- Author: Wendy Powers
I arrived in Albuquerque Sunday afternoon. It was surprisingly cool here for the first 12 hours. While that has changed, 3 years in the desert that is California has acclimated me. Keith and Bill Frost, and Jean Marie Peltier are here with Glenda and I. Today's meeting started with a brainstorming session about the future direction of the Western Center for Metropolitan Extension and Research (WCMER); Keith is the California rep on the Center's Advisory Board but a number of others from UC ANR are involved with the center in various ways.
WCMER has been around for about 5 years so it is time to reflect on all that the Center has accomplished while simultaneously thinking about future needs without feeling chained to the past. What was most interesting about the morning discussions was the repeated acknowledgement that ‘urban issues' aren't much different from ‘rural issues'. Rather, a different delivery mechanism from the traditional Extension model used historically in rural Extension programs is needed to affect change in urban areas.
The rest of the week is meetings plus a tour on Wednesday afternoon. On Tuesday evening we have a cultural presentation during the group dinner. I can't remember where the tour will take us but by the time Wednesday comes I will be eager to not sit in meetings.
During the recognition lunch David Haviland and team will be recognized for their IPM work as recipients of the Western Extension Directors Association Award of Excellence. Congratulations to the group for their accomplishments! Be sure to check out the website in a few weeks to read the award abstract for the team.
Welcome to Amer Fayad who started today as the new Director, Western Integrated Pest Management Center! Amer is located in the Davis UC ANR building. California is fortunate to be the current home for the Western IPM Center.
One thing UC ANR doesn't have is a Chile Pepper CE Specialist. I was surprised to learn that New Mexico State University has a Research Specialist that focuses on chile peppers. And, NMSU has a Program Specialist, too! The positions are key to the Chile Pepper Institute whose mission it is to ‘educate the world about chile peppers'. I think those who grew up in the Southwest best appreciate the value of such an institute.
- Author: Wendy Powers
Yard work season is in full swing. That means research agricultural field research is underway as well. It doesn't look like water will be a big concern this year. I'm hoping my yard is ‘under control' by Memorial Day to avoid weeding, pruning, and tree trimming during the heat. In spite of yard work, I made progress on the dossier reviews. I am halfway through with 39 packages left to undergo my first review.
Today was the first meeting of new UC ANR Governing Council. The 6-hr long session was intended for the Council to get to know each other and UC ANR. Both Glenda and Tu gave overviews of our high-level goals, programs, funding sources, and expenditures. While all, or most, of the Council members know a fair bit about UC ANR, the details were likely informative to all. The fact that Cooperative Extension is a 3-way partnership between federal and state governments and the local community (county) may be a detail that was unknown to some of the Council members before today. Numbers of academics and staff largely depends upon the level of support provided by each of the three partners. Should one partner step away, the entire partnership is compromised.
During the Western Extension Directors Association meeting last week in San Diego, I learned that the Extension Director in Nevada had made tremendous progress demonstrating the value that Cooperative Extension brings to the state. Though Cooperative Extension was slated to receive a 72% cut to its state funding back in 2011 (proposed by the Provost; a 33% cut proposed by the Governor), it appears that things have turned around mainly due to County support for programs. Clark County (Las Vegas) is partnering with Cooperative Extension to address youth violence by providing Cooperative Extension a $60 million contract to solve the problem through its 4-H program and sub-contractors on an as-needed basis. Also, the Director requests a $4.7 million increase from the State. I grabbed a copy of the 1-page ask to review and share with others.
Other states are in a very different position. The University of Alaska is merging Cooperative Extension and the Ag Experiment Station. That by itself isn't a problem. It is the intent to downsize both that causes concern. One of the three campuses plans to close, and while Fairbanks has not declared exigency, some speculate that tenured faculty may lose their jobs. The thought that field-based academics may be released when their communities need them most is of great concern.
These conversations as well as others throughout the 2-day meeting reminded me that while we may not have the density of positions per capita or square mile as other states, we do support our people very well, offering travel funds, grants support, program evaluation support, and many training opportunities.
