Assembly Bill A10831

Signed By Governor
2019-2020 Legislative Session

Designates the second Monday in July each year as a day of commemoration, to be known as Abolition Commemoration day

download bill text pdf

Sponsored By

Archive: Last Bill Status Via S6658 - Signed by Governor


  • Introduced
    • In Committee Assembly
    • In Committee Senate
    • On Floor Calendar Assembly
    • On Floor Calendar Senate
    • Passed Assembly
    • Passed Senate
  • Delivered to Governor
  • Signed By Governor

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2019-A10831 (ACTIVE) - Details

See Senate Version of this Bill:
S6658
Law Section:
Executive Law
Laws Affected:
Amd §168-a, Exec L

2019-A10831 (ACTIVE) - Summary

Designates the second Monday in July each year as a day of commemoration, to be known as Abolition Commemoration day.

2019-A10831 (ACTIVE) - Bill Text download pdf

                            
 
                     S T A T E   O F   N E W   Y O R K
 ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                   10831
 
                           I N  A S S E M B L Y
 
                               July 17, 2020
                                ___________
 
 Introduced  by COMMITTEE ON RULES -- (at request of M. of A. Pretlow) --
   read once and referred to the Committee on Governmental Operations
 
 AN ACT to amend the executive law, in relation  to  the  designation  of
   Abolition Commemoration day as a day of commemoration
 
   THE  PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND ASSEM-
 BLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

   Section 1.  Subdivision 3 of section 168-a of the  executive  law,  as
 amended  by  chapter  481  of  the  laws  of 2012, is amended to read as
 follows:
   3. The following days shall be days of  commemoration  in  each  year:
 January  sixth,  to  be known as "Haym Salomon Day", January twenty-sev-
 enth, to be known as "Holocaust Remembrance Day", February fourth, to be
 known as "Rosa Parks Day", February fifteenth, to be known as "Susan  B.
 Anthony  Day",  February sixteenth, to be known as "Lithuanian Independ-
 ence Day", February twenty-eighth, to be known as  "Gulf  War  Veterans'
 Day",  March  fourth,  to  be known as "Pulaski Day", March tenth, to be
 known as "Harriet Tubman Day", March twenty-ninth, to be known as "Viet-
 nam Veterans' Day", April ninth, to be known as "POW  Recognition  Day",
 April  twenty-seventh,  to  be  known as "Coretta Scott King Day", April
 twenty-eighth, to be known as "Workers' Memorial Day", the first Tuesday
 in May to be known as "New York State Teacher Day", May seventeenth,  to
 be  known  as  "Thurgood  Marshall Day", the first Sunday in June, to be
 known as "Children's Day", June second, to be known  as  "Italian  Inde-
 pendence  Day", June twelfth, to be known as "Women Veterans Recognition
 Day", June nineteenth, to be known as  "Juneteenth  Freedom  Day",  June
 twenty-fifth,  to  be  known  as  "Korean War Veterans' Day", THE SECOND
 MONDAY IN JULY, TO BE KNOWN AS  "ABOLITION  COMMEMORATION  DAY",  August
 twenty-fourth, to be known as "Ukrainian Independence Day", August twen-
 ty-sixth,  to be known as "Women's Equality Day", September eleventh, to
 be known as "Battle of Plattsburgh Day" and also to be known as "Septem-
 ber 11th Remembrance Day", September thirteenth, to be  known  as  "John
 Barry  Day"  and  also to be known as "Uncle Sam Day in the State of New
 York", September seventeenth, to be  known  as  "Friedrich  Wilhelm  von
 Steuben Memorial Day", the third Friday in September to be known as "New
 
  EXPLANATION--Matter in ITALICS (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
              

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