A Toppenish man leaves City Hall next week
and heads for a whole new level of politics.
Dan Garza, a Toppenish city councilman,
a leader in President Bush's state campaign and a state liquor agent, has
been named Hispanic media coordinator for the U.S. Department of Interior
in Washington, D.C.
The appointment represents the Bush
administration's commitment to serving the nation's growing Hispanic
population, Garza said Tuesday.
The 33-year-old calls the job, which
starts Aug. 9, a life-changing chance to work for his country.
"For the love of God, I was a farm
worker and now I'm being appointed to one of the president's agencies,"
Garza said. "That's as real as you get."
Bush created the position to coordinate
the spreading his administration's messages from top agencies, including
Interior, to newspapers, television and other media sources.
Garza, a four-year member of the
Toppenish City Council, served as state director for Hispanics for Bush,
which was aimed at gaining that segment of the vote.
He will resign this week from the City
Council and the state Liquor Control Board, where he worked for three
years as an enforcement agent.
He also has worked as a Toppenish police
officer and a legislative aide for U.S. Rep. Doc Hastings' Yakima office.
Garza spent the first part of his life
traveling with his family between agricultural jobs. At 15, his family
settled into the Yakima Valley.
Party leaders congratulated Garza on the
appointment.
State Republican Chairman Chris Vance
said Bush highlighted Washington with the selection, rather than choosing
a coordinator from a better-known state with a large Spanish-speaking
population.
"To have someone from Washington in this
position, instead of California or Texas, is a real coup for us," Vance
said.
"This is a key position for the
president, and I think getting Dan Garza in there is a step in the right
direction," Vance added.
State Sen. Jim Honeyford, R-Sunnyside,
said he expects Garza to perform well. He connects quickly with people and
understands Republican politics well, Honeyford said.
"I think he'll do an excellent job," the
senator said. "I was pestering him all the time to get ready to run for
legislative office."
Garza plans to eventually return to the
Yakima Valley. He remains interested in politics, but he offered no firm
plans in that regard.
As media coordinator, Garza wants to
help Hispanics understand recreational and commercial opportunities
available to them through the Interior Department, which oversees the
Bureau of Reclamation, National Park Service, Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Fish and Wildlife Service and other agencies.
"There's just so much going on and so
much information to put out, which had not been done in the past,
effectively at least, in regards to the Hispanic community," Garza said.
The Interior Department's actions hold
special significance in the Yakima Valley, where issues involving federal
irrigation projects, the Yakama Nation and federal wildlife policies, can
have major economic implications.
Reaching out to Hispanics should help
involve them in politics and national affairs, Garza said.
"It's not only what this country can do
for Hispanics, but what Hispanics can do for this country," he said.
Department of Interior representatives
in Washington, D.C., did not return calls requesting comment on Tuesday.