Miami Herald

From Hialeah student to MDC’S FIRST WOMAN LEADER

- BY JIMENA TAVEL jtavel@miamiheral­d.com

The teacher still remembers her first interactio­n with a particular student about 40 years ago. It was her first year teaching at Henry Filer Junior High School in Hialeah, and she ran into then-ninth-grader Madeline Pumariega in a hallway.

“What are you doing?” the rookie instructor asked her.

Pumariega replied, without missing a beat: “Standing.”

The teacher, Arlene Prieto, giggles as she recounts the memory of now one of her closest friends: “I asked her a stupid question, and she had this smart, real direct answer. I laughed, and that’s how we connected.”

That dry humor and quick wit still characteri­ze Pumariega, 54, who was named president of Miami Dade College on Nov. 17, 2020, when, after a spiraling 19-month search process, the seven-member MDC Board of Trustees selected her as the college’s fifth president, its first female leader, in its 61-yearhistor­y.

Come Friday, Pumariega, 54, a graduate of Hialeah High, Class of 1986, and an MDC alum and former basketball player at MDC’s Kendall Campus, will have the college chain and medallion placed on her shoulders in a historic investitur­e ceremony at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts. She will be the leader of the largest college in Florida and one of the largest in the country, with roughly 120,000 students and 6,500 faculty and staff.

The milestone comes amid a year of monumental struggles.

On the education front,

Pumariega, like educators across the country, battled the COVID-19 pandemic, which brought on mental health challenges for students and, in MDC’s case, a precipitou­s drop in enrollment that led to the loss of 9,000 students from 2019 to 2020 — the steepest decline in the college’s history.

On the personal side, she grieved her own mother, who died shortly before Pumariega was named president. The country song “Five More Minutes” by Scotty

McCreery comes to her mind when she thinks of that loss, because she wishes she could relive “the good stuff, the good times.”

Her mom, a former teacher who once graded papers alongside a young Madeline asking her to paste stickers on them, never saw her take on the college presidency. But as Pumariega goes through her executive duties, she thinks of her.

“I know she’s watching from another seat in the house,” Pumariega said.

INVESTITUR­E DATES BACK TO MIDDLE AGES

Her investitur­e ceremony, a tradition to transfer power that dates back to the Middle Ages, will finalize a weeks-long celebratio­n across all eight of the college’s campuses.

In the so-called road to investitur­e, students, staff and community members have showered Pumariega with presents, including a key to the city of Hialeah, a portrait and a pair of Tiffany pearl earrings.

Katherine Padilla, a second-year student pursuing an associate’s degree in business administra­tion at West Campus in Doral, handed her the Tiffany’s turquoise bag with the earrings at a recent celebratio­n that included a sky blue carpet entrance followed by a carnival with dancers in bejeweled costumes and plumed headpieces.

Padilla, the campus president, said the local Student Government Associatio­n purchased the earrings for Pumariega after scouring her Instagram profile to gauge her taste. Pumariega, who often wears a multi-strand pearl necklace, grinned when she received the gift. She told Padilla she would wear them to the investitur­e ceremony.

“O-M-G, yes, please wear the earrings!” Padilla said. “It feels very empowering, and it feels like this generation of females can accomplish whatever they want to accomplish.”

“It’s not about me,” Pumariega repeated during the event. She plans to donate the gifts to the college’s archive, and write a check to Padilla and her colleagues to reimburse them for the pearls.

In early November, during the inaugurati­on of a HistoryMia­mi Museum exhibit on the college, Pumariega said she wanted the investitur­e to be a

commemorat­ion of the college’s legacy rather than hers.

“I said we would only do it if we could go back and do a history of Miami Dade College,” she told the crowd that night about the showing. The exhibition walked visitors from the early days of the “Chicken Coop College,” nicknamed for the original buildings that turned into classrooms, to today’s MDC as a pillar for economic mobility, culture and education in MiamiDade County.

Years after their encounter in the junior high hallway, Prieto reunited with Pumariega while they both worked for the college. Their friendship has turned into a sisterhood, despite Prieto living in Virginia now. They speak on the phone regularly.

“She definitely hates being the center of attention,” Prieto said.

Pumariega doesn’t display photos of her or her family at the President’s Office, and she rarely talks about her personal life in profession­al settings.

“She’s a very private and modest person,” Prieto said. “For her, it’s about the work.”

‘WHOA, WHO IS THIS LADY?’

At 6-foot-2, Pumariega towers over almost everyone and that, coupled with her power suits, manicured nails and styled ash blonde hair, can make her initially intimidati­ng.

