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Norman N. Hsu

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Norman N.H. Hsu (Chinese: 徐乃星; pinyin: Xú Nǎixīng; Wade–Giles: Hsu Nai-hsing) is a Chinese American Republican politician in Southern California. From 1991 to 2011 he was a board member of the Hacienda La Puente Unified School District (HLPUSD).[1][2]

Biography[edit]

Born in Singapore and raised in Southeast Asia, Hsu went on to Taiwan and studied political science at the National Taiwan University. After graduation, he returned to teach in Indonesia. Hsu immigrated to the United States in 1979, and was employed by the United States Postal Service in 1981. Hsu became active in organizing the Chinese American community in 1983 and began running for public office in 1987 for a seat in the HLPUSD Board of Education, which he finally won in 1991.

In 1998, Hsu ran for a seat in the Republican primary for California's 60th State Assembly district. Hsu garnered 7.3% of the vote, losing to Ben Wong.[3] He was unsuccessful in a bid for the 2003 Hacienda Heights city council election.[4] Hsu was criticized for an editorial he wrote in a Chinese newsletter during the 2003 election in which he advocated for a Chinese majority on the council, which many residents found exclusionary.[5] The cityhood measure lost 63% to 37%.[6]

In February 2011 the Public Integrity Division of the Los Angeles District Attorney's office opened an inquiry to review whether Hsu misused district resources by having a secretary at the school set up trips to China.[7] Hsu also came under criticism for initiating a Chinese language program at Cedarlane Middle School sponsored by Hanban, which is a branch of China's Ministry of Education. In February 2011 a recall drive began against Hsu and other members of the board. This recall effort was abandoned in June 2011. Hsu did not run for re-election in November 2011.

After retiring from the school board Hsu became the CEO of BELA Educational Group, which charges Chinese students to attend local high schools. In 2013 the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office launched an investigation of board members Gino Kwok and Joseph Chang regarding possible illegalities stemming from unauthorized trips to China organized by Hsu.[8] An administrative audit[9] conducted by the district concluded that Joseph Chang had taken trips to China paid for by Hsu to help recruit Chinese students to come Wilson High School, and that Chang had pressured administrators to accept Hsu's students even if they were unqualified.[10] On September 27, 2013 the board voted to censure Joseph Chang for his involvement with Hsu's company, BELA.[11]

References[edit]


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