Tag Archives: Bakersfield Californian

Vision for the Valley: Kern County Leaders Look to the Future at BC

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Sonya Christian

Whether you’re titans of industry, learned academics or pre-schoolers on the playground, there’s a simple rule that holds true — talking through problems is usually the most effective path to workable, sustaining solutions.

 

Unfortunately, we’re all so busy with our daily lives (especially this time of year) that we have a hard enough time identifying the problems, let alone crafting the complex answers needed to settle them.

So how do we as a community solve the multi-layered puzzle of addressing Kern County’s critical infrastructure needs?

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Richard Beene (TBC), Nick Ortiz (Chamber), Victoria Rome (NRDC),    Tupper Hull (WSPA)

Well, there are few experiences more energizing than listening to a collection of very smart people talk about very important things — so BC was thrilled to host the Bakersfield Chamber of Commerce’s inaugural Vision for the Valley summit this week.

Nick Ortiz and our friends at the Chamber really outdid themselves, creating a half-day symposium that assembled some of our area’s most knowledgeable business, legislative and analytical minds to examine issues we all face every day (whether we think about them or not) — issues around energy, water, agriculture, housing, transportation and their interlocking impacts on Kern County’s economy.

Before I get into the content of the summit’s multiple panels, a quick congratulations to the Chamber and our team at BC for the great visual presentation on the Simonsen Performing Arts Center stage.  From the Scandinavian type furniture to the backdrop to the impressive lighting package, the production crew behind the summit did a phenomenal job.

As for the panels themselves…well, delving into “big think” topics like this can be an enormous challenge, but the summit’s roster of insightful speakers — under the well-orchestrated direction of moderators Richard Beene and Louis Amestoy of the Bakersfield Californian — crystallized the major points around these complex issues, making them all very relatable.  Elizabeth Sanchez did a piece in the Californian on the summit which can be found at

http://www.bakersfield.com/news/2015/12/08/thomas-urges-county-to-seek-half-cent-transporation-sales-tax.html

The Energy, Sustainability and the Economy panel, for instance, brought together natural opponents for a spirited discussion of where the oil industry is headed, particularly focusing on its impact on Kern County, the San Joaquin Valley and the rest of the state’s transportation needs.

Much of the conversation with conservationist advocate Victoria Rome with the National Resources Defense Council and Western States Petroleum Association vice president Tupper Hull centered on state regulation, both its impact on oil producers and whether California was going too far — or not far enough — in overseeing the industry’s activities.

While Victoria was encouraged that California’s 140,000 electric and hybrid cars on the road today could hit the 1 million benchmark by 2030, both agreed the state’s need for oil would likely remain strong for years to come.

“We need to stop looking for simplistic answers to complex questions,” Tupper said.

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John Burtchaell (Wells Fargo), DeeDee D’Adamo (State Water Resources Control), Lois Henry (TBC), Louis Amestoy (TBC)

That was a theme that held true throughout the day, including a deep-dive look at the impact of California’s drought on our groundwater demand during the Agriculture and Water Resources panel. DeeDee D’Adamo, a board member with the State Water Resources Control Board, defended and explained, and in some cases, commiserated over the state’s water use policies. Lois Henry made the issues clear in a pragmatic and a “let’s cut to the chase” approach of addressing these complex issues.

Water use in California has reduced by 27 percent in the five months since emergency conservation regulations began in June.  While there was general agreement that it will be a long-term,  multi-year effort to replenish state water reserves, there was a sense that some form of permanent conservation measures would remain in place even once the drought is declared over, helping to protect the state from future water shortage issues.

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Louis Amestoy (The Bakersfield Californian), Greg Bielli (Tejon Ranch),   Bill Thomas (former Congressman), Dave Cogdill (former State Senator)

The third and final panel of the day, a round-table talk about housing, land use and transportation, was also a strong contender for highlight of the day, particularly thanks to the spirited engagement and effusive charm of panelist, retired congressman and luminary BC faculty emeritus Bill Thomas.

I wasn’t here during Bill’s teaching career on this very campus from 1965 to 1974, but those nine years as a political science faculty were part of the beginnings of one of Kern County’s most storied political careers.  Bill’s 27 years in the U.S. House of Representatives, highlighted by his chairmanship of the powerful House Ways and Means Committee, grant him a unique perspective on issues that few others could offer.

