Archive for September, 2012

Two Men Shot in Antioch Tuesday Night

Thursday, September 13th, 2012

By Lieutenant Pat Welch, Antioch Police Field Services Bureau

On Tuesday, September 11, 2012 at 7:18 p.m., the Antioch Police Department dispatch received a call of a shooting that had just occurred on Lemontree Way. As officers arrived on scene they located a 31-year-old Antioch man suffering from a bullet wound. As police were arriving on scene other witnesses reported the shooting actually occurred in the parking lot of a shopping center at 1118 Sycamore Drive in Antioch.

Witnesses at that location stated there were several black male adults in some sort of altercation in the lot just prior to several shots being fired. Witnesses also stated they thought two people may have been shot and one fled in a vehicle that had left the scene.

As Antioch dispatch was checking with local hospitals, they were notified a second gunshot victim, a 24-year-old Antioch man, had been brought into the emergency room. Neither victim’s wounds were life threatening. The investigation is ongoing and nothing else is being released at this time.

Anyone with information may text a tip to 274637 (CRIMES) using key word ANTIOCH.

Former Antioch Police Chief Jim Hyde to Speak at U.N. World Peace Conference at The Hague

Thursday, September 13th, 2012

Hyde

Former Antioch Police Chief Jim Hyde will represent Antioch’s Youth Intervention Network (YIN) at a conference of world peace experts at The Hague in the Netherlands on September 20, 2012. Hyde co-founded YIN with Antioch community leaders Keith and Iris Archuleta in 2007.

This recognition of YIN by the U.N. during the opening celebration of the United Nations Peace University at The Hague is very exciting and such a great honor,” said co-founder Iris Archuleta.

Through their company, Emerald HPC International, the Archuletas have provided planning and development consulting to corporations, communities, and organizations in the U.S. and abroad using their “High Performing Communities” framework since 1992. The couple moved to Antioch to purchase a home in 1999, but soon began to be concerned about what was happening with the youth population and the lack of community collaboration around the issue.

Hyde said he was skeptical when he received an invitation from the United Nations mandated University of Peace (UPEACE) asking if he could make a presentation about the Antioch Youth Intervention Network at the UN conference. But the invitation was real.

Headquartered in Costa Rica, UPEACE has developed a variety of masters degree programs in peace building and conflict studies as well as shorter-term courses and training for students and professionals from around the world.

In January, UPEACE opened a new center at the Peace Palace at The Hague in the Netherlands. The center will be officially launched during a conference entitled “Peace for Humanity in the 21st Century.” With invitations limited to only 250 people globally, Hyde will be one of four presenters during the Urban Peace Workshop during the conference.

The YIN Approach

“Antioch was a good city that imploded on itself because it grew too fast,” Hyde said. “We started YIN in Antioch to help high-risk teenagers by first figuring out who was most likely to be at risk,” he said. “We asked ourselves, what could we do to change the behavior of youth who were acting out?”

So, unlike similar projects, the Antioch team used a small seed grant to do the research first. “There are so many projects out there without any research and very little science,” Hyde said. “We wanted the science in the front and then build strategies out of that.”

In cooperation with the school district, they collected anonymous electronic data on more than 8000 youth in Antioch. Data included grades, test scores, discipline, attendance and socio-economic status.

The research, conducted by Andy Wong of AJW, Inc., showed that the top two indicators of youth who are likely to commit or become victims of violence, without the appropriate interventions, are truancy and student disengagement, refuting the false notion that ethnicity and socio-economic status were the dominant indicators.

The study showed that dysfunction with youth and within families had nothing to do with economics or race. Dysfunction is dysfunction wherever it is,” Hyde said.

“AJW, Inc. has done phenomenal work around the country,” Hyde said. “Wong’s analysis helped us develop a strategy which placed the focus on volunteerism, conflict mediation at the family level, and working with the family and school district to tailor an academic recovery plan.”

The data-driven strategy of YIN to reduce truancy and student disengagement has proven to be successful on many levels.