Tomorrow I head to Denver for an Extension administrators meeting before visiting with the team in San Bernardino County.
- Author: Wendy Powers
There is still time to raise your hand in support of California's 4-H program! It's easy. It's free. And if can result in a $20,000 award to the state program to support youth development in California.
I'm in San Diego at the spring meeting of Extension program leaders, Extension directors, and Ag Experiment Station Directors. The views are great and the water really close. Yesterday we spent the afternoon talking about increasing cultural competency in our states. The discussion had quite a bit of focus around increasing partnerships with the 1994 institutions and increasing capacity funding through the Federally Recognized Tribal Extension Program (FRTEP). The whole conversation had me thinking about our one of our public value statements: Developing an inclusive and equitable society. When that statement was first developed there was considerable discussion about the principles as a component of everything we do; the act of inclusion without giving it any thought because it is second nature is the indicator that one is culturally competent. Admittedly, I questioned why, as a core value, we would have a stand-alone public value statement around inclusion. However, as I listened to the conversations yesterday and this morning, it became clear to me that by calling this out as a one of our UC ANR statements, we make the commitment to move the needle.
A portion of the conversation centered on the need for the academic review system to reward for impact and teamwork. I honestly don't remember how we moved to such acknowledgment when the topic was cultural competence, but that's how meetings go. I do know that at UC ANR we are doing exactly this; questioning the ‘so what' of our work and the change in conditions that resulted as opposed to focusing on evidence of scholarship (i.e. the number of publications and grant dollars secured). We've seen the value of our impact stories when we've made visits to offices of our state and federal elected officials. The impacts, not the activities, cause people sit up and take notice. Fortunately, we have many stories to tell, ranging from work with the Fresno Street Saints to efforts to improving water use efficiency.
Some of the conversation addressed the problems of using an ‘expert model' in community work. I think framing about our work, even if only in our internal conversations, under knowledge areas serves to perpetuate the expert model. Framing our work around condition changes and/or public value statements avoids said problems.
If put to a vote today whether to leave ‘Developing an inclusive and equitable society' as its own public value statement or to consider it inherent within the others, I believe I would raise my hand to leave it as is.
- Author: Wendy Powers
Please welcome Joy Hollingsworth to UC ANR. Joy starts today, April 1st, as CE Nutrient Management and Soil Quality Advisor, based in Fresno, with programmatic responsibilities in Fresno, Kings, Madera and Tulare Counties. Today marks the third consecutive Monday when a CE Advisor has begun their career with UC ANR!
The table below tells the story about our academic footprint over the last 18 months or so. We are down a bit in CE Advisor numbers compared to the end of October. The good news is that CE Specialist numbers are up and non-CE ANR academic numbers continue to increase. The most significant decline is in the number of AES researchers. Honestly, I can't account for the full reduction in CE Advisor numbers; I will need to look into this a bit. The date of data collection makes a difference in the numbers. It will be another quarter before we have updated data that reflect the three recent CE Advisor additions. I estimate that those data will appear in a June post, shortly before the traditional retirement date.
Headcounts |
Oct-17 |
Jan-18 |
Apr-18 |
Jul-18 |
Oct 18 |
Jan-19 |
CE Advisors |
169 |
170 |
173 |
169 |
175 |
171 |
Academic Administrators |
7 |
7 |
7 |
6 |
7 |
7 |
Academic Coordinators |
34 |
31 |
31 |
31 |
31 |
30 |
CE Specialists |
112 |
112 |
112 |
111 |
115 |
118 |
Non-CE ANR Academics (Researchers, Project Scientists, non-CE Specialists) |
8 |
6 |
6 |
9 |
11 |
13 |
AES |
579 |
576 |
577 |
568 |
565 |
560 |
Total CE (Advisors + AA + AC + Specialists) |
322 |
320 |
323 |
317 |
328 |
326 |
Total (AES + CE + Non-CE ANR Academics) |
909 |
902 |
906 |
894 |
904 |
899 |
What doesn't appear above are the numbers of Community Education Specialists across the state. These are some of our most important members of UC ANR and often those conducting some of the most visible programmings. A number of these individuals work in the EFNEP program, which happens to be celebrating its 50th anniversary. Meet EFNEP Youth Educator Adan Osoria of Alameda County to learn more about the program. The EFNEP team has been busy working with the News and Outreach in Spanish team to produce a series of videos. In the “Estamos Contigo – We Are With You” series, EFNEP educators share about the impact of their work on their communities as well as their personal lives. This series was produced in English and Spanish to show our communities that we are with them in their journey towards raising healthy families and living healthy lives. Be sure to take a look.
