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SJR 57

70th Anniversary of the Nationwide Polio Eradication Campaign, commemorated

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Billy Beasley

Ceremonial, nonbinding resolution recognizing the 70th anniversary of the 1955 nationwide polio vaccination campaign and honoring Alabama contributors and Tuskegee physicians.

Enacted
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Bill Summary · SJR 57

Summary — SJR 57: Commemorating the 70th Anniversary of the Nationwide Polio Eradication Campaign

Status: Enacted (delivered to Governor 04/10/2025; enacted 04/16/2025)
Introduced: 02/25/2025
Sponsor: Senator Beasley (with numerous co‑sponsors)
Classification: Concurrent resolution (ceremonial)

Purpose and intent

SJR 57 is a ceremonial resolution that formally commemorates the 70th anniversary of the nationwide polio vaccination campaign that began in 1955. Its intent is to recognize the public‑health achievement represented by the campaign, honor the scientists, physicians, public‑health workers, parents and communities involved, and highlight notable historical contributions—particularly work done in Alabama.

Key provisions / content

  • Officially commemorates the 70th anniversary of the 1955 nationwide polio eradication campaign.
  • Affirms the historical significance of polio (a highly infectious disease primarily affecting young children) and notes that there is no known cure.
  • Recognizes the development and impact of the Salk polio vaccine as a turning point in public health.
  • Specifically acknowledges:
    • The role of Black physicians and researchers at the Tuskegee Infantile Paralysis Center (Tuskegee Institute / Tuskegee University) as the only place in the South where African American children with polio could receive treatment in the campaign era.
    • Ira Myers, M.D., for his role in initiating Alabama’s mass Salk vaccination program and his prior federal public‑health work.
    • President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s support and a quoted characterization of the campaign as “one of the greatest events of our time.”
  • Salutes all Alabamians and others who contributed to the campaign’s success.

Who is affected

  • This is a non‑binding, symbolic resolution; it does not create legal rights, duties, funding, or regulatory changes.
  • Primary “effects” are symbolic: recognition for historical actors (e.g., Tuskegee, Dr. Ira Myers), affirmation of public‑health achievements, and potential use in public education, commemorations, or awareness campaigns.

Procedural highlights / timeline

  • Filed: 02/25/2025
  • Passed Senate: 03/31/2025
  • Received in House / Referred to House Rules: 04/03/2025
  • Enrolled: 04/09/2025
  • Delivered to Governor: 04/10/2025
  • Enacted: 04/16/2025

Significance

SJR 57 serves as an official state recognition of a major 20th‑century public‑health triumph. While it carries no policy or budgetary consequences, it documents and honors historical contributions—particularly those from Alabama institutions and practitioners—and may support public‑health outreach and historical commemoration efforts.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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