Ron Bilbao

Web Name: Ron Bilbao

WebSite: http://www.ronbilbao.com

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Ron Bilbao

In The Arena

Tuesday, October 10, 2017 Proud and humbled to receive the "Rising Star" award.

Wednesday, May 4, 2016 South Florida Gay News Recognition as Straight Ally
Straight Ally: Ron Bilbao
User Rating:5/5LOCALJason Parsley04/26/2016 1:55 pmPrintEmail
Ron Bilbaos sense of social justice started in high school where he started the first student-lobbying program leading fellow students to the state capitol to advocate for anti-bullying legislation. Besides serving on the board of SAVE Bilbao is the Legislative Specialist at the Florida Education Association.
"The LGBT community still faces the daily scourge of discrimination in the workplace, in housing, in public, and in places of worship protected behind the veil of "religious freedom, he said. For straight allies, it means accepting a society that doesn't accept our friends and our loved ones. It means accepting discrimination at some level, which leads to discrimination at all levels. And it means that we need to stand side-by-side in a movement that hopes to achieve a greater goal than just civil unions and marriage; that of a greater society where all forms of discrimination at all levels are eradicated. True equality for all is a cause we should all stand up for."Executive Director of SAVE Tony Lima added, Ron has been a longtime board member of SAVE, South Florida's foremost advocate for the local LGBTQ community, and I am so proud to have worked with him fighting for equality for the last few years. We congratulate Ron on everything he's accomplished and look forward to continuing to work with him towards the goal of social justice for all.http://southfloridagaynews.com/Local/straight-ally-ron-bilbao.html#
Tuesday, October 13, 2015 Democracy in the Americas SymposiumExcited to participate!


Wednesday, May 27, 2015 Excited to serve as Ambassador on the national New Leaders Council (NLC) Leadership Board of AdvisorsRon Bilbao, NLC Miami Board Member, Legislative Specialist, Florida Education Association
Ron Bilbao is Legislative Specialist at the Florida Education Association (FEA), Floridas largest association of professional employees with more than 140,000 members. He is a proud Miami native of Venezuelan and Colombian heritage.Rons passion for social justice was firmly rooted at a young age. In high school, he served as President of the Miami-Dade County Student Government Association (SGA) where he created their first student-lobbying program leading fellow students to the state capital to advocate for anti-bullying legislation and juvenile justice reform. He also led the SGA in a federal lawsuit against the Miami-Dade County School Board for banning the childrens book Vamos a Cuba.In college, Ron continued his tradition of student-led advocacy through founding the North Carolina Coalition for College Access, which lobbied state leaders for in-state tuition for undocumented youth. As a first generation college student, he founded the universitys Latina/o center to advance opportunities for this emerging population.Ron returned home to Miami in 2010 to become the lobbyist for the ACLU of Florida defending civil liberties in an adversarial legislature. Most recently, Ron served as Political Director for SEIU Local 1991 representing nurses, doctors and healthcare professionals at the nations largest public hospital system Jackson Health.In 2014, Ron was selected by LatinoLeaders Magazine as one of Miamis Leaders of the Future and was named one of the 30-under-30 Rising Stars in Florida Politics by Saint PetersBlog.Ron is a founding fellow of the 2012 NLC Miami inaugural class and has since served as Chapter Vice Director and in various roles on the exec team. Ron also serves on the Board of Directors of SAVE, Miami-Dade's largest LGBT advocacy organization. Ron is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and currently resides in Miami. Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Proud to join the Public Policy Advocacy team at FEAJanuary 5, 2015


