Well-loved Ridgway, PA Mayor Guillermo Udarbe, 81

Doctor Guillermo Udarbe, who was mayor of Ridgway, Pennsylvania for 12 years, died unexpectedly on November 11, according to an obituary announcement. He was 81.

He is survived by his wife Gloria Aragones Udarbe of Ridgway, daughters Cherry Pie Udarbe Clark of Fairview, PA and Charina Udarbe Felix of Lutherville, Maryland; five grandchildren Isabella Udarbe Felix, Clarissa Udarbe Felix, Nathaniel Udarbe Clark, Olivia Udarbe Felix, and Andre Markus Felix; and sister Mila Udarbe Campos of Guelph, Canada.

Udarbe was born February 10, 1940, in Dugo Camalaniugan in Cagayan province, the son of the late Dominador Urias and Luz (Genobebe) Udarbe. He married Gloria Aragones on December 23, 1967.

He resided in Philadelphia for 12 years and Ridgway for 40 years. He was a member of the Trinity United Methodist Church where he was a Trustee. He was the mayor of Ridgway for 12 years, and formerly Chief of Residence Family Practice in Northeastern Hospital in Philadelphia.

Interviewed by The FilAm in 2012, Udarbe shared that he and his wife Gloria were the first Filipino residents of Ridgway.

Dr. Udarbe and his wife Gloria were the first Filipinos to live in Ridgway.

“We had a hard time at first,” he said then. “We received phone calls telling us to go away. They even called us niggers.”

But the couple persisted and raised two daughters, Cherry and Charina, while Gloria worked as a nurse and Udarbe ran his private practice. He served his residency at Northeastern Hospital in Philadelphia and Temple University. He had been employed as a Family Practice physician for 52 years, first in Ridgway being self-employed and then later by UPMC Kane Community Hospital.

“I came here because Ridgway is just like my little hometown in Camalaniugan,” he said wistfully.

When he became mayor in 2009, the town had a population of 4,600, where 98 percent were Caucasians and 2 percent were Asians. There were two more Filipino families in addition to the Udarbes.

The town lost nearly half of its residents – from about 9,000 down to 4,600 — when factories that made automotive brake linings and ball bearings closed at the height of the recession.  People moved to nearby cities in search of jobs.

“Nagsi-alisan sila. Bumaba ang census namin,” he said, speaking in Tagalog.

Seeing that Ridgway was getting to be a “ghost town,” he decided to run for mayor in 2009. It was a five-way race; his four opponents were all Americans. He won by 65 percent as the Democratic candidate in a Republican-leaning community.

“It’s all because of my relationship with the people. I’m a friendly guy,” he said. He has been re-elected two times.

Udarbe continued to see patients as a doctor of the Kane Community Hospital and the Elk County Regional System. By end of business, he puts on his mayor hat and meets the town council. Most council meetings are at night “I am a full-time mayor,” he said.

Udarbe was a much-loved family physician in town. As mayor, he enjoyed leading the annual Firemen’s Parade and planted trees in downtown Ridgway to beautify the town.

“Mayor Udarbe’s election as the first Asian American and Filipino American mayor of Ridgway brought a great honor for the Philippines and the Filipino American community,” said then-Consul General Mario de Leon Jr., a friend of the mayor. – Cristina DC Pastor

© The FilAm 2021



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