Since 1996, Damian Trujillo has been a NBC Bay Area News reporter, host and producer of “Comunidad Del Valle,” the longest running public affairs program in the Bay Area. Comunidad Del Valle now also airs in Spanish on Telemundo 48.
Damian has been honored with awards from the Associated Press, the Radio and Television News Director's Association (RTNDA), and the National Association of Hispanic Journalists. Damian was named "2004 Reporter of the Year" by the Associated Press Television and Radio Association for California and Nevada and five times nominated for an Emmy Award.
Damian grew up in Greenfield, about 2 hours south of San Francisco on Highway 101. While in high school, Damian worked in the agricultural fields of the Salinas Valley, with his family, to help make ends meet. He picked garlic, broccoli, cucumbers, and strawberries.
As a former farm worker, Damian now honors his first job, on the Cesar Chavez Holiday. Every March 31, Damian’s family hosts family, friends, and students. They make sacked lunches at the Trujillo home, and distribute them to roughly 250 farm workers in the South Bay. The gesture is a “thank you “ to farm workers, for their tireless work. In addition, each year, the Trujillo family awards a college scholarship to the son or daughter of a farm worker in Greenfield.
In 2012, Carolyn Brown, professor at American University in Washington D.C., produced a half-hour documentary on the life of Damian Trujillo titled “From the Fields: An American Journey”. Damian has screened the film at Stanford, Georgetown, and Harvard universities, at The National Steinbeck Center. And April 2013, Congress invited Damian for a special screening on Capitol Hill.
Damian and his wife Monica have a daughter, Malyna, and twins Isela and Michael Damian.
Follow Damian on social media: @NewsDamian on Twitter, @NewsDamian on Instagram and on Facebook.
The Latest
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Police investigate hit and run of unhoused man in downtown Campbell
Campbell Police are searching for the driver of a black SUV that ran over a man Thursday night. The victim is in stable condition. Damian Trujillo reports.
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‘You're going to start feeling it': Bay Area toy business impacted by new tariffs
The impact of tariffs is now showing up for at least one Bay Area business.
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US State Department revokes visas from Mexican band ahead of South Bay concert
Los Alegres Del Barranco was set to perform in Morgan Hill this month, but the U.S. State Department revoked their visas, citing the promotion of crime through their “narco ballads.”
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Indoor soccer program in San Jose aims to keep at-risk youth away from gangs
Two gyms in San Jose will host indoor soccer games on Friday and Saturday nights as part of an effort to offer potentially at-risk children an alternative to street life.
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San Jose unveils its largest safe parking site to date
San Jose on Thursday unveiled its largest safe parking site yet.
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Runoff likely in special election for San Jose council seat
The polls closed in the special election in San Jose’s District 3, and it appears there will be a runoff to replace former councilman Omar Torres.
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Proposed California bill aims to bridge gap in school funding
A new California bill would help close the school funding gap between schools in wealthy areas and those in economically threatened areas.
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‘Latino Freeze' organizers say Target boycott over DEI rollback is working
A boycott on Target stores nationwide is working, according to organizers.
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Homicide investigation launched after 2 bodies found in Santa Cruz Mountains
The discovery of two bodies in the back of an abandoned pickup truck in the Santa Cruz Mountains earlier this week is being investigated as a double homicide, the California Highway Patrol said Thursday.
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2 bodies found in abandoned pickup truck in Santa Cruz Mountains
Detectives on Tuesday were trying to solve a mystery after two bodies were found in the back of an abandoned pickup truck in the Santa Cruz Mountains.