Gregory A. Galluzzo
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Gregory A. Galluzzo has been a community organizer since 1971.

From 1971 to 1975 he was director of the Pilsen Neighbors Community Council operating in the predominantly Mexican Community of Pilsen on the near South side of Chicago. During his tenure, the Community Council won a battle for the new Benito Juarez high school, created the 18th Street Development Corporation, established the neighborhood festival called Fiesta del Sol which has grown to attract over 1,000,000 visitors annually.

From 1975 to 1979 he worked to establish six community organizations in the State of Washington. Each of these organizations fought and won issues around crime, housing, education, and better youth services. These organizations combined into a coalition called the Light Brigade to fight the utility companies that were attempting to pass the cost of nuclear power plant overruns on to consumers. The Light Brigade saved consumers billions of dollars by forcing investors rather than consumers to foot the bill for this debacle.

From 1979 to 1986, he worked with Mary Gonzales to establish UNO of Chicago. This organization forced the city to build a new health clinic in Southeast Chicago. It organized thousands of people to push for the creation of the West Side Technical Institute. This $60,000,000.00 community college provides training to thousands of young people so that they can compete for higher paying technical jobs. UNO also played a major role in pushing for school reform in the City of Chicago.

From 1986 to the present he has been director of the Gamaliel Foundation. During this time the Gamaliel Foundation has grown into a network of nearly 60 community organizations in fourteen states and in the Natal and Western Cape Provinces of South Africa.

The Foundation has worked in Canada and Romania. It has been invited to work in Honduras and Tanzania. It continues to expand in the United States.

The Gamaliel Foundation works primarily with congregation centered community organizations. These organizations have become powerful forces for change in poor and working class communities. They also work with religious leaders to strengthen congregations.

The foundation provides intensive staff and leadership development programs. The organizations within the network frequently combine to work on National Issues affecting housing, transportation and urban sprawl.
 









 

 

Copyright ©1999-2006  The Gamaliel Foundation. All rights reserved.

Photos from Gamaliel Department of Communication, Juan Soto, Mary Gonzales, and Patricia Bond@Flickr.