Uncertain future for Latin American Social Club

Dwindling membership at odds over club’s purpose

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Couples dance at a party during the 2011 Fiesta Days celebration at the Latin American Social Club. (Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com)
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Not everyone joins for the right reasons, he said.

“Most people join just to get a discount on the hall rental,” he said. “This club is like any other club, ... a small handful of people that are workers.”

He said he can depend on 12 members to help run activities.

“We got a lot of complainers,” Ortiz said. “We don’t need ideas; we need help. We’re not getting that kind of support. Therefore, this is what is happening. There’s only so many things we can do.”

During its peak membership, club members met monthly. That’s not the case anymore. Only the officers show up now, Ortiz said.

“Nobody comes to the meetings,” he said. “Nobody wants to help. Everybody wants to give us ideas on how to do things.”

Ortiz said he has sent out postcards to members, asking them to attend meetings.

“I don’t know what else I can do,” he said. “I posted up here in the hall that we have a meeting. [They] still don’t come.”

Miller said what has happened with the Latin American Social Club is not unique.

He noted a decline in participation in voluntary organizations in contemporary American society, saying the trend is “pretty widespread.”

Founder’s intent

When it was formed in the 1950s, the club was intended to “unite and promote the Hispanic cultures of the Sauk Valley community,” according to its bylaws.

At the time, Hispanics were a minority in the area.

Sixty years later, the number of Hispanics in Whiteside County has grown.

Census data from 2010 shows Sterling had the Sauk Valley’s biggest increase in Hispanics over the past 10 years. They now make up nearly a quarter of the city’s population, 24.2 percent, compared with 19.2 percent in 2000. The number jumped from 2,973 to 3,715.

That happened while the overall population of Whiteside County declined.

As more Hispanics have come to the area, they have integrated into society, Miller suggested.

“Rather than being a small minority that is relatively unusual, once the [Hispanic] community grows and becomes more integrated into an entire community as a whole, the [club’s] usefulness when it was a small group is not as compelling or not as required, really,” Miller said.

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