Sonia Yaco

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sonia Yaco
Born 1957
Ann Arbor, Michigan

Sonia Yaco was the 1972 Human Rights Party candidate for the Ann Arbor, Michigan school board. When she ran for office at the age of fifteen, she became the youngest documented candidate ever for a publicly elected school board seat in the United States.[1]

[edit] The election

Calling for student voice in school leadership, Yaco was a youth activist with Youth Liberation of Ann Arbor. After announcing her campaign and working with allies from the Human Rights Party, Yaco completed the procedural requirements for candidacy by submitting a petition with signatures from more than eighty-five qualified electors requesting that she be certified as a candidate. The Office of Operations of the Ann Arbor Public Schools denied certification of Yaco's candidacy in an attempt to stop her bid for a seat.

On June 7, 1972 the Human Rights Party requested a court hearing to stop the vote from happening before the trial was held. Their request for a preliminary injunction was denied by a district court judge. The election was held on June 12, 1972, without Yaco's name on the ballot, but Yaco received eight percent of the total votes as a write-in candidate.

The Human Rights Party filed a lawsuit with the Michigan courts, Human Rights Party v. Secretary of State for Michigan, on May 11, 1973. They requested that the court declare the statute unconstitutional on the ground that it denies persons under eighteen years of age equal protection of the law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. The court argued that Court in Oregon v. Mitchell, YMCA Vote at 18 Club v. Board of Elections of the City of N.Y. and McGowan v. Maryland provided precedents of age deterrents. In YMCA Vote at 18 Club..., in particular, the court had specifically found that school boards can exclude students under eighteen from running for school-board seats, primarily because of concerns about "maturity."

Yaco's campaign has been credited as one factor among several leading to the formation of the city's experimental, alternative Community High School later that year.[2]

Yaco went on to attend the University of Wisconsin in Madison, Wisconsin, and developed a career in the field of archival records and administration.[3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Gross, R. and Gross, B. (1977). The Children's Rights Movement: Overcoming the Oppression of Young People. New York: Anchor Press/Doubleday. p. 130.
  2. ^ Mosher, M. (2000) "Youth Liberation of Ann Arbor: Young, Gifted and Media-Savvy", Bad Subjects. #47, January 2000. Retrieved May 6, 2007.
  3. ^ Sonia Yaco C.V., 2007, accessed 24 Feb. 2008.

[edit] See also