House, California , District #38
Contact Information
Napolitano202-225-5256
202-225-0027 (fax)
http://www.napolitano.house.gov
Home Town: Brownsville, TX
Committees: Resources, International Relations
Bio
Grace Flores Napolitano was first elected to Congress in 1998. She is currently serving her fourth term representing California's 38th District. Her Los Angeles County-based district covers several cities and communities in the Southeast and San Gabriel Valley areas including Norwalk, Pomona, Santa Fe Springs, the City of Industry, Montebello, Pico Rivera, Avocado Heights, La Puente, Hacienda Heights, West Puente Valley and parts of East Los Angeles, Whittier, Rowland Heights, South San Gabriel, Valinda, and other unincorporated areas.
Committees and Caucuses
Resources Committee:
Napolitano is
the Ranking Member of the Water and Power
Subcommittee. She is an avid promoter of
conservation, water recycling, desalination,
and sound groundwater management and storage to
address Southern California's need for adequate
water quality and supply. She is proud of
her legislative efforts on a number of fronts:
implementation of CALFED, a water
management plan for the State of
International Relations
Committee:
Serving her third term on the
International Relations Committee, Napolitano
is committed to forging stronger relationships
with other nations and reducing the threats
posed by terrorists. While she sees
two-way trade as mutually beneficial, she also
recognizes that trade is an important tool for
fostering democracy, raising living standards
and reducing global instability and military
conflicts.
Congressional Hispanic Caucus
(CHC):
The Congresswoman is proud to serve
as Chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus.
As Chair, Napolitano will work over the course
of the next two years with the task force
chairs who direct the legislative, policy, and
political direction of the CHC. She expressed
her desire to coordinate efforts with the
Congressional Asian Pacific American and
Congressional Black Caucuses to ensure sharing
of priorities.
Congressional Mental Health
Caucus:
At the beginning of the
108th Congress, Napolitano founded
the Congressional Mental Health Caucus, which
she now co-chairs with Rep. Tim Murphy (R-PA).
The caucus included more than 70 members from
both parties during the 108th Congress.
As co-chair, Napolitano has hosted a
congressional briefing on veteran's mental
health needs and is working on proposals to
improve mental health services that the VA
gives to veterans. A key priority is
legislation to provide mental health parity in
health insurance. The Congresswoman is
also working to address the mental health needs
of adolescents, children, minorities and
seniors.
In the District
The Congresswoman is committed "constituent service" and to the economic revitalization of her district. She is working aggressively with federal, state and local officials to bring in new businesses, higher wage jobs and training funds to the district. She counts as one of her successes for her district a $2.8 million Labor Department grant for precision and computer numeric control (cnc) machinists and $4 million to spur reuse and redevelopment of the Northrop Grumman B-2 facility in Pico Rivera.
Napolitano has also taken a leading role in suicide prevention among Latina adolescents noting that nearly one-out-of-three has seriously considered suicide - the highest rate for any ethnic or racial group in the country. In 2001 she won a major victory when funds were included in the Labor-HHS-Education appropriations bill to support school-based, mental health services in her district. To date, $1.6 million has been secured for this program now operating in 4 local schools.
Manufacturing Task Force:
A firm
believer that manufacturing "matters," the
Congresswoman has initiated a Manufacturing
Task Force in the 38th district
comprised of various small and mid-sized
companies. The task force meets to
examine key issues and work on strategies that
will foster more manufacturing jobs and create
a positive climate for manufacturing retention
and growth.
Health Task Force:
Napolitano
established a 38th district Health
Task Force composed of health providers,
educators and experts throughout the local
area. The Task Force helps keep the
Congresswoman apprised of key health issues
facing her constituents and works with the
Congresswoman to devise programs and projects
to improve health care and health outcomes for
the local area. Currently the
Congresswoman and the Task Force are pursuing
funding options for a proposal to train more
nursing professionals at both the entry level
(CNAs and LVNs) and RNs with advanced
degrees.
Personal
The Congresswoman was born and raised in the border community of Brownsville, Texas. After high school, she married and moved with her husband to California where they raised 5 children. Always a working mother, Napolitano made her way up through the ranks of Ford Motor Company. After retirement, she focused full-time on civic pursuits in her adopted hometown of Norwalk where she has resided for more than 40 years.
Napolitano began her political career as a member of the Norwalk City Council, winning her first election in 1986 by a mere 28 votes. Four years later she won re-election by the highest margin of votes recorded in city history. In 1989, Napolitano was elevated by her council colleagues to serve as Mayor. During her council tenure, she focused much of her attention on providing access to constituents and on redevelopment and transportation issues to address the city's need for jobs and a more diversified economic base.
Following her 1992 election to the California Assembly, Napolitano emerged as a recognized leader on international trade, environmental protection, transportation and immigration. She quickly earned a reputation as a hard worker and champion for small business, women, economic expansion and job creation. In 1996 she requested and received the creation of the first new standing committee in nine years, the committee on International Trade, which she chaired. In her six years in the Assembly, she also served as chair of the Women's Caucus and vice-chair of the Latino caucus.
Grace is married to Frank Napolitano, retired restaurateur and community activist. They reside in Norwalk, California and take great pride in their five grown children, fourteen grandchildren and one great grandson.

