30 Under 30Proud and humbled to have been selected. - September 24, 2014

Meet Ron Bilbao one of the30under30rising stars in Florida politicsByPeter Schorschon September 24, 2014Growing up, Ron Bilbao dreamed of being an astronaut. And then he faced reality hes scared of heights.So Ron settled on a more down-to-Earth dream helping people without a political voice. He was still in high school when he saw the possibilities.As president of the Miami-Dade Student Government Association, Ron helped organize students to lobby for anti-bullying legislation in collaboration with Equality Florida. It took two years but it passed.I love the idea of democracy that works on behalf of people, Ron says. But youve got to get the politics right.He says his family left Venezuela to escape the corruption in government. That formed my thinking. The way to make society better is to have everybody participate and have a stake in it.That same passion is reflected in his volunteer work with the SAVE, which advocates for LGBT rights, and the Florida Immigrant Coalition. He serves on the boards of both organizations.He was a part of the inaugural class of New Leaders Council Miami, which helps train the next generation of leaders, and remains on the executive team today.Defending peoples rights is one of his proudest achievements, whether it was at the ACLU or in his current position as political director of SEIU Local 1991 in Miami, representing the healthcare professionals at Jackson Healthcare System.Here is Ron in his own words:I am26 years old and live in Miami.I graduated fromthe University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.I hope to visitTokyo one day.I got into politicsto try and level the playing field for those who dont have a voice in government. Everyone deserves an equal shot at a prosperous life, and government can help or hinder that opportunity. Politics is the means for which we can achieve a more representative, more responsive government. A better government is the means for a fairer, more just society.One principle I always put above politics isintegrity and loyalty. Integrity cant be bought; it has to be nurtured within you so it can grow. Loyalty is never forgetting who your friends are and always remembering that to have a good friend, you have to be a good friend. So much in this business is based on trust, and if you cant trust those you work with, then the whole thing gets dysfunctional.Person or people who gave me my first shot:Bob Levy I credit with giving me my first shot in politics. When I was 18, he gave me a chance to be his summer intern and work on campaigns statewide. After that, I was hooked. Bob has had, and continues to have, an inextricable influence on the kind of political person I am and hope to be. He is the personification of integrity, the definition of loyalty, and the epitome of friendship. Those of us who have worked for Bob (and there are many of us) know that our lives are better in some way for knowing this great man.Ive already worked for/on:Ive worked for great people and great organizations both before and after college. Ive already mentioned Bob Levy. My first job out of college was for the ACLU of Floridaunderthe venerable Howard Simon. Now I have the privilege of working on behalf of the healthcare workers at the world-class Jackson Health Systemunderthe leadership of Martha Baker at SEIU.When I begin a project or first work on a campaign, I look forwhat the ultimate benefit to the community will be. I also look for integrity in the people Im working for and with.Ive been blessed to have these people as my mentors:Ive already mentioned the mentors Ive worked for: Bob Levy, Howard Simon, and Martha Baker. At UNC-Chapel Hill, I had fantastic mentors including distinguished author, journalist, and professor Paul Cuadros, respected administrator Josmell Perez, and brilliant artist Mario Marzan. In Miami, Christopher Norwood was an early friend and continues to guide me through the complexities of Miami politics. CJ Ortuno gave me a shot when he recruited me to be on the board of SAVE Dade three years ago. Through SAVE, Ive met some of the best political mentors anyone could ask for: Joe Falk, Christian Ulvert, and the newest executive director Tony Lima. All these folks are more than just mentors; they are friends I still turn to for career and personal advice today.The people I most admire in politics are:The people behind the scenes that make government work: the committee staff, legislative aides, even the bill readers and the Sargent at Arms; the lobbyists who help electeds navigate complicated policy so that they know what theyre voting on for better or worse; the folks who help get people elected in the first place field, comms, and finance; and the journalists and members of the press that keep the public informed and hold all of us in the political process accountable.One lesson Ive already learned isdont take it personal. Its difficult not to in this business, especially when the issues often hit so close to home. Try and find a way to get to the heart of the policy goal by staying true to your core principles and allowing the other side to remain true to theirs. Tough, but not impossible.If I wasnt working in politics, Id be working in (which field)Science. I always wanted to be an astronaut.In ten years, youll read about meworking on behalf of the people of Miami and Florida, fighting for an equal voice in government for everyone, and continuing to work toward a fairer, more just society.You can connect with me on social media:@ronbilbaoFacebookLinkedInOriginal Post:http://www.saintpetersblog.com/archives/159980 Wednesday, September 17, 2014 Latino Leaders Magazine Club Leaders of the Future
April 17, 2014 - Happy to have been selected by Latino Leaders magazine as one of their Club Leaders of the Future for Miami.

Check out the article and others selected here.


Tuesday, August 7, 2012 Vote August 14th!

UPDATE 8/15: Proud and honored to have been elected last night!





All registered Democratic voters in Miami-Dade's Precinct 592 eligible to vote in this race. Punch #459 to vote for me for Democratic Executive CommitteePrecinctCommitteeman!