One of Bill’s political passions is transportation — and like the true statesmen he is, Bill didn’t hold back, crusading for Kern County to keep pushing through apathy and threats of adjudication to complete the scores of local transportation projects undertaken by his namesake Thomas Roads Improvement Program (TRIP).

Ret. Rep. Bill Thomas and former state Sen. Dave Cogdill on the Housing, Land Use and Transportation panel

Ret. Rep.Bill Thomas, former state Sen.Dave Cogdill 

For those who don’t know the history, TRIP has been overseeing the use of $630 million in federal funds secured by Thomas in 2005 to tackle Bakersfield’s specific transportation problems.

He repeatedly framed it as transportation issues that arise when an “east-west” county resides within a “north-south” state. The projects include the completed construction of the Westside Parkway, the State Route 178/Fairfax Road Interchange, the State Route 58 gap closure and the State Route 178/Morning Drive Interchange.

Right now, one of TRIP’s top priorities is to begin work on their largest project, the Centennial Corridor, which will ultimately connect State Route 99 and Interstate 5.  But Thomas warned about the danger of obstructionist attorneys using CEQA (California Environmental Quality Act) statutes to slow Corridor construction via unnecessary litigation.

“Adjudication takes a long time and costs a lot of money,” Thomas said. “That’s their way of trying to control the outcome.”

Bill also made some news during the summit, coming out in support of Kern County voters approving a half-cent tax measure that would mark Kern as a “self-help” county, earmarking funds for future county transportation projects.  More importantly, the designation would significantly boost Kern County’s ability to secure state and federal money to carry such projects to completion.

As a staunch Republican acutely aware of Kern County voters’ pervasive anti-taxation stance, Bill told the crowd he understood initial bristling to the idea — but warned the cost of not attaining “self-help” status and losing out on federal transportation dollars to other areas made passing the tax infinitely more cost-effective for the county and its residents.

Talking through water regulations and oil production restrictions and transportation funding can seem like dry policy wonk chatter, capable of making anyone’s eyes glaze over. But at the end of the day, all of these critical conversations come back to some simple questions — how does this affect the people of Kern County and how do we make everyone’s lives better through our collective decisions?

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Sonya Christian (BC), Mary Jo Pasek (BC), Karen Goh (Garden Pathways), Michael Turnipseed (Kern Tax)

It was wonderful to see the community out at the college to engage in these discussions. Events like the Vision for the Valley summit help point us toward ways of enriching the life of every single Kern County resident…and we at BC couldn’t be happier to play our part in making events like this happen.

Ramon Puga Cropped Dec 7 2015

Ramon Puga from BC. Helping with the take down

BC Faculty Spotlight

It has been one heck of a week and I thought life would slow down after graduation 🙂  I got back to Bakersfield on Friday after travelling on work related business and woke up this morning to see the picture of one of our colleagues in the Californian.  Nick is a regular expert contributor to the Californian with his Stargazing feature, and this morning I was filled with pride to read this well written piece that is content rich and has a nice style.  Nick tells us about “Dawn” and “New Horizons,” two spacecraft exploring dwarf planets. He then zooms out to the edge of the universe and the stretching of spacetime with a super-luminous galaxy with 300 trillion times the power of the sun that is visible as it was only 1.3 billion years after the Big Bang. Finally he takes us home for a look at the planets from our familiar night sky, Venus and Jupiter to the west and the rings of Saturn to the east of the evening sky.

Nick's article on June 6 2015

Nick Strobel’s article in the Californian. June 6, 2015

I could not find Nick’s piece on the Californian’s website hence you get an iphone photo image of the front page of today’s Eye Street.  But I found it on BC’s website.  Here it is:

https://www.bakersfieldcollege.edu/planetarium/bakersfield-night-sky/bakersfield-night-sky-june-6-2015

Here is a “copy and paste” from the website.

