Her mother, Ana Tzintzún, is from a rural agricultural community in Michoacán, Mexico, and her father, Tom Costello,[4] is an American who came to live in Mexico in the 1960s and 1970s.[5] Tzintzún's original surname was Costello, which she changed to Tzintzún as a teenager.[4] She was born and raised in Ohio, where her parents operated a fair-trade Mexican jewelry business.[6] The family business required that the Tzintzún family live and travel to Mexico throughout her early life. Her parents, both progressive, encouraged their children to participate in various causes, especially those involving the Latino immigrant community. In high school, Tzintzún began organizing and working with newly-arrived Mexican immigrants in Ohio.[5] She graduated from University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin) in 2006 with a Bachelor of Liberal Arts in Latin American studies.[7]
Career
Tzintzún began organizing with Latino immigrant workers in 2000 in Columbus, Ohio, and then moved to Texas, where she helped establish the Workers Defense Project (WDP), serving as its Executive Director from 2006 until 2016.[8]
At the WDP, Tzintzún and co-founder Emily Timm led the organization to focus its efforts on the construction industry, the largest employer of undocumented labor in Texas.[1] She helped spearhead the organization's efforts to organize workers in one of the most-hostile political climates for worker and immigrant organizing in the country.[1]
Tzintzún served as the lead coordinator of immigrant mobilizations and strikes in Austin, Texas, on April 10, 2006 and May 1, 2006.[9] It was estimated that 60% of restaurants and 80% of construction sites closed in Austin for the strike.[9]
In 2008, Tzintzún co-founded the Austin Immigrant Rights Coalition (AIRC), which brings together stakeholders across the city to advocate for the rights of immigrants.[9]
Tzintzún helped lead the organization to pass over half a dozen local ordinances and state laws better protecting the rights of hundreds of thousands of workers by combining grassroots organizing, strategic research and smart communications strategies.[9] She co-authored two reports on construction workers in Texas that resulted in a federal investigation by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and led the agency to review 900 construction sites resulting in $2 million in fines.[10]
Tzintzún created and developed the organization's Better Builder Program, which won construction workers living wages, higher safety standards, training and on-site enforcement by Better Builder monitors against some of the largest corporations in the world.[8] At the close of 2015, the Better Builder program had won agreements on nearly a billion dollars in construction projects covering 10,000 workers.[11]
A quarter of workers surveyed on Better Builder sites reported receiving a raise from their last job, 38% reported receiving safety training for the first-time and 30% reported receiving workers’ compensation coverage for the first time in their construction careers.[12]
In 2017, Tzintzún founded Jolt, a civil rights organization that works to increase voter turnout among Latinos in Texas.[13][14]
Tzintzún married Jose Manuel Ramirez on November 13, 2015.[28] The couple has a son, Santiago Tzintzún Ramirez, who was born in 2017.[29] Tzintzún took her husband's surname, Ramirez, after they were married in 2015. The couple divorced in December 2019.
"Killing Misogyny: A Personal Story of Love, Violence and Strategies for Survival" in: "Yes Means Yes! Visions of Female Sexual Power & A World Without Rape. Seal Press, 2008 ISBN9781580052573
"Colonize This!" in: Colonize This!: Young Women of Color on Today's Feminism, Edited by Daisy Hernández and Bushra Rehman. New York. Seal Press, 2002 ISBN9781580050678
"Protecting Immigrant Workers" National Housing Institute: ShelterForce Sept. 1 2015
^ ab"Colonize This!" in: Colonize This!: Young Women of Color on Today’s Feminism, Edited by Daisy Hernández and Bushra Rehman. New York. Seal Press, 2002 ISBN9781580050678