The intent of YIN has been to change negative community messaging around the causes of problems related to youth and crime in Antioch; to work collaboratively with agencies and organizations to make necessary systemic changes in areas that impact youth and families, and to directly intervene in the lives of youth and families impacted by violent and/or anti-social behavior in the Antioch community,” said co-founder and Board President Keith Archuleta.

One of the reasons YIN has drawn so much attention is because it is a true collaborative, leveraging existing programs, breaking down silos, and cutting across traditional geographic lines. YIN convenes a collaborative of stakeholder organizations to develop and measure cross agency strategies to reduce truancy, dropout rates, and youth violence and to increase academic performance, graduation, employability, and college-going rates among youth.

A unique feature of YIN is that community volunteers are recruited and trained to serve as mediators and educational, legal, and family advocates who directly engage youth and families.

These volunteers participate in 40 consecutive hours of training as well as advanced professional development, and then invest 6 months to 3 years working directly with youth and their families with amazing results.

YIN uses Emerald HPC International’s High Performing Communities (HPC) framework for building effective and sustainable community collaboration.

Leaders and volunteers are also trained in the Dialogue for Peaceful Change (DPC) conflict management methodology developed by Different Tracks founders Colin Craig of Northern Ireland and Jaap van der Sar of the Netherlands, which teaches the practical skills that enable leaders to assist those in conflict to agree on how they can live and work without violence.

Hyde said the team learned early on that family participation in YIN had to be voluntary. “If families were forced they would have their ability to be a partner in the process taken away.”

The program takes in about 40 families a year and participation lasts at least a year and up to three years. The first step is conflict mediation.

The family meets weekly for 3 to 6 months with a volunteer mediation team of two. During the process, the family identifies issues of conflict within the home, identifies solutions, and enters into a partnership contract with the network to work towards solving the issues that are associated with YIN’s at risk indicators.

“Once they reach agreement the next step is to build and execute a recovery plan,” Hyde said. At that point the family is transitioned to a family/education advocate who helps them work with school and other identified agencies and resources to get the family working together, the young person back on track academically, out of anti-social behavior patterns and feeling like a valued member of the community.

Hyde said that most kids going into the program were on the brink of falling into serious dysfunction. “They weren’t coming home after school, they smelled of alcohol and marijuana, they were defiant, money was missing from the house,” he said. “The vast majority of the kids we worked with were on the fringe.”

The individualized approach of the YIN process allows for a variety of agencies and organizations to provide wrap-around services as needed, creating restorative outcomes for youth ages 10-18 and their families. The project collects detailed data from its participants to assess their progress and evaluate the success of the initiative.

In the summer of 2008, YIN served its first pilot family. Since that time, YIN has successfully trained 300 youth and adult leaders and volunteers, served over 50 families and 90 youth, and brought together more than 35 Antioch and Contra Costa County agencies and organizations.

Among youth and families served, there has been a 92% reduction in police calls for service, an 83% reduction in truancy, and an improvement in student GPA by an average of 2 grade points. Ninety percent of the students participating in YIN have graduated from high school. Of these, 100% have gone on to postsecondary education.

“We saw kids leave gangs and become academic achievers,” Hyde said.

YIN has helped to redefine the community message; improve and hold accountable the systems that impact youth and families; and engage youth and families in a way that has fundamentally changed their lives and decreased or eliminated the likelihood that these youth will continue to commit or become victims of violence.

YIN has received several local, state and national awards, and in 2010 the US Department of Justice awarded Antioch the sole Best Community Involvement award. Hyde said the award is usually spread around and given to up to five cities annually.

Although Hyde retired from the Antioch Police Department in January 2011, the Youth Intervention Network is going strong. It has been a goal since the inception of YIN to integrate its best practices into the right community vehicle that would move the vision forward and take it to a level of sustainability. To that end, a transition team was formed in December 2011. By May 17, 2012 the transition team had completed the incorporation of YIN as an independent 501c3, and selected a board of directors and officers.

