Editing Salvatore A. Cotillo
Content that violates any copyrights will be deleted. Encyclopedic content must be verifiable through citations to reliable sources.
Latest revision | Your text | ||
Line 54: | Line 54: | ||
Cotillo was member of the Joint Legislative Committee on Housing, also known as the [[Charles C. Lockwood#Lockwood Committee|Lockwood Committee]] because it was headed by [[Charles C. Lockwood]]. The committee investigated renting and building conditions in the City of New York and ended a spate of rent-raising as a result of the housing shortage after World War I.<ref name=nyt080621>[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1921/06/08/98705789.pdf 43 Companies Agree To Drop Monopoly Of Fire Insurance], ''The New York Times'', June 8, 1921</ref><ref>[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1958/09/22/81929335.pdf Charles C. Lockwood Dies at 81], ''The New York Times'', September 22, 1958</ref> The group found that the housing conditions at the time constituted a serious menace to public health in New York since some 400,000 persons were directly affected by the scarcity of affordable dwellings and the poor quality of the existing ones.<ref name=nyt310122>[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1922/01/31/109336328.pdf Finds City Short 80,000 Homes For 400,000 Residents], The New York Times, January 31, 1922</ref><ref name=lockwood>New York State (1922). [https://archive.org/stream/intermediaterep00lockgoog#page/n18/mode/2up Intermediate report of the Joint Legislative Committee on Housing], Legislative document (1922) no. 60, State of New York, p. 7</ref> Later he was the chairman of New York state commission to investigate child welfare, and a member of the Joint Legislative Committee to Investigate Exploitation of Immigrants (1923–24).<ref name=nyt280739/><ref name=exploit>New York (State). [http://pds.lib.harvard.edu/pds/view/4609923 Report of the Joint Legislative Committee on the Exploitation of Immigrants]. Albany : J.B. Lyon, printers, 1924</ref> |
Cotillo was member of the Joint Legislative Committee on Housing, also known as the [[Charles C. Lockwood#Lockwood Committee|Lockwood Committee]] because it was headed by [[Charles C. Lockwood]]. The committee investigated renting and building conditions in the City of New York and ended a spate of rent-raising as a result of the housing shortage after World War I.<ref name=nyt080621>[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1921/06/08/98705789.pdf 43 Companies Agree To Drop Monopoly Of Fire Insurance], ''The New York Times'', June 8, 1921</ref><ref>[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1958/09/22/81929335.pdf Charles C. Lockwood Dies at 81], ''The New York Times'', September 22, 1958</ref> The group found that the housing conditions at the time constituted a serious menace to public health in New York since some 400,000 persons were directly affected by the scarcity of affordable dwellings and the poor quality of the existing ones.<ref name=nyt310122>[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1922/01/31/109336328.pdf Finds City Short 80,000 Homes For 400,000 Residents], The New York Times, January 31, 1922</ref><ref name=lockwood>New York State (1922). [https://archive.org/stream/intermediaterep00lockgoog#page/n18/mode/2up Intermediate report of the Joint Legislative Committee on Housing], Legislative document (1922) no. 60, State of New York, p. 7</ref> Later he was the chairman of New York state commission to investigate child welfare, and a member of the Joint Legislative Committee to Investigate Exploitation of Immigrants (1923–24).<ref name=nyt280739/><ref name=exploit>New York (State). [http://pds.lib.harvard.edu/pds/view/4609923 Report of the Joint Legislative Committee on the Exploitation of Immigrants]. Albany : J.B. Lyon, printers, 1924</ref> |
||
As the foremost force on the New York State Commission to Examine Laws Relating to Child Welfare, concerned with issues of custody, orphanage, child support, and state wardship and institutions, Cotillo pushed a comprehensive reform through the legislature with the support of the social-welfare advocate [[Sophie Irene Loeb]] and the [[Hearst Corporation|Hearst newspapers]]. His biographer, Nat Ferber, a former Hearst reporter, considered the reform to be "the outstanding achievement of Cotillo's career".<ref name=henderson/> |
|||
In 1923, on behalf of the [[National Women's Party]], he introduced into the New York State Senate twenty-five radical equal rights bills for women to remove from the statutes of New York any inequalities now existing in the legal rights and obligations of men and women.<ref name="nyt040223">[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1923/02/04/105845529.pdf Women's New Equal Rights Bills Confer Full Privileges Of Men], ''The New York Times'', February 4, 1923</ref> One of the radical bills provided that a wife may demand wages from her husband for the services she performs in the home. "The law as to the ownership by the husband of the services or labor of his wife is totally abrogated," the bill said.<ref name="nyt040223" /> |
In 1923, on behalf of the [[National Women's Party]], he introduced into the New York State Senate twenty-five radical equal rights bills for women to remove from the statutes of New York any inequalities now existing in the legal rights and obligations of men and women.<ref name="nyt040223">[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1923/02/04/105845529.pdf Women's New Equal Rights Bills Confer Full Privileges Of Men], ''The New York Times'', February 4, 1923</ref> One of the radical bills provided that a wife may demand wages from her husband for the services she performs in the home. "The law as to the ownership by the husband of the services or labor of his wife is totally abrogated," the bill said.<ref name="nyt040223" /> |