EDINBURG, TEXAS – The Rio Grande Guardian International News Service interviewed the director of Hidalgo County’s Community Service Agency, Jaime R. Longoria, at the conclusion of the agency’s recent Access to Success banquet.
Here is a video recording of the interview:
Story continued:
Community service agencies were established across the county as part of President Johnson’s War on Poverty initiative in the 1960s. Hidalgo County’s version started in the mid-1970s.
HCCSA’s Access to Success is funded through a Community Service Block Grant. The intention is to empower participants and establish a foundation for upward mobility, helping them to self-sufficiency and transitioning them out of the poverty.
The banquet was held at Monza Social Event Center in Edinburg on Dec. 12, 2024.
Nineteen participants graduated from this year’s program. They are:
Joel Barrios – South Texas College
Jocelyn Bravo – Valley Grande Institute
Nathalie Casa – South Texas College
Aleander Camacho – South Texas College
Karla Castillo – McAllen Careers Institute
Adelina Vega – UT-Rio Grande Valley
Juan Gonzalez – Southern Industrial Careers Institute
Shelsey Gutierrez – South Texas College
Amoramay Hernandez – Del Mar College
Jose Juarez – McAllen Careers Institute
Nahomi Erin – South Texas Vocational Technical Institute
Ezequiel Moreno – McAllen Careers Institute
Anahi Munis – Rio Grande Valley College
Angelica Olvera – UT-Rio Grande Valley
Christophe Pruneda – South Texas Vocational Technical Institute
Raymond Rojas – McAllen Careers Institute
Marisa Zepeda – South Texas College
Lone Star National Bank, McAllen Careers Institute, and UTRGV School of Nursing were also recognized by HCCSA. Hidalgo County Judge Richard Cortez was named Field Marshal of the War on Poverty in Hidalgo County.
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