File #: 19949    Version: 0 Name: courtesy - Samuel U Rodgers Health Center
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 8/9/2018 In control: County Legislature
On agenda: 8/13/2018 Final action: 8/13/2018
Title: A RESOLUTION recognizing Samuel U. Rodgers Health Center on the occasion of its Founders Day event as part of National Health Center Week.
Sponsors: Alfred Jordan, Scott Burnett, Garry J. Baker, Crystal Williams, Tony Miller, Dennis Waits, Dan Tarwater III, Greg Grounds, Theresa Cass Galvin
Indexes: NATIONAL HEALTH CENTER WEEK, SAMUEL U. RODGERS
Attachments: 1. 19949adopt.pdf
IN THE COUNTY LEGISLATURE OF JACKSON COUNTY, MISSOURI


Title
A RESOLUTION recognizing Samuel U. Rodgers Health Center on the occasion of its Founders Day event as part of National Health Center Week.

Intro
RESOLUTION NO. 19949, August 13, 2018

INTRODUCED BY Alfred Jordan, Scott Burnett, Garry J. Baker, Crystal Williams, Tony Miller, Dennis Waits, Dan Tarwater III, Greg Grounds, and Theresa Galvin, County Legislators


Body
WHEREAS, Samuel U. Rodgers Health Center will kick off National Health Center Week with a visit and tour by Congressman Emanuel Cleaver II on Monday, August 13, 2018, followed by a special Founders Day event on Friday, August 17, 2018; and,

WHEREAS, Congressman Cleaver's visit helps draw attention to the impact the Health Center has made for patients in Kansas City and across the nation; and,

WHEREAS, the late Dr. Rodgers built a system designed to provide better care for the poor and disenfranchised within our community; and,

WHEREAS, on Friday, August 17, Samuel U. Rodgers Health Center will unveil the honorarily renamed Samuel U. Rodgers Avenue, and officially open its newly-dedicated community rooms that commemorate Wayne Miner with a ribbon-cutting event; and,

WHEREAS, Dr. Rodgers was the first board certified, African-American OB/GYN in the country, having served as a powerful voice in the civil rights movement in Kansas City; and,

WHEREAS, Dr. Rodgers opened the nation's first medical practice made up entirely of African-American providers, launched the nation's first community health center west of the Mississippi River in the Wayne Miner Housing Project, and helped build the Federally Qualified Health Center system; and,

WHEREAS, Wayne Miner, an African-American serviceman from Kansas City, was among the last American soldiers to be killed in action during World War I; and,

WHEREAS, to keep his legacy alive and teach new generations about his bravery, the Health Center's community rooms will be renamed Wayne Miner Communi...

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