- Author: Pamela Kan-Rice
The California Board of Forestry and Fire Protection has created a public survey to help develop a baseline estimate of work needed to implement Zone 0 – clearing the first five feet surrounding any structure of combustibles such as woody plants, mulch and wood fences. This will inform their economic impact analysis for the regulations, which are intended to protect homes, businesses and communities.
The board has asked UC ANR staff and academics to distribute the survey through their networks to maximize responses.
The following is suggested text for social media and email sharing:
“Your input is needed! UC Cooperative Extension is partnering with the California Board of Forestry and Fire Protection to develop a new defensible space zone for wildfire resilience within the first 5 feet of a structure, known as Zone 0. We're asking California residents and business owners to help inform cost estimates for the implementation of these new science-driven defensible space standards. Please complete the 5-10 minute survey at https://forms.office.com/g/peGA5QuDfn. It's open through April 5.”
- Author: Pamela Kan-Rice
Nominations are being accepted for UC ANR Staff Appreciation and Recognition awards until midnight on April 12.
Nominations should be submitted via e-mail to Human Resources at humanresources@ucanr.edu.
Nominators are responsible for documenting the approval of each nominee's supervisor as part of the application submission. A PDF copy of email approval from the supervisor(s) will be accepted.
After reviewing the applications, a review committee will recommend the individuals and teams to be awarded. The vice president has final authority to approve STAR awards.
Unit directors and award winners will be notified of the final decisions in May.
STAR Award recipients will be celebrated during an ANR recognition event on June 15 at 2-3:30 p.m.
For more information about eligibility and criteria, visit https://ucanr.edu/sites/ANRSPU/Supervisor_Resources/Staff_Appreciation_and_Recognition_STAR_Awards.
- Author: Pamela Kan-Rice
Show us the animals that inspire you each day. Post a pic of your pet on the ANR Employees Group Facebook page or email photos labeled with pet names to pam.kanrice@ucanr.edu with "Pet Pic" in the subject line.
We'll put them in the April edition of ANR Employee News.
- Author: Pamela Kan-Rice
Beverly Diane Wallace, UC Cooperative Extension 4-H youth development advisor emeritus and former long-time director of UCCE in San Diego County, died on March 13. She was 84.
Wallace, who was born near Malibu, served UCCE for 38 years.
“Her love for extension, her tireless efforts to secure support for the office and support for all staff made a huge difference in the culture and productivity of our office,” said Ramiro Lobo, UCCE small farms advisor for San Diego County.
Wallace is remembered as a great mentor by former colleagues Sue Manglallan, 4-H youth development advisor emeritus, and Valerie Mellano, former UCCE environmental issues advisor.
“She instilled the principals of Cooperative Extension bringing research and education to solve community issues,” said Manglallan. “Her leadership as CD was used to support the creation of many innovative programs such as 4-H afterschool care and San Diego Grown. Diane worked hard to secure resources for program development and delivery.”
Mellano added, “Diane was a great mentor, and an integral part of the ag community for such a long time, not to mention a great single mom and a really great grandma. She was really effective about creating a collaborative staff in our office.”
Her daughter Andrea “Andi” Doddridge recalled that Wallace volunteered for many school field trips and took her to numerous 4-H camps, meetings and conferences, saying “She was a tremendous role model for mothers everywhere.”
“She was very supportive of her staff and we appreciated that,” said Cheryl Wilen, UC Integrated Pest Management advisor emeritus. “Helping San Diego residents, especially growers and youth, thrive were the most important things in her life next to her family.”
As a 4-H member, Wallace raised a certified Angus steer named Gus when she was in high school. Gus was named Grand Champion Steer at the California State Fair in Sacramento and his sale at the fair's auction funded her dreams of attending college. The daughter of a cattle ranch manager and a homemaker became the first of her family to attend college.
After earning a bachelor's degree in home economics at UC Davis, she joined UC in 1960 as a 4-H and home advisor in San Bernardino County. Wallace left UCCE in 1964 after marrying and having a child and moved to San Diego, where she took a job with San Diego Gas & Electric to demonstrate new electric appliances for the home to consumers. In 1968, she returned to UC Cooperative Extension to develop and expand 4-H and home advisor programs in San Diego County.
In 1982, UC ANR named Wallace one of its first female UCCE county directors. She developed relationships with county government officials and agency directors, which enabled the UCCE advisors to assist a wide range of county departments and community-based organizations. That collaboration cultivated broad-based county support and appreciation for UCCE programs.
Over her career, Wallace received many awards, including the Woman of Achievement Award from the President's Council of the City of San Diego, the Distinguished Service Award from the National 4-H Agents' Association, the Distinguished Service Award from Assembly Council and the first Friend of Agriculture award from the San Diego Farm Bureau.
“I feel so lucky to have known and worked with Diane,” said Manglallan.
Wallace is survived by daughter Andrea Doddridge; grandchildren Zach, Jacob and Madelyn Doddridge; and sisters Shelba (Lloyd) Crenna and Joan (Kermit) Walker. A private family interment service will be held in Galt this summer. Donations may made in her memory to the Cal Aggie Alumni Association at UC Davis, 530 Alumni Lane, Davis, CA 95616.
- Author: Pamela Kan-Rice
George D. Rendell, UC Cooperative Extension 4-H youth advisor emeritus and long-time director of UCCE in Los Angeles County, died on Feb. 19 in Long Beach. He was 90.
“George was an incredible person who showed care and concern for all Cooperative Extension employees,” said Keith Nathaniel, 4-H youth advisor and director of UCCE in Los Angeles County. “He loved the work he did with Cooperative Extension and was especially proud of his work as a 4-H YD advisor before he became an administrator. His 40-plus years of service is a testament to his love and dedication to the mission of Cooperative Extension.”
Rendell was born in Rialto in San Bernardino County. At age 10, he joined 4-H. He noted his sister Wilma joined a different club because there were separate clubs for boys and girls. After completing a year of community college and planning to study law, he participated in a 4-H International Farm Youth Exchange Program that took him to Wales and England for 6 months. During the trip, he decided to major in agriculture, according to his oral history interview in 2008.
He earned his B.S. in animal husbandry from UC Davis in 1955, then joined the Army for two years. In 1957, Rendell joined UC Cooperative Extension as a 4-H farm advisor in San Bernardino County. In the early 1960s, he was awarded a 4-H fellowship, which he used to earn his master's degree in public administration from American University in Washington, D.C. In 1966, he was appointed UCCE director for San Bernardino County overseeing 11 advisors as UCCE began efforts to serve more diverse populations of Californians.
After Prop. 13 passed in 1978, limiting property tax, county budgets were reduced. Rendell expected the county to cut UCCE's budget by 44%. “We were fortunate in that two of the five supervisors were former 4-H club members,” he recalled in his oral history, and 4-H and the Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program were popular with urban supervisors. “So we actually, in San Bernardino County, got an increase.”
In 1978, he was promoted to regional director. In 1985, he became a 4-H advisor and later added county director responsibilities in Los Angeles County, where he served until retiring in 1997.
“He and Katie Speers [then 4-H advisor in Los Angeles County] started the first 4-H-run afterschool program in the country,” said Sue Manglallan, UCCE 4-H advisor emeritus. “California led the way for 4-H to administer and support curriculum in programs in many states.”
Gifts in memory of Rendell may be made to the University of California 4-H program. To read more about his career, see his oral history at https://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/roho/ucb/text/rendell_george.pdf. For more about his life, visit https://obituaries.neptunesociety.com/obituaries/san-pedro-ca/george-rendell-11167922.