Martinez prides herself on having been able to make a difference in the lives of other women through aiding the passage of these two bills. 

Martinez has also worked on bills to help the lives of animals—a topic that is rarely discussed in politics but is crucial to Martinez. According to the State Senator, animal welfare is linked to human welfare and needs to be discussed more. Martinez believes that those who commit crimes against animals are more likely to commit a crime against a human being. She concludes that stopping animal abuse and educating people about animal welfare is both a good in itself, and leads to a better society in which people act more humanely toward each other. 

Martinez is currently working on improving and providing more support to animal shelters across New York State. She hopes these efforts will result in the adoption of more animals into their “forever homes” and to discourage and ultimately eliminate unnecessary euthanization of adoptable pets. 

Martinez works for all of the people, but believes her mission is to advocate for those who are often overlooked both by society, and by most politicians. The legislation she drafts or advocates for, and her hard work as a NY State Senator presents, in her words, “an uphill battle right now.” But she continues these battles, because she believes that there is nothing which “can’t be done...everything is possible.” 

References

[1] “Monica Martinez.” Ballotpedia. Accessed August 10, 2020. https://ballotpedia.org/Monica_Martinez.

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Juliet Schulman-Hall is a rising junior at Smith College majoring in English Language & Literature, minoring in Sociology, and concentrating in Poetry. At Smith, she is involved in Emulate Magazine, the club volleyball team, and the Sophian Newspaper. She is passionate about criminal justice reform and animal rights and advocacy and is the Communications Lead for an animal nonprofit called Global Strays. 

Persisting for Animals

Photograph by Katrina Hajagos.

Photograph by Katrina Hajagos.

BY: JULIET SCHULMAN-HALL, SUMMER 2020 COLLABORATOR AT POWER IN PLACE

Laughter resonates in the room at the Falcons annual dinner in South Bend, Indiana, as politicians roar at the sight of a plush toy dog held between the hands of a politician squealing about the importance of protecting animals. They stand in front of dinner tables elegantly set, mocking the passion and hard work of the South Bend City Councilwoman Valerie Schey—this was a dinner she did not attend. 

Valerie notes that this mockery does not compare to the many stories of female politicians who have been harassed. However, there is an intriguing sensitivity that revolves around her being a female politician advocating for animal welfare as one of her many key issues. 

Animal welfare is not a winning issue in politics. The love humans hold for their beloved pets often does not extend to the protection of other animals, even to those within the same species. One of the reasons for this sensitivity revolves around the fear, according to Valerie Schey, that if a politician fights for animals, they will not fight for their constituents. 

Valerie’s voice raises slightly as she is reminded of the persistence she needed during her time in office to make any difference in the lives of animals. With a low grumble in her laugh at the preposterousness of her colleagues, she states that it took an overwhelming amount of time to even be able to start an animal welfare committee: two years to be exact. Her council was not trying to make revolutionary laws that completely altered humans’ lives, but rather was trying to change legislation around breed-specific laws and mitigate the high euthanasia rate occurring in animal shelters around South Bend. Even at the outset of this committee, certain women around her did not support Councilwoman Schey, including the city council attorney who refused to work with her as she thought this committee shouldn’t exist. The committee, in the eyes of many of her colleagues, was a distraction from the work she needed to do for her constituency. What they failed to recognize was her dedication to the lives of those in South Bend—not only animals, but also humans. 

In 2016 Valerie left office and since then she has been running a nonprofit called Care of South Bend. She has been spending her time providing free spay and neuter clinics, vaccines, and more for low income pet owners in the area of South Bend. Her dedication to animal welfare remains strong despite the difficulties she had in office; persisting with patience and humility, her voice will remain unwavering. 


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Juliet Schulman-Hall is a rising junior at Smith College majoring in English Language & Literature, minoring in Sociology, and concentrating in Poetry. At Smith, she is involved in Emulate Magazine, the club volleyball team, and the Sophian Newspaper. She is passionate about criminal justice reform and animal rights and advocacy and is the Communications Lead for an animal nonprofit called Global Strays.