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Stories of Success from La Alianza Hispana

Stories of Success from La Alianza Hispana

 

Since 1971, La Alianza Hispana has been an icon of Latino leadership, consistently serving as a portal to hope for well over 30,000 Bostonians. As a hub of social service delivery, advocacy, and education, the organization has changed the landscape of community resources and聽improved many lives.

 

One of these lives was that of聽Nydia Mendez. Read her story below, and visit聽聽for additional stories of success.

 

La Alianza Hispana Success Stories

 

The Journey is Everything.
For over 41 years, La Alianza Hispana has been a starting point for many leaders in Boston’s Latino community.


La Alianza Hispana launched in 1970 with the vision and determination of community organizers/ teachers, Ana Maria Rodr铆guez and Betsty Trage.聽 Inspired to change the reality of the impoverished Latino students they were seeing in their classrooms, Ana Maria and Betsy rallied the community to respond to the growing socio-economic challenges facing the Latino community. They made a strong case for support.聽 By providing education and culturally appropriate family support, Latinos could and would thrive in Boston.

Once La Alianza Hispana’s doors opened, the Mendez Family entered with big dreams.聽 Nydia Mendez, tells her story.聽 “We came to Boston to study. My mother was an elementary school teacher in Puerto Rico and my father was a construction worker. When we arrived in 1968, the only jobs available for my parents were in the factories producing war supplies. My parents worked incredibly hard and struggled with learning English and teaching us English as well. 聽They knew that in order to get ahead and realize their dreams, we all needed better educational opportunities. My mom is the one that enrolled the whole family in La Alianza Hispana in 1970.聽 It became the lighthouse for our family.聽 It was a safe place where we learned and connected with others who understood our struggle and our dreams.”聽 Frieda Garcia, a La Alianza Hispana founder and the agency’s first executive director, had a profound impact on the Mendez Family.聽 “She was such a role model for me.聽 Frieda inspired all of us to get involved and take responsibility for ourselves and our community” shared Nydia.

Nydia and her brother were enrolled in La Alianza Hispana’s summer camp program while her parents took English classes. During high school, they both became peer leaders in the after school program.聽 Nydia went on to earn a degree in education from Boston University.聽 She launched her career as an educator in the Boston Public Schools. Over the last thirty years, she has taught at the elementary, middle, and high school levels and has worked as a principal and an administrator. Nydia was the first Puerto Rican and Latina to become a school principal in Boston.聽 She has also been involved in governance over Boston Public School’s bilingual education initiatives.

Today, Nydia is serving as the Program Director for English Language Learners for the Pilot Schools Programs, a division of the Boston Public Schools Department. On occasion, Nydia returns to La Alianza Hispana to organize Latino parents and engage them in bilingual education programs.聽 She knows the power of a helping hand.聽 She sees the impact access to education has on the whole family.聽 She hears the stories of successful Latino family who mirror her own experience.聽 She also understands the importance of giving back to the community that makes dreams a reality.

 

La Cocina VA: Combating Unemployment and Hunger with Careers in the Food Service Industry

La Cocina VA: Combating Unemployment and Hunger with Careers in the Food Service Industry

 

La Cocina VA, one of our affiliates, is doing incredible things!

 

Located in Arlington, Virginia, La Cocina equips unemployed and underemployed聽Hispanic聽adults with聽the skills and certification necessary to work in the聽culinary and hospitality industry. Participants also improve their English skills as they prepare to enter the workforce.

 

 

Visit to learn more about the program!

 

 

Breaking Free: Ending Domestic Abuse Through Financial Empowerment

Breaking Free: Ending Domestic Abuse Through Financial Empowerment

 

Domestic violence and financial abuse don鈥檛 discriminate. It affects people of all races, genders, religions and income levels 鈥 even right in your own community. Odds are, it鈥檚 happening to someone you know.

If you missed , it’s worth a watch.

 

 

Over the last 12 years, the Allstate Foundation has propelled more than 1 million victims on the path to safety and security and has invested more than $55 million to empower women to break free from abuse.

FEATURING:

U.S. Congresswoman Gwen Moore (WI-04)

Judy Chapa, Vice President of Corporate Social Responsibility, Financial Services Roundtable

Victoria Dinges, Senior Vice President, Corporate Relations, Allstate Insurance Company

Kim Gandy, President and CEO, National Network to End Domestic Violence

Monica Gray, Chief Executive Officer of the YWCA National Capital Area in Washington, DC

 

Washington Update

Washington Update

 

Fed鈥檚 Harker Says Job Training Needed to Boost U.S. Economy (Reuters)

October 5, 2017

Business, governments and other organizations should stop looking at job skills training as social welfare and see it instead as a path to better jobs, higher paying wages, and faster growth, a Federal Reserve Policymaker said on Thursday.

The remarks were made at a conference on workforce development in Philadelphia. 鈥淭he U.S. economy succeeds when we back programs that move people out of poverty and into stable, sustainable employment.鈥

Read the full article

 

Latino Dropout Rate Plummets as College Enrollment Hits Record High (NBC)

October 4, 2017

In five years, the Hispanic dropout rate fell 6 percentage points 鈥 to 10 percent in 2016, from 16 percent in 2011 鈥 among Latino students aged 18 to 24.

The drop is significant considering that Latino students make up a growing share of the nation’s students. Hispanic enrollment in kindergarten through college increased by 80 percent from 1999 to 2016, from 9.9 million to 17.9 million.

The report notes that Latinos still lag when it comes to educational attainment, particularly college completion.

Read the full article

 

Trump鈥檚 Apprentice Plan Seems to Need a Mentor (New York Times)

September 28, 2017

President Trump has聽聽for increasing the聽 nationwide to 5 million from roughly 500,000 today. To do this, he wants to direct $100 million of federal job training money to the program. He also wants to relax federal standards for 鈥渞egistered鈥 apprenticeships, which require a mentor, salaries that increase with experience, and minimum hours of formal instruction in both the classroom and workplace.

But research and recent experience suggest this approach could backfire. Over the last decade, Britain tried to increase the number of apprentices through a mix of public subsidies and changes that watered down the definition of apprenticeship. The result? Subway聽聽to hire 鈥渁pprentice sandwich artists鈥 who would be paid the minimum wage.

Read the full article

 

By the Numbers: Hispanic Women in the Workforce

By the Numbers: Hispanic Women in the Workforce

 

From the U.S. Department of Labor Blog:

“Each year, the United States recognizes Sept. 15 to Oct. 15 as Hispanic Heritage Month.聽In recognition of Hispanic women鈥檚 significant contributions to the labor force, here are six statistics demonstrating their growing influence as drivers of economic productivity and entrepreneurs.”