Archive for 2012

Columnist Discusses City Budget

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2012

The Antioch City Council just had the first of many meetings in regard to building the fiscal 2012-13 budget and reviewing projections for the fiscal 2014 budget. Although Antioch, severely understaffed and not meeting community demands for services e.g. the Police Dept. only open to the public 16 hours a week, isn’t in the best fiscal shape, unlike our neighbor Brentwood, there is hope on the horizon. (Jim Frazier for Assembly campaign signs posted all over town on public rights-of-way, fences and other places not allowed in Antioch, aren’t helping our image either.)

Projections previously provided to Council reflected deficit spending in the General Fund of $50,881 in FY12 and $1,781,473 in FY13. Now, however, current projections indicate elimination of the FY12 deficit, largely due to an 8.8% increase in sales tax projections between March 2011 and 2012 and $800,000 in payments from GenOn to be received in July and December 2012. (Council directed that $100,000 of GenOn funds be used to supplement the code enforcement program.)

While the City’s General Fund could run out of fund balance in FY2014, primarily due to higher worker’s compensation insurance premiums and newly negotiated salary increases and other payroll factors, including PERs rates, consultants anticipate the City will return to 2008 sales tax levels by FY16.

In case you’re interested in the City’s investment portfolio, 28.39% is invested in Federal Home Loan Banks, 24.03% is invested with the U.S. Treasury, 28.39% with Fannie Mae, 18.40% with General Electric Company plus other numerous investments including Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (0.73%).

Four Antioch Students Win at Piano Competition

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2012

Young Artist Competition winners - (Top row from left to right) Luigi Galvan, Cole Preciado, Griffin Holt and Ryan Chiang (bottom row) Emily Yen and Natassya Irpan

On Saturday, April 21st, six pianists who participated in the Young Artist Competition performed in recital at Los Medanos College in Pittsburg. Four of them are from Antioch and won either first or second place, or honorable mention.

Out of sixteen competitors, these young musicians were chosen as winners in the following categories:

1) Students through grade eight: Cole Preciado, 1st place; Emily Yen from Dallas Ranch Middle School, 2nd place; and Griffin Holt, Honorable Mention.

2) High school students: Luigi Galvan from Antioch High, 1st place; Ryan Chiang from Deer Valley High, 2nd place, and Natassya Irpan also from Deer Valley High, Honorable Mention.

These pianists represent the piano studios of teachers Grace Edwards, Barbara Schnieder, Sara Harris, Maureen Honegger, and Kathleen Flemming. The competition was sponsored by the Delta branch of the Music Teachers’ Association of California.

Congratulations to these fine musicians!

BART Unveils New Draft Bicycle Plan

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2012

Seeks Public Input

Over the past year, BART has crafted a brand new bicycle plan that defines the strategies BART will pursue over the next 10 years to double the number of passengers who access stations by bike.  This is an update to BART’s first Bicycle Plan, published 10 years ago.

Approximately 4%, or about 14,000 passengers, currently reach BART stations each weekday by bicycle.  Building on the success of past BART bicycle access improvements, the growth in popularity of bicycle travel throughout the BART service area, and the significant improvements to bike travel recommended in this plan, this BART Bicycle Plan’s goal is to double this rate, to 8% by 2022, by transforming BART from a system that allows bikes to one that depends on them.

The plan focuses on five high-level issues each with multiple strategies:

  •  Cyclist Circulation: Improve station circulation for passengers with bicycles
  •  Plentiful Parking: Create world-class bicycle parking facilities
  •  Beyond BART Boundaries: Help assure great bicycle access beyond BART’s boundaries
  •  Bikes on BART: Optimize bicycle accommodations aboard trains
  •  Persuasive Programs: Complement bicycle-supportive policies and facilities with support programs

“It’s been exciting to watch the popularity of bicycling to BART skyrocket” said Steve Beroldo, BART’s Bike Program Manager.  “We installed 65 bike rack spaces inside-the-station at 19th St/Oakland Station and within months they were full.  We added 30 more spaces there plus 30 new inside-the-station spaces at 12th St/Oakland City Center just to keep up with demand.”

