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Great Valley Center News Blog

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Shrinking the Central Valley's Digital Divide, California Report

The residents of the small rural community of Pixley in Tulare County have a new option when faced with computer challenges. They can call the Pixley Digital Connectors, a team of tech-savvy teenagers, who can help in solving technical challenges.

Today on the California Report Central Valley Bureau Chief Sasha Khokha reports on what this team and technology access means to the small rural community of Pixley. The story features interviews with GVC's Pixley Connect program coordinator Maria Velasquez and Pixley Digital Connectors graduate Alvin Chavez.

→Listen to the California Report's story here

→View a slideshow of pictures from Pixley Connect below


Friday, June 26, 2009

Welcome ALF Northern San Joaquin Valley chapter


We are proud to announce that Stanislaus, Merced, and San Joaquin counties are the heart of the newest ALF chapter. The chapter will be the 11th in the nation and the 3rd in California. It is true testament to the success of the organization which has been going strong for 20 years.

Currently, the network of leaders is being formed, and will pay dividends across city and county lines, but also social, economic and political boundaries. Through a year of hard work, facilitated by nationally-known experts, each ALF class member will be better able to address challenges for the region, workplace and personal life. The inaugural class will establish relationships that build trust and cooperation, and will be armed with new skills for taking on difficult issues, appreciating diverse views, and identifying resources to turn dialogue into action.

The inaugural class features 18 outstanding leaders who have committed to strengthening their leadership skills and networks in the region over the course of
the next year. These fellows are:

Steve Arounsack (California State University, Stanislaus), Debra Brady (First United Methodist Church, Modesto), Debra Brown (Kaiser Hospital, Modesto), Wendy Byrd (Modesto/Stanislaus NAACP & Modesto Junior College), Ben Duran (Merced College), Lisa Finer (Wells Fargo), Ron Foster (Foster Farms), John Garamendi, Jr. (University of California, Merced), Kathy Halsey (AT&T), Flip Hassett (United Way, Merced), Dennis Lee (Central Valley Asian American Chamber of Commerce), Linda Lopez (Office of Congressman Cardoza), Noah Lor (City of Merced, City Council), Virginia Madueno (Imagen Public Relations), Marian Martino (Martino Graphic Design), Pat Patrick (Lodi Chamber of Commerce), Robert Santos (Monte Vista Small Animal Hospital), Cynthia Wagner-Weick (University of the Pacific).


→Find out more about ALF here


Can the Central Valley Grow Green?


UC Davis Releases Study: Achieving Sustainability in California's Central Valley

"I am actually pretty pessimistic about the possibility," says the lead author of a new UC Davis review of 100 Central Valley cities' growth policies.

"Sustainable growth is growth that minimizes environmental impact while meeting goals for economic viability and quality of life, for both present and future generations," says associate professor Mark Lubell. "Our study identified some very serious obstacles to achieving the goal, but also identifies some variables and recommendations that might help.

Some of those recommendations are to stop relying on big box stores, concentrate on transitioning cities and sustainability from the start.


→Download the full UC Davis report here
→See the Central Valley Business Times article about the report here

Watch us on TV

Airing of
"What is Killing People in the Central Valley?"

Friday July 3, at 7pm or Sunday, July 12, 10:30 am
On KVPT

Great Valley Center President David Hosley moderates a panel discussion on the subject of health providing a range of perspectives on the issue. Featuring three regional experts:

John Capitman, Central Valley Health Policy Institute, Executive Director
Dr. Silvia Diego, Golden Valley Health Centers, Chief Medical Director
Sophia Pagoulatos, City of Fresno Planning and Development, Department Planner


Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Job Opening




The Center for Land Based Learning is looking for a liaison between youths and nature.




The SLEWS Program (Student and Landowner Education and Watershed Stewardship) engages students in habitat restoration projects that enhance classroom learning, develop leadership skills, and benefit the land.

The program strives to provide meaningful educational experiences while achieving the most effective ecological impact on the land. They are looking for a full time coordinator who has strong background in, and passion for, experiential education, habitat restoration and program coordination.
Some responsibilities include coordinating trips and activities involving aspects of logistics, documentation, publicising. Overseeing interns and volunteers. Recruiting and maintaining funder relations.
→Download the full job description here

Summer Edition of Great Valley News Now Available


Get your summer update on all things GVC with the new edition of our quarterly newsletter. Learn about our new satellite offices in the Valley, new leadership and urban forestry programs, and what the energy program has accomplished through workshops and publications in the region.



→download your GVC news letter here

Share the Fun



Ballet Folklorico joins youths with fun cultural dancing in Pixley.

