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I nominate Ramiro Cortez Gonzalez (1946-2009) for the 2015 Saginaw County Hispanic Hall of Fame. Ramiro was a pillar of the Saginaw Mexican-American community - an educator, a community organizer, an advocate for people, a historian and a proud promoter of his Mexican culture. He learned to be a community organizer and to serve others consistently from his father, J. Refugio Gonzalez, who was a co-founder of Saginaw’s La Union Civica Mexicana.
Ramiro’s obituary reflects that Saginaw Latinos remember about him: “Ramiro's passion of culture, history, life and serving the community were just part of being Ramiro; always doing the best. His academic background, broad and arcane knowledge, leadership skills, and wide diverse interests made Ramiro be a model for all of us.” (Deisler Funeral obituary, Nov 2009) Ramiro was born January 5, 1946, son of J.
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Refugio and Maria Cortez Gonzalez, married Maria Estefana Gonzales in 1968 and was the father of six children. Education was paramount for Ramiro. He graduated from St. Joseph High in 1964 and received degrees from Delta College in 1968, Western Michigan University in 1971 and University of Michigan-Ann Arbor where he earned a Masters and completed his studies for Doctor of Philosophy (Phd) in 1977. Professionally, Ramiro's employment involved education: 1980-1985 Saginaw Valley State University - Director of the Bilingual Teacher Training Program 1985-1988 Buena Vista School District - Principal of Keoltzow Elementary School 1988-1990 Saginaw Public Schools - Upward Bound Director, worked with high school students at Arthur Hill and Saginaw High. 1990-1995 Michigan Department of Education - Consultant for the Office of Teacher & Administrator Certification, Coordinator of Educator’s Advisory Committee to the State Board of Education.
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1995-2001 Tri-City SER Jobs for Progress, Inc. - Executive Director, GED instruction, Senior Center, Job Placement, Substance abuse prevention, Immigration, High risk youth Before 1995, Ramiro collaborated with Mexican Action Center (MAC) to establish the Benito Juarez Academy (1995-2002), a Saginaw charter high school targeted to at-risk youths, especially Latinos. Ramiro wrote the charter school's philosophy, vision, and curriculum; and completed required charter schools paperwork for Central Michigan University.
Ramiro was a proud Vietnam veteran who served in the U.S. Marine Corp (Feb 1966-Dec 1967) as a corporal and was a member of the former American Legion Post #500, the 40 and 8 Society and the Saginaw branch of the American G. He was involved were the Buena Vista Lions Club, Saginaw LULAC, the Kiwanis Club and other organizations. Ramiro was active in community affairs and concerned for the welfare of the community at large all his life. In the 1970's The Saginaw News wrote an article about Ramiro being an up and coming Hispanic leader.
He served as a Trustee on the Buena Vista Township Board, was appointed as a member to the State of Michigan Board of Nursing, and served on the national level as a committee member for the League of United Latino American Citizens (LULAC). One of his proudest achievements was the establishment of the Saginaw chapter of LULAC in 1979. Saginaw LULAC provided scholarships for area Hispanics. The first year provided three scholarships and grew to provide scholarships to over 300 students and over $500,000. (FYI - Saginaw's LULAC chapter has disbanded and a Saginaw United Way person said that the LULAC school scholarships stopped 5-6 years ago.) Ramiro promoted Mexican culture in numerous avenues: - organized the painting of murals on El Pato Grocery (Carroll St.