WASHINGTON (AP) — Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew says he’s received more than a million responses to his request for comments on how U.S. currency should be redesigned and recommendations for what woman should become the first female on U.S. paper money in more than a century.
Lew said it has been a “remarkable outpouring” of everything from tweets and retweets to handwritten letters.
Lew set off a furor in June by announcing a redesign of the $10 bill that would replace the portrait of Alexander Hamilton with a woman.
Lew said a decision is still expected “in the very near future.”
While a woman’s portrait will be placed on the $10 bill, Lew said Hamilton will still be honored in some way.
He said the redesign of the $10 bill will be just the first in a series of redesigns of the currency to make the U.S. bills safer against the newest forms of counterfeiting.
The aim is to make an announcement of what woman will go on the $10 billion by this fall with the total redesign completed by 2020, the 100th anniversary of the passage of the 19th Amendment giving women the right to vote.
- Posted July 30, 2015
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Treasury receives more than one million comments on redesign
headlines Macomb
- Fall family fun
- MDHHS announces enhancements to improve substance use disorder treatment access
- Levin Center looks at congressional investigation of torture and mistreatment of war detainees
- State Unemployment Insurance Agency provides tips on how to stop criminals from stealing benefits
- Supreme Court leaves in place Alaska campaign disclosure rules voters approved in 2020
headlines National
- Professional success is not achieved through participation trophies
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- ‘Jailbreak: Love on the Run’ misses chance to examine staff sexual misconduct at detention centers
- Utah considers allowing law grads to choose apprenticeship rather than bar exam
- Can lawyers hold doctors accountable for wasting our time?
- Lawyer suspended after arguing cocaine enhanced his cognition