The Kern County Call to Action would like to invite you and your colleagues to a summit we are coordinating for September. Save the Date: September 17, 2014 for the Call to Action for a Healthy Kern Summit.  Come and join your fellow community leaders and residents to exchange ideas, hear about local efforts, and learn how we can take concrete steps to change how health happens at home, school, work—everywhere. Participants will learn to identify opportunities to foster and develop community changes that will aid in reducing Kern County’s obesity and chronic disease rates and work towards building walkable, healthy, sustainable and livable communities.

Summit Details:
Date – Wednesday, September 17th
Time – 8:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Location – Bakersfield Marriott at the Convention Center (801 Truxtun Avenue, Bakersfield, CA)

To RSVP or for more information, please see the attached flyer.  Also, please feel free to share this flyer with others who you think may benefit from this workshop. I hope you will be able to join us. As always, don’t hesitate to call Becky Lomeli (661-868-0165) if you should have any questions.

save the date summit 1  save the date summit sp

 

Eleven-Month, full-time positions are available for AmeriCorps Members to serve as mentors in one of two California communities starting August 18, 2014 and ending July 17, 2015. Applicants must be available to serve site-specific schedules during the term of service.

 

ESSENTIAL FUNCTIONS AND RESPONSIBILITIES

 

As a Mentor:

Under general supervision, to implement the Building Healthy Communities AmeriCorps programs by providing the following direct services:*

-plan structured and meaningful mentor activities

-implement one-on one and small group mentoring

-attend regular mentor training provided by program

-collaborate with agency staff to monitor mentee progress

-serve as a mentor and positive role model to target mentees

-report weekly on mentee contact logs and other important documents

-appraise mentee progress using evaluation instruments provided by program

-create and manage a schedule to ensure all mentees receive appropriate hours

*mentor specific duties will vary across program sites

 

As an AmeriCorps Team Member:

-recruit and coordinate community volunteers

-serve as a resource to the Building Healthy Communities local hubs

-participate in team meetings and other events promoting the AmeriCorps identity

-plan, implement and report on service projects to strengthen communities

-participate in and reflect on community service experiences

-participate in ongoing service specific training

 

Living Allowance and Benefits:

-Full-time(approx. 40hrs/week) $1300 monthly living allowance

-Child care benefits(for eligible full-time members)

-Health Insurance benefits(for eligible full-time members)

-$5550 full-time education award** upon satisfactorily completing eleven months of service and 1,700 hours for full-time

**The education award can only be used to pay student loans or for future college tuition and expenses.

 

Mentor youth in one of these California communities:

-Santa Ana

-Bakersfield

-Greenfield

-Lamont

-Arvin

-Weedpatch

 

For more information, call 661-636-4255 or apply at www.BHCamericorps.org

 

 KCCD will be offering three training programs this summer.

A FREE job training program that starts June 9, 2014 .

Only 30 students will be accepted in each program this summer.

Prepares individuals for careers in the Construction, Industrial Maintenance and Oil Field Services fields including the highly

sought after safety certifications.

The retail sales and customer service training and certification being sought after by the retailers at the Tejon Retail Outlets.

Teaches young people the employer expectations, team work and communication skills which are required by most employers.

For more information see flyer Summer Training Program Rv 2 (3)

Whether in the home, at the pool or on vacation, it is always important to keep safety in mind when children are in or near water.

 

Drowning is the second leading cause of injury-related death among children in California. In Kern County, 9 Kern County children lost their lives to accidental drowning between 2010 and 2012. Even a near-drowning incident can have lifelong consequences. Children who survive a near-drowning may have irreversible brain damage after 4 – 6 minutes under water.

 

June is Water Safety Month. Kern Cares, as a proud partner of the Kern County Water Safety Coalition, encourages all community members and organizations, this month and throughout the year, to practice water safety with the children of all ages.

 

The Kern County Network for Children (KCNC) invites the community to attend the following events:

 

  • Kern Cares Spotlight on Child Water Safety at the KCNC General Collaborative Meeting on Thursday, June 19, 2014 with American Splash Swim School, a member of the Kern County Water Safety Coalition beginning at 8:30 am.

