logo
Exploring how Latinos can get ahead. Work ethic already there, Modesto speaker says

Exploring how Latinos can get ahead. Work ethic already there, Modesto speaker says

Yahoo19-05-2025

In Modesto last week, Merced County's director of workforce development laid out statistics on how his fellow Latinos have been held back in the job market. He also told of an ambitious plan to make the future better.
Erick Serrato spoke about the effort, which also involves Stanislaus and San Joaquin counties, at Thursday's meeting of the Latino Community Roundtable of Stanislaus County.
The plan, North Valley Thrive, aims for well-paying jobs for residents of all backgrounds. The report was compiled under a $5 million state grant.
Some of the plan is well under way, such as solar and biomass energy and making various products from crop waste. The documents also note the long-standing need for nurses, electricians, mechanics and other skills.
Serrato knows Modesto well, having graduated from Davis High School in 1994. He urged training and business investments to get Latinos beyond the farm and service jobs they have long filled. He noted that this group suffers more than the overall workforce when downturns happen.
He said one measure, called labor force participation, highlights the eagerness of Latinos to work. It counts not just job-holders but people looking for work. The most recent report showed 67% of the total Latino population in this category, vs. 61% of all workers. The people not counted include children and retirees.
Serrato recalled a saying from his boyhood: 'As long as there is work.' It was instilled by his parents, Rodolfo and Graciela Serrato, who attended his talk.
'What that means is that as long as there is work to do for us, everything else will kind of fall into place,' the son said.
Graciela Serrato was a teacher's aide at Prescott Junior High School. Her husband worked farms and also commuted to his supervisor job at Pacific Steel in Berkeley. For a few years, the couple ran a Creole restaurant named Cafe Bravo on Kansas Avenue.
Erick Serrato earned an architecture degree at Woodbury University in Los Angeles. His thesis dealt with social goals in public housing design. He got into economic development with the city of Long Beach and joined Merced County in 2020.
North Valley Thrive is one of 13 regional plans around California. They can compete for $600 million to carry out the ideas.
Serrato said Latinos make up 95% of California farmworkers but only 12% of farm owners. He urged 'advanced manufacturing' beyond the current food processing, selling goods made from agricultural waste to the world.
The region also could have high-tech niches, such as semiconductors, measuring devices and electric vehicles. Serrato suggested fabricating accessory dwelling units, or ADUs, to ease the housing shortage.
The plan also envisions jobs in 'climate smart flood management,' letting rivers spread across restored forests that store carbon. And it calls for 'placemaking,' using the arts and other means to improve a community's quality of life and attract companies.
North Valley Thrive overlaps with Stanislaus 2030 in its call for converting crop and livestock waste. The latter has spread to Merced and San Joaquin counties. The ventures could include earth-friendly fuels, building materials, plastics and more.
Both efforts also seek to expand child care so parents can get to these jobs, along with growing small businesses of many types.
The bioindustry push drew a protest from Bianca Lopez, a leader with both the Latino Roundtable and Valley Improvement Projects. She urged a focus instead on local agriculture — 'take care of our soil, be good stewards of the land, grow food that we're actually going to eat, not almonds that go to China.'
Gov. Gavin Newsom received the North Valley Thrive report during a Jan. 6 news conference at Stanislaus State University. It mainly was about his proposed budget for the next fiscal year.
Serrato was on hand in Turlock, as noted Thursday by Roundtable President Karlha Arias. 'You are bringing state attention to our area,' she said. 'No one ever thinks about us, so that's a lot of work.'
Praise went to Serrato's parents from Marian Kaanon, president and CEO of the Stanislaus Community Foundation. 'You did such a great job with this guy, incredible. Thank you.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Need help paying rent? Financial assistance waitlist opens up soon in Miami-Dade
Need help paying rent? Financial assistance waitlist opens up soon in Miami-Dade

Miami Herald

time3 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Need help paying rent? Financial assistance waitlist opens up soon in Miami-Dade

Miami-Dade County residents who need help paying their rent have the opportunity to apply for housing assistance in apartments located in buildings participating in the Project-Based Voucher program, which makes certain rental units affordable for low-income tenants. Applications to join the waitlist for the Project-Based Voucher program will be accepted online only starting Monday, June 9 on the county's website. Applications are available in English, Spanish and Creole. Under the program, tenants pay 30% of their adjusted monthly income, plus applicable utilities, during their participation. Although rental prices have adjusted in Miami-Dade County and there is more rental inventory, the average rental cost stands at $2,719 per month, according to the most recent report from the RentCafe website. Differences between the Project-Based Voucher program and Section 8 The Project-Based Voucher program is tied to the apartment, and when the tenant moves out, they don't take it with them, but rather make room for another person in need. Section 8, on the other hand, is granted to the individual, who can transfer it when moving to another project in the private market that accepts that type of subsidized housing plan. The waiting list for the Project-Based Voucher program focuses on buildings or developments with multi-room apartments, many of which serve residents with tenant vouchers (Section 8) and people requiring supportive services, seniors, people with disabilities and formerly homeless residents. Some of those buildings are located in Little Havana, downtown Miami, North Miami, Miami Gardens, Opa-locka and South Miami, to name a few neighborhoods in the county that have apartments dedicated to the housing assistance plan. The need for affordable housing has become a crisis since the rise in rents during COVID-19, leading thousands of Miami-Dade residents to sign up for the Section 8 waitlist. In 2021, more than 90,000 people signed up, and in 2024, when the list reopened, 70,000 people applied on the first day alone to join a waitlist that had space for 5,000. How to apply for the housing voucher program Applications can be completed online from Monday, June 9 at 8 a.m. to Friday, June 20, at 11:59 p.m. Those without computer access can complete their application at the public libraries that offer this service: the Main Library in downtown, 101 W. Flagler St., Miami North Dade Regional Library, 2455 NW 183rd St., Miami GardensWestchester Regional Library, 9445 Coral Way, MiamiMiami Beach Regional Library, 227 22nd Library, 14850 SW 280th St., Homesteadand at various Community Resource Centers throughout the county. One application per household is allowed. Once you have provided all the information on your application, you will receive a confirmation number to acknowledge successful submission. Those selected will receive notification from the Miami-Dade County Housing and Community Development Department by email or to the address provided when completing the application. Priority is given to those on the 2024 waiting list, including homeless individuals, veterans, vulnerable populations, households with special needs, and individuals with mobility, hearing or vision impairments. Income limit for housing assistance Individuals 18 and older are eligible to apply for the Project-Based Voucher program waiting lists. Each year, the income limits that allow applicants to receive assistance change, and for 2025 they are: single person, $43,400 household of two, $49,500household of three, $55,570household of four, $61,950household of five, $66,950household of six, $71,900 More information can be found on the county's website. You can also call the program office at 786-654-8440 Monday through Friday during regular business hours.

