Lourdes
Barroso de Padilla has an extensive background in youth development and
leadership. She has served with City Year, an education focused organization
dedicated to helping students and schools succeed for more than 20 years.
Barroso de Padilla has helped to found five of City Year’s twenty nine sites
across the country, and has worked at all levels of the organization. She is a
certified Youth Development Trainer and was awarded the Hewlett Packard Alumni
Leadership Award in for her impact and service to the organization.
Barroso de
Padilla is a graduate of Project Diversity, Leadership Columbus, and the
Academy for Leadership and Governance Executive Fellowship program. She has
served as a Commissioner with the Ohio Latino Affairs Commission, as a founding
member of the Create Columbus Commission and as a board member for Directions
for Youth and Families, the YWCA Columbus, and as a member of the United Way’s
Education Impact Council and Diversity and Inclusion Committee. Currently, she
serves as Vice Chair of MORPC’s Regional Policy Roundtable, is a member of the
New Leader’s Council Advisory Board, and is a Greater Columbus Arts Council
board member.
As Senior
Vice President of Site Stakeholder Engagement for City Year Inc. Barroso de
Padilla oversees the organization’s major gifts, corporate and grant programs.
Since its inception more than a decade ago Barroso de Padilla has led and
currently serves on the Board for the Latina Mentoring Academy a unique
professional development and mentoring program for Latinas in Central Ohio.
Barroso de Padilla was featured in the
inaugural editions of The Women’s Book and Who’s Who in Latino Columbus as well
as WELD Ohio’s Women Welding the Way Calendar. She has been honored as one of
Business First’s 40 under 40, and was named a Distinguished Hispanic Ohioan by
the Ohio Commission on Latino Affairs. In November of 2021, Barroso de Padilla
made history by becoming the first Latina to be elected as a member of the
Columbus City Council.
Lourdes is
a bilingual first generation Cuban-American who was born and raised on the
eastside of Columbus, and is a product of the Columbus public school system.
She resides with her husband, Ernesto, and daughters, Eva and Valentina in
Eastmoor.