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Please feel free to contact Harriet at:
(845) 638-5269 or
email
cornellh@co.rockland.ny.us
Harriet Cornell
Chairwoman
Rockland County Legislature
Harriet Cornell is
the first woman to chair the Rockland County Legislature, a position she has
held since January 2005. She has been a Legislator since 1984. Her long
record of accomplishments led to The Journal News naming her as one
of 25 people who made the greatest impact on Rockland County during the 20th
Century.
As Chairwoman, Mrs.
Cornell’s priorities have included protection of our environment, enhanced
educational resources, improved health services for women and children,
homeland security, Rockland’s transportation infrastructure, and smart land
use planning. She has brought together elected officials from every level
of government in Summit meetings to cooperate on these issues of mutual
concern.
The following are
among Mrs. Cornell’s accomplishments since becoming Chair:
- She worked with state
officials to secure an air monitoring station to be placed in Rockland
County and sponsored legislation to reduce pollutants, including mandating
the phased-in purchase of clean vehicles for the county’s light and medium
duty fleet; and the use of ultra-low sulfur fuel and emission-reducing
technology in all the county’s on-road diesel powered vehicles. She also
worked to establish penalties for idling of motor vehicles longer than
three minutes.
- She created the
Rockland Child Care Task Force to determine ways to increase subsidies to
low income families for child care and to provide tuition, enhanced
training opportunities, and better compensation for child care workers.
- She hosted a series of
hearings on children’s health issues designed to explore such concerns as
lack of insurance for low income families, limited availability of
services and insurance for children suffering from mental illness,
language barriers for new immigrant families, and the need for a continuum
of life-long health services for Rockland residents. The findings of
these hearings include recommendations for state and local action.
- She earlier sponsored
legislation to acquire distance learning equipment in Rockland schools,
libraries and teachers’ centers to allow children and adults access to
learning opportunities throughout the world. She then created an ongoing
group to develop content and to encourage its use.
In 1984, her
first year as a legislator, Mrs. Cornell founded
the Legislature’s Commission on Women’s Issues and invited community leaders
to participate in the formulation of public policy. The ambitious work of
this committee included the creation of the Rockland Housing Action
Coalition to address affordable housing issues; the Child Care Coalition to
focus on quality, affordable child care; the opening of the county’s AIDS
Clinic as a direct result of the first hearings on HIV/AIDS in Rockland; pay
equity for county employees; gynecological care for uninsured and
under-insured women; youth employment programs; care for the aging; outreach
for breast cancer detection; education about heart disease; and the
formation of STOP F.E.A.R., a coalition to stem the scourge of domestic
violence.
During her tenure in the
Legislature, Mrs. Cornell also served as Chair of the Multi Services
Committee, the Transportation Committee, and the Arts, Culture & Tourism
Committee. She sponsored the unique Arts in Public Places Law, which
requires art to be included in county construction projects.
Mrs. Cornell’s lifelong
interest in the well-being of children and families led to her leadership
role in the creation of Rockland Schools of the 21st Century,
also known as Rockland 21C, which she has chaired for 11 years. The goal of
this collaborative organization is the optimal development of every child.
Through this collaboration of family, school, community and government, 30
county schools now have family resource centers with access to social
services, health services and literacy programs for all family members
including a home visitation program for 2 and 3-year olds.
A dedicated public
servant, Mrs. Cornell has served as Liaison to the Rockland County Fire
Advisory Board, a Member of the Hudson River Valley Greenway Conservancy,
Founder and Co-Chair of the Rockland County Breast Cancer Task Force,
Founder of the Rockland County Coalition for Democracy and Freedom, board
member of the Clearwater and Chair of the Eleanor Roosevelt Legacy
Committee. She has served as a member of a wide variety of civic and
cultural organizations, including the Rockland Center for the Arts, Rockland
Parent-Child Center, NAACP, Historical Society of Rockland, Mental Health
Association of Rockland, Child Care Resources of Rockland, the Rockland
County Conservation Association, Friends of the Nyacks, Cornell Cooperative
Extension, Hadassah, Hopper House, NOW, American Association of University
Women, Hi-Tor Animal Shelter and the Rockland Women’s Political Caucus.
Mrs. Cornell has always
been forthright and outspoken about her strong beliefs. In 1984 she formed
and chaired the first Citizen’s Commission to Close Indian Point and has
sponsored legislation ever since to close that nuclear power plant.
Mrs. Cornell was honored
to be recognized for her work in the community by a number of prestigious
organizations and institutions. The first-ever Good Housekeeping/Ford
Foundation Award was presented to Mrs. Cornell in 1998 for her efforts which
demonstrate how government can improve people’s lives. In 1999, she
received the Rockland County Economic Development Corporation Award for
“exceptional efforts to foster a healthy economy in Rockland County.” She
received the Yale University Public Service Award in 1998 for exemplary
leadership, resulting from her work with Rockland 21C. She was honored by
the Martin Luther King Center for her dedication to the ideals of Dr. King
and by the Library Association of Rockland County for her support of public
libraries. More recently, she received the Rockland Family Shelter
Distinguished Citizen Award in 2005, Child Care Resources of Rockland
Children’s Champion Award and the Jewish Family Service Community Service
Award in 2004, and the Rockland Center for the Arts Award and the A.A.U.W.
Woman of Achievement Award in 2003. She received the first County
Executive’s Arts Award for her sponsorship of the Arts In Public Places
legislation and for her work promoting the arts. The Historical Society of
Rockland is honoring her in March 2007 for lifetime achievement.
Mrs. Cornell’s efforts to
include women’s perspectives and aspirations in the formulation of public
policy, to encourage and assist women to become politically active and her
many actions to enhance the lives of children and families merited her
inclusion in Feminists Who Changed America 1963-1975, published by
the University of Illinois Press in 2006.
Mrs. Cornell is a
graduate of Swarthmore College and received her M.P.A. degree from N.Y.U.
Wagner Graduate School of Public Policy. She was married for 48 years to
attorney J. Martin Cornell until his death in 2002. He had been President of
the Rockland County Bar Association, President of the Palisades Interstate
Park Commission and a former County Attorney of Rockland County. They have
four children and two grandsons.
Address:
County Office Building
11 New Hempstead Road
New City, New York 10956
Tel: (845) 638-5100
Fax: (845) 638-5675 |