Lolita Harper When she raised her right...
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Lolita Harper
When she raised her right hand and swore to uphold her civic duty
as a new United States citizen a year ago, Paty Madueno took her vow
seriously.
“They give you this little booklet on what it means to be an
American and what the role of the government is,” Madueno said, still
carrying a thick accent from her home country, Mexico. “I read that
book, and I am following it.”
The 46-year-old Costa Mesa resident has worked diligently to push
for local and state legislation she thinks would improve the lives of
her neighbors, friends and loved ones -- the working class, as she
describes them.
When Madueno is not working her day job as an apartment manager,
she is lobbying on behalf of the Orange County Congregation Community
Organization, which is designed to create neighborhood service
programs through the faith-based community. Madueno represents her
St. Joachim Catholic Church Parish.
“This is my passion, working with the community,” Madueno said.
“This is my heart.”
Her fiery enthusiasm fueled an impromptu visit to Assemblyman John
Campbell’s Sacramento office earlier this summer to talk about
possible additions to the state health care program, Healthy
Families. Madueno said Campbell had not personally returned her phone
calls, so she decided to pay him a visit while in town for another
meeting.
Campbell, who represents Newport-Mesa, was in the middle of budget
conference committee meetings, which entail hours of grueling debates
over the proposed state budget, said Matt Black, Campbell’s chief of
staff. He met with Madueno in the assemblyman’s absence.
“Those folks are definitely determined,” Black said of Madueno and
Father Joseph Robillard from St. Joachim’s, who was with her.
Madueno and Alma Penalosa, also a representative of the
faith-based organization, argue that proposed additions to the
Healthy Families program, which would also cover the parents of
eligible children, should be funded. Those parents need to be healthy
so they can work and work hard enough to get their families to the
point that they don’t need government assistance, Madueno said.
“These are people who are legal, who pay taxes and who are
providing a base of manual labor for many of the state’s major
industries,” Madueno said.
Because of the nature of their work -- mostly blue collar, retail
or in restaurants -- those workers are not offered health care and
cannot afford to pay for it on their own, Madueno said.
She uses her 22-year-old daughter as an example.
Sylvia Madueno takes classes at two community colleges and works
part time at a coffeehouse, where she does not receive health
benefits. She can’t afford health care on her own, so her parents pay
for it.
But many people don’t have that luxury, Madueno said.
Campbell said he is more than willing to meet with Madueno to
discuss the topic but, as the third-highest-ranking Republican in
state leadership, he is swamped with budget concerns right now.
“The good news is that you have someone representing you that has
influence,” Campbell said. “The bad news is that means I am up [in
Sacramento] a lot and don’t have time to meet face to face as often.”
Madueno should not feel like she has been ignored, he said;
sometimes that’s just the way it goes.
The Costa Mesa resident admits she is new to the political scene
but can’t help but feel her issue is simply not important to
Campbell.
“He just doesn’t understand the working class,” she said. “This is
not another hand-out, it is a way to ensure that the backbone of the
work force stays healthy.”
Campbell said it is not a matter of understanding social
conditions, which he feels he is in touch with -- it is a matter of
the bottom line.
Philosophical differences aside, there is just no money in the
state budget to start adding things to programs, Campbell said.
Proponents of Healthy Families are asking for an additional $65
million for the program. The extra allocation would bring the total
state costs to $265 million to $365 million for the year.
“We are talking about cutting things,” Campbell said. “Expanding
something for someone means we have to cut something for someone
else. Why should we create new government dependencies when we are
having to cut back on the ones we already have?”
Despite not yet having won Campbell’s support, it is clear Madueno
is not discouraged by her newfound role in politics.
“I don’t care about glory, I don’t care about rewards, I care
about people,” she said.
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