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Jose A. Medina, Graduate Fellow
Placement 1: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food Stamp Program
Placement 2: Congressman Silvestre Reyes (TX-16)
Hometown: El Paso, TX
Education:
University of Texas at El Paso, Political Science, M.A. candidate
Vassar College, B.A., Sociology and Political Science
For many, social justice is a concept embodied only in the Hollywood’s
greatest films —Erin Bockavich, A Civil Action, and so on. But today’s
real heroes are not Julia Roberts or John Travolta, and they walk not
the hills of Hollywood, but the halls of Congress.
Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute (CHCI) Graduate Fellow, Jose
Medina is one such hero in the making.
A native of El Paso, TX, Jose’s contributions date to his college years.
As a Vassar College Compton-Mentor Fellow, Jose advanced an alternative
educational model for Mexican, rural migrant teens in the Hudson Valley,
NY. Also during college, Jose worked as a Ford Scholar in the department
of Political Science, where with Professor Katherine Hite, he studied
the authoritarian legacy in post-Pinochet Chilean popular media.
During this time, Jose also worked as an intern at Vassar's
multicultural safe space, the African-American/Black, Latino,
Asian-American/Asian, Native-American (ALANA) Student Cultural Center.
Serving as a Center representative to the greater Vassar community, Jose
became deeply committed to addressing questions of institutionalized
racism and classism, from both an academic and grassroots perspective.
Following his work as a Compton-Mentor Fellow, Jose returned to El Paso
and enrolled in the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) Masters
program in Political Science. There, much of his work centered upon the
democratic merits of legal secularism. At UTEP, Jose also interned for
Federal District Judge David Briones; was a Teaching and Research
Assistant in the Department of Political Science and the Center for Law
and Border Studies (CLBS); and served as an Assistant Editor for the
Journal of Law and Border Studies, a legal journal centered upon
political and legal issues unique to the border region.
As a CHCI Fellow, Jose jumped right into his first placement at the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA). At the USDA Food and Nutrition Service
and under the guidance of the Administrative Review Division Branch
Chief, Jose reconstructed the hearings process for the State Food Stamp
Appeals Board. For example, when a state agency is charged with
violating Food Stamp Regulations, it has the right to appeal. Given the
nature of the offense and the resources involved, the appeal goes before
a federal board. State agencies have the right to an administrative
hearing. He re-constructed the hearings process, from discovery to
witness examination, to judicial rights. Jose interpreted the Code of
Federal Regulations and used it as his guidance. USDA is now the last
line of appeals before a state moves to the federal courts.
In his second placement — the office of Congressman Reyes — Jose is the
Congressional Hispanic Caucus liaison, helping to write floor
statements, press releases, columns and blogs.
It won’t be long before Jose is worthy of his own Hollywood fame, “based
on a true story:” After his work as a CHCI Public Policy Fellow, Jose
will attend law school to pursue public service, both from a grassroots
and an intellectual standpoint.
Past Fellows of the Month
Angelica M. Reza - February, 2007
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