 

  • Child Water Safety Workshop with Children’s Hospital of Central California from 9 am to 11:30 am in Bakersfield on June 25, 2014.  Register at http://conta.cc/1tMdA64

 

To help put a spotlight on what all of us can do to create safe water environments and prevent drowning, Kern Cares offers the guide How You Can Get Involved in Child Water Safety which outlines everyday ways to prevent this major cause of child death in Kern County.

 

The Kern Cares website (www.kerncares.org) and Kern Cares Facebook (www.facebook.com/kerncares) will also provide parents and community members with information, local resources and water safety education programs and events dedicated to reducing the number of Kern County children and youth injured or killed from drowning.

 

The protection of our children requires the involvement of the entire community. KCNC Children’s Advocacy Committee was formed in 2010 to help guide KCNC’s outreach and education efforts with the Kern Cares 2013/2014 Prevention Calendar. Guided by the Calendar, Kern Cares promotes community commitment and awareness to a specific child safety and well-being issue each month by sharing activities, information, resources and training opportunities with partner agencies, media, schools, faith communities, and families on that topic.

In “Local Harvest: Developing the Central Valley Workforce for California’s Future Agriculture,” the Milken Institute’s research depicts a future where agriculture (Kern’s largest employer) will face technological innovation and our employees will become increasingly unprepared and unable to fill available jobs. Effectively, the existing skills gap will continue to grow at a more rapid pace in the years to come. In her State of the County Address, Kern County Supervisor Leticia Perez poignantly stated, “When our workforce doesn’t have enough skilled people, we can’t attract industries that provide the better-paying jobs that fuel economicgrowth. And as the backbone industries that built Kern County evolve, they, too, need people with high-tech skills.”

 

But Kern County’s problem isn’t just with being tech savvy; our children are moving into adulthood without adequate English, math and reading skills. Despite the county’s philosophy of being business friendly, Kern County offersprospective employers the opportunity to recruit from one of the least-educated workforces in the state — where we expel more students in raw numbers than Los Angeles Unified School District. According to school records, of all incoming students in Fall 2013 at Bakersfield College, completing assessment, 81 percent needed remediation in math, English or reading. In addition, only 14 percent of Kern’s population has attained a college degree.

 

So if we understand that businesses rely on a quality workforce — and that quality workforce comes from our educational systems — why are our schools sending (expelling) children home? Why would a business want to come here to hire employees that have been expelled from school at alarming rates? Luckily, all is not lost. There are those in our local K-12 system working hard to change a pattern by which we remove kids from school for discretionary offenses, only to encourage them into a life of crime and create a lifelong burden on taxpayer dollars later.

 

Dr. Matthew Ross is the superintendent of Vineland School District. As a former principal in Lancaster, Dr. Ross led a school that, prior to his arrival, had more suspension incidents than students enrolled and had expelled almost a third of that number.

 

Dr. Ross recognized that expulsions and suspensions impacted the economic and educational bottom line. If a child isn’t in his or her seat, the school district doesn’t get a dime that day from the state. A conservative estimate is that one school could lose $100,000 or more annually because of suspended/expelled students. Those are real dollars that could have been used to improve technology in a school library, pay for a literacy coach or support a school counselor.

 

As principal, Dr. Ross recognized the need for change. “To use a sports analogy, when my favorite team isn’t doing well, we don’t get rid of the entire team. We focus on the capacity of the coach and management because we know we need a different approach.” In many cases, the suspension serves no valuable purpose from a developmental or academic aspect. Disciplinary actions involving suspensions send a message to parents that school attendance has no value, causing children who need to be in school the most to fall further behind. This provides nothing in the way of real tools to change behavior and represents a loss of revenue to the school — in addition to the future costs to taxpayers.