Bakersfield Night Sky — June 6, 2015

Bakersfield Night Sky – June 6, 2015
By Nick Strobel

Both of NASA’s dwarf planet spacecraft continue to get closer to their targets. Dawn has been in orbit around the dwarf planet, Ceres, in the main asteroid belt, since the first week of March and has now spiralled down to its second mapping orbit at a distance of 2700 miles from Ceres. The two bright spots in earlier images have been resolved into multiple smaller bright spots, so they are very likely exposed ice. Dawn will remain in this mapping orbit until the end of June. After that it will spiral down for an even closer look at Ceres.

Because Dawn uses an ion engine, instead of regular chemical rockets to propel itself, the accelerations are very small so the orbit changes are very gradual. Therefore, it takes days to a few weeks to spiral downward or upward to whatever orbit the scientists want.

New Horizons is speeding toward dwarf planet Pluto at about 750,000 miles a day, so today it is approximately 28 million miles away. You can check its distance up to the minute using the dashboard on the left side of the New Horizons homepage at http://pluto.jhuapl.edu . At the end of May, the images posted on the website were slightly better than the best maps derived from months of heavy computer processing of data from the Hubble Space Telescope. The view over the next few weeks will get thousands of times sharper!

In other space exploration news NASA’s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) has discovered a very distant galaxy, called WISE J224607.57-052635.0, shining with the power output of over 300 trillion suns. Since the galaxy is very distant, we are seeing it as it was 12.5 billion years ago. Because of the stretching of spacetime due to the expansion of universe, I don’t say it is 12.5 billion light years away. At short distances of just a few million light years away, the light travel time matches up with the distance number in light years. For example, a we see a star 150 light years away as it was 150 years ago. But when we’re talking about billions of years of light travel time, then the distance the object is from us at this particular cosmic time is much greater. That’s why the press releases from the astronomers will be careful to give how far back in time we’re viewing something and not give a light years distance number.

Having said that, though, I’ll sometimes slip up myself and confuse the light travel time with the distance because my brain is hardwired for Newtonian space and time. Well, the news story about the super-luminous galaxy wasn’t about light travel times or even so much about the large luminosity. The surprising thing is that supermassive black hole at the galaxy’s core that is responsible for the huge power output is so darn young, just 1.3 billion years after the Big Bang. The light is coming from the huge disk of gas and dust spiralling into the black hole. Bigger black holes can have bigger (brighter) disks of gas and dust surrounding them.

The black hole at the core of WISE J224607.57-052635.0 was already billions of times the mass of our Sun when the universe was only 10% of its present age. How did it get so big in so short a time? Three months ago in a previous column, I talked about another supermassive black hole that had grown huge in “too short” a time. Well, one can expect a few oddballs to crop up in nature due to chance but the latest study from WISE talks about 20 new very distant galaxies that have been found with have very large black holes that have been added to the oddball list. That’s enough to indicate our understanding about what’s powering these super-luminous galaxies is incomplete or how these black holes grow is incomplete. Probably both are incomplete!

Something we do understand very well are the motions of the planets in our sky. The two brightest planets, Venus and Jupiter, continue to draw closer together in the western sky after sunset. Jupiter is still between Cancer and Leo. In May Venus scooted through Gemini and is now on the right (west) side of Cancer about a fist and a half width at arms length from Jupiter (see the first star chart below). On the night of June 19th, a thin Waxing Crescent Moon will be below Jupiter and Venus making a very nice photo opportunity. At the time of the free public star party hosted by the Kern Astronomical Society on the 27th, Jupiter and Venus will be about two knuckles at arms length apart from each other. At the end of the month, they’ll be less than a thumb width apart from each other.

Saturn is shining brightly in the eastern sky in the evening. It continues moving retrograde (backward) and is now at the edge of Libra in front of the head of Scorpius (see the second chart below). Saturn’s rings are tipped almost fully open from our perspective on Earth, so this is a good time to check them out in a telescope.

Want to see more of the stars at night and save energy? Shield your lights so that the light only goes down toward the ground. See www.darksky.org for how.


Nick Strobel
Director of the William M Thomas Planetarium at Bakersfield College
Author of the award-winning website www.astronomynotes.com

Bakersfield College Equity TV

IMG_4317Education never comes easy. Nothing worth acquiring ever does. And with all of life’s pressures and responsibilities we juggle each day – our jobs, our families, our friends and all the rest that comes with our frantic existences – it’s easy to look at the added toil of going to classes, completing assignments and paying tuitions and think, “Why am I putting myself through all this?”

