| As the President of the Oakland
City Council, Ignacio De La Fuente directs the business
of the city’s legislative branch of government which
includes approving the city-wide budget and crafting innovative
and fiscally responsible policies designed to improve the
lives of all Oaklanders.
Ignacio was born on January 1, 1949 in Mexico City. He
immigrated to California at the age of 21 and subsequently
became an American citizen. Mr. De La Fuente settled in
Oakland, California and began working in a foundry as a
machinist. His career in labor relations was launched in
1977 when he was elected as a union representative. Today
Mr. De La Fuente serves as an International Vice President
for the Glass, Molders, Pottery, Plastics, and Allied Workers
International Union, AFL-CIO, where he periodically negotiates
for members seeking health insurance, pensions, and other
benefits.
First elected to the Oakland City Council in 1992, he served
as the chair of the Council's Economic and Community Development
Committee until January 1999. At that time, Oakland adopted
the Strong-Mayor form of government that removed the Mayor
from the City Council and created the position of Council
President. Mr. De La Fuente became the first Council member
to be elected by his peers to serve as President of the
Oakland City Council in 1999. He has been re-elected to
this position every two years since then. Mr. De La Fuente
also co-chairs the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Joint
Powers Authority, overseeing the City’s Coliseum-Arena
complex and three professional sports franchises.
Mr. De La Fuente has been the point person for the city's
efforts at downtown and neighborhood revitalization. He
is credited with the revitalization of Fruitvale’s
International Boulevard shopping area – taking its
vacancy rate from 40% to nearly 0% -- as well as adding
major developments like the Fruitvale Station Shopping Center,
Super K-Mart (now Home Depot) and the Fruitvale Transit
Village. He is also credited with leading efforts to build
two new public schools and ball fields where a large, abandoned
building once stood in the Fruitvale.
In 2003, District 5 was redrawn to include the Glenview
neighborhood. Mr. De La Fuente’s beautification efforts
in Glenview have resulted in the complete rehabilitation
of the Park Boulevard Median Strip, street banners and new
street trees.
|