[NIFL-WOMENLIT:2361] RE: In Memorium: Sheila Wellstone

From: cthomas@uws.org
Date: Mon Nov 04 2002 - 16:41:16 EST


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From: cthomas@uws.org
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Subject: [NIFL-WOMENLIT:2361] RE: In Memorium: Sheila Wellstone
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Thank you for such important information. I would never have known about
this woman and the wonderful things she did.
Catherine

-----Original Message-----
From: nifl-womenlit@nifl.gov [mailto:nifl-womenlit@nifl.gov]On Behalf Of
Daphne Greenberg
Sent: Friday, November 01, 2002 8:52 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list
Subject: [NIFL-WOMENLIT:2359] In Memorium: Sheila Wellstone


If any of you covered Senator Wellstone's death in your classes, you may
also want to share the following about his wife:

Sheila Wellstone, Unsung Women's Rights Activist

By Peggy Simpson WEnews correspondent

The death of Sheila Wellstone, one of the most influential Senate spouses,
meant the loss of a leader who brought about historic changes for battered
women and welfare mothers in the United States.

WASHINGTON (WOMENSENEWS)--Sheila Wellstone was an extraordinary political
wife. And her death in a plane crash on Oct. 26, with her husband, Paul, and
their daughter Marcia Markuson and three campaign workers, has deprived
welfare mothers, battered women and their children of one of their most
passionate and skilled advocates in Minnesota and Washington.

Sheila Ison Wellstone was a Kentucky native, described as shy by some. She
had dropped out of college to put her husband through graduate school and,
after he became a Carleton College professor, she worked as a librarian and
reared their three children. She also was an organizer, in her own way.

By the time Paul Wellstone won the upset race for Senate in 1990, the only
defeat of an incumbent that year, Sheila had become a passionate voice on
many key issues. Her roots in Kentucky are credited with being a catalyst
for her husband's advocacy for Appalachian coal miners, for instance. And
she had won national recognition for her own work on domestic violence.

Within Minnesota, she worked to increase the number of battered women's
shelters, and went herself to the opening of every new one. An Oct. 30
profile of her in the Minneapolis Star Tribune quoted Beverly Dusso,
executive director of the Harriet Tubman Center in Minneapolis, as saying
the once-shy girl from Kentucky would stride into a shelter dining room, sit
down with the women there and "talk by the hour."

Through her advocacy, Dusso said, Minnesota put in place an emergency
one-stop call center for a battered woman who is "kept on the line until we
find her a place to stay. That was all Sheila's work and we were the first
in the nation to do it."

Sheila Wellstone: A Passionate Crusader for Children of Battered Women

As a senator's wife, Sheila Wellstone expanded her advocacy not only on
behalf of battered women but also their children. When she arrived in town
12 years ago, political activist Karen Mulhauser introduced her to the
network of "women involved here in sexual assault and domestic violence."
Sheila Wellstone worked closely with them, but also with researchers on
family violence and on the impact of violence on child witnesses. And she
worked to get the research translated into federal programs.

In a Feb. 16, 2001, speech to the Child Abuse Prevention Studies program at
the University of Minnesota, Sheila Wellstone credited many experts on the
issues, including Jody Raphael of the Center for Impact Research and her
"amazing research, 'Trapped by Poverty, Trapped by Abuse.'" As a result of
that work, "Paul and I were able to add the Family Violence Option waiver to
the Welfare Reform Bill," she said in that speech. The option is now used by
39 states and Guam. In dealing with victims of domestic violence, the states
can now waive federal rules regarding required work, time limits, and
child-support cooperation.

"It gives these women time to work on a safety plan--on putting her life and
the lives of her children back together--without further risk of abuse," she
said in the address.

In her 2001 speech, she talked about the legislative proposal her husband
had introduced, the "Children Who Witness Domestic Violence Protection Act,"
which would help finance schools to work with children who were witnesses as
well as beef up resources for child-protection workers, domestic violence
advocates and police responders. That legislation is still pending.

After she and the senator visited the Betsy Macalaster Grove program at
Boston Hospital, which takes a holistic and often communal approach to
working with the children of battered women, a policeman giving them a ride
to the airport said his officers had been greatly affected by training about
children who witness violence against their mothers, enabling them to better
understand the dynamics of this violence and to respond to the immediate as
well as longer-term needs of parents and their children.

Linked Gun Safety with Domestic Violence Laws

Sheila Wellstone could be as caustic as her husband in harpooning some of
the conservative's policies on children. She said the 1996 federal welfare
legislation, whose reauthorization this year has been postponed, needs to
address the many dilemmas facing welfare mothers as they go to work. "We
hear of children being left with siblings too young to care for another
child and often that sibling is resentful of having to care for a brother or
sister; we know that children are often let in unsafe environments or with
relatives and neighbors who aren't responsible. Where are these families
when we talk about leaving no child behind?"

Another of the issues that Sheila Wellstone worked closely with Sen.
Wellstone was gun safety. The couple was instrumental in getting gun-safety
language into the 1994 Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act,
banning gun sales to individuals who are under police restraining orders in
domestic violence cases. Federal prosecutors used the law in late October to
bring the initial charges against the alleged Washington sniper, John Allen
Muhammad, whose ex-wife had told police she feared for her life and had
gotten a restraining order against him in late 2000. (He got a gun anyway.)

Peggy Simpson is a veteran reporter who covered the 1970s-1980s women's
political movement. She recently returned to Washington after a decade in
Central-Eastern Europe, covering the economic-political transition after the
fall of communism.


For more information:

Minnesota Star Tribune--Paul Wellstone:
http://www.startribune.com/stories/1752/

U.S. Senator Paul Wellstone:
http://www.senate.gov/~wellstone/

Tubman Family Alliance:
http://www.tubmanfamilyalliance.org/




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