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Nydia Velazquez

This is part of an article written by Andrea Cooper that appeared on the March 2008 issue of the Entrepreneur Magazine.  It is titled:

The Influencers

What forces will affect your business in the coming year? Here are the 25 people, trends and events you can't afford to ignore.

In our first-annual look at the nation’s top 25 influencers, we name the individuals, groups and trends we believe will have a substantial impact on business owners in the coming year. In our view, no entries here are merely interesting for you to know about. They are essential--the forces you must take into account now so your business can reach full strength.

 

Nydia Velázquez

Few politicians sought to land the unattractive job of chair of the U.S. House Committee on Small Business. But Rep. Nydia Velázquez (D-NY) actively sought the leadership role and has brought great passion to the work. "If you’re looking for a true small-business advocate, Nydia Velázquez is the number-one name," says Paul Miller, a small-business lobbyist with Miller/Wenhold Capitol Strategies. In her first year as chair, Velázquez saw the passage of 17 bills through the House. The bills ranged from helping businesses recover from disaster to assisting entrepreneurs in expanding their markets overseas. For 2008, her priorities include promoting small-business R&D and legislation to ease the regulatory burden felt by small firms.

Other influencers selected by the author: 
  • Marc Cuban
  • Steve Jobs
  • Oprah Winfrey
  • Bill Gates

You can read the entire article by clicking here:

http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2008/march/190234-2.html

 

Who is Nydia Velazquez

Nydia Margarita Velázquez (born March 28, 1953 in Yabucoa, Puerto Rico) became the first Puerto Rican woman to be elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. Velázquez, whose father worked the sugar cane fields, was one of nine siblings. She was raised with the influence of political dinner table conversations. Her father was a local political activist and, from a young age, she would accompany her father to political rallies. Her father would focus on the rights of sugar cane workers and denounce the abuse perpetrated by wealthy farmers.

After skipping grades, she entered high school when she was 13. In high school she organized her classmates on a protest and the school was closed down. Their protest against the dangerous and unsanitary conditions of the school caused the necessary renovations to be made.

In 1969, when she was only 16, she enrolled in the University of Puerto Rico (Universidad de Puerto Rico). In 1974 she graduated magna cum laude and became the first one in her family to receive a college diploma. She then went to New York where she attended and studied political science, on a scholarship, at New York University. In 1976 she received her Master's degree.
Velázquez was a university professor for many years, first in the University of Puerto Rico's Humacao branch (1976-81) and then at New York's Hunter College (1981-83).

In 1983, she was appointed Special Assistant to Representative Edolphus Towns (D-Brooklyn). In 1984, she became the first Latina appointed to serve as a member of the New York City Council.

In 1986, she served as the Director of the Department of Puerto Rican Community Affairs of the U.S. During that time, she initiated a successful Latino empowerment program called "Muevete" (Move on).

In 1992, she was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, representing New York's 12th District (map),and became the first Puerto Rican woman member of Congress. The sprawling 12th district encompasses parts of Brooklyn, Queens and Lower Manhattan. It includes such neighborhoods as Ridgewood, Maspeth, and Woodside in Queens, Bushwick, Williamsburg, Red Hook, and Sunset Park in Brooklyn and part of Manhattan's Lower East Side. She also became the first Hispanic woman to serve as Ranking Democratic Member of the House Small Business Committee. She oversees federal programs and contracts totaling $200 billion dollars annually. She also serves on the House Financial Services Committee.

Velazques received a "B" on the Drum Major Institute's 2005 Congressional Scorecard on middle-class issues.

During her campaign for the House seat, her medical records, including documented clinical depression and an attempted suicide, were leaked to the press. She quickly held a press conference and said that she had been undergoing counseling for years and was emotionally and psychologically healthy. *

Her district is the only one in New York City which covers residential areas of three boroughs (Brooklyn, Queens, Manhattan). Charles Rangel's district, the Manhattan-based 14th CD, also includes parts of the Queens and The Bronx, but the district's only territory in The Bronx is the Riker's Island jail.

On April 3, 2003, Velázquez was named "Hispanic Business Woman of the Year" by Hispanic Business magazine, becoming the first women to be named as such, in recognition of her national influence in both the political and business sectors.

Among her "firsts" are: The first Hispanic woman to serve on New York City's Council; the first Puerto Rican woman to serve in Congress; The first woman Ranking Democratic Member of the House Small Business Committee.

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Nydia Velazquez, BoricuaFirst

www.house.gov/velazquez