Bridget Gonzales
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Described
as “full of life” by friends and colleagues, Bridget Gonzales
is a woman who lives fully the Marygrove ideals of competence,
compassion and commitment, says Maura Cantor, who describes
the day they met 15 years ago. “As I found my way down the
hall to my new office (in the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency), I was introduced to a woman who was larger than
life—full of energy, eager to learn, excited to lend a hand,
brimming with ideas and ready to work.”
Currently Bridget is the Chief of the Office of Legislative,
Education and Intergovernmental Affairs for the U.S. Department
of Commerce Minority Business Development Agency (MBDA) in
Washington, D.C. According to Agency Director Ronald Langston,
Bridget has enhanced the agency and its mission through media
and advocacy outreach, including two special sections, inserts
in issues FORBES magazine, June 2005 and 2006, which focused
on high-growth minority business enterprises. In praising her
competence, he said that the FORBES exposure opened financial
and contractual opportunities for minority business nationally
and locally. She has also worked tirelessly to assist minority
business enterprises in the hard-hit Gulf region as a key member
of the outreach team. The goal is to re-engage minority business
in the Gulf region.
Prior to joining the MBDA, Bridget was a Vice President with
Edelman Public Relations, the world’s largest independent public
relations firm, where she developed communications strategies
and issue campaigns. She also worked for Issue Dynamics, Inc.,
another consumer and public affairs firm, and led its strategic
alliances group, which forged working relationships with high-profile
national organizations such as the NAACP and the U.S. Hispanic
Chamber of Commerce.
Bridget was Legislative Director for Congresswoman Debbie
Stabenow (now Senator). She had responsibility for all legislative
matters before the U.S. House of Representatives and the House
Science Committee. She supervised legislative assistants, crafted
legislation for Representative Stabenow, prepared congressional
remarks and coordinated events among myriad responsibilities.
After receiving her Bachelor’s of Social Work in 1982, Bridget
began her public service career with the Girl Scouts of the
USA and held various positions with the Girl Scouts in Detroit,
San Diego and New York City through 1988. As the youngest Latina
to hold the position of Membership Director for a major metropolitan
council, she increased Girl Scout membership in San Diego by
four percent.
In the fall of 1994, Bridget also founded and led a Girl Scout
troop for financially underprivileged Latina and African American
girls in her southwest Washington, D.C., neighborhood. She
secured sponsorship of the troop from St. Dominic’s Catholic
Church and offered girls and their families an American tradition
for over four years. Bridget continues her involvement with
youth through her leadership on the Children’s Committee of
Fiesta Italiana at Holy Rosary Church.
A graduate of Detroit’s St. Mary’s of Redford High School,
Bridget was taught the virtue of community service at an early
age. She is a founding member of the Washington, D.C., chapter
of the National Society of Hispanic MBAs and, in February 2006,
she was elected Vice President of MANA, a national Latino advocacy
organization established in 1974. She has earned a Master’s
in Public Administration from Baruch College-City University
of New York and is an alumna of the National Urban Fellows
Program.
Bridget is the proud daughter of the late Mr. Salvador M. Gonzales
and Mrs. Helga Anglin; the sister of Mr. Salvador M. Gonzales,
II; and the wife of Mr. Sandro Edward Young. She acknowledges
them and her wide circle of other family members, teachers,
mentors and friends for their guidance, support and inspiration.
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