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You may remember him as El Super Mex. He was born
in San Benito, Texas to parents who were migrant farmworkers in
Montana,
Colorado, Texas, Illinois, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Ohio. As a
child, he and his family lived for eight years in a migrant camp.
He has never forgotten his roots.
In 1984, Lucio moved to
Columbus
to work for the state of
Ohio,
but he continued to drive up to BGSU to do the radio show. “I did
it for 11 more years. I never got paid. It was my way of putting
back into the community,” Lucio told this reporter.
But that wasn’t his only legacy at BGSU. Lucio established a
Hispanic Scholarship Fund and hosted the first Hispanic Issues
Conference in 1978 that brought the top Latino leadership in the
country (José Angel Gutiérrez and Reyes
López Tijerina) to the campus.
That same year, Lucio was instrumental in establishing residency
rules for migrant workers in
Ohio.
BGSU recognized his efforts along with support from Advocates for
Basic Legal Equality (ABLE), and established residency rules under
the Ohio Board of Regents.
Today, in
Columbus,
El Super Mex is host of a talk and Latino music show on
1550 AM in
Columbus. The show features interviews with representatives of
government agencies and others who serve the community. He
provides valuable information to the community on such vital
issues as how to apply for child support, the importance of
voting, income taxes, government laws and regulations, employment
opportunities, dealing with domestic violence and other topics of
concern.
Just this month, he began hosting a weekly community TV show,
Punto de Contacto (Point of Contact) on Channel 48, Azteca
America, which is televised in Columbus at 9 AM every Sunday.
The station hopes to syndicate the show throughout the state. Like
Lucio’s radio show, Punto de Contacto is a primetime
approach to advocacy.
But there is much more to Lucio than just his radio and television
persona.
He began his public service career in 1981 when he was elected
Chairman of the Board of the Ohio Hispanic Institute of
Opportunities, Inc. This was a non-profit multi-million dollar
supportive services agency for migrant farm workers and the Latino
community.
Lucio’s work came to the attention of the state of Ohio, and in
1984 he was hired as the first State Migrant Agricultural
Ombudsman. In 1995 he was promoted to Monitor Advocate/Ombudsman
for the Ohio Department of Jobs and Family Services, a program
designed to meet the needs of migrant and seasonal farmworkers and
their employers. Lucio was the first in the nation to create an
agricultural Web site for migrant farm workers, and established a
migrant housing program to improve the housing of migrant workers
in Ohio.
He helped in the promotion of ITIN’s for immigrants, and was the
first to host the Mexican Consulate in Columbus in 2000.
Lucio is the former Board President and Secretary of the Board of
Directors for Material Assistance Providers, Inc., the state’s
only free furniture bank. He is president of the Hispanic Society
of Central Ohio, Inc., a local non-profit Latino organization that
has provided more than $50,000 in scholarships to Hispanic college
students in Central Ohio.
His work has earned him recognition. Lucio was named Government
Advocate of the Year in 2004 by the Ohio Hispanic Chamber of
Commerce, and received the Padrino Award in 2006 from the Ohio
Hispanic Coalition.
He is a member and active participant in Shaddai Pentacostal
Church, St. Stephen Catholic Church, and Christ the King Catholic
Church. Lucio still finds time to volunteer one day a week
teaching ESL to the Hispanic community. He also hopes to complete
his degree at Ohio State University.
La familia
is very important to Lucio, who is the single father of two girls.
Tiffany, 20, is a junior at OSU, and Adriana, 3, is
described by her father as “a politician in training.”
His parents, Cpl. Benito Lucio, Sr., and Bernardina
Lucio, have been married for 54 years. They live in San
Benito, Texas.
Benito Lucio, Sr., served in the Korean War, and two of his sons
have made careers in the U.S. military serving their country.
Sgt. Ruben Lucio,
US Air Force Retired, did three tours in Iraq. His brother,
Sgt. Miguel Lucio, a US Army Green Beret, is a 20-year veteran
who has reenlisted for five more years. Currently stationed in
Qatar, he served four to8urs of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Benito also has four sisters: Anna María Lucio Cruz
is an Education Specialist for the University of Texas;
Belinda Lucio Morales is a teacher in the Houston area;
Cindy Lucio teaches Special Education in the San
Benito School District, and Yolanda Lucio is a
hospital administrator in Harlingen, Texas.
“My parents did very well, not bad for a migrant farmworker
family that came to Ohio to pick crops for ten years,” says Lucio.
But we saved the best news for last. We may not have heard the
last of El Super Mex on Northwest Ohio radio.
“I’m seriously thinking about approaching President Sidney
Ribeau at BGSU about doing a two-day reunion of the WBGU show
with all the original DJs,” says Lucio.
If it happens, it will be another example of how Lucio continues
to put back into the community for all the support that others
before him gave in making him the person that he is today.
PART 1:
1978: When BGSU met Latino music, at WBGU 88.1FM |