 

Though a daunting task, Dr. Ross changed the culture of his school, asking his teachers to think more thoughtfully and purposefully before requesting suspensions. He integrated diverse student behavior management frameworks like Positive Behavioral Intervention and Supports (PBIS) to help shift the focus on school discipline from punishment-based reactions to teaching compliance and behavioral expectations, following up with rewards for positive behavior. Dr. Ross indicates, “Now they only used suspensions to allow a teacher to continue to teach, provide for safety, or to help students cool off.” While Dr. Ross dropped suspensions from a high of 1,035 to below 300, the API score of the school rose dramatically from a low of 574 to a high of 693, a 21 percent increase. These changes represent savings to the school budget, improved learning and a reduction in taxpayer-funded social services later. And at Vineland, he has been able to make similar changes in less than a year under his leadership.

 

Supportive school board members, principals and teachers have also helped pave the way. The results: fewer suspensions, increased student learning and larger school revenues. To prepare our children for the workforce needs of tomorrow, let’s keep our students in school today.

 

Michael Turnipseed is the executive director of KernTax.

Michael Turnipseed

Michael Turnipseed 

JOB SUMMARY:

The Recreation Projects Coordinator for South Kern provides leadership, planning, and  coordination with the Building Healthy Communities Hub and the Recreation Action Team to facilitate youth engagement and agency collaboration. The BHC youth component focuses on convening local school-aged youth and developing capacity for youth generated health priorities in the recreation arena. The Coordinator will facilitate and coordinate technical assistance in order to build leadership, policy advocacy and communications capacity among youth working to advance BHC priorities and outreach to existing recreation partners to collaborate and leverage efforts.

 

 Job Description

Job Title:  Recreation Projects Coordinator

Department: Administration                                                               Status: full-time

Reports To: Executive Director – Boys & Girls Clubs                        Date Prepared: 5/14/2014

Salary: $45000.00 plus benefits

To Apply: Please submit a cover letter and resume to Zane Smith at zanesmith@bgclubsofkerncounty.org or fax (661) 325-2118

For more information, please contact Zane Smith at (661) 325-3730

 

For further information on this job opportunity, please see attached flyer Recreation Projects Coordinator

Bike Arvin is a non-profit bicycle advocacy group. Our goal is to help and teach people about safe bicycling skills, improve the streets of Arvin, as well as South Kern, and teach basic bicycle mechanic skills. All profits made will be put back into the city of Arvin or the South Kern areas, for better streets, bicycle lanes, andmuch more.

We Have:

Fixed Gears, Road Bikes, Mtn Bikes, Cruisers, BMX, Grips, Wheels, Tires, Helmets, And much more!

 

For more information on the Bike Kitchen, please see attached flyer Bike Arvin Flyer

 

Come to this free class to learn what you can do to prevent or manage diabetes. You can live a healthy lifestyle even if you have the disease.

You will learn about:

  • How to prevent diabetes
  • Signs and symptoms to watch out for
  • How insulin works in your body
  • Possible diabetes problems
  • How to manage your diabetes

Diabetes Basics Class What You Need to Know About Diabetes

LOCATION: HealthNetCommunitySolutionsCenter

6013 Niles Street, Bakersfield, CA  93306

DATE/TIME: Thursday, June 5, 2014 @9:00am – 10:00am

For further contact information, please see attached flyer HN Diabetes Basics English 6.5.14

 

Asista a esta clase gratuita para saber lo que puede hacer para prevenir o controlar la diabetes. Puede llevar un estilo de vida saludable aun si tiene esta enfermedad.

Aprenderá lo siguiente:

  • Cómo prevenir la diabetes
  • Signos y síntomas a los que debe prestar atención
  • Cómo funciona la insulina en el cuerpo
  • Posibles problemas relacionados con la diabetes
  • Cómo controlar la diabetes

Clase sobre los aspectos básicos de la diabetes

LUGAR: Health Net Community Solutions Center

6013 Niles Street, Bakersfield, CA 93306

FECHA/HORA: Viernes el 27 de junio @9:00am – 10:00am

Para mas detalles de este evento por favor mire el bolante aqui HN Flier Diabetes Basics Spanish 6.27.14