Ex-NFL Player, WSU Standout And Spokane Native Steve Gleason Honored By Congress For ALS Work
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS AND NWPB STAFF
Former NFL player Steve Gleason has received the Congressional Gold Medal — the highest civilan honor bestowed by Congress — for his work as an advocate for people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease.
“This award represents the people of the United States of America and is a sublime honor for me,” Gleason, who no longer can speak on his own, said through a computer-generated voice. “It represents some joy, some encouragement and some triumphs for the tens of thousands of families living with ALS and others living with disabilities or experiencing anguish, tragedy or adversity.”
Gleason thanked his family for their support since his diagnosis, noting to his wife, Michel, “This is not the life we imagined and it hasn’t been easy.”
Gleason also said it’s his children — son Rivers and daughter Gray — who “give me purpose.”
Aside from his time in the NFL with the New Orleans Saints, Gleason is well-known in eastern Washington for his work on ALS issues in the Spokane and North Idaho region. He is a graduate of Washington State University, where he played football and baseball from 1995 to 1999. He grew up in Spokane and graduated from Gonzaga Prep High School. Last year Washington State University unveiled the Steve Gleason Institute for Neuroscience in Spokane — part of WSU’s health sciences campus that includes the growing medical school.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi opened the ceremony on Wednesday.
“We have come to honor a true American hero … who has transformed the lives of so many people living with ALS,” Pelosi said. “You bring pride to our nation.”
Seated next to Pelosi during the ceremony was Sen. Mitch McConnell, who has clashed with Pelosi ahead of the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump. Earlier in the day Pelosi had introduced the House managers who would lead the Democrats’ impeachment trial in the Senate.
Saints quarterback Drew Brees and his son, Baylen; Saints owner Gayle Benson; NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell; and former NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue were among those in attendance.
The 42-year-old Gleason was diagnosed with ALS in 2011. He has since spearheaded efforts through the Team Gleason foundation to develop and provide technology to help ALS patients live longer, more fulfilling lives. Those include devices that track eye movements to help people who are paralyzed type words that can be transformed into speech. Gleason has used the technology to communicate, post messages on social media, address lawmakers from around the world and give motivational speeches to athletes.
Congress in 2018 year approved the Gleason Act, which provided funding to help ALS patients get those devices.
“In the ALS community, he is a rock star, he gives hope,” said U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy, a Republican from Louisiana and a doctor who helped sponsor the legislation to honor Gleason. “Through his example of how he lives, he has changed life for us all. Thank you for inspiring hope even in the face of extreme adversity. Thank you for being a hero.”
Gleason played in 83 games for New Orleans between the 2000 and 2006 seasons, emerging as a special teams leader and blocking four punts. His final block occurred against Atlanta on Sept. 26, 2006, the night the Superdome reopened for the first time since it was heavily damaged while serving as a shelter of last resort for thousands who’d remained in New Orleans when Hurricane Katrina struck nearly 13 months earlier.
The play has been memorialized by a bronze statue entitled “Rebirth,” on a public plaza surrounding the Superdome.
Copyright 2020 Associated Press. Additional information by Scott Leadingham of Northwest Public Broadcasting