Roy D. Malonson is publisher of the African-American News&Issues. Congresswoman Jackson Lee has been at the forefront of bringing jobs and federal funds to her district and the general Houston area. Jackson Lee has won 125 grants totaling $351,000 from the federal stimulus bill for Congressional District 18. This is the fourth-largest amount of funds brought to a district by a Texas Member of Congress.

Congresswoman Jackson Lee has been at the forefront of bringing jobs and
federal funds to her district and the general Houston area. Jackson Lee has won 125 grants totaling
$351,000 from the federal stimulus bill for Congressional District 18. This is the fourth-largest amount of
funds brought to a district by a Texas Member of Congress.
The
Congresswoman initiated the re-start of the local senior home repair program
and spoke out about the backlog of thousands of requests for repairs. She has brought in $2.5 million for
that program, along with millions more for a weatherization program. She also authored amendments to bills
protecting the elderly that will help local law enforcement find seniors lost
because of Alzheimer’s and other illnesses. Jackson Lee has received a perfect 100% rating from the
Alliance for Retired Americans, a nationwide organization of more than 2.5
million union retirees.
Sheila
Jackson Lee cares about our veterans.
The Congresswoman has won a million dollars for Riverside Hospital to
set up a Post Traumatic Stress Disorder treatment center for our veterans, the
first one in a predominantly African American community. And when 66-year-old Houstonian C.B.
Black asked Jackson Lee for help replacing the medals he had won while serving
in Viet Nam, the Congresswoman got him those medals, including the Bronze Star
and the Purple Heart.
In
addition to the Riverside funding, the Congresswoman has also brought half a
million dollars to the University of Texas in the Medical Center for a Minority
Cancer Control Program and $1 million for the Prostate Cancer Outreach Project
at the Center for Research on Minority Health.
As the
chair of the Congressional Children’s Caucus, Jackson Lee has fought for bills
to make our children and schools safer. In fact, it was the Congresswoman who brought
the Centers for Disease Control to Houston when something at Key Middle School
was making teachers and students sick.
She won
$2 million for the Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics Initiative,
to encourage our kids to study science and math, and a $1 million grant for
after-school programs in Houston schools, part of a total $1.7 billion dollars
for improving schools and colleges.
Those higher education funds include $400,000 for the University of
Houston for teacher training and $3000 for archive preservation at TSU’s Mickey
Leland Center. Most importantly,
Jackson Lee got the federal government to cancel the $11 million TSU owed so
that university can now move forward without that debt hanging over it.
Hurricanes
Ike, Katrina and Rita affected the Houston area severely but Jackson Lee was
there, getting supplies distributed to her district and bringing millions in
federal assistance to the community.
Just last month, the Congresswoman brought to Houston the FEMA director
and asked him to extend relief to 20,000 local residents still recovering from
Ike.
Jackson
Lee has risen to senior positions on powerful committees, including Judiciary,
Foreign Affairs and Homeland Security and chairs Homeland Security’s Transportation
Security and Infrastructure Protection Sub-Committee.
Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee works for District 18 and she delivers.
