Joya T. Hayes Takes Office As South Central Regional Director for Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated®

Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated® has always been an organization that of times of crisis, the members respond by stepping up, serving, and continuing the business at hand. The global pandemic of COVID-19 might have delayed their efforts but did not stop them. Treading in uncharted waters, the sorority used its virtual platforms to hold the first virtual election where Joya T. Hayes was declared the South Central Regional Director and installed into office at the 69th international convention of the 112-year-old organization. Hayes now leads 10,000+ members in more than 120 undergraduate and graduate chapters in the states of Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, and Texas in the second largest region of the sorority.

After going through a campaign process that required candidates to exercise flexibility, Hayes was grateful when she was officially named the winner of the election.

“It caused me, and all the candidates I believe, to really reevaluate what matters most, and to reevaluate what brought us into the sorority in the first place, and made us reprioritize our thoughts and our beliefs,” Hayes said about participating in the historic election. “So for me when I heard that I had won I was just grateful because I knew that it was just a true blessing to not have only been the one who won but to be in a space where I could be there and make that happen under such unfortunate circumstances.”

During this tumultuous time in the world, where the issues of the day are the pandemic and racism, Hayes plans to focus on what makes the membership thrive in the name of service and sisterhood, that is community. Under the administrative brand, “We Are South Central,” Hayes will galvanize members to focus on the social justice issues that are critical to the communities in which members live and serve.

“If we are going to lead with service, we have to recognize that the first community with which we must service is our own,” said Hayes. She intends to have members support their black children and families in the inequity issues that make all thrive in the workplace. Her priorities are getting the region focused on sustainability, connectivity, and being committed to the community’s social issues making it “not a better day, but a new day” in how members pivot to meet the needs of the community and the organization to move forward. In that new day with the new branding “We Are South Central,” Hayes wants members to recognize that their power is not in the individual talents of the membership but in the collective power of the entire body.

With a strong background in human resources, Hayes is more than equipped and ready to take on the challenges of this new role. Human resources is an industry where being able to relate to human beings and all aspects that make up an individual in a systematic way is crucial, and it comes second nature to Hayes. The cum laude graduate of Huston-Tillotson University also has a Master’s degree from Texas State University with concentrations in communications and public administration, respectively. Currently, she is the Director of the Human Resources Department and Director of Civil Service for the City of Austin, Texas, where she deals with all things related to human resources, training, and organizational development. In other words, she works with people a lot.

Hayes was not born in Houston, but she has some deep roots embedded in the city. She is a product of Houston ISD schools having attended Ridgemont and Parker Elementary, Johnston Junior High (now Meyerland Performing and Visual Arts Middle School), and graduated from Lamar High School. Her mother even taught in Houston ISD for an extended period. She is a proud third-generation United Methodist preacher’s kid.

Hayes is a Life Member of the sorority serving more than 25 years at the local, regional, and international levels.

Rising to this level in the organization is worthy of praise, but accolades are not what Hayes seeks. She simply wants more opportunities to serve to make a greater impact on more people. This is what makes her heart smile. Her commitment to want to serve others stems from being the daughter of Debra and Bobby Hayes. In the Hayes family, everyone has a strong belief in worshipping the Lord, serving others, achieving higher education, and Greekdom. Her parents met, fell in love, and were initiated into Greekdom on the very campus that Hayes would call her own. Hayes and her mother were both initiated into the sorority through the Beta Kappa Chapter while her father became a member of the campus’s chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Incorporated. Many more family members are also Greek and work as principals or preachers. Hayes smiles thinking about how her family has always kept her balanced and helped her to keep things in perspective.

“The Hayes family really teaches me how to extraordinary in everyday spaces,” commented Hayes.

She will need that stable foundation as she enters this new role in a new age where the road is uncertain. Like any leader, she does not work alone but has formed a team of members with various talents to run the region smoothly. Among that stellar team of individuals is Houston Style Magazine’s own Managing Editor Jo-Carolyn Goode, who is the Social Media/Graphic Design Team Lead. Her role falls under the region’s Communications Committee, where fellow Texans MarQuisia Johnson is chairman, and Kizzy LeJay is co-chairman.

Hayes officially began her term as the 26th woman to hold the office of South Central Regional Director of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated® on July 15, 2020.

Read more Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated® at AKA1908.com