Student prevails through motherhood and school

Despite unexpected hardships, Veronica Garcia shows fortitude and determination in her studies.

The Guardsman

Thomas Figg-Hoblyn

Veronica  Garcia, who only weeks before had celebrated her 16th birthday, walked  out of the doctor’s office in a state of shock. Her mind reeled as she  processed the news: she was pregnant.

It was the fall of 2000 and Garcia was only a high school sophomore.

She choose to keep her baby after leaving the doctor’s office that day, and went on to graduate high school as a single mother.

“I was scared, but excited at the same time,” she says.

Three years after her daughter Araseli was born, her second daughter, Priscilla, came into the world.

In 2008 she enrolled at City College. Placement tests put her in Math E1 and English 92.

Garcia is the daughter of Jose and Maria Garcia, first-generation immigrants from Guadalajara, Mexico.

A  City College student equity report published in 2009 showed that among  native-Spanish-speaking students only 14 percent of those placed in Math  E1 and only 22 percent of those placed in English 92 will go on to  complete transfer-level curriculum.

Beating the odds, Garcia would eventually meet her transfer requirements after taking five English classes.

While  taking classes at City College full time, Garcia, as a single mother,  also had to to work full time to support her young daughters.

“It wasn’t easy,” she says with a big smile.

In 2009, soon after she began at City College, her mother, Maria, became ill from congestive heart failure.

Maria  speaks little English. Because of this language barrier, and because  Garcia’s father, Jose, needed to work to keep a roof over the families’  heads, it became necessary for Garcia to get involved — dealing with  medical insurance, appointments, medications, social security and  disability.

Garcia  rose to the challenge, claiming that her mother was receiving  inadequate health care treatment and had almost died as a result.

Maria’s  condition worsened and soon only a heart transplant would save her  life.  After tackling the red tape and bureaucracy, her family  eventually got her on the transplant list.

Since  her mother did not understand English, Garcia said she gave the  hospital staff explicit instructions to call her directly any time there  was a problem.

One  day, without warning or explanation, they received a letter from the  hospital saying that her mother had been dropped from the heart  transplant list for “failure to comply” — in effect a death sentence.

Garcia said it wasn’t fair and the hospital had failed to give them any notice or even mention compliance up to that point.

“They were supposed to call me,” she said.

Her feeling is that if her mother was Caucasian, she would not have been taken off the list.

She continues to fight to get her mother back on the list, before it is too late.

The  experience has motivated Garcia to get involved with social justice.  She has joined the club Students Making a Change, becoming their student  leader for City College.

At  the moment she is fighting to change mandatory placement testing  policies at City College to create a more lenient system where  counselors are allowed to make placements.

Garcia continues to balance school, fighting for her mother’s life, raising her daughters and advocating for social justice.

Garcia plans on fighting against inequality as a career.

“I help people because I want to,” she says. “It’s my life’s purpose.”

On  May 26 Garcia will graduate from City College with two associate  degrees. Then she is moving on to earn her bachelor’s degree in ethnic  studies at either San Francisco State University or UC Berkeley, which  is currently reviewing her application.