Week 3
Margaret Fung
As Executive Director of the Asian American Legal Defense
and Education Fund (AALDEF), Margaret Fung is actively engaged in fostering
a wide spectrum of legal rights for Asian Americans.
A graduate of Barnard College in New York City, Margaret Fung earned
her law degree from New York University, where she was a member of the
NYU Law Review, an Arthur Garfield Hays Civil Liberties Fellow and a
Root-Tilden Scholar. Fung also received an honorary LL.D. from City
University of New York (CUNY) Law School in 1997.
Over 10,000 Asian Americans benefit yearly from legal counseling and
community programs provided by AALDEF, which is a nonpartisan organization
formed in 1974 to protect and promote the civil rights of Asian Americans,
through litigation, education, and legal advocacy.
Under Fung's leadership, AALDEF has successfully defended the civil
rights of members of the Asian-American community nationwide in areas
including voting, housing, and economic justice for workers. A staff
of 10, including six attorneys, helps reform immigration policy, stamp
out sweatshops and combat anti-Asian violence and police misconduct.
A landmark ruling from the New York Court of Appeals that Fung won
in 1986 required that the impact of new development on low-income tenants
and small businesses be considered under state environmental laws. That
case, Chinese Staff and Workers Association v. City of New York,
blocked construction of a proposed high rise condominium in Manhattan's
Chinatown. That case has been used as a legal precedent by other groups
challenging the effects of displacement in their neighborhoods.
Margaret Fung organized AALDEF's first exit poll of Asian-American
voters in New York City in 1988. These multilingual voter surveys have
been conducted in every major election since then. AALDEF documented
Asian-American voting patterns by conducting over 5,000 multi-lingual
exit polls in the presidential election in 2000.
In April 1992, Fung was invited to testify before the House Judiciary
Committee on the Voting Rights Language Assistance Act, which requires
providing bilingual ballots and assistance to voters. Her powerful advocacy
led to the passage of the Act and to the first fully translated Chinese-language
ballots in New York City for the 1994 elections. This effort provided
bilingual ballots to over 200,000 Asian Americans nationwide.
In her testimony before the New York State Legislative Task Force for
Demographic Research and Reapportionment in 2001, Fung presented information
on AALDEF's challenge of previous redistricting plans that diluted minority
voting strength, leading to the disenfranchisement of Asian Americans.
Although New York City has the nation's largest Asian-American population,
at that time no Asian American had ever been elected to the New York
State Legislature or the New York City Council. Objections were filed
with the Justice Department because Manhattan's Chinatown was divided
between two state assembly districts, which diluted the voting strength
of the Asian-American community. Fung implored the Task Force to take
seriously its obligation to comply fully with the Voting Rights Act.
In AALDEF's successful case against a Manhattan restaurant that refused
service to a Princeton University professor who wore a turban because
he is a Sikh, Margaret Fung addressed the issue of religious intolerance.
As a member of the Board of Directors of the New York Civil Liberties
Union, Margaret Fung has worked to alleviate police brutality.
She was appointed by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani to serve on the Mayor's
Task Force on Police/Community Relations, which was formed after the
police torture of Haitian immigrant, Abner Louima. Governor Mario Cuomo
also selected her to serve on the New York State Temporary Commission
on Constitutional Revision.
Fung also serves on the boards of directors of the National Asian Pacific
American Legal Consortium, the National Association of Public Interest
Law, and the National Committee on Responsive Philanthropy. In her work
on Community Board #1 in Lower Manhattan, she plays an advisory role
in the rebuilding of the World Trade Center site after the September
11 tragedy.
Named one of the nation's "20 Lawyers Making a Difference" by the American
Bar Association in 1992, she has also won awards from the Asian-American
Bar Association of New York, the Asian-American Lawyers Association
of Massachusetts, and NYU Law School. She received the "I Love an Ethical
New York" award from Common Cause.
The American Bar Association salutes Margaret Fung and her outstanding
achievements in protecting the legal rights of Asian Americans.
Photo Usage:
Photo used with permission of Margaret Fung.
Asian Pacifican American Heritage Month 2002
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