Pixley is seeing success after implementing Joint Use practices in their community.

Check out this video of how Ballet Folklorico is helping youths keep physically active while having fun.





Great Valley Center is always striving to serve the Valley and its citizens.
The Center is proud to support programs in the city of Pixley like the digital connectors program.

Check out these links to learn more on what we are doing there.

→ABC 30-Learn About Pixley Connect Project

Friday, June 19, 2009

June 25: What's Killing People in the Central Valley?


Come join us for the filming of the upcoming public television program:

What's Killing People in the Valley?

Thursday, June 25, 2009

4:30-6:oopm

Valley Public Television Studio
1455 Van Ness Ave.
Fresno Ca, 93721

Panelists
Central Valley Health Policy Executive Director John Capitman,
Golden Valley Health Centers Associate Medical Director Dr. David Simenson,
City of Fresno Planner Sophia Pagoulatos

Show description

People in the Valley have a shorter life span than the rest of the state. What issues are impacting the region's health so significantly that people are dying earlier and are more likely to be living with chronic diseases in the region? Great Valley President David Hosley will moderate a panel featuring regional health experts to find out why.

Space is limited: RSVP to Lila McIver lila@greatvalley.org or (209) 522-5103

This is in partnership with KVPT and California Health Care Foundation

→Download the flier here



Wednesday, June 17, 2009

June 18: Valley Futures Forum on Density


June 18, 2009
Valley Futures Forum:
Delightful Density: Strategies for Comfort, Convenience, and Choice

5:00 p.m.-6:45 p.m.
Great Valley Center
201 Needham St., Modesto

Featured speaker:
Dan Zack

About this month's topic:
Should density be a dirty word? Or can density be delightful? Dan Zack will examine this question and make a case for density in the right places. He will demonstrate how appropriate density can help with goals such as lowering household vehicle miles travelled (VMT), increasing transit viability, spurring downtown retail, and increasing cultural amenities and social opportunities.

About the Valley Futures Forum:
The Valley Futures Forum has been developed as a monthly conversation on development issues in the San Joaquin Valley. Email nuplanner@gmail.com for more information.

→Download the Valley Futures Forum Flyer for June

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

June 17: KVIE to air Great Valley Center program, The Great Valley in a Decade


The Great Valley in a Decade
KVIE Television
Channel 6 Sacramento/Stockton/Modesto

Wednesday, June 17, 7:00 pm - 7:30 pm
and
Sunday, June 21, 6:00 pm - 6:30 pm

This program is hosted by Great Valley Center President David Hosley (pictured right) and was produced by the Great Valley Center with underwriting support from the California HealthCare Foundation.

Show description:
The Central Valley is among the fastest growing regions in the country. Where will the jobs be in 2020 and beyond? How can we reduce air pollution and ensure a healthy future for our children? Linking Education and Economic Development (LEED) CEO David Butler, UC Davis Center for Regional Change Director Jonathan London, and UC Merced Medical Education and Academic Planning Excecutive Director Dr. Fred Meyers provide expert insight on this topic.

Friday, June 12, 2009

Pixley Businesses to Come Out Saturday for Community Event

A Pixley Business Bazaar will take place Saturday June 13, 2009 in the small rural community of Pixley in Tulare County.


Pixley Business Bazaar
Saturday, June 13, 2009
1:00—4:00 p.m.
Pixley Memorial Building

718 N. Park Pixley, CA


The Great Valley Center has been directly involved in organizing this event due to the Pixley Connect program. Pixley Connect is a three-year initiative of the Great Valley Center to bring technology access, education and training to the underserved, predominantly Spanish-speaking, Incorporated community of Pixley. A goal for the Pixley Connect project is to support the creation of community based economic development.

What does the Great Valley Center have to say about this:
"We have so much community support here in Pixley, but when you are a business owner in a rural community your capacity can be greatly limited, " said Great Valley Center Pixley Connect coordinator Maria Valasquez. "This community gathering will be a great way for businesses to begin making the connections with community members who are potential customers as well as make connections with each other in order to strengthen and increase the capacity of our business community."

→Download a flyer for the Pixley Business Bazaar

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

18 Valley Leaders to Graduate Saturday

This Saturday will be a day of celebration at the Great Valley Center as 18 emerging regional leaders graduate from the Great Valley Center’s Institute for the Development of Emerging Area Leaders (IDEAL).

The graduation ceremony will take place:
June 13th, 5:30 p.m.
Great Valley Center
201 Needham Street, Modesto

This group of diverse regional leaders, who represent communities throughout the Valley, have spent the last six months traveling the region and meeting monthly to engage in discussions with regional and statewide experts in areas such as agriculture, the economy, transportation, land use, and the environment.