Friday, May 25, 2012 New Leaders Council Fellowship
So proud to have been selected as part of the first class of NLC Miami Fellows class!
Check out the rest of the amazing fellows in the 2012 class here:
http://newleaderscouncil.org/2012-nlc-fellows-miami/

Read more about New Leaders Council here:http://newleaderscouncil.org/ Wednesday, May 16, 2012 Ron Bilbao joins SAVE Dade Board
2/29/12
Miami native Ron Bilbao has been named a new member of the SAVE Dade Board of Directors. Ron works with the ACLU of Florida full time as a senior legislative associate and has been a very active member of the Miami-Dade community. In addition to founding and chairing the Hands on Miami Youth Advisory Corps, Ron has been active in the Miami Dade Election Reform Coalition and has worked with legislators on both sides of the aisle on a range of issues. The entire Board and staff of SAVE Dade is pleased to welcome Ron to the Board during this important election year in fighting for equality.http://www.savedade.org/board_of_directors

Tuesday, December 21, 2010 News and Observer article by Kristin CollinsArchive


June 21, 2009PARENTS' CITIZENSHIP IS SON'S JOY
Author: Kristin Collins, Staff Writer

CARRBORO Ronald Bilbao will remember his 21st birthday not for gifts that he received, but for one that he gave.This year on his birthday, Bilbao, a rising senior at UNC-Chapel Hill, sponsored his parents for legal residency in the United States - 25 years after they left their native Venezuela for Miami.
His parents had been among this nation's estimated 12 million illegal immigrants, with no way to rectify their immigration status, since 1984. But several years ago, they discovered that they were among a small group of illegal immigrants who have a path to citizenship.
In the nation's complex web of immigration laws, there is a provision that allows people who entered the country on legal visas and remained after the visas expired to apply for permanent residency - but only if they have an immediate family member who is a U.S. citizen and at least 21 years old. Ronald, a U.S. citizen born in Florida, was their ticket.
He signed the forms on his birthday, Jan. 8, and in March, Bilbao's parents received green cards that allow them to live permanently in the United States. It was a joyful occasion for his family. It was also a lesson in the arbitrary nature of U.S. immigration laws, which forgive some illegal immigrants and provide no remedies for others, Bilbao said.
Because he was born in Florida, the U.S. immigration system gave Ronald Bilbao all the rights of a U.S. citizen and allowed him to get a full scholarship to UNC-CH. It left his family, including his brother, who came to this country when he was a baby, on the margins of society for more than two decades before excusing their violations.
"I didn't do anything differently," Bilbao says. "I'm just lucky. And I had to wait 21 years so I could finally do something to help my family."

LAW WILL HELP FEW

The law that helped Bilbao's family works for only a small number of immigrants. It applies only to people who entered the country on legal visas, an estimated 45 percent of the nation's illegal immigrants. It excludes those who crossed the border without a visa or committed any legal infraction, such as using false documents to get a job. Arcane provisions of the law bar still more people, on the basis of criteria such as the year they entered the country.
It will not help the majority of North Carolina's illegal immigrants from Mexico, many of whom sneaked across the border by swimming across the Rio Grande River or hiking through the desert.
Cases such as Bilbao's give fuel to both sides of the nation's contentious immigration debate. Some anti-illegal immigration activists point to them as a reason to cut back on family-based immigration, and to deny citizenship to the children of illegal immigrants. They say that violating the law shouldn't be rewarded with the chance to gain legal status.
Mark Krikorian, director of the Center for Immigration Studies in Washington, which pushes for stricter immigration enforcement, said the case shows the need for tighter laws that punish people who over-stay visas just as they punish border jumpers. "We need to deal with the illegal immigrants who are here the same way, regardless of how they got here," he said.
Immigrant advocates agree that cases such as Bilbao's point to a fundamental unfairness in the law. They argue that the nation needs immigration reform that would give all illegal immigrants equal opportunity to earn legal status. Jack Pinnix, a Raleigh immigration lawyer, called current law "an irrational patchwork of happenstances that divides families."



