Lucretia
Hunt was born 74 years ago in East Utica, New York. Her neighborhood
then was a predominantly Italian, mixed commercial and residential
community. Today, it is the most diverse in the city, serving
as home to a large population of low-income seniors, minority
families, and immigrants from Eastern Europe and Southeast Asia.
Hunt is part of the glue that binds this diverse neighborhood.
From 1955 to 1966, she lived in Puerto Rico. While there, she
was recruited to teach English as a second language. In the process,
she learned to speak Spanish fluently. She was also the host of
an English-speaking radio show while she was there.
A teacher and long-time
community activist in political circles and women's issues, Hunt
was a founder of the East Utica Concerned Citizens Block Association.
That association, a model for others formed in the city, was a
charter member of the Association of Block Coalitions (ABC) formed
in 1995 by the HomeOwnership Center ® as a means of impacting
positive change throughout Oneida County. At the formation of
the ABC, Hunt was head of the East Utica block association. In
1998, she became a member of the association's board of directors.
She has served as chair of the board development committee and,
for the past three years, has been secretary. This year, she has
been nominated to serve as vice president.
Hunt and the East Utica
block association have been in the forefront of letter-writing
campaigns advocating health and safety code changes in Utica.
She has served a leader of a committee established by the HomeOwnership
Center ® to explore the possibility of earning a designation
for Utica as a Weed and Seed community. Now she is an active member
and community representative on the crime prevention committee.
She also has lent her talents
to a community leadership committee, created to establish new
block associations and increase participation in established ones.
The committee has developed a block captains' manual and PowerPoint
presentation as part of a resident leadership peer training strategy,
and raised $14,000 to send 14 residents to a Community Leadership
Institute sponsored by Neighborhood Reinvestment.
Hunt is a staunch supporter
of the HomeOwnership Center ® and a key volunteer for any
task. She can always be counted on for NeighborWorks ® Week
activities, neighborhood cleanups, the annual paint can pickup,
block parties, telephone calls, letter writing, advocacy activities
and more. Utica is a better place because Lucreita Hunt was born
there 74 years ago.