Los Angeles Times

She’s not your typical tree hugger

Activist Aura Vasquez runs a consulting firm and also serves as a DWP commission­er.

- By Ivan Penn ivan.penn@latimes.com

Aura Vasquez runs a consulting business that bears her name and is one of five commission­ers on the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power’s board.

Vasquez, 39, provides environmen­tal and political consulting as the sole employee of her firm, which she bolsters as needed by hiring contractor­s. Her consulting work includes the successful push for a law that requires utilities to produce 50% of their electricit­y from clean energy sources by 2030 and to reduce greenhouse gas levels to 40% below 1990 levels.

At the DWP, the nation’s largest municipal utility, her potential impact is broad as the utility employs more than 9,000 people and serves 647,000 water customers and 1.4 million electricit­y ratepayers. Protecting the Earth: Vasquez says she became an environmen­talist as a child. At age 11, she learned about global warming at a science show in her native Colombia. Ever since, she says, she has advocated to “bring about a world that is not only more just but is just free of pollution.”

Aiding the marginaliz­ed: In her role as a consultant and as a commission­er for the DWP, Vasquez says, her aim is the same: to help people who don’t have a healthy environmen­t and safe places to play.

“Both of my careers are intertwine­d with my calling to continue the crusade to protect the environmen­t, to give a voice to people who traditiona­lly don’t have a voice.”

Grass-roots organizer: In 2013, Vasquez founded her consulting business, and in May 2017 she was sworn in as a DWP commission­er. Those roles emerged from her grass-roots campaignin­g and protesting as an organizer for the Sierra Club in its Beyond Coal campaign.

Vasquez led the effort to convince Los Angeles to wean itself from coal-generated electricit­y and to implement a single-use plastic bag ban.

She recently completed an executive education program at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, focusing on leadership, organizing and action.

Early learner: In her tiny hometown of Candelaria, Colombia, Vasquez became an early and quick study as a student.

Her stay-at-home mom taught her to read, write and recite poetry. So by age 4, Vasquez entered first grade. “I grew up in a very sheltered environmen­t where my schoolteac­hers were like my parents.”

They scolded and advised, she said, providing guidance that has carried her throughout her life. That all helped develop a strong sense of community, Vasquez said.

Preteen community organizer: After that science show about global warming when Vasquez was 11, she

founded the first environmen­tal club at her school.

“I went to my principal and asked, ‘What are you going to do about global warming?’ She asked me, ‘What do you want to do about it?’ ”

Already on a fast track, Vasquez graduated from high school just four years later at age 15.

Strong women: Education helped establish Vasquez’s sense of self, seeing strong female educators in her family and community as well as learning about women who helped with the liberation of Colombia from Spain, she said.

“It’s interestin­g because, you know, in those days women didn’t really have that kind of rebellious role,” she said.

The Big Apple: Vasquez was 18 when her family moved to the United States, making their new home in New York. After learning English, she enrolled in City University of New York Lehman and earned a degree in political science.

She moved on to jobs with the United Way of New York and as a political advisor for U.S. Rep. Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.), building experience in lobbying and politics that would prepare her for a move to California.

Coal-heavy L.A.: When Vasquez began pushing for Los Angeles to give up its coal-fired power plants, the city was producing about 40% of its electricit­y from the fossil fuel.

As the campaign ramped up in 2010, Vasquez used her passion for the environmen­t, knowledge of politics and concern for people to press for change.

It all led to what some saw as her unlikely appointmen­t to the DWP’s board of commission­ers — an unpaid, voluntary position — by Mayor Eric Garcetti.

Tree huggers: Relatives recently came to see her at her Los Angeles home, and “the first thing they did when they came to visit me here was hug that tree,” Vasquez said with a laugh, pointing to a towering sycamore in her backyard. That hug reflected the passion she and they have developed for the environmen­t.

She said that as a consultant for nonprofit organizati­ons, community groups and others as well as at the DWP, she’s optimistic about having a positive influence on the direction of environmen­tal and social justice policy in Southern California.

 ?? Christina House Los Angeles Times ?? AURA VASQUEZ of the Department of Water and Power’s board says her aim is to help people who don’t have a healthy environmen­t and safe places to play.
Christina House Los Angeles Times AURA VASQUEZ of the Department of Water and Power’s board says her aim is to help people who don’t have a healthy environmen­t and safe places to play.

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