VISAS EXPIRED

Bilbao's parents, Lucia Romero and Henry Bilbao, moved to Florida in 1984 with their infant son, Robert. All had visas that allowed them to come legally, but the documents eventually expired.
Lucia Romero said they had a good life in Venezuela; her husband had a business importing auto parts, and she worked as a secretary. But her husband traveled frequently to the United States for business, and he became passionate about raising his children in what he saw as the land of opportunity.
"We moved for better education for our children," she said.
Growing up in the multicultural mix of Miami, Ronald and Robert say, they didn't understand the concept of being illegal immigrants. They occasionally heard their parents talk about not "having papers," but they didn't know what that meant.
Lucia Romero said they went to legions of lawyers, trying to find a way to gain legal status, always hitting dead ends. Even a 1986 amnesty that legalized millions of immigrants didn't help.
But their status had little effect on their day-to-day lives. Her husband continued to run his auto-parts business, and she found work as a housekeeper. Immigration laws went all but unenforced for years, so they never feared deportation.
It wasn't until 2001, when their elder son Robert began applying to colleges, that their immigration status began to have serious consequences. Robert, who graduated among the top five in his high school and dreamed of becoming a doctor, was accepted by Cornell University and by UNC-Chapel Hill. But his immigration status disqualified him for student aid or loans. He was forced to turn down the slots and, for a while, give up his hopes of a college education. "I've come to identify myself as a man without a country," says Robert, who still lives in Miami. "I'm not American enough for America, and I'm not Venezuelan enough for Venezuela."
Robert eventually found a way to attend the University of Florida and earned legal residency by marrying his girlfriend. He is now a teacher and hopes soon to begin medical school.
But he and Ronald watched things become increasingly difficult for their parents as immigration laws tightened in recent years.
They were unable to renew their driver's licenses, and the fear of deportation, once unimaginable, crept in.

'JUST BAD LUCK'

Ronald said he didn't fully understand his family's situation until he entered college in 2006. He knew the specifics - his brother couldn't get financial aid and his parents couldn't get passports or driver's licenses - but he didn't know that their problems fit into a broader national problem.
He had no idea that there were tens of thousands of students like his brother, unable to go to college because of their immigration status. "I thought it was just bad luck on our part," he says.
He figured it out only when he began studying immigration issues, and talking with other students who were engaged in the debate over national policy.
Now, he is the leader of a group he founded at UNC-CH, the Coalition for College Access, which advocates allowing illegal immigrants to attend the state's universities and colleges.
His family made it to the other side of this country's immigration morass. But he said he cannot celebrate their success without also feeling guilty - that he is attending a college his brother couldn't, that he was able to help his family in a way that most children of North Carolina's illegal immigrants cannot.
And guilty that, when he went home for spring break, his father felt the need to thank him for the gift of legal residency.

Staff writer Jennifer Klahre contributed to this report.

kristin.collins@newsobserver.com or 919-829-4881 Monday, December 13, 2010 NPR segment on the Carolina CovenantMy first interview at UNC. For the NPR program The State of Things with Jessica Jones on the Carolina Covenant.

Scroll down and click on Listen Now to hear the full interview.

http://wunc.org/programs/news/past/news/archive-old/NJJ020207.mp3/view Saturday, December 11, 2010 "Carolina Firsts" videoA video for the launch of the Carolina First Generation Students and Faculty at UNC-Chapel Hill


And an article to explain:
Initiatives Recognize First-Generation College StudentsInitiatives Mark Success of First-Generation College Students
Ron Bilbao was born and raised in Miami to immigrant parents from Venezuela and Colombia. Now a senior at Carolina, he is the first person in his family to head down the path to college graduation.
"My father had to actually drop out of college when he was younger to go to work, but [my parents] knew the value of an education and wanted to pass that on to their kids," Bilbao said.

Continue reading here: http://alumni.unc.edu/article.aspx?sid=7455 "Celebrate Carolina's Diversity" video for the Carolina Annual FundLaunch of the new Carolina Latina/o Collaborative website! Tuesday, September 7, 2010 My Op-Ed Contributions to The Daily Tar Heel, Fall 2010On the Changing Face of America

Monday, August 16, 2010 Carolina Alumni Review Article College StoriesBecoming Latino: From Miami to Carolina Del Norte
by Ron Bilbao

It was the first thing my mother mentioned when she dropped me off on Franklin Street three and a half years ago and the first question my best friend asked when he came up to visit one year later:

"Where are all the Hispanics?"

