Emergency Preparedness Winners Announced

Anthony Do, In Home Support Services

Many of you answered the call to prepare for an emergency, and for five lucky employees, preparedness came with added benefits. Each won a deluxe emergency survival kit for their efforts in the month-long preparedness campaign, which is especially critical here in San Diego with the threat of wildfires and other disasters.

The winners of the opportunity drawing were Maribel Cuadras-Manriquez with Family Resource Center - South Bay, Anthony Do with Aging & Independence Services, Tanya Kunz with the Public Defender, Cesar Ortega with HHSA’s Tuberculosis Control program and Arturo Torres with the Family Resource Center – Southeast.

Tanya Kunz, Office of the Public Defender

The prize included a tent, two sleeping bags, lantern, hand crank and solar powered radio with USB charger for cellphones, first aid kit and more.

While the drawing is over, there is still time to win by making sure you and your family are ready for a disaster.

Follow these four simple steps:

  • Make a Plan: Complete a family disaster plan.
  • Build a Kit: Your preparedness “go kit” should be organized and ready to grab during an emergency such as an earthquake or wildfire. The kit should be sufficient to sustain you, your family and your pets for a minimum of 72 hours.
  • Be Informed: Register your cellphone number for AlertSanDiego. Download the SD Emergency app. Bookmark the County’s emergency website. And follow the County on Twitter.
  • Get Involved: There are countless ways to get involved. You could find your office’s emergency exits, review your office’s Continuity of Operations Plan (COOP), join the County’s Advanced Recovery Initiative to help during a disaster or volunteer with CERT.

For more information, visit the Office of Emergency Services on InSite.

Sharing Our Goals

You’ve probably heard the expression about getting everyone in the boat to row in the same direction. In a huge organization like ours, doing such a wide variety of stuff, it makes an enormous difference. Taking the idea literally for a moment, picture 17,000 or so of us with oars in the water and the wake we’d make pulling together. 

We’re also an organization driven by goals. Every department has them. And they all in some way support our four big strategic initiatives: healthy families, safe communities, sustainable environments and operational excellence.

Now – what if instead of each department having just its own goals, we came up with a set of goals that combined some of the different things departments do? Keeping with that notion of everyone rowing toward the same point.   

That’s exactly what we’ve started doing with this new fiscal year, and we have a name for it: enterprise-wide goals.

The idea is that these goals go across departments. Sometimes a couple departments, sometimes several. They all have a part in achieving one goal.

It’s not like working together is new ground for us. We’ve had numerous successful partnerships between departments, and we’re always cooperating in countless ways.   

What is new is the whole framework for lining up our many efforts and steering us where we want to go. It now sets the structure for, and ties together, everything in our operational plan.

Let’s look at one example. Under Sustainable Environments, one enterprise-wide goal involves finding ways for residents to be civically engaged and work with us on challenges. Multiple departments are taking on facets of that. Health and Human Services will train people to deliver its Resident Leadership Academy, which teaches people how to create positive change in their communities. Parks will build civic responsibility through a series of volunteer activities. The Registrar will work with community organizations to increase voter registration. The Citizens Law Enforcement Review Board will expand awareness of its role through stakeholder outreach.

You see there are different departments, each doing what they do, but working toward that same goal of civic engagement.

That’s just one example. Under each strategic initiative are several enterprise-wide goals. And each of those goals has those cross-departmental objectives feeding into it. Our op plan lays it out quite neatly, and it’s easy to trace how everything connects.

One really great thing about this is how the whole design came together. The Board of Supervisors sets policy. Our executive leadership team translates that into our County vision and came up with the goals. Our strategic planning support team refined that, then pulled together a cross-section of County employees representing every department. They were put into focus groups to work out the departments’ objectives. It’s a plan for the organization – by the organization.        

You know, the variety of operations you get in a local government like ours beats anything you see in the largest corporations. With so many very different kinds of jobs, sometimes it can be hard to see how each one fits in to help us reach our big vision: creating a region that’s healthy, safe and thriving. These enterprise-wide goals make that connection much more clear.

I know you’re all rowing hard. With this new help steering our efforts, I can’t wait to see how far we’ll go in the year ahead.

Don’t Miss Chance to Win Emergency Preparedness Kit

Are You Ready? For the past four weeks, we’ve asked you to better prepare yourself and your family for a disaster with four simple tasks: make a plan, build a kit, be informed and get involved.

If you haven’t taken any of the steps, there’s still time to check at least one off the list and enter the drawing for a deluxe emergency preparedness kit, which includes a two-person tent, two sleeping bags, radio, first aid kit and more. Preparedness is especially critical with dangerous fire conditions here in our county and major wildfires in other parts of the state.

To enter the drawing, you’ll need to complete one or more of the actions below, and then submit your entry online by Aug. 7. Five winners will be selected at random.

  • Make a Plan: Complete a family disaster plan.

  • Build a Kit: Your preparedness “go kit” should be organized and ready to grab during an emergency such as an earthquake or wildfire. The kit should be sufficient to sustain you, your family and your pets for a minimum of 72 hours.

  • Be Informed: Register your cellphone number for AlertSanDiego.Download the SD Emergency app.Bookmark the County’s emergency website.And follow the County on Twitter.

  • Get Involved: There are countless ways to get involved. You could find your office’s emergency exits, review your office’s Continuity of Operations Plan (COOP), join the County’s Advanced Recovery Initiative to help during a disaster or volunteer with CERT.

For more information about these steps and the campaign, visit Emergency Preparedness page on InSite.

Get Ready to Thrive Across America

It’s time to hit the ground running. Thrive Across America is back for San Diego County employees!