Padilla said she first met Pumariega at a Student Government Associatio­n meeting at the beginning of the fall term. Pumariega showed up unexpected­ly, and although Padilla had heard about Madame President Pumariega, she didn’t immediatel­y recognize her.

“I was like, ‘Whoa, who is this lady?’ I had heard about her, but I had never seen her. So, when she came in, and I saw she’s like this super tall and elegant lady, I was like ‘Whoa.’

“I was super nervous. I wanted to make a good impression,” Padilla said.

Throughout the semester, Padilla has encountere­d Pumariega at other gatherings. “She’s not scary. That was my first impression — that she seemed scary — but she’s not scary at all,” Padilla said.

Pumariega forgoes

MDC makes its decision Watch as Miami Dade College makes its selection of Pumariega as its next president a year ago.

handshakes for side-hugs and skips the small talk to jump straight into candid conversati­ons.

She recently told a group of students over lunch that the next time they would ditch the “rubber chicken” and get McDonald’s instead.

She’s also not afraid to criticize the college, stimulatin­g honest feedback.

In mid-November, during another meeting with students, one of them timidly complained about MDConnect, a web page for college services. Pumariega leaned closer and whispered, “Can I tell you a secret? I have the same problem. It’s not intuitive.”

She then launched into a detailed explanatio­n on how her team is trying to improve it.

In that same meeting, she told students the college wants to increase campus engagement. Those who attend MDC often work part or full time to make ends meet, or often take care of an elder or younger family member to help out at home. All of them commute, as the college lacks dorms, so making time to watch a volleyball game or join the Japanese manga club can be difficult.

Pumariega, however, is slowly changing the school to cultivate student involvemen­t. She said she has questioned why some libraries push away students with unnecessar­y regulation­s, like forbidding eating and drinking completely.

“I said, ‘No food or drinks? Well, then I’m not coming,’ ” she told the students, who roared in amusement. “Those are antiquated rules.”

Pumariega described her leadership style as collaborat­ive. She spends less time giving orders and more time listening to others, she said.

She also tries to give her team space to make mistakes and grow from them, pointing out any mistakes privately.

“If every day you’re flying off, if every day you’re screaming, if every day nobody is good enough, people eventually just turn off,” she said. “And I think that when employees turn off, that’s dangerous for an institutio­n, because you don’t feel that motivation anymore.”

‘SHE BROUGHT THEM TOGETHER AGAIN’

Michael Bileca, chair of the Miami Dade College Board of Trustees, credits Pumariega’s approach to developing a newfound unity among top leaders at the college.

Eduardo Padrón, her predecesso­r, retired as president in 2019 after nearly 50 years at the school — the last 24 years as president of the college. During his tenure, the college grew from a twoyear community college to a major force offering four-year degrees. He also played a key role in Miami’s cultural and downtown renaissanc­e, launching the Miami Book Fair at the school’s Wolfson Campus, growing the Miami Film Festival and renovating the Freedom Tower into an art museum.

But Padrón, who declined to comment for this article, ran the school with a longtime group of lieutenant­s, including Lenore Rodicio, his right-hand person. The board of trustees passed over Rodicio for the presidency; she resigned shortly thereafter to work as a senior fellow at the Aspen Institute and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

“The environmen­t was more of a top-down structure; campus presidents were not given full transparen­cy on informatio­n on their campus,” Bileca said. “[Pumariega] brought them together again. She created an empowered atmosphere and an atmosphere where there is ownership of all levels of organizati­onal leadership.”

Pumariega has also rallied those who weren’t her fans when she applied for the job.

“There was some concern by others through the search process, and to have her come in and be such a unifying leader has been an incredible thing to watch,” he said. “It’s been a year, and I have yet to hear anything but overwhelmi­ng positive feedback.”

Bileca said he believes Pumariega’s strength and success come from her extensive experience, both at MDC and at other educationa­l posts.

Pumariega started her career at MDC, as an academic adviser and adjunct faculty member at the Kendall Campus, which she attended in the 1980s. After five years, she transition­ed into student services at downtown Miami’s Wolfson Campus, working as a dean of students there, and then a dean of students and administra­tion at the Medical Campus.

She then became the president at Wolfson, the college’s signature campus, from 2011 to 2013. At the time, she helped grow the Miami Culinary Institute and launch the Idea Center, an entreprene­urship hub.

After two decades at the college, Pumariega moved on to become chief executive officer of the statewide nonprofit Take Stock in Children, which helps kids further their education, for about two years. At the time, she had been diagnosed with breast cancer and did some soulsearch­ing.

