NPR News and Music Discovery for the Four Corners

La Plata County women are honored for their service to the community

Your browser doesn’t support HTML5 audio

Community members celebrate Women's Resource Center honorees Olivia de Pablo Lopez, Stella Zhu, and Elvia German-Palacios at the Durango Public Library
Clark Adomaitis

The Women’s Resource Center in Durango supports community members who are facing domestic violence, financial hardship, and housing issues.

At a recent reception at the Durango Public Library, ten women from La Plata County were honored for their work in providing resources to underserved people in marginalized communities.

Stella Zhu is a Basic Needs Coordinator at Fort Lewis College, where she helps oversee food and housing security initiatives.

“I'm a first-generation immigrant here. So, I've had the lived experience of navigating systems and policies that don't serve my needs. I know with the population that we're serving at Fort Lewis College, half, nearly half of our students are first-gen,” said Zhu.

Susan Hakanson, Executive Director at Durango Adult Education Center, also works with students, but different ones.

We have students from currently 18 different countries. They come to us with backgrounds as varied as having never been in school in their home country to having advanced degrees in their home country. Their stories are as varied as any one of us might imagine,” said Hakanson.

Elvia German-Palacios works for a program called Health Without Barriers through the Colorado State University Extension. She says she was raised by a family of advocates.

Back then, my English wasn't as good as it is now. But I was never too afraid to speak the language that I had to support those who needed it the most. I have always had a heart for activism, social justice, and social change,” said German-Palacios.

Community members gather to learn about the community organizing that women in La Plata County are doing.
Clark Adomaitis

At the event, the Durango Poet Laureate, Esther Belin, read a poem honoring her mother:

My mother comes from the Land of Enchantment,
now also the land of poverty, drugs, illiteracy, and confusion.

My mother, like many Japanese during World War II, was relocated off the rez to a federally run boarding school in Riverside, California, USA.

My mother resides angelic among the yellow-brown haze, Indigenous, and immigrant smog in Los Angeles. Skyscraping progress pushing her home.”

The poem is featured in Belin’s book From the Belly of My Beauty.

The Women’s Resource Center will host events throughout Women's History Month to celebrate the ten women.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
Clark Adomaitis is a shared radio reporter for KSUT in Ignacio, Colorado, and KSJD in Cortez, Colorado, for the Voices from the Edge of the Colorado Plateau project. He covers stories that focus on underrepresented voices from the Four Corners region, including the Southern Ute tribe, the Ute Mountain Ute tribes, the Navajo Nation, the LGBTQ+ community, the Latinx community, and high school students.
Related Stories
  1. A rare win after nearly 40 years for Texas investors planning Wolf Creek Village
  2. The Gathering of Nations 2024: North America's largest powwow takes place in Albuquerque
  3. Colorado law empowers students in public and charter schools to be Naloxone first responders
  4. Republicans in the Colorado Senate unanimously defeated the Child Sexual Abuse Accountability amendment