This article originally appeared in Sombrilla, UTSA's magazine.
Ozuna captures the data from SAGE and its partners, including organizations such as United Way of San Antonio, San Antonio Police Department, Goodwill of San Antonio and San Antonio ISD. As they implement their programs and activities, she then measures the effectiveness, which allows her to make data-driven suggestions to achieve a greater impact and to make a stronger case for funding.
“We find the meaning behind the raw data,” Ozuna says. “I take all these data points and find the storyline. I find ways to better implement these community efforts to maximize effect. I feel really fortunate to be sitting in a place where I get to see how the data and evaluation translates to actual outcomes.”
Born and raised in San Antonio, this work is especially meaningful for Ozuna. With her position at SAGE, she has struck the right chord for her desire to affect change while working with data and programming. But it wasn’t always like that.
“I come from a family of public servants. My mother was a teacher, and my father was a firefighter. I knew I had to work in something that I found meaningful, that really served people,” Ozuna says.
“I was building all of these skills and experience, specifically around program implementation and workforce development,” she says. “I was very passionate and was really committed to making a difference.”
It was Ozuna’s sister, who at that time was completing a Ph.D. in applied demography at UTSA, who encouraged her to pursue a graduate degree in public administration. The UTSA Master of Public Administration program (M.P.A.) helped Ozuna realize that she could still serve people and create change from a programmatic perspective.
With her work at SAGE, Ozuna is thriving personally and professionally. “The best part of my work is that it is different every day,” she says. “I work in an organization that attempts to be adaptive to community needs, which poses challenges to an administrator, but that’s my sweet spot.”