Pumariega, born in South Miami as the second child of two Cuban exiles, then was tapped as chancellor of the Florida College System, the first woman and the first person of Hispanic descent to hold the job. The college system oversees 28 institutio­ns, including MDC, and serves more than 800,000 students.

Pumariega, who was chancellor for three years, then briefly took on a teaching job at New York University, and simultaneo­usly became the executive vice president and provost of Tallahasse­e Community College for nearly two years. In January 2021, she officially started her current job at MDC.

Because of her time in Florida’s capital city, she’s a known figure there.

Elizabeth Ramsay, president of the United Faculty of Miami Dade College, said she has witnessed Pumariega’s acclaim across the community, even among MiamiDade’s delegation in Tallahasse­e.

“Each time that we’ve met with a senator or a representa­tive they always said, ‘How about that president of yours? She’s just great!’ ” Ramsay said. “And in some cases that’s the only point upon which we agree.”

A HIALEAH GIRL

Her ability to navigate the corridors of Tallahasse­e, which for much of its history has been a white male-dominated power structure, comes, Pumariegia says, from growing up in Hialeah in the

1980s.

“I’m like 6-foot-tall, and I’m from Hialeah, so anyone trying to intimidate me ... that’s just not going to work,” she joked.

Watching her mom work as a teacher and her dad as a banker after migrating from Cuba showed Pumariega the value of a solid work ethic. Ramsay, the faculty union president, said she stood beside Pumariega for years while they volunteere­d at the Miami Book Fair.

She’s a “roll-up-yoursleeve­s kind of person.”

Those who knew Pumariega in high school say she wasn’t exactly a popular kid, but she didn’t have problems making friends. She played softball and basketball and swam.

Victor Whitaker, her former water polo and swimming coach at Hialeah High, said Pumariega started out as one of the slower swimmers her first year and then, by her senior year, led the team as its captain.

“She started as a guppy and ended as a shark,” he said.

When he found out about a month ago that Pumariega is now the president of MDC, Whitaker pulled out the Hialeah High yearbook and reminisced. But what he didn’t feel was surprise.

“That one made sense because of how she approached high school. She was a real go-getter. She managed sports and got really good grades.

“I’m proud of her. It makes me feel like it was worth all of the afterschoo­l and Saturdays and Sundays,” he said.

At MDC, Pumariega continued her love for sports, specifical­ly basketball. She started as a basketball player at the Kendall Campus in 1986. As a center, she led the team to the state championsh­ip tournament. She later returned as an assistant coach for the women’s basketball team for five seasons. She was inducted into the MDC Alumni Hall of Fame in 2018.

Pumariega’s upbringing shaped her views on faith and family, both crucial in her life.

She spends most of her free time visiting her only daughter, Alyssa, a 17year-old senior at Florida State University School in Tallahasse­e. She enjoys her Sunday nights with family dinners, surrounded by her loved ones and loud music. And on weeknights, she’s nearly always

THERE WAS SOME CONCERN BY OTHERS THROUGH THE SEARCH PROCESS, AND TO HAVE HER COME IN AND BE SUCH A UNIFYING LEADER HAS BEEN AN INCREDIBLE THING TO WATCH.

Michael Bileca, chairman, MDC Board of Trustees

A final goodbye Former Miami Dade College President Eduardo Padrón honored at graduation during ‘bitterswee­t’ sendoff.

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Madeline Pumariega, far right, and WSVN-7’s Belkys Nerey, next to her, help culinary students make paella during the Wolfson Campus Investitur­e Ceremony on Nov. 3.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Madeline Pumariega, far right, and WSVN-7’s Belkys Nerey, next to her, help culinary students make paella during the Wolfson Campus Investitur­e Ceremony on Nov. 3.
 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Madeline Pumariega near her office inside the school’s Wolfson Campus in downtown Miami.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Madeline Pumariega near her office inside the school’s Wolfson Campus in downtown Miami.
 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Miami Dade College’s first female president, Madeline Pumariega, with Student Government Associatio­n President Isabella Cunningham at MDC Wolfson Campus.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Miami Dade College’s first female president, Madeline Pumariega, with Student Government Associatio­n President Isabella Cunningham at MDC Wolfson Campus.
 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Madeline Pumariega speaks during the Wolfson Campus Investitur­e Ceremony on Nov. 3.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Madeline Pumariega speaks during the Wolfson Campus Investitur­e Ceremony on Nov. 3.
 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Madeline Pumariega joins Louis Wolfson III, left, and MDC Professor Emeritus and Miami historian Dr. Paul George at HistoryMia­mi.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Madeline Pumariega joins Louis Wolfson III, left, and MDC Professor Emeritus and Miami historian Dr. Paul George at HistoryMia­mi.

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