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That journey can seem even tougher to conquer if you come from a disadvantaged background. For many, paying bills, taking care of family members and simply surviving in difficult environments and communities can easily take precedence over the education that will inevitably set you up for an even better tomorrow.

BC has been working on issues of Equity and Inclusion in a focused way over the last two years particularly as it relates to the success of students in their educational attainment. We have several Equity initiatives underway and our newest initiative is Equity TV.

Launched last month on January 19, 2015, on Martin Luther King day, the one-hour series webcast on Bakersfield.com explores the important benefits available to students from all walks of life to help motivate higher education dreams among potential future Renegades and their families.

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Dr. Sonya Christian, President, Bakersfield College

Every Monday at 11 a.m., hosts Francis Mayer and Christine Dinh O’Dell spotlight the experiences of BC faculty, staff, students and alumni to deliver a fundamental message: education is the key to life success and the bright future we all crave.

Horace Mitchell EquityTV 2015

Dr. Horace Mitchell, President of CSUB

On January 19th, as the first guest on the show, I introduced BC-EquityTV to our community. Dr. Horace Mitchell, President of CSUB, was a guest on the launch episode. Thank you President Mitchell!

Subsequent weeks have similarly highlighted other special student populations particularly in need of encouragement and guidance, including Latino students, veterans and former foster youth.

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Sandra Serrano, Chancellor, KCCD

Last Monday’s (Feb 23rd) show, shot in the beautiful studios at the Bakersfield Californian downtown, centered on the difficult issues confronting athletically gifted high school grads forced to tackle the often unfamiliar terrain of higher education.

Specifically, why should I care about school if I’m on my way to a life in professional sports?

Francis got a resounding answer to that question from former BC and NFL player Jeremy Staat. Jeremy recounted his rocky relationship with learning while at BC and later at Arizona State before being drafted in the second round of 1998 NFL Draft by the Pittsburgh Steelers.

You can still feel the regret as Jeremy told the heartbreaking story of being rejected for a post-football job at Home Depot – all because he left school without completing his degree. Despite a four-year NFL career and a trophy case of athletic accomplishments, none of it helped set up Jeremy to succeed after his career on the playing field.  Jeremy is now a welding faculty at BC while he pursue a master’s degree.

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Coach Reggie Bolton

IMG_4360Other guests this week included BC’s Associate Director of Athletics and assistant football coach Reggie Bolton, who advocates a “win at life” philosophy of academics ahead of any on-field accomplishments; and current Renegade football players safety Pat Marzett and running back Curtis McGregor, who despite challenging upbringings, have committed to achieving their higher education dreams with the same passion they’ve carried on to the turf at Memorial Stadium.

You can check out those Equity TV segments with Jeremy, Reggie, Pat and Curtis below as well as all the interviews from the show’s first five episodes on the Equity TV page at bakersfieldcollege.edu.

I want to thank the entire BC crew that made this happen.  Amber Chiang, Odella Johnson, Corny Rodriguez, Paul Beckworth, Tina Mendoza, and Primavera Arvizu.  Tune in and see just one of the fantastic projects at BC helping to make higher education a reality for everyone in Bakersfield and Kern County.

 

Renegade Athletics: Ending the Season on High Note

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Francis Mayer coaching the Equity TV Team on Dec 15 2014

I was just browsing BC’s webpages and found the Athletics website to be very current and engaging.  Check it out at http://www.gogades.com/

Thank you Francis Mayer for keeping this website up-to-date.  Also thank you for your work on the Renegade Report which aired last season with 15 episodes on Thursdays at 11:00 a.m.  You can find the archived versions of the videos at: http://tinyurl.com/lnh5w9r

Francis is now producing BC’s first Equity TV show that will air live on Monday, January 19th, at 11:00 p.m. Our launch episode is with the African American Initiative. Odella Johnson is the lead for 4 episodes on Equity TV that focuses on African Americans and the importance of higher education.  The Latino strand is co-led by Corny Rodriguez and Lisa Kent, the Veterans by Tina Mendoza and Paul Beckworth, and the remaining by Prima Arvizu.  More on the BC Equity TV later.

