File #: RS2022-1375   
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 1/28/2022 In control: Metropolitan Council
On agenda: 2/1/2022 Final action: 2/1/2022
Title: A resolution honoring the life of Hispanic community leader and journalist Eliud Trevi?o.
Sponsors: Sandra Sepulveda, Russ Pulley, Colby Sledge, Jennifer Gamble, Brandon Taylor, Antoinette Lee, Sharon Hurt, Joy Styles, Freddie OConnell, Kyonzte Toombs, Angie Henderson, Bob Mendes, Burkley Allen, Zulfat Suara, Jonathan Hall, Robert Swope, Sean Parker, Brett Withers, Emily Benedict, Nancy VanReece, Larry Hagar, Erin Evans, Russ Bradford, Kevin Rhoten, Jeff Syracuse, Ginny Welsch, Tom Cash, Mary Carolyn Roberts, Gloria Hausser, Thom Druffel, Kathleen Murphy, Courtney Johnston, Bob Nash, Tanaka Vercher, John Rutherford, Dave Rosenberg
Attachments: 1. RS2022-1375
title
A resolution honoring the life of Hispanic community leader and journalist Eliud Trevi?o.

body
WHEREAS, prominent Hispanic community member and leader Eliud Trevi?o passed away on January 23, 2022 at the age of 77; and

WHEREAS, Eliud Trevi?o was born to Mexican parents Cruz and Maria Trevi?o on January 10, 1945 and grew up in Odessa, Texas; and

WHEREAS, he moved to Nashville in 1994 and subsequently began his successful career in media by renting three hours of studio time in the evening at WNQM, a gospel station by day; and

WHEREAS, Trevi?o played selections of his favorite music and eventually ran a very successful daily broadcast from 6:30 p.m. to midnight on weekdays and overnight on weekends. According to a 1999 article in The Tennessean, Trevi?o's Radio Melodias broadcast had between 15,000 and 20,000 listeners each night; and

WHEREAS, in 1999, Trevi?o founded El Crucero de Tennessee, a Spanish language weekly newspaper, later incorporated as El Crucero Entertainment LLC, and became its president and publisher; and

WHEREAS, El Crucero was one of the first sources of information for the Spanish speaking community in Tennessee; and

WHEREAS, Trevi?o's work and career was recognized by the Nashville Area Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and he received their Media Excellence Award in 2006 and their "Ganas" in Entrepreneurship Award in 2019; and

WHEREAS, Trevi?o was an active member of the community and loved to support his neighborhood church, St. Edwards, in South Nashville. He served on the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights Tennessee Advisory Committee, the Mental Health Association Board, Metro Nashville's Emergency Communications District Board, and was appointed to Metro's Procurement Standards Board in 2000 during Mayor Bill Purcell's administration; and

WHEREAS, Trevi?o was a strong supporter of Unamonos, a local civic organization founded by community advocate and immigration attorney Mario Ramos. Trevi?o also fostered the first League of Unit...

Click here for full text