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2004
NETWORKING® MAGAZINE’S
DAVID AWARD HONOREE.
DAVID
OCHOA
Principal
NuAlliance, LLC and The Resource Group, Inc.

In
writing "I am honored to accept the Networking Magazine 2004 David
Award," David Ochoa congratulates publisher Christine Conniff Sheahan
and her husband "for your work supporting nonprofits and charities." Ochoa,
a native Californian who moved to Long Island 12 years ago, notes that
by effectively supporting and advancing women's issues, Networking helps
identify community issues, and he adds that "through philanthropy
and a spirit of diversity and openness, we all share in community building" -
a major thrust in Ochoa's life.
The ninth of 15 children
born into a migrant farm family, Ochoa credits his parents with teaching
the value of community activism and entrepreneurship. He was the first in
his family to go on to higher education, saying his mom and two sisters cleaned
homes to support his undergraduate career at Whittier College and the pursuit
of his Juris Doctor from UCLA School of Law. He proudly states that members
of his family were devoted to public service, including positions on the
staffs of President Jimmy Carter, several governors and Los Angeles Mayor
Tom Bradley. Ochoa says that he tries to "replicate his parents" in
his business profession, and describes his three areas of interest as business
ownership, education and church work.
Ochoa's communication and
community building skills took shape at an early age when he helped organize
farm workers with Cesar Chavez and participated in student anti-war protests.
Later applying his skills in the business world, he co-founded and was CEO
of Buena Vision Cable Company of Los Angeles, the nation's second largest
minority owned telecommunications company. He moved on to executive producer
for programming at WNBC-TV in New York, and co-founded and served as senior
executive of Bilingual Children's Television.
Dovetailing his business
acumen with his support for education, Ochoa served for 17 years in the field
of development for higher education institutions. His communication and fundraising
expertise benefited Alaska Pacific University, Chicago State University and
Long Island's Dowling College.
Ochoa and his wife Myrka
Gonzalez, a lawyer and educator, understand the value of education. He says
he would like to see "equal access to education, a leveling of the playing
field," and together with Myrka they have set up scholarship opportunities,
including the Myrka Gonzalez and David Ochoa Latino Students Scholarship
Fund, an endowment in excess of $1 million at Dowling; a scholarship at Hofstra
University, Myrka's alma mater, for Hispanic law students; and a scholarship
at the Metropolitan College in New York City. Continuing to help others achieve
a well-rounded life, Ochoa volunteers his time with the Long Island Masterworks
Chamber Choir, and as the Long Island Urban League's number one volunteer
fundraiser, he supports and encourages others to support, its work.
"It's all about giving
of one's self," remarks Ochoa, who is active in a quiet way in supporting
Long Island's day laborers, its Latino community and nonprofit organizations.
Tapping his experience in production, Ochoa has appeared on a one-hour Telecare
show discussing Long Island's critical issues, and has also been a guest
on a half-hour Spanish language program. He's an ardent supporter of the
Hispanic Counseling Center, the Hispanic Brotherhood of Rockville Centre
and Adelente of Suffolk County.
More recently, Ochoa left
the field of higher education and returned to the private sector, where he
says he "looks for vehicles to create business and create change." He
adds that he is looking to promote his message in new ways, to new audiences
and provide new opportunities.
Ochoa's professional service
includes a seat on the board of directors of Doral Bank. Headquartered in
Puerto Rico, Doral entered the New York market four years ago and currently
has four branches in the metropolitan area. The seven-billion-dollar bank
hopes to increase its retail lending presence, and through his seat on the
audit committee, Ochoa sees an opportunity to interact with management and
affect policy. He promotes an investment strategy that would match good ideas
and people with wise investments.
Interested in supporting
a cleaner environment, Ochoa has a managing interest in Big Apple Energy,
a four-year-old business that sells natural gas to utilities and larger retail
outlets, like corporations and shopping centers. Ochoa's newest ventures
include his work at NuAlliance, a management consulting and business investment
company, and The Resource Group, where he specializes in government relations,
and fundraising and development services for the nonprofit sector.
Outgoing and energetic,
Ochoa has worked with the Long Island Choral Society, bringing children and
adults the opportunity to study and perform the great works in choral music
and literature. He receives great satisfaction in volunteering at his church,
the Congregational Church in Patchogue, where he serves as chairman of the
board of trustees.
"Long Island must
realize that it's not a collection of villages and communities any more,
it's one community," says Ochoa, whose philosophy pervades his work
within the community. Ochoa continues, "We've got to work together.
It's the same brains that will be tackling gridlock and the energy crisis
that will be providing access to our parks. We've got to find solutions."
Ochoa received the humanitarian
of the year award from the National Association of Puerto Rican Hispanic
Social Workers in 2001 and was a co-honoree at the 34th annual Hispanic Day
Parade on Long Island in 2000. On two separate occasions, Hispanic Business
Magazine included David Ochoa on their list of the 100 Most Influential Hispanics
in America.
Ochoa models his "working
together" theme in real life. In much of his community service, he partners
with his wife Myrka. The Association of Fundraising Professionals honored
the couple for their philanthropic work in 2002, and they are welcomed guests
at many nonprofit events.
Ochoa has two children
by a previous marriage: son David Jr., his wife Robin and their two children
Reynaldo, 10, and Nicholas, 2, live in Anchorage, AK; and his daughter Chemen,
her husband Mauro Rivera and three-year-old daughter Angelica live in New
Mexico.
NETWORKING® January
2004
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