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Windie Scott ’74, Political Science
Deputy State Controller and Vice President of the California State Bar
Windie Scott
first marched into history wearing a tartan
skirt and carrying a trumpet
for the Sacred Heart Academy marching band. This
may not seem significant except that Scott was
one of three children selected from a segregated
Catholic School in Biloxi, Miss., to integrate
the previously all-white Sacred Heart Academy
in 1967. Although Brown v. Board of Education was
decided in 1954, it took more than 10 years to
be implemented in the South, and the first schools
to experience desegregation were the private
parochial schools such as Our Mother of Sorrows.
“I look at the picture of me in my band
uniform, and it forces me to remember how far
I have come,” says Scott, a deputy state
controller and vice president of the California
State Bar. “It was a difficult, emotional
time full of taunting and anger.” She pauses. “Ignorance
breeds hate, it really does.”
Because of her firsthand
experience with desegregation, Scott was asked
by Chief Justice Ronald George to sit on the
Judicial Council’s Brown
v. Board of Education Advisory Commission.
As such, she organized events to commemorate
the 50th anniversary of the landmark Brown decision,
including live panel discussions, symposiums,
and an interactive exhibit, “The Long Walk
to Freedom,” at the State Building. But
Scott has even more on her plate.
As deputy to State Controller
Steve Westly, she represents him on boards
and commissions and works with other deputies
to create policies for him. Scott’s particular specialty is
tax law, and the probate referee system is under
her watchful eye. She was recently in charge
of a worker’s compensation task force and
regularly handles anything to do with financing,
tax, borrowing, and credit ratings.
In addition to her duties
at the controller’s
office, she is the vice president for the California
State Bar, an elected office, and sits on its
Board of Governors. Her district alone governs
more than 11,000 lawyers in Sacramento and its
surrounding areas. In 2002, she was named Lawyer
of the Year by the Sacramento County Bar Association
and Distinguished Alumni by the UC Davis King
Hall School of Law. All this from a young woman
who dared to play trumpet for an all-white marching
band in the deep South.
As difficult
as the experience must have been, it demonstrates
Scott’s
impressive approach to life and work. Her parents,
an engineer and school teacher who graduated
from the Tuskegee Institute, were so deeply
affected by the assassination of Martin Luther
King Jr. that they pulled up stakes and headed
for California. Once there, Scott was enrolled
as a junior at Pomona Catholic, an all-girls
parochial school in Pomona, and, feeling disenfranchised
by the laid back sociopolitical environment
in the Golden State, she began to channel her
passion into forensics. Her skill led the forensics
team to many victories and then followed her
to Cal Poly Pomona, where she majored in political
science and served as attorney general for
Associated Students, Inc.
Scott was accepted at
the UC Davis King Hall School of Law and, again,
made history, but this time not carrying a
trumpet — she was the
only black female in her class. Undaunted, she
went on to become the first black woman to serve
as president for the Sacramento County Bar Association
and also for the Women Lawyers of Sacramento.
“It all started at Cal Poly Pomona,” says
Scott. “I was attorney general for the
student body and was in charge of regulating
dormitory issues. It was perfect training for
being a lawyer.”
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