Current Antioch police chief Alan Cantando is now Chair of the YIN collaborative and serves on the YIN Board. The community is building upon the legacy and success of the initiative by continuing to provide direct intervention services to the highest risk youth and their families and developing the leadership capacity of local youth through work with YIN partners such as the Police Activities League and the Youth Directors Council leadership program and through Peer Mediation training.

Key partners have included the Antioch Police Department, the City of Antioch, Supervisor Federal Glover’s Office, Antioch Unified School District, Sutter Delta Memorial Hospital, John Muir Health, East County Business-Education Alliance, the John F. Kennedy University Counseling Center, Children and Family Services, County Juvenile Probation, County Mental Health, Families Thrive, Contra Costa County Zero Tolerance Initiative, Kaiser Permanente, gang intervention groups such as One Day at a Time (ODAT) and The Williams Group (TWG); Antioch Police Activities League (PAL); and faith-based organizations, such as Antioch Christian Center, St. John’s Lutheran Church, and the Islamic Center of the East Bay; youth, parents, and more than 300 trained community volunteers and agency affiliates.

YIN has been supported financially through the A Taste of Antioch event in 2009, by individual donors, and by local and major funders such as: California Wellness Foundation, Keller Canyon Fund, East Bay Community Foundation, Vesper Society, Beswick Family Fund, Touchstone Golf Foundation, California Emergency Management Agency – Project Safe Neighborhoods Grant, Calpine Corporation, Pacific Gas and Electric Company, ABC/EV Floors, Dow Credit Union, East County Insurance, Delta Realtor Association, State Farm, Dow Chemical Company, John Muir Health, St. John’s Lutheran Church, First Congregational Church, Community Presbyterian Church, Sher & Minnard, AJW, Inc., Hymark Consulting, and Emerald Consulting.

Live Music at Schooner’s This and Next Friday Nights

Thursday, September 13th, 2012

Sin (pronounced Shin, short for Sinead – it’s Gaelic/Irish) Silver will perform this Friday night, September 14 and next Friday night, September 21 at Schooner’s Grill & Brewery in Antioch starting at 7:00 p.m.  Schooner’s is located at 4250 Lone Tree Way in Antioch, near the AMC Theaters. For reservations call (925) 776-1800 and for more information visit their website at www.schoonersbrewery.com.

Antioch’s Animal Services Manager Honored by American Red Cross

Wednesday, September 12th, 2012

The American Red Cross Bay Area Chapter announced on September 4, 2012 the recipients of its Contra Costa County Heroes Awards, all of whom will be honored at the Contra Costa County Heroes Breakfast on Friday, October 5 at the Crow Canyon Country Club in Danville.

The annual program celebrates everyday heroes, recognizing those local individuals and organizations that make a difference in their community through acts of extraordinary courage and kindness. This year’s honorees include Animal Rescue Hero Monika Helgemo.

Helgemo has been the Animal Services Manager at the Antioch Animal Shelter for the past 24 years but continues to develop fostering programs while volunteering to administer care for puppies, kittens and ducklings in her own home.

The actions of the Heroes embody the principles and ideals of the Red Cross’ humanitarian mission. For more information or to purchase tickets for the Heroes Breakfast event, please visit: www.redcrossbayarea.org/heroes.  This event benefits Red Cross disaster readiness and relief efforts in Bay Area.

About the Heroes Awards Program

People in the Bay Area make a difference in the lives of others in their communities every day. The American Red Cross Bay Area Chapter and civic leaders from six counties in the Bay Area are joining together to celebrate everyday heroism, recognizing those individuals and organizations whose extraordinary acts of kindness and courage make them heroes. American Red Cross chapters around the country hold events in their communities to recognize acts of heroism by local residents and pay tribute to those who have performed lifesaving acts. Each year, nearly 900 people attend events in Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco, San Mateo and Solano Counties to honor local heroes. For more information about the events and corporate sponsorship opportunities, please visit www.redcrossbayarea.org/heroes. All proceeds from the events support the disaster preparedness and relief efforts of the American Red Cross in the Bay Area.