For now, here is a quick blurb on Renegade Athletics from my report to the KCCD Board on December 18, 2014:

Football

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Renegades celebrate after winning the Western State Championship on Nov 22 2014

The Renegade Football team overcame a disappointing 1-4 start by winning their next final five regular season games and qualifying for the Western State Bowl. With only a week to prepare, the Athletic Department rallied together and obtained the financial backing of longtime supporter Clifford Bradford Insurance to underwrite the game. Where the Renegades lacked numbers and size, they compensated with creative play calling, gutsy execution, and attention to detail on special teams. Placekicker Parker Campbell is a great example of this. While Chaffey’s defense was stubborn and wouldn’t let the Renegades score a touchdown on offense, Campbell was a perfect long-distance weapon. He was five of five on field goal attempts, accounting for 15 of the ‘Gades 22 total points. He was awarded the Offensive Player of the Game Award, a rare honor for a kicker. Another rare occurrence was Punter Dayton Diorio earning Defensive MVP honors. He did so by pinning Chaffey inside of their own 20 yard line four times with booming punts. The overall MVP of the game is the grandson of former Head Football Coach and Athletic Director Carl Bowser, Renegade legacy Dominic Frasch. “Dom” is a speedy defensive back who scored the game’s only touchdown, a trick punt play where Frasch took the snap instead of the punter, and sped 59 yards for the score.

 

Wrestling

Jack Murphy

Jack Murphy

Renegade Wrestling battled injuries and weight issues most of the season, but there was one constant rock; 197 pounder Jack Murphy. According to Head Coach Brett Clark, Murphy put together one of the dominant seasons in program history by going undefeated (23-0) and not being taken down once. Murphy also didn’t give up a single offensive point all season. He capped off the effort with a 3-2 victory in the state championship match against Oscar Martinez of Cerritos College. It was Renegade Wrestling’s first state championship since current Assistant Coach Joe Espejo won the Heavyweight title ten years ago in 2004. Murphy has appointments with five different schools to discuss his transfer options. He wants to get a degree in sports medicine.

 

Women’s Basketball

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Coach Paula Dahl says relationships are everything, and her team is proving it this season with an incredible 9-0 start. Coach Dahl says it’s been almost a different star in every win this season, including big performances from Claesy Tarver, Rosebrooke Hunt, Alex Green, Nakia Page, and McKaiela Tyler. She says the teammates don’t even send individual texts to one another anymore; instead every message is a group text. Their second tournament championship in program history was achieved when they won the Bristol Marketplace Classic at Santa Ana, and Tarver won tourney MVP honors. Dahl says the last time a team had this hot of a start, they finished second in the conference championships. Her goal this season is simple: she wants to win the conference and host playoff games in March. Check out the December 18, 2015 piece in the Californian at
http://www.bakersfieldcalifornian.com/sports/college/x1494739079/BC-women-top-Santa-Ana-improve-to-9-0

BC Renegade Report and Live Football

Athletics partnered with The Bakersfield Californian to bring live video coverage to all 11 Renegade Football games as well as 15 in-studio weekly shows promoting the college athletic programs. In total more than 10,000 people viewed the video coverage during the 2014 season and an average of 522 viewers of the live weekly show through the first 13 shows.  We have a great partner in the Bakersfield Californian.  Thank you!

BC Featured in today’s Californian

andrea thorson Reggie Williams

Check out our faculty Reggie Williams and Andrea Thorson in today’s Californian at
http://tinyurl.com/kfuh4br

Special thanks to the Women’s History and More committee for their work in helping the reporter from The Bakersfield Californian with development of a story about Bakersfield College’s Women’s History Month Events. In addition to their regular duties, Dawn Dobie, Marci Lingo, Erin Miller, and Ann Wiederrecht planned and coordinated the WHAM events and worked to make sure the events were fully promoted throughout the college and community. Thank you for your hard work!

Note:The thumbnail photos are from the Californian’s website.  For larger pictures, check out the actual piece in the Californian.

Sonya Christian's Blog