SECTION 1.
The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the following:(a) Veterans have served with great distinction and honor in defending the United States and the constitutional rights of all Americans. All veterans deserve to be honored for that service. Veterans who have lost their lives should be honored for making the ultimate sacrifice.
(b) At the federal, state, and local level there are memorials to veterans based on service in a specific conflict or war. There are also privately funded memorials to veterans. These memorials recognize veterans who have served in virtually every conflict or war in the history of the United States.
(c) There are also other memorials for veterans who are of a certain cognizable group and those memorials are based on the unique experience of that group in military service. In recognition of Native Americans’ unheralded history of military service, Congress enacted in 1994 the Native American Veterans’ Memorial Establishment Act (Public Law 103-384; 20 U.S.C. Sec. 809 note) that authorized the erection of a Native American veterans’ memorial in Washington D.C. at a site to be determined by the National Museum of the American Indian. Congress in 1992 also authorized the Go for Broke National Veterans Association Foundation to establish a memorial in the District of Columbia or its environs to honor Japanese-American patriotism in World War II (Public Law 102-502; 40 U.S.C. Sec. 1003 note). In Los Angeles, there is the Japanese American Veterans Memorial Court at the Japanese American Cultural and Community Center to recognize the service of Japanese-American veterans. There are also monuments and memorials to recognize African-American veterans, women veterans, Jewish veterans, disabled veterans, and others.
(d) State law already establishes the Mexican American Veterans’ Memorial Beautification and Enhancement Commission. However, there is no process in place for the creation of other California state memorials to other similar groups of veterans. Some veterans’ groups believe that the state needs to join federal, local, and private organizations who have recognized various groups of veterans to appropriately recognize the sacrifice of these veterans.
(e) To properly recognize all veterans, a process must be created to review the need for and to create memorials, as appropriate. These memorials may be based on service in a specific conflict or war, or service by a specific cognizable group. The purpose of this act is to create such a process.