About American Red Cross Bay Area Chapter 

As a community-based, humanitarian organization, the American Red Cross Bay Area Chapter provides relief to those affected by disasters and empowers individuals in our community to prevent, prepare for and respond to emergencies.  By helping people in the Bay Area learn how to take care of their families and neighbors, the Red Cross strengthens the community and makes it ready for all types of disasters, including home fires, earthquakes, wildfires and health emergencies. Call 1-888-4-HELP-BAY (443-5722) or visit www.redcrossbayarea.org to learn more. You may also find us on Facebook and Twitter.

Highway 4 Westbound Lane Shift at Somersville this Week

Tuesday, September 11th, 2012

The California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) and the Contra Costa Transportation Authority (CCTA) are widening State Route 4 (SR-4) through Pittsburg and Antioch. Construction has reached a milestone with the completion of the westbound Somersville Road Bridge.

A Traffic Advisory was issued on August 29, 2012 which described the planned westbound traffic switch at Somersville Road during the week of September 2, 2012. Due to contractor scheduling conflicts, this traffic switch has been delayed and is currently scheduled to occur during the week of September 9, 2012.

Traffic on SR-4 at Somersville Road will be modified during the week of September 10, 2012, and westbound traffic will shift to the newly completed bridge. To accommodate this work, all westbound lanes and several ramps in the vicinity will periodically be closed to traffic overnight. This work is tentatively scheduled to take place on the evening of Thursday, September 13.

The SR-4 Widening Project includes over $570 million in State, Federal, and Contra Costa Measure J sales tax, and other local funds to widen SR-4 from four to eight lanes between Loveridge Road and SR-160. The combined effort of Caltrans and the Contra Costa Transportation Authority on projects in the SR4 corridor will reduce congestion, create a safer roadway, improve operations, and reduce traffic delays on this important east-west connector.

When completed, the SR-4 highway median will be used to extend BART service from Pittsburg/Bay Point to a new station at Hillcrest Avenue in Antioch.

The project web site at: http://widensr4.org will have updated lane closure information.

Caltrans and CCTA appreciate your patience as we work to improve the highways.

Salvation Army to Hold Car Show, Car Wash & Craft Boutique Fundraiser on Saturday

Tuesday, September 11th, 2012

       

 

FIRST ANNUAL SALVATION ARMY

CLASSIC CAR SHOW, CAR WASH & CRAFT BOUTIQUE

September 15, 2012 at 9:00 am to 2:00 pm

@ Higgins Chapel, 1310 A Street, Antioch

FUNDRAISER

Benefits the Salvation Army’s After School Program

CRAFT OR PRODUCT SELLERS CAN Rent a 10’ x 12’ space for $25 to sell your Arts and Crafts OR PRODUCTS

For rental space or more information contact

Norm (925) 778- 0808 Ext: 17 or email SalArmyAntioch@yahoo.com

 

Contra Costa’s Hispanic Chamber of Commerce Recognized as “Chamber of the Year” in both its Region and California

Tuesday, September 11th, 2012

At the recent statewide convention of the California Hispanic Chambers of Commerce (CAHCC), the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce of Contra Costa County (H5C) was honored as the 2012 Chamber of the Year.  The H5C was selected from amongst 65 Hispanic Chambers of Commerce and Latino Business Associations throughout the state of California.  The award was presented by President and CEO Julian Canete at the CAHCC’s 33rd Annual State Convention in San Diego.

“Our chamber was honored to have received the Chamber of the Year award, not only for our region but also the Chamber of the Year award for the entire State of California!  The success of this chamber is the result of of the value we provide to our business members through Education, Business Opportunities, and Advocacy”, said Eric Maldonado, President of H5C.

