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Great Valley Center News Blog

Monday, November 30, 2009

Great Valley News: Fall 2009


Get your Fall update on all things GVC with the new edition of our quarterly newsletter. Learn about the Sacramento Valley Forum, the release of the 2009 Economic Indicators Report, and updates on recent grants received by the Great Valley Center.

Click on the following link to read and download for free: http://www.greatvalley.org/artman2/publish/greatvallyenews/pub_Great_Valley_News_Fall_2009.aspx.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Splitting the state down the middle

Los Angeles Times
Sunday, November 15, 2009
by Cathleen Decker

(Photo © Copyright 2010 Roy Tennant)

Last week's Los Angeles Times/USC poll spilled a flood of pessimism from California voters about their state: They're troubled by its direction, upset at its politicians and sure that nothing will wrest California from the abyss.

That was about it, when it came to agreement. One always presumes a fair amount of communal thought in a state, even one this large. But apart from a shared disdain for the governor and the Legislature, there is hardly anything communal anymore in California politics . . .

Although the state is reliably Democratic at the moment, California's growth is now largely coming from the inland areas and from the Central Valley in particular, making the area noteworthy for the long term. According to a Field Poll report on California voters, 55% hailed from Los Angeles or the Bay Area in 1978. Now, 46% do. Almost three in 10 voters now reside inland, on a path winding north from the Inland Empire through the state's agricultural fields.

The conservative tendencies inland are colliding, however, with the urban problems bedeviling their residents. Air quality and health issues are profound, and shortcomings involving education and the economy have come into sharp relief during the recession.

California's inland counties have unemployment rates far higher than the state overall. In September, both Fresno and Kern counties hovered near 14%; Los Angeles, in contrast, was at 12.7% and San Francisco was below 10%.

As troubling to Central Valley analysts are education statistics. The region's teenagers are more likely than Californians overall to drop out of high school and less likely to head to a UC school or other four-year college.

"This is a recipe for disaster," said David Hosley, president of the Great Valley Center, a nonprofit think tank that studies Central Valley issues. If it's not altered swiftly, he said, "we will be in a downward spiral that will be hard to turn around."

→ Read the full article

Monday, November 9, 2009

Modesto Bee: Great Valley Center conference moving

Think tank tries hometown of Modesto for a change

Modesto Bee

Saturday, November 7, 2009
By Garth Stapley
gstapley@modbee.com


After 12 years in Sacramento, the Great Valley Center's annual conference is moving to Modesto. "The Gallo Arts Center is one of the jewels in the valley," said David Hosley, who succeeded Carol Whiteside as the center's president in early 2008. "And we thought it would be exciting for people to see our headquarter in Modesto."

→Read the entire article here

Save the Dates:
May 6 & 7, 2010
Great Valley Center's Annual Conference
Gallo Center for the Arts, Modesto




Monday, November 2, 2009

November Media Advisory Available Now

The Great Valley Center's November 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 Center and throughout the Central Valley during the month.

November's advisory includes briefs on:

* Regional story ideas
* GVC and regional events during the month
* Programs that are new to the Great Valley Center
* Reports, Publications, and Resources Currently Available

→Download the November 2009 Media Advisory

CPR: Feature News Story | Senators Hear From Top Sac Region Transportation Official on Climate BIll

Capitol Public Radio featured a great story on how Sacramento's transportation planning may impact federal legislation:

"After a week of getting yelled at by Republicans, Senator Barbara Boxer was relieved to hear from an ally. As Chairwoman of the environment committee she’s incorporated some of what Sacramento has done in her federal climate bill..."

→ Listen to the entire story here:
CPR: Feature News Story | Senators Hear From Top Sac Region Transportation Official on Climate BIll