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Congressman Hinojosa: About Ruben
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Educational Biography of Congressman Rubén Hinojosa

Throughout his career in the private sector and now in public service, Rubén Hinojosa has consistently displayed his dedication to educational excellence. As President and Chief Financial Officer of his family-owned business for 20 years, Congressman Hinojosa experienced first-hand the value of education and a trained workforce.

Not one to sit on the sidelines, he was elected to the local school board and worked to address these issues in his community. From the school board, he moved to the Texas State Board of Education, where he served for 10 years through 1984. Soon after that he was elected Founding Chairman of the Board of Trustees for South Texas Community College, a position he held from 1993 through 1996. Hinojosa was instrumental in leading the efforts to successfully create the South Texas I.S.D. magnet high schools system and the new South Texas Community College.

In 1996, Rubén Hinojosa was elected to the United States Congress representing the 15th Congressional District of Texas. He serves on three House committees: 1) Committee on Education and Labor, 2) Committee on Financial Services and 3) Committee on Foreign Affairs.

Representative Hinojosa is widely recognized as a powerful voice for communities traditionally left behind in America's education system: low-income families, minorities, students with disabilities, English language learners, and the children of migrant and seasonal farm workers. As chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus’s Education Task Force, Congressman Hinojosa ensures that federal education policy never loses sight of the country’s youngest and fastest growing population - Hispanic Americans. By focusing on a group of federal education programs that are critical to the Hispanic community, often referred to as the Hispanic Education Action Plan (HEAP), the Congressman has helped to secure dramatic increases in resources - starting with $8.5 billion in 1998 and growing to nearly $15 billion for 2004.

In January 2007, Congressman Hinojosa was appointed Chairman of the Subcommittee on Higher Education, Lifelong Learning, and Competitiveness. As incoming chair, Congressman Hinojosa helped guide into law the historic College Cost Reduction and Access Act of 2007, which represents the single largest increase in student financial aid since the GI Bill.

Congressman Hinojosa has also vaulted Hispanic-Serving Institutions to a position of prominence in higher education. In the 1998 amendments to the Higher Education Act, the Congressman succeeded in establishing a separate Title V dedicated to the development of HSIs. Since that time, funding for HSIs has grown from $12 million to nearly $95 million annually. Congressman Hinojosa’s leadership has also enabled the passage of an unprecedented number of measures in the 110th Congress that boost the achievement of Hispanics in higher education. His successful initiatives include a landmark $510 million investment in minority institutions and a program to support graduate degree attainment at HSIs.

For his constituents, Congressman Hinojosa's advocacy has resulted in a surge of federal education funding in the 15th Congressional district of Texas. Since Congressman Hinojosa took office in 1997, the district has seen a 50 percent increase in federal education grants, with a total of nearly $380 million from 1997 - 2002.

Among the many awards of recognition Congressman Hinojosa has received, his favorites include two elementary schools, a U. S. Highway, and a Regents Endowment Professorship in perpetuity at The University of Texas in Austin... all bearing his name.

Born in South Texas, Congressman Hinojosa graduated from Mercedes High School and earned a Bachelor in Business Administration and a Master in Business Administration from the University of Texas in Austin and in Edinburg, respectively. He is married to Martha Lopez Hinojosa and has five children.

Washington, DC
U.S. House of Representatives
2463 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515

Phone: (202) 225-2531
Fax: (202) 225-5688
Edinburg Office
2864 West Trenton Road
Edinburg, TX 78539


Phone : (956) 682-5545
Fax: (956) 682-0141
Beeville Office
107 South St. Mary's Street
Beeville, Texas 78102


Phone : (361) 358-8400
Fax: (361) 358-8407