The draft plan is available for review and comment at www.bart.gov/bikes through May 12, 2012.  Comments and suggestions related to the draft Bike Plan can be sent to bikes@bart.gov.

Bataan Death March Survivors Honored

Monday, April 30th, 2012

Front (L-R) Death March survivors David U. Tejada, age 89, George E. Cawley, age 93 and Ramon B. Regalado, age 95 with back (L-R) Walter Ruehlig, Trustee, Antioch Unified School District, and Cynthia Ruehlig, Trustee, Contra Costa County Board of Education.

IN HONOR OF HEROES

The three month battle on the Bataan peninsula in the Philippines was the last bastion of resistance in the Pacific during WWII against the Imperial Japanese Army.

Cloaked in darkness, General Douglas MacArthur, his family and several USAFFE officers escaped in four PT boats from Corrigidor, Bataan for Australia where the General promised to the Filipinos, “I Shall Return”.

On April 9, 1942, 76,000 Filipino and American soldiers surrendered and were forced to walk 80 miles to a prison camp in Capas, Tarlac. An estimated 10,000 prisoners of war died from lack of food and water and from torture in the hands of their captors in what is now known as the “Bataan Death March”.

The Filipino-American Association of Pittsburg celebrated the 70th anniversary of the Fall of Bataan honoring the heroes who fought so bravely for our freedom.

Tony LaRussa’s ARF Expanding to East County

Monday, April 30th, 2012

Program provides pet therapy to seniors in East Contra Costa County.

Tony LaRussa’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, 2012, 135 Pet HugPack volunteers and their qualified pets make over 280 visits per month to more than 70 facilities throughout Contra Costa County.

“Volunteers who are willing to give their time and energy to this important cause are making a commitment to show how invaluable it is to promote good will towards our senior population,” stated Dina Osakue, Community Relations Director of The Commons. “Participating in this event is one of many ways to touch the heart of a senior in our community.”

A volunteer drive will take place on Saturday, May 12, 2012 at The Commons at Dallas Ranch, 4751 Dallas Ranch Road, Antioch from 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.. Volunteers are invited to attend to obtain information and join ARF in support of the Pet Hug Pack Program. Light refreshments will be served.

To obtain additional information regarding this event or to RSVP, please contact Dina Osakue at (925) 754-7772 or dosakue@commonsatdallasranch.com.

If you would like more information about the Pet Hug Pack Program, contact Pat Mills at pmills@arf.net or go to http://www.arf.net.

For more information on The Commons, visit www.commonastdallasranch.com.

Metropolitan Transportation Commission Offering Paid Summer Internships

Monday, April 30th, 2012

MTC SUMMER INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITIES

Please direct all interested individuals to http://jobs.mtc.ca.gov/InternshipOpportunities/jobinternship.html.  We also appreciate your forwarding the information to any organizations or groups that may distribute.

The Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) is offering 13 Internships for the summer of 2012. For further information about and to apply for the positions, please see our website at http://jobs.mtc.ca.gov/InternshipOpportunities/jobinternship.html

Internships at MTC provide students with the opportunity to gain professional work experience in transportation planning, finance and operational projects.  Internships are generally full-time from June through September.

To qualify for an MTC internship, students must be enrolled at least part-time in a four-year undergraduate or graduate level curriculum. Individuals who have already graduated may be considered up to six (6) months post-graduation.

MTC is looking for personnel with a professional demeanor, the ability to work effectively with a variety of people, have an energetic attitude and are self-motivated.  Have excellent organizational, analytical skills and are detail-oriented.

Pay rate:  for undergraduate students: $14.50/hour, for graduate students: $18.75/hour.

TO APPLY:  go online to http://jobs.mtc.ca.gov/InternshipOpportunities/jobinternship.html.
Closing dates vary by position.