Naturally all that asked were indeed Hispanic themselves and from Miami no less, the Latin American capital of the United States. We're known for a few things in Miami: the beach and Will Smith. We're also known as one of the only cities in the U.S. where Hispanics are the predominate ethnicity and rank first in the world in terms of cities with percentage populations born outside of their own country (59% according to the United Nations Development Program, 2004).

For an eighteen year old born and raised in Miami by Venezuelan and Colombian immigrant parents that spoke no English and never went to college, going to a high school with a Hispanic population of over 90%, in a city where it is common to be asked "Can I help you?" in Spanish first and then in English, going out of state for college was no big deal. My first-year roommate from the rural one-stoplight town of Beulaville, NC (1,200 residents) and I had more in common than we thought when we first arrived in Chapel Hill, NC: we were both in a state of culture shock.

For him, he had never seen so many people from so many different places with so many different stories. For me, I had never seen so many white southerners from so many rural areas with so many generations lived in the U.S. For him, UNC was the Flagship University of the State, the school his father went to and the one all his friends aspired to. For me, it was a reputable public school with unmatched financial assistance that was far away from home. He loved it for its tradition. I loved it for its value.

While I was only one of two hundred eighty one male Hispanic students at UNC in 2006, I was part of a larger trend happening both nationally and locally. The U.S. is seeing an unprecedented rise in the Hispanic population and much of it is happening right here in North Carolina - the state with the fastest growing Latino population (Pew Hispanic Center). UNC Chapel Hill has similar growth more than tripling its Hispanic student enrollment over the last eight years and projecting a four hundred percent increase over the next ten years (College of Arts and Science Growth Study, 2007).

So where were all the Hispanics then? Eventually I found them - in Lenoir. The dining hall staff was overwhelmingly Hispanic and most spoke little to no English. I found them in housing - cleaning the bathrooms and mopping the hallways. I found them on Franklin Street - in the backs of restaurants cooking or washing dishes. I found them on street corners in Carrboro - at 7am hoping to be picked up for work. The truth was Hispanics were everywhere. It's just that they were nowhere to be seen.

Why were there so few Hispanics in my classes, teaching classes, holding Administrative positions, managing others? I often found myself the sole Hispanic voice on University committees, student groups, and focus groups. I admit that at times I felt I was purposefully placed on certain committees to be that voice, to represent my people so to speak. I remember being asked in a committee meeting once how other minority students would feel about a particular proposal. For the first time in my life, I realized, I was actually a minority.

I had never felt underrepresented until I came to North Carolina. I met people who were in an unfamiliar place, frightened, and who had no right to speak up for themselves. These were neither the strong-character Cubans I knew from back home nor the fiercely passionate Puerto Ricans that I had grown up with. They were the rest of us, the Hispanics that were underrepresented, the invisible Latinos.

Recognizing the opportunities I had at a place like UNC, I took action. I helped found the North Carolina Coalition for College Access - a state-wide, grassroots, student-led movement dedicated to ensuring access to higher education for all students regardless of immigration status. I urged the Chancellor in 2007 to consider the creation Latino Center to represent our community on campus and in the state and in April 2010, the Carolina Latina/o Collaborative will be formally inducted at Craig North Residence Hall on south campus at UNC. I've mentored a Latino high school student from Siler City for the past three years and have tutored university workers in the English language. To me this was the very least I could do at a place that gave me the power to stand up and do it. I became the voice of a population like I had never imagined.
Growing up in Miami showed me that the world is a comfortable place when people have so much in common. Coming to UNC showed me that it's a much more realistic world when you have to figure out what it actually is you have in common. My goal has been to show the people of this state that we are not so different and that our values are closely aligned: family, religion, prosperity for our country.

In Miami I was Hispanic - a term coined by the U.S. Census in 1970. When I moved to North Carolina I became Latino - a similar meaning yet self-imposed by our community as a form of empowerment. I have been and always will be an American - whatever that means to you. Monday, July 19, 2010 UNC Home PageOn the UNC home page today. [Archived here]

Thursday, April 22, 2010 Mini-Documentary by Michelle May Wednesday, July 15, 2009 My 2009 Summer Travel Fellowship in Europe
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Or ZOOM OUT Thursday, January 29, 2009 Campaign EndorsementsHappy to announce the endorsement of the Sports Clubs at UNC!

