Business leader Cindy Ramos-Davidson dies at 69
EL PASO, Texas (KTSM) — Longtime community leader and Hispanic Chamber of Commerce executive Cindy Ramos-Davidson has died at the age of 69, her family posted on social media.
Ramos-Davidson stepped down as chief executive officer of the Hispanic Chamber in April to focus on her health and a battle with cancer.
She had been with the Hispanic Chamber, a leading advocacy organization for small business in the El Paso region, for 27 years.
Here is what her family posted on Sunday, June 1 via Facebook: 'With profound sadness, but also deep gratitude for her extraordinary life, we share that our beloved Cindy Ramos-Davidson has gained her angel wings.'After a courageous battle with pancreatic, colon cancer, and a stroke, Cindy passed peacefully early this morning (June 1), surrounded by the love she so freely gave to others. A fierce advocate, fearless leader, and lifelong champion of small businesses and underserved communities, Cindy leaves behind a legacy that spans generations and hearts across the nation.'There are no words big enough to capture what she meant to our family, our community, and the countless lives she touched. If you've read her story, seen her work, or simply stood in her presence — you know she was a force of nature and a light in this world.'True to her spirit, Cindy asked that we not rush. In honoring her wishes, we will take time to thoughtfully plan a Celebration of Life in August, open to all who knew her, loved her, or were touched by her work. This will allow loved ones from across the country, time to make arrangements and gather together in her honor.'Details will be shared soon. For now, we ask that you hold her in your heart, share your memories, and continue the work she believed in so deeply. She may no longer walk beside us, but her legacy lives on in every act of courage, love, and community we carry forward. Fly high, Mom. You have your wings now.'
A GoFundMe has been created to support Ramos-Davidson's family and her legacy efforts.
You can find out more by clicking here.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
6 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Traders Scour for ‘Elusive' Catalyst to Push S&P 500 to Record
For stock traders there's little to fear at the moment. Corporate America keeps churning out solid earnings. The chances of a recession aren't blaring. And President Donald Trump's tariff policy is expected to become more clear before long. So what's there to worry about?


Bloomberg
9 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Don't Count on a Sustained Fed-ECB Decoupling, Schnabel Says
It would be wrong to expect a persistent policy divergence between the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank, according to Executive Board member Isabel Schnabel. 'I expect this trade conflict to play out as a global shock that's working for both global demand and supply — we can discuss which of the two effects on inflation is larger because that that determines the net effect,' the German central banker said on Saturday.


Bloomberg
14 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
We Now Know the Meaning of 'Religious Enough'
Back in 1959, the chief administrative officer of the United Presbyterian Church warned that churches wielded too much 'economic power' due to their tax-exempt status. Unless religious groups were taxed like everyone else, the nation might soon face 'revolutionary expropriations of church property.' Well, the revolution hasn't yet come for the churches. But regulatory creep has nevertheless nibbled at the margins of religious freedom, with states finding one activity or another to deem not truly religious and therefore subject to tax.