2017-J4391
Senate Resolution No. 4391
BY: Senator COMRIE
MOURNING the death of Leslie Payne, Pulitzer Prize
winning journalist, distinguished citizen and
devoted member of his community
WHEREAS, It is with great sorrow and deep regret that this
Legislative Body records the passing of Leslie "Les" Payne, noting the
significance of his purposeful life and accomplishments; and
WHEREAS, Leslie Payne, a fervid and fearless Pulitzer Prize-winning
reporter, columnist and editor for Newsday who helped pave the way for a
generation of black journalists, died on Monday, March 19, 2018, at the
age of 76; and
WHEREAS, Leslie Payne was born on July 12, 1941, in Tuscaloosa,
Alabama; his mother, Josephine, moved him and his two older brothers to
Hartford in 1954; and
WHEREAS, After high school, Leslie Payne enrolled at the University
of Connecticut, where he earned a bachelor's degree in English; he then
spent six years in the United States Army, serving as a Ranger in
Vietnam and earning the rank of Captain; and
WHEREAS, After joining Newsday in 1969, Les Payne exposed inequality
and racial injustice in a largely white, segregated, suburban community;
a true trailblazer, he reported on such topics as apartheid in South
Africa, illegally segregated schools in the American South and redlining
by real estate agents in suburban New York; and
WHEREAS, Among Leslie Payne's first undercover assignments for
Newsday was to spend a month in a migrant labor camp in Riverhead, in
eastern Long Island, laying irrigation pipe on a potato farm; and
WHEREAS, Once he was armed with a weekly column, Leslie Payne
established a reputation as a passionate champion of people who were
powerless to defend themselves; and
WHEREAS, Leslie Payne was on the reportorial team that won a
Pulitzer for public service in 1974, for a 33-part series, "The Heroin
Trail," which traced a narcotics scourge from its source in Turkey to
the mean streets of America; and
WHEREAS, Throughout his tenure, Leslie Payne was instrumental in
helping the newspaper raise its profile beyond Long Island and in the
transformation of Newsday into a fully rounded paper that covered the
state, the nation and the world; and
WHEREAS, In addition to his illustrious career in journalism, Leslie
Payne was a foreign correspondent, a teacher at the Columbia University
Graduate School of Journalism, and a founding member and former
president of the National Association of Black Journalists; he retired
from Newsday in 2006, as associate managing editor in charge of national
and international coverage; and
WHEREAS, Leslie Payne's commitment to excellence, and his spirit of
humanity, carried over into all fields of enterprise, including
charitable and civic endeavors; and
WHEREAS, Leslie Payne is survived by his wife, the former Violet
Cameron; two sons, Jamal and Haile; a daughter, Tamara; three brothers,
John, Joseph and Raymond; and a sister, Mary Ann; and
WHEREAS, Armed with a humanistic spirit and imbued with a sense of
compassion, Leslie Payne leaves behind a legacy which will long endure
the passage of time and will remain as a comforting memory to all he
served and befriended; now, therefore, be it
RESOLVED, That this Legislative Body pause in its deliberations to
mourn the death of Leslie Payne, Pulitzer Prize winning journalist,
distinguished citizen and devoted member of his community; and be it
further
RESOLVED, That a copy of this Resolution, suitably engrossed, be
transmitted to the family of Leslie Payne.