Truly I think this was one of the most fair and valuable forums so far and I'm humbled to have received it. I think it marks a turning point in our campaign and really gets the momentum going for the remainder of the election season. Hope we keep that on our side!

UPDATE: We have also received endorsements from the Environmental Clubs and the Residence Hall Association. Tuesday, January 20, 2009 Campaign for YouRon is running for Student Body President at UNC Chapel Hill. Have a look at the campaign for you website. More videos, pictures, and other goodies will be going up there shortly.
Monday, December 1, 2008 Good Morning AmericaABC News came to campus and talked to a few students (including yours truly) about student attitudes to alcohol (among other things). Have a look at the video by clicking on the image below. Note that clicking will open a new window.

Saturday, November 29, 2008 Holding the Urban Development Boundary LineAs President of the Miami-Dade Student Government Association, I urged county commissioners in Miami-Dade to stop developing into the everglades and deter urban sprawl.

Visit Hold the Line's website and scroll down to see our statement.

Watch the video here!ACLU: Vamos A Cuba LawsuitIn 2006, a book called Vamos A Cuba was challenged by the father of a student in the Miami-Dade County Public School system for allegedly "painting too rosy a life under Castro's Cuba." The book is for 5-8 year olds between Kindergarten and 2nd Grade and is filled mostly with pictures and an average of one sentence per page. Some questionable content included "In Cuba, children eat, work, and go to school like you do."

In response to the challenge, the School Board of Miami-Dade County formed two committees, a school-based and a district-based committee, in which to review the book for objectionable content and provide recommendations to the Board. Both committees recommended allowing the book to remain in school libraries.

Against those recommendations, the School Board voted to ban the book any way and begun the process of pulling the book from elementary schools. In response, the Miami-Dade County Student Government Association, the largest student organization in the County representing 370,00 students in every school in the District and that which I was President of at the time, contacted the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and together filed a federal lawsuit against the School Board of Miami-Dade County, FL demanding that the books be returned to the schools.
The story is long and the details gritty but in short, we won and the books were returned. We are currently in appeal but are confident the results will be similar.

ACLU Press Release 2006
Miami Herald Article by Matthew Pinzur 2006

Speaking the 2006 ACLU National Conference

After distinguishing himself as President of the Miami-Dade County Student Government Association and conducting a Student Right's Conference, Ronald Bilbao was placed on a District Committee to review the potential banning of the book Vamos a Cuba (Trip to Cuba). The book had been on shelves for years until an ex-political prisoner of Castro's regime raised the compliant that the book's depiction of Cuban life did not match his experience with the country. Despite strong opposition from its legal counsel and Bilbao's committee, the school board voted 6-3 to ban the book and proceeded to ban 20 other books in the same series. Believing that students have the right to have access to any educational resource, regardless of political content, the SGA joined the ACLU to sue the school board. After testifying in court, Bilbao saw a victory for himself and student rights and the school board was ordered to return all of the removed books to the schools' libraries. After the suit, Bilbao maintains, "There have always been those that challenge the basic freedoms and liberties that this country was founded on. But there will always be others that will dedicate themselves to preserving a true America, in its basic and purest form, the way our founders saw it, and the way only true Americans can still see it. That is the ACLU."

Listen to the podcast from the conference.
Friday, November 28, 2008 A Little Bit of HistoryI figured to kick off ronbilbao.com, we should go back and take a look at a little bit of what brought me to the place I am today.

Everyone has a unique story. For me, it has been blessed with a loving family, incredible opportunity, and an unwavering work ethic. Not to mention a little luck along the way.

As I attempt to chronicle a history of my short life until this moment, rather than upload my resume or post a list of things that I have done, instead I will you give you a 21st century look into my life as it is known publicly in some of the most significant work in which I have had the fortune to take part.

If after this you decide a resume would work better, simply make your opinion known by commenting on this post.

Thank you for visiting and enjoy! HomeSubscribe to:Posts (Atom)Keep in touchFollow me on TwitterFriend me on FacebookAdd me on LinkedInBlog Archive 2017(1) October(1)Proud and humbled to receive the Rising Star award. 2016(1) May(1) 2015(4) October(1) May(1) April(2) 2014(1) September(1) 2012(3) August(1) May(2) 2010(9) December(5) September(1) August(1) July(1) April(1) 2009(3) July(1) January(2) 2008(4) December(1) November(3)
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