The Hispanic Chamber of Commerce has been reaching the community and enhancing economic development in Contra Costa County for the last 25 years through various activities and programs. The Business workshop series has served over 1400 businesses by providing them with the tools and resources required to succeed.  H5C has established a platform to allow small businesses to voice their opinions and concerns with elected officials during legislative events including visits to Sacramento and Washington D.C. Additionally, the mixers and speed networking events continue to be a vital source to help businesses expand their network and allow them to succeed and flourish.  H5C will continue to find ways to better serve the community to create economic growth and opportunity in Contra Costa County.

Douglas Lezameta, Member of the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce states, “This well-deserved award was rewarded to the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce of Contra Costa County for their excellent performances in providing members with the programs necessary for growth. I would like to congratulate the board of directors for their hard efforts. Special thanks to Eric Maldonado, President and Mayra Bautista, Vice President and chamber staff.”

Mr. Maldonado observed that credit for the extraordinary honor and recognition goes to a large team of hard working chamber volunteers, staff and supporters.  He noted “the efforts required to be recognized as the best Hispanic Chamber in the State cannot be sustained without the proper support and infrastructure.  Special recognition goes to the Board of Directors, chamber’s staffs, and volunteers, past presidents and the support of our corporate advisors.”

The H5C continues to grow and has become one of the most active chambers in Contra Costa County.

The mission of the Hispanic Chamber is to develop, enhance and promote valuable business opportunities for our members while providing a special emphasis on education, cultural awareness and available resources within the Hispanic Community and Contra Costa County overall. H5C is working to promote the economic prosperity of its members within the Hispanic community and the Contra Costa community

Special thanks to the following:

Board of Directors; Eric Maldonado, Travis Credit Union; Mayra Bautista, TeamPersona; Abiud Amaro, San Pablo EDC; Leonard E. Marquez, Wendel, Rosen, Black & Dean LLP; Raymundo Villanueva, iServe Residential Lending; Emilio Solares, ESPN Deportes Radio; Stephen Martinez, ABD Direct Inc.; Nancy Aguirre Be-Yam, Mary Kay Cosmetics, Steve Macias, Humana; Johnny Huang, Johnny Huang Insurance Services and Richard Perez-Pacheco, Black Sheep Design.  

Chamber’s Staff: Mayra Rodriguez, Operation Manager; Claudia Samalea, Administrative Assistant; Stacy Flores, Marketing Assistant; Maria Peterson, volunteer, Lydia Celis, volunteer; Martha Morales, volunteer.

Advisory Board:  Ed Basaldua, Enrique Ruiz, Pedro Babiak, Steve Lesher, Shell Martinez Refinery; Ken Dami, Tesoro Golden Eagle Refinery; Richard Chacon, Union Bank; Ken Mintz, AT&T; and Ron Wetter, Kaiser.

The Commons at Dallas Ranch Hosts Tony La Russa’s Animal Rescue Foundation to Recruit Volunteers for the ARF Pet Hug Pack Program

Tuesday, September 11th, 2012

Efforts to Expand Program that provides pet therapy to seniors in East Contra Costa County Continues.

Tony La Russa’s Animal Rescue Foundation (ARF) is expanding their therapy animal program into Antioch, Pittsburg, and Brentwood. To accommodate this expansion, they are seeking volunteers who want to brighten the life of a senior.

ARF’s Pet Hug Pack teams visit hospitals, rehabilitation centers, schools and adult day care facilities throughout Contra Costa County. Pack pets are tested to ensure they are well-mannered, healthy and possess good temperament. The teams provide unconditional love to the people they visit. There are proven health benefits to animal interaction which recipients enjoy by petting or holding an animal team member

ARF had been involved with animal assisted activities for several years prior to launching the visiting animal program in August 2002. As of April of 2012, 135 Pet HugPack volunteers and their qualified pets make over 280 visits per month to more than 70 facilities throughout Contra Costa County.

For more information contact ARF at (925) 256-1273 or visit their website at www.ARF.net.