[2] Her political career took a lull between 1992 and 1995, when she pursued (and abandoned) a degree in public administration, but she returned to the ISSSTE in 1995 as the Director of Child Well-Being and Development.
[2] From 2002 to 2004, Terrazas sat on the Ciudad Juárez city council, a position she left in 2004 to work at the Municipal Urbanization System.
[2] She was called upon to serve in the Senate for a time in 2015, to replace Liliana Merodio;[3] she had to ask for license to temporarily leave the Chamber of Deputies to do this.
[3] After two years serving as the director general of social development in Juárez, voters in the fourth district sent Terraza back to San Lázaro for the LXIII Legislature, with more than double the votes of her PAN rival.
[2] In March 2016, Terrazas was tapped to run the gubernatorial campaign of Enrique Serrano Escobar, once again asking for license to temporarily leave the Chamber of Deputies.