Learn about the 2009 IDEAL Fellows

“This year’s IDEAL class contributes immense talent and potential that will add significantly to the network of up-and-coming leaders who will make a difference in the Valley," stated Great Valley Center program manger Manuel Alvarado about this year's class.

About IDEAL:
The goal of IDEAL is to foster leaders with effective, creative, and quality decision-making skills in order to increase their capacity as leaders to improve public affairs in the Central Valley. In its eight years of operation the IDEAL program has had180 participants graduate, of which, 32 alumni have gone on to local elected office, over 90 have served on planning commissions or appointed boards, and 128 have utilized their leadership skills by serving on nonprofit boards.

Learn more about the IDEAL Program


Friday, June 5, 2009

Report: Preschool is One of the Most Promising Investments, but Significant Challenges Exist in San Joaquin Valley

Press Release
MODESTO, CA (June 5, 2009)- The recently released Great Valley Center report Early Education for the Next Generation: Pre-School Readiness in the San Joaquin Valley presents the facts on children in the San Joaquin Valley having severely limited access to quality preschool despite an overwhelming need for early childhood education and the immense benefits the region would reap from increased opportunities for pre-kindergarten education.

The report, available to be downloaded at www.greatvalley.org, examines the current challenges to preschool education access in the region, specifically a serious lack of spaces for enrollment in current preschool programs (59 percent of all public preschool programs in the region have an active wait list), a lack of preschool facilities for children who need preschool the most (six San Joaquin Valley Counties would fail to accommodate children in the most needy school districts), and the lack of affordable preschool choices for those in the region that would greatly benefit from pre-kindergarten education (the annual shortfall for families in the San Joaquin Valley making the median income, maintaining a household, and sending a child to part-time preschool ranges from $1,160 to $9,712).

Great Valley Center on the issue of preschool:
“So many sectors in our community agree on the importance of early childhood education, from educators, to law enforcement, to employers,” commented Manuel Alvarado, Great Valley Center program manager and co-author of the report. “We now must figure out how all of these sectors with an interest in quality early childhood education can start working together to make it a priority for our region.”

Materials and Resources:

→ Download the full press release

→ Download the report: Early Education for the Next Generation: Pre-School Readiness in the San Joaquin Valley

Thursday, June 4, 2009

UC Merced to pull curtain back today on new preschool

Merced Sun-Star Article

June 4, 2009
By Danielle Gaines

Tiny chairs clustered around tiny tables.

Piles of pinecones and other learning tools for young children are scattered about.

And a new garden, named in honor of first lady Michelle Obama, will soon be tilled.

But the place -- the sparkling new UC Merced Childhood Education Center -- doesn't have that lived-in feel. Yet.

Today, the sustainably built modular schoolhouse, which will serve 80 pre-kindergarten children beginning this fall, will open to the public for the first time with a ribbon-cutting ceremony and open house...

Read the full article

→Download the Great Valley Center's Report: Early Education for the Next Generation: Pre-School Readiness in the San Joaquin Valley


Wednesday, June 3, 2009

June 2009 - Upcoming Events in the Region

June 3: Developing a Successful Local Housing Trust Fund Workshop – Expert panelists will discuss critical issues about establishing a housing trust, executing a successful permanent source campaign, and the state of California housing. Radisson Conference Center, 2233 Ventura Street, Fresno, June 3, 9:30 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. No charge, but advanced registration is required. To register, go to: http://frbsf.org/community/resources/2009/0603/index.html

June 3: Why Rural Matters 2009 Report – The Rural School and Community Trust will host a webinar to preview their Why Rural Matters 2009 report, due for release this fall. This report, the fifth in this series, analyzes the importance of rural education in each of the 50 states and calls attentio. This event is free for RSIN members. Fee for nonmembers is $45. Register at: www.ruraledu.org

June 9: Land Conservation Easement Celebration - Central Valley Farmland Trust will be celebrating the placement of agricultural easements on Jorgensen Ranch and Silveira Farm in Merced County. The celebration will take place at Jorgensen Ranch 30416 W. Jorgensen Road, Gustine, Ca at 10:00 a.m. For more information contact Bill Martin or Susan Hooper at the Central Valley Farmland Trust (916) 687-3178.

June 13: IDEAL Graduation – 19 emerging Central Valley leaders will complete and graduate from the Great Valley Center’s Institute for the Development of Emerging Area Leaders (IDEAL), a six-month fellowship program focused on Central Valley public policy issues. The graduation will take place at the Great Valley Center, 201 Needham Street, Modesto. Contact: Program Manager Manuel Alvarado manuel@greatvalley.org.

