StoryCorps Northwest: A Community Comes Together For Polo Aguilera

Terry Aguilera talking with her co-worker and friend, Cherokee Frazier, about her late husband, Polo Aguilera.

Listen

Polo Aguilera lived for his community. He participated in 10 Yakima council boards, funded local sports teams and was the founder of Yakima’s first Mexican bakery, La Petunia. He was known as a man who loved to help others. When Polo’s health started to fail, it didn’t come as a surprise that the community came to his family’s aid. Polo’s wife, Terry Aguilera  talked to her co-worker and friend, Cherokee Frazier about Polo’s struggle with cancer and the help their family received after his death.

Copyright 2013 Northwest Public Radio

Related Stories:

Farmworkers in the Skagit Valley tulip fields. (Credit: Brad Smith / Flickr)

New funding to build farmworker housing in the Pacific Northwest, nationwide

The United States Department of Agriculture is soliciting applications for funding to build farmworker housing nationwide.
In the Pacific Northwest, leaders hope the money can address gaps in farmworker housing. The Pacific Northwest is in a housing crisis and that impacts rural small businesses and agricultural producers, as well as farmworkers, said Helen Price Johnson, who is the Washington State Rural Development director for the USDA.
Continue Reading New funding to build farmworker housing in the Pacific Northwest, nationwide

Read More »