Former Colorado teachers union president Amie Baca-Oehlert launches congressional bid
Former Colorado teachers union president Amie Baca-Oehlert launches congressional bid

Yahoo

time18 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Former Colorado teachers union president Amie Baca-Oehlert launches congressional bid

Amie Baca-Oehlert, a former teachers union president, launches her congressional campaign in Colorado's 8th District at Adams City High School on June 5, 2025. (Chase Woodruff/Colorado Newsline) It's suddenly a very crowded race in the Democratic primary for Colorado's most competitive congressional seat. One day after Colorado State Treasurer Dave Young announced his bid, former teachers union president Amie Baca-Oehlert became the latest Democratic hopeful in the 8th Congressional District, a key battleground in the nationwide battle for control of the House of Representatives. Baca-Oehlert, who served as president of the Colorado Education Association from 2018 to 2024, launched her campaign in front of a crowd of about 50 supporters Thursday evening at Adams City High School, where she got her first teaching job. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX 'When I look at Congress, I don't see people like me,' Baca-Oehlert said. 'I don't see enough teachers, Latinos, moms, union members or middle class Americans. What I do see is a broken system, a system that caters to the wealthy and well-connected, where plenty of politicians are looking out for themselves and their billionaire donors.' Drawn by an independent redistricting commission in 2021, the 8th District includes parts of Denver's northern suburbs as well as more rural areas in southern Weld County. Four in 10 residents of the district are Latino. The seat is currently held by U.S. Rep. Gabe Evans, a Fort Lupton Republican who unseated former Democratic Rep. Yadira Caraveo by a margin of fewer than 2,500 votes in the 2024 election. Despite representing one of the nation's most evenly divided congressional districts, Evans has remained a steadfast supporter of President Donald Trump's historically extreme anti-immigration agenda, his chaotic efforts to launch a global trade war and a sweeping GOP budget bill that would cut $625 billion from Medicaid. 'Nearly all of us are hurting right now, because of the fear, division and economic turmoil that Trump has created,' Baca-Oehlert said. 'And Evans is literally standing by — standing beside his friends like Lauren Boebert, to promote this disastrous agenda, and not fight against it.' Boebert, a staunch Trump supporter, is the Republican representative of Colorado's 4th Congressional District. Caraveo has launched a bid to win back her seat in 2026, joining a Democratic primary that also includes Young, state Reps. Manny Rutinel of Commerce City and Shannon Bird of Westminster. Baca-Oehlert's campaign launch featured endorsements from Adams County Commissioner Emma Pinter and former state Reps. Judy Solano and Joe Salazar. 'I know all the candidates that are running, I know all of them,' Solano told the crowd. 'But Amy's the one.' SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Springfield WORKS celebrates Bridge to Prosperity Cliff Effect Pilot Program
Springfield WORKS celebrates Bridge to Prosperity Cliff Effect Pilot Program

Yahoo

time20 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Springfield WORKS celebrates Bridge to Prosperity Cliff Effect Pilot Program

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (WWLP) – Working families in Springfield are learning how to bounce back from a 'cliff effect' from the Bridge to Prosperity Cliff Effect pilot program that began in February. Discover tasty veggie burgers at top spots in western Massachusetts, according to Yelp The cliff effect is when employees are given a small increase in their income, but suddenly lose their public benefits. Oftentimes, families end up in financial trouble. Each participant receives a monthly bridge payment based on their estimated cliff effect impact, with an additional $10,000 asset-building payment at the end of the program. Springfield WORKS, a community initiative of the Western Massachusetts Economic Development Council (EDC), and United Way Pioneer Valley hosted a celebration for the program on June 5th. The program offers personalized coaching on finance, employment, and career growth. Each participant receives a monthly bridge payment based on their estimated cliff effect impact, with an additional $10,000 asset-building payment at the end of the program. Over the last year, the program received over $1M in private funding to support the cause. There are currently 18 participants in the program. The goal is to help up to 100 families this year. 'For our gateway cities, Springfield and Holyoke, and our people of color, 1 out of 3 Hispanic, Latino families. 1 out of 4 black African American families receive at least 1 public benefit,' said Anne Kandilis, a director at Springfield WORKS. Springfield WORKS wants to create legislative policies that will mandate a course of action. WWLP-22News, an NBC affiliate, began broadcasting in March 1953 to provide local news, network, syndicated, and local programming to western Massachusetts. Watch the 22News Digital Edition weekdays at 4 p.m. on Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store