Nydia (Nydia) Velazquez (D-USH07)
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Capitol: 202.225.2361
FAX: 202.226.0327
District: 718.599.3658
District FAX: 718.599.4537
Representative
Room 2302 RHOB- Rayburn House Office Building 50 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, DC 20515-3207

Residence: Brooklyn, NY
Elected: 1992    Next Election: 2024
Spouse: Paul Bader   DOB: 3/28/1953
Committee Assignments
RM MemberHouse Committee on Small Business
MemberHouse Committee on Financial Services
MemberHouse Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Monetary Policy
MemberHouse Subcommittee on Housing and Insurance
MemberHouse Subcommittee on Indian and Insular Affairs
MemberHouse Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources
FC MemberCongressional Urban Caucus
MemberHouse Committee on Natural Resources
Ranking MemberCongressional Progressive Caucus
FC MemberCongressional Caucus for Women's Issues (House)
FC MemberCongressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC)
FC MemberBipartisan Congressional Pro-Choice Caucus
Counties Representing
Bronx / Queens

Bio

Congresswoman Nydia M. Velazquez is currently serving as Representative for New York's 7th Congressional District. In the 118th Congress, she is the Ranking Member of the House Small Business Committee, a senior member of the Financial Services Committee and a member of the House Committee on Natural Resources. She has made history several times during her tenure in Congress. In 1992, she was the first Puerto Rican woman elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. In February 1998, she was named Ranking Democratic Member of the House Small Business Committee, making her the first Hispanic woman to serve as Ranking Member of a full House committee. Most recently, in 2006, she was named Chairwoman of the House Small Business Committee, making her the first Latina to chair a full Congressional committee.

Given these achievements, her roots are humble. She was born in Yabucoa, Puerto Rico - a small town of sugar-cane fields - in 1953, and was one of nine children. Velazquez started school early, skipped several grades, and became the first person in her family to receive a college diploma. At the age of 16, she entered the University of Puerto Rico in Rio Piedras. She graduated magna cum laude in 1974 with a degree in political science. After earning a master's degree on scholarship from N.Y.U., Velazquez taught Puerto Rican studies at CUNY's Hunter College in 1981.

But her passion for politics soon took hold. In 1983, Velazquez was appointed Special Assistant to Congressman Edolphus Towns (D-Brooklyn). One year later, she became the first Latina appointed to serve on the New York City Council.

By 1986, Velazquez served as the Director of the Department of Puerto Rican Community Affairs in the United States. During that time, she initiated one of the most successful Latino empowerment programs in the nation's history - "Atrevete" (Dare to Go for It!).

In 1992, after months of running a grassroots political campaign, Velazquez was elected to the House of Representatives to represent New York's 7th District. Her district, which encompasses parts of Brooklyn, Queens and the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is the only tri-borough district in the New York City congressional delegation. Encompassing many diverse neighborhoods, it is home to a large Latino population, Jewish communities, and parts of Chinatown.

As a fighter for equal rights of the underrepresented and a proponent of economic opportunity for the working class and poor, Congresswoman Velazquez combines sensibility and compassion, as she works to encourage economic development, protect community health and the environment, combat crime and worker abuses, and secure access to affordable housing, quality education and health care for all New York City families.

As the top Democrat on the House Small Business Committee, which oversees federal programs and contracts totaling $200 billion annually, Congresswoman Velazquez has been a vocal advocate of American small business and entrepreneurship. She has established numerous small business legislative priorities, encompassing the areas of tax, regulations, access to capital, federal contracting opportunities, trade, technology, health care and pension reform, among others. Congresswoman Velazquez was named as the inaugural "Woman of the Year" by Hispanic Business Magazine in recognition of her national influence in both the political and business sectors and for her longtime support of minority enterprise.

Although her work on the Small Business Committee and the House Financial Services Committee (where she is the most senior New York Member on the Subcommittee on Housing and Community Opportunity) keeps her busy, Congresswoman Velazquez can often be found close to home, working for the residents of her district.