I'm in San Diego this week for the regional experiment station directors meeting, followed by the MultiState Research Committee meeting, and finally the regional extension directors meeting. In between, I will be reading some of my remaining 47 merit and promotion packages. It is Academic Coordinator week!
- Author: Wendy Powers
Next week I am heading to Redding and north to spend some time with Larry Forero, Yana Valachovic and their offices. The United flight I was on earlier this week ran an advertisement for Redding on the video entertainment system which has me once again in awe of the resources in California. But the state has nothing over UC ANR as far as impressing me. Last week seemed to be full of recognitions for a number of people in UC ANR. Here's just a few that you may or may not have heard about:
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Tim Paine, professor and AES researcher at UC Riverside, was named the inaugural Tokuji and Bettie L. Furuta Endowed Chair, recognizing his work in IPM for woody ornamentals. It was a really nice reception with Furuta family members present and a strong turnout from Dr. Paine's colleagues. John Kabashima and Loren Oki, to name just two, were among presenters who had great memories to share of both Dr. Furuta and Dr. Paine. Dr. Paine gave an eloquent acceptance speech; highlighting that is was collaborations throughout his career that fostered his success.
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David Lewis, UCCE watershed advisor and County Director of UCCE in Marin and Napa Counties, was named one of the two recipients for the 2017 Bradford Rominger Agricultural Sustainability Leadership Award by the Agricultural Sustainability Institute. The award recognizes the work David has done to help communities find practical, science-based ways to protect salmon habitat from agricultural erosion, cleaning up oyster beds polluted by dairy operations, riparian ecosystem restoration and conservation, and water quality planning to protect the Napa and Sonoma Rivers. Way to go David!
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Sheri Zidenberg-Cherr, CE Specialist at UC Davis, was awarded the 2017 Academic Federation Award for Excellence in Research in recognition of the impact and significance of her recent work on school nutrition education and scientific literacy, school gardens to teach nutrition, and multicomponent interventions to reduce the incidence of childhood obesity. Congratulations Sheri!
I suspect I missed some recognitions so if you are aware of any, please feel free to share as a Comment to this blog.
And while those recognitions are acknowledgement of career successes, a number of new hires are just beginning their UC ANR careers. While attending the Western Extension Directors Association spring meeting this week we met with the Western Region Program Leaders Council (UC is represented by Chris Greer) and heard about the many, many plans that group has to develop resources for new, and experienced, academics including program evaluation and assessment videos and a new idea to develop an innovative way of sharing program approaches and successes that could have multiple uses, would be peer-reviewed and is an outlet for deliverables that are focused on engagement beyond what a journal article can provide. Here's just one example of their work to develop resources: http://extension.wsu.edu/wrpl/.
Enjoy your day off tomorrow in recognition of Caesar Chavez. If you get a chance, try to locate and watch “The Wrath of Grapes”. Did I mention that the Western Extension Directors Association spring meeting was held in Kona? There are definitely some advantages to being located in the Western Region. I wouldn't be surprised if the Midwestern Region meeting is held in someplace like Mankato or Omaha – equally as expensive to get to without the view. So before I head back and get some more reading done on the flight, I am going to take advantage of the 3-day weekend and go up 14,000 feet or so to see what snow pack remains on Mauna Kea. Hopefully the ‘vog' isn't too thick.