June 18: Valley Futures Forum – Delightful Density: Strategies for Comfort, Convenience, and Choice. Guest speaker, Dan Zack, Downtown Development Coordinator for Redwood City. Appropriate density can help with goals such as lowering household vehicle miles travelled (VMT), increasing transit viability, spurring downtown retail, and increasing cultural amenities and social opportunities. Great Valley Center, 201 Needham Street, Modesto, 5:00 pm to 6:45 pm, $10 at the door. Contact: Cindy van Empel nuplanner@gmail.com.

June 30: Pixley Digital Connectors Graduation – 10 young people from the rural Tulare County community of Pixley will be recognized for completing the Digital Connectors Program, a six-month internship program that strives to assist the community with technology related challenges inherent in small and isolated rural communities by training high school students to provide computer training and technical support for the residents of Pixley. Contact: Great Valley Center Senior Program Manager Dejeune Shelton at dejeune@greatvalley.org.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

June 2009 Media Advisory

The Great Valley Center's June 2009 media advisory is now available. This monthly resource for members of the media and others in the community features information on what's happening with the Great Valley and throughout the Central Valley during the month.

June's advisory includes briefs on:
  • Significant reports available in June
  • An upcoming Land Conservation Easement Celebration
  • IDEAL class of 2009 graduation information
  • Much more happening around the region
Materials & Resources

→Download the June 2009 Media Advisory

Monday, June 1, 2009

Vasché: In search of the overarching issue

Modesto Bee Column
May 31, 2009

"Water Wealth Contentment Health."

When Modesto adopted those four words as its motto in the early 1900s and fastened them to the arch that for so many decades has welcomed visitors to the community, they represented the hopes and dreams -- and promise -- of a bright future.

Today, a century later, they represent critical issues facing a valley suffering not only from the current recession but from decades of chronically high unemployment, dismally low education levels and ever-increasing poverty.

I got to thinking about the arch -- and our challenges in each of those four areas -- the other night at a dinner at the Great Valley Center, the Modesto-based organization dedicated to improving the economic, social and environmental well-being of California's Central Valley.

I'd been invited to join about about two dozen people representing diverse backgrounds -- ranging from agriculture to health care, finance to education, development to energy, public service to the news media -- for an update on the center's work, and to discuss key issues facing the valley.

As David Hosley, the center's president, reminded us, regardless of the difficulties we're experiencing today, the future is going to happen -- and we best be ready.

As one of the participants would note, we tend to make plans and decisions based on short-term needs and goals, all too often ignoring more critical long-term considerations.

To that end, Hosley asked each of us: What is the one issue we must address in the next 10 years?

The delightful dinner, comprised entirely of items grown in our valley, gave us time to ponder the question. Later, as we went around the room, our answers were as varied as our backgrounds:

Fixing the state's fiscal mess, aligning and prioritizing revenues and spending; ensuring adequate water for farms and cities; improving education and skill levels; developing the work force; creating an environment that will keep businesses here and attract new ones; improving transportation, including mass transit.

And, there was more:

Preserving prime farmland by encouraging urbanization rather than sprawling suburbanization; improving air quality and other areas of the environment; bettering our health by considering it in everything we do as individuals, businesses and government; creating energy sources that are efficient, economical and green; and achieving greater cooperation among cities and counties up and down the valley.

I was one of several who listed education as the critical issue -- from increasing the graduation rate to addressing illiteracy to improving vocational training to creating a college-going culture.

As I reflected on the evening's discussion later, several things struck me:

— The issues facing our communities and our valley are wide-ranging.

— The issues, in one way or another, are interrelated.

— There are no simple solutions. They will take time, effort, commitment, and, in some cases, courage.

— The solutions need to be valley-wide. Not community- or county-wide, but envisioned and implemented cooperatively by all the cities and counties of the 400-mile-long Central Valley.

— The stakes are high, enormously high.

If we do it right, some day those four words -- "Water Wealth Contentment Health" -- could represent the reality of a vibrant, healthy, prosperous valley.

If we fail, however, they'll represent a laundry list of broken dreams, unattained goals and unclaimed promises.

What do you think? If you had to narrow it down to a single thing, what is the most important issue to be addressed over the next 10 years?

Let me know at mvasche@modbee.com, and I'll pass along your thoughts. Or, visit the center's site at www.greatvalley.org.

Vasché, The Bee's editor and senior vice president, can be reached at mvasche@modbee.com or at 578-2356.

Read the column online