Showing posts with label California. Show all posts
Showing posts with label California. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Shake, Rattle, and Roll

Well Southern California got into the shaking action of 2010 with a bit of a bang Sunday with our very own grouping of earthquake events. With a 7.2M quake in Baja (the biggest earthquake I've ever felt) and a series of related events within minutes in Imperial County just Southeast of San Diego, its been a shaky couple of days.

With Twitter and Facebook on everyone's phones, it blew my mind how fast information travelled. Within a couple of minutes I was getting phone calls and texts from friends and family far and wide, checking that we were okay or, more commonly, comparing notes. Within a minute after the shaking stopped I had 20 friends on Facebook documenting the quake, and each of us racing to post USGS magnitude maps and links. It reminds me of the last big quake I was in, and how each of us in our office raced to our computers to see where the epicenter was and what the magnitude was.

For those of us who have lived through enough of these kinds of long and rolling earthquakes, they can come out as adrenaline pumping and sometimes even kind of fun experiences - only because damage is limited and no one gets seriously hurt. By the next day everyone (including myself) is complaining because aftershocks kept waking us or our pets and we all find our houses shaking to be annoying. Maybe that's why our out of state relatives think we are crazy granola eating hippies - because we find that the result of the Earth's tectonic plates shifting is a pain in our sides and gets in the way or our daily routines. Whatever the case, I'll take Sunday's 7.2 roller over a tornado any day.

Whatever the human response, the amount of energy being released along the San Andreas down here in So Cal is pretty impressive this week. Here's a map from the USGS:

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Destruction of higher education in California

An op-ed piece in the LA Times that struck a chord:

"California's higher-education debacle:
Watching the decline of the California State University system from within its boardroom mirrors the erosion of the California dream.

For nearly six years, I have served on the Board of Trustees of the California State University system -- the last two as its chairman. This experience has been more than just professional; it has been a deeply personal one. With my term ending soon, I need to share my concern -- and personal pain -- that California is on the verge of destroying the very system that once made this state great.

For more of the op-ed by Jeff Bleich, Chairman of the CSU Board of Trustees visit the LA TIMES