Los Angeles Times

Meet the Golden State of mind

- GUSTAVO ARELLANO

As Rudy Monterrosa wrapped up his final year at Notre Dame Law School in 1998, he also readied a return to Southern California.

South Bend, Ind., had treated him well, but the son of Mexican and Salvadoran immigrants didn’t see a future there. His family and friends lived in unincorpor­ated Bloomingto­n in San Bernardino County. He was a volunteer with the Inland Empire Future Leaders Program, which has trained generation­s of high schoolers to better their communitie­s.

And that’s what Monterrosa planned to do back home — set up a law practice, then eventually enter politics.

But one night, he served as an emcee when Edward James Olmos came to Notre Dame. Latinos drove for hours from across the Midwest to hear the actor speak, thirsty for a touch of their culture and for an event where they weren’t an anomaly, at only about 8% of the population.

“Something clicked,” Monterrosa now says. “It made me realize we can make a difference here.”

So he gave himself five years to try to establish a life. He became a respected leader, the type of guy whose career allowed him to cross paths with former South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg and the husband of newly confirmed Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett. Meanwhile, the Latino population in South Bend and the surroundin­g region doubled.

By 2018, Monterrosa achieved the dream he once imagined for himself in California: immigratio­n lawyer, Notre Dame law professor and school board member.

He’s running for reelection on the South Bend Community School Corp. board this year as one of the

few Latino politician­s in the Hoosier State.

And he’s doing it as a voice from the future — as a California­n who has already been through the demographi­c changes that an increasing­ly diverse Midwest is now confrontin­g. “The issues that California went through in the 1980s and ’ 90s, like bilingual education and discrimina­tion, the stuff I lived through, are just coming to Indiana,” said Monterrosa, who is 47.

He’s on the board of Inland Empire Future Leaders and still returns to San Bernardino County every year to volunteer at the nonprofit’s summer camp.

“Our students can see someone like them in me, and their parents can see someone who was once in their children’s exact position,” he said.

That Golden State state of mind is slowly starting to pop up in corridors of power across small- town America.

Latinos raised in California sit on a community college board in Nebraska, a city council in Virginia and in the Maryland House of Delegates. They’ve become the first Hispanic ever elected to political office in Kentucky and are climbing New Hampshire’s government­al ladder.

This phenomenon is so new that the National Assn. of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials, which keeps a database of the more than 6,000 Latinos who hold public office in the U. S., has no hard numbers on how many politician­s like these exist.

But NALEO COO Erica Bernal- Martinez says she’s “excited” by the trend.

“It’s going to make these communitie­s stronger in the long term,” she said. “They bring these [ California] ideals and convince people locally that they’re one of them.”

So let me introduce you to three electeds who illustrate this point: Monterrosa, New Hampshire state representa­tive Manny Espitia and Christine Thompson, a school board member in a tiny Kentucky county where the Latino population is just 2.5%.

Monterrosa was the one who grew up alongside an emerging Latino community. There was only one Latino lawyer in all of South Bend when he attended Notre Dame. Monterrosa’s mere presence and his f luency in Spanish made him sought- after almost immediatel­y.

“An activist went up to me shortly before I graduated and told me, ‘ Rudy, we need you here,’ ” he said. “‘ Don’t leave.’ ”

He eventually become president of the board of directors for La Casa de Amistad, a local community space, and volunteere­d for other Latino- focused groups across Indiana. Running for office was always “at the back of my mind,” but Monterrosa preferred to just focus on his law practice.

By the time there was a vacant spot on the South Bend Community School Corp. board two years ago, Monterrosa was a logical choice for the appointmen­t.

“He knows what it takes to be a leader out in California, where he’s one Latino amongst many,” said R. C. Heredia, chair of Inland Empire Future Leaders. “In South Bend, not so much. But he takes his pride and leadership that he learned with us and adapted it in order to have an impact.”

That’s the same approach Espitia is taking in New Hampshire, where Latinos make up only 4% of the population. The Santa Ana native has lived in the Granite State since 2015, landing there to work on Hillary Clinton’s campaign. After stints on the staffs of Nashua’s mayor and U. S. Sen. Maggie Hassan, Espitia ran for state representa­tive in 2018, at the urging of Democratic leaders. He remains one of just two Latinos in the state’s 400member House of Representa­tives.

His district has the largest concentrat­ion of Latinos in New Hampshire, yet he finds himself fighting for “basic stuff,” like government communicat­ion in Spanish — things so common sense in California that we forget the rest of the country isn’t like us.

“Nashua is becoming diverse, and [ native New Hamsphirit­es] have to break out of their homogenous mindset,” said the 30- year- old, who just bought a home with his fiancée but will keep his cellphone’s 714 area code. “Being able to get people to adjust their minds that different population­s have different obstacles is tough. But we fought those battles in California long ago.”

Both Espitia and Monterrosa moved away from California as adults. Thompson, the daughter of immigrants from Mexico City and Nayarit, arrived in Paducah, Ky., from Riverside with her family when she was 14.

“That shock of being in that new environmen­t was very difficult for me,” said the mother of two. “Especially being a teenager. You want to fit in, you don’t want to stand out — and you stand out.”

Thompson stayed in western Kentucky with her family, who liked the slower pace of life and the lower cost of living. She entered the nonprofit world and became a familiar community presence, lately as executive director at Paducah- McCracken County Senior Center.

But when she decided to run for the Livingston County school board in 2018, she had her 14- year- old self in mind.

“Growing up here as the daughter of immigrants, as a newcomer, that’s a way for me to advocate for quality education” for her rural constituen­ts, said the 37year- old. “I bring those lived experience­s to the table. That really keeps me going — being a role model and that inspiratio­n for other kids to look up to.”

People like Thompson, Espitia and Monterrosa are powerful — both symbolical­ly and literally. Not only do their actions affect the lives of their constituen­ts, but they also serve as ambassador­s for Latinos nationwide — and for the California way.

“California made me who I am,” Monterrosa said, choking up. “And that same spirit that I grew up with is the same one that I keep with me in South Bend.”

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