MTC IS AN EEO/AA EMPLOYER

Letter Writer Lauds National Day of the Teacher

Monday, April 30th, 2012

Who would argue that teaching is not a demanding vocation? Consider, after, all, the two greatest exponents of the art, Jesus and Socrates. One was crucified, the other poisoned; both in the line of duty.

Not that it takes the ultimate sacrifice, though, to qualify teaching as a challenging line of work. Ask any parent, who play the ultimate teaching role, and they’ll tell you. Kids don’t readily absorb wisdom through their pores. That is why lecturing is mostly an exercise of in one ear, out the other.

After all, we’ve learned that no one size fits all. The best teaching employs multiple approaches with the understanding that no two kids are facsimiles. Then factor into the equation the proven theorem that kids love to do the opposite of what you tell them and you can see the wisdom of the Socratic method. Showing is better than saying but the penultimate success comes from the art of suggesting. A practiced teacher pokes and prods self-discovery. Good teaching is, in the end, doing. Paradoxically, it is learning inside out.

Given, then, that even under the best of circumstances effective teaching is a tricky and nuanced proposition, imagine the dicey mission  we have now put at the doorsteps.  In this global economy and age of of lightning-fast information teachers are asked to deal with kids who wire down when they enter the school portals. They are asked to keep this wired generation engaged while producing minds that seamlessly communicate, collaborate and thrive on critical  thinking. They face this already daunting task while asked to be equal parts disciplinarian, entertainer, coach, social worker, counselor, motivator, sociologist and statistician.

Strikingly, one elementary teacher was telling me that years back it was expected that  you might have one or two ‘problem’ kids in any given class, a child suffering a.d.a. or impulse management or maybe from a troubled home. Control issue, yes, but the juggling came with the territory.

Nowadays, the teacher reported, that classroom management factor typically runs 6 or 8 or 10 kids, with gripping issues such as homelessness, parental unemployment, child abuse, family addictions, latch-key environments, or stressed out commuter parents. That’s a lot of fires to put out.

Broken families? That phrase from another age that once stirred concern now sounds hopelessly old-fashioned in its’ lament. Facts are, more than half of marriages dissolve and some communities have born out of wedlock rates at 70%. As backdrop, Antioch has seen a 250% increase in group homes and a 200% increase in foster homes.

Then throw into this mix the jolt of assimilating  an explosive pace of urbanized migration and transiency; an increasingly permissive, materialistic, violent and instant-gratification addicted society; and a culture where the authority of teachers is casually questioned by students, parents and the ACLU alike. It spells an uphill battle.

Not to mention yearly pink slips and the No Child Left Behind pressures of  test mania; nor the difficulty of doing all of this in a state where classroom size and the staffing ratio of counselors, nurses, psychologists and librarians scrapes the very national bottom.

Tough gig? I say! Hopefully on Tuesday, May 8th, which is the National Day of the Teacher, we thank these unsung heroes and heroines for what they do. Let’s remember that  a teacher in teaching our son teaches our son’s son, that his or her influence has no end but ripples to the shores of eternity.

Walter Ruehlig

Antioch

Ruehlig is a Trustee on the Antioch School Board

Antioch Man Accidentally Shoots, Kills Younger Brother, Arrested

Monday, April 30th, 2012

By Acting Lt. Diane Aguinaga, Antioch Police Investigations Bureau

On Saturday, April 28, 2012 at 6:39 p.m. Antioch police received a 911 call from a 41-year-old man in the 2300 block of Cambridge Drive stating that he had accidentally shot his brother. Antioch police, along with fire and ambulance, responded to find a 36-year-old male suffering from a single gunshot wound.

He was declared dead on scene. It appears that the 36-year-old came to his brother’s home to show him a newly obtained gun. While both brothers were looking at the gun, it went off, striking and killing the 36-year-old.

Later that night, the 41-year-old brother, George Enriquez, born 12-16-71, was arrested for involuntary manslaughter and illegal possession of an assault weapon. He was sent to the Martinez Detention Facility and released on bail on Sunday, April 29.

Anyone with information is asked to call Detective Desmond Bittner at (925)779-6939.