Thrive Across America is an online program where participants log physical activity and progress along a virtual route across the United States. The trail this year is new. We’re traveling from the Cohos Trail in New Hampshire to Kings Canyon—here in California.

“Whether you are an elite athlete or just starting out, Thrive Across America can motivate you to get moving and keep moving,” said William Erese, wellness program coordinator. “Plus this popular program is a lot of fun.”

Participants are urged to do at least 30 minutes of physical activity, five days a week. Each day you record 30 or more minutes of physical activity, you earn a star. The more stars you earns, the higher your score and the farther you “travel” across the country. Plus, there are prizes for your efforts.

Registration and team formation is open through Aug. 16. Team participation, which requires four to 10 members, is optional.

Participants may begin recording activity on Monday, August 3. Record minutes online or on your smartphone. Download the Thrive Across America app from the App Store or Android Market—and log from the gym, trail or home.

The competition runs eight weeks through Sept. 27.

This Employee Wellness program is one of the activities you must participate in to be eligible for the end of year beach cruiser bike opportunity drawing for 2015.

For more information, surf over to Thrive Across America to read the “about this program” and “question and answer” sections or visit the Employee Wellness site.

High-Profile Crime Scenes Frame DPW Photographer's Career

Robert Feuerstein works in the Department of Public Works Cartographic Services as a webmaster and photographic audio/visual specialist. Before joining the County, Feuerstein worked in the Los Angeles County District Attorney's office and worked on …

Robert Feuerstein works in the Department of Public Works Cartographic Services as a webmaster and photographic audio/visual specialist. Before joining the County, Feuerstein worked in the Los Angeles County District Attorney's office and worked on some of the highest profile criminal cases of the past few decades.

He’s been witness to the aftermaths of some of the biggest crimes in southern California over the past few decades but the highlight of Robert Feuerstein’s career as a criminal photographer might have been meeting his wife at a crime scene.

Feuerstein, who works as a webmaster and photographic audio/visual specialist for the San Diego County Department of Public Works, previously worked for the Los Angeles District Attorney’s office and photographed the crime scenes for the trials of O.J. Simpson, the Menendez brothers and Heidi Fleiss.

“I met my wife at a crime scene when I was working for the DA’s office,” he said. “She caught her boss stealing money from a casino and she was in charge of what they call the ‘eye in the sky’ – the surveillance cameras.”

It was Feuerstein’s job to go out to the casino, view the videotape evidence and get the necessary footage and images that showed the man taking the money. Like most cases, it required he work long hours. 

“I spent two days there and I was hungry,” he said. “She (his future wife) said, ‘You want something to eat? I’ll take you out.’”

Their dinner discussion quickly turned to photography, a passion they both shared.

“We got to know each other and we got married down the pipeline.”

Feuerstein’s photography skills developed early. He was initially interested in taking photos because his father took it up as a hobby and curiosity got the best of him.

“My dad would close the bathroom door and I didn’t know what was going on in there, and then all of the sudden he would come out with some film negatives and that started me with photography,” Feuerstein said.

He quickly became known as the audio/visual guy around school and started to expand his skill set.

“I lived in Redondo Beach and Torrance and I had a lot of friends that were surfing and I was taking a lot of pictures of them,” he said.

That was where Feuerstein would have his first brush with fame and realize that photography was talent that got him access to places he wouldn’t normally be able to experience.

One of the other guys photographing surfers at the same time was Bruce Brown. Brown is widely credited with changing society’s impression of surfers with his surfing photography and movies, including the classic Endless Summer.

Feuerstein also befriended the crew of the Goodyear Blimp, which was anchored in nearby Gardena. He would go photograph the airship and crew and they in turn provided him with free rides. Riding his bike from Redondo Beach to Gardena, he met Carroll Shelby, the designer of the Shelby Mustangs for the Ford Motor Company, who did all his design work in a garage across from the blimp base.

“This thing has opened up doors,” he said. “I’ve been places most people have never been.”

Not long after that, Feuerstein was doing photography for local newspapers that got him access to the Academy Awards and NBA games. Once he entered El Camino Junior College, he photographed anything that happened on campus and that allowed him to meet Ansel Adams who was appearing at the campus theater.

While going to school he worked several jobs gaining skills in several areas of the photography business, and it was at one of those jobs that he made the connection that led to his 18-year career as a crime scene photographer. He would develop film for a police officer who mentioned there was an opening for a photographer in the DA’s office.

He quickly learned there was no such thing as a routine day and you had to be prepared to work long hours on a moment’s notice.

“You come to work and you’re doing your routine and then all of the sudden you get a call on a Friday afternoon, ‘Bob, hop in the car, you’re going to a crime scene with me.’ And it’s the OJ Simpson case.”

He got involved with the case when Simpson’s maid testified during trial that she saw him come home and enter the house the night of the murders. Feuerstein had to go photograph and document what the maid saw out the window and ended up putting in an 18-hour day.

“This is what the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department’s criminal photographers do day in and day out,” he said. “They’re doing their lab work, they’re doing their testing and then all of the sudden they get a call and they’re out at a crime scene 12 to 30 hours without any sleep, and that’s an average crime scene.”

Feuerstein said every case is handled the same way. There is a procedure that is followed and it’s the job of the photographer to frame the evidence as neutrally as possible.

“I don’t care what the name of the person is, or what the body is or whatever,” he said. “I have to treat it as a technical problem that I have to solve and my mental emotions have to be in control.

“I can’t get wrapped up with what’s going on around me. That’s not my job.”

Even though he’s not actively working crime scenes anymore, it doesn’t mean Feuerstein has slowed down any. He assists the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department and the Public Defender’s office with video and audio enhancement and data recovery. He documents major road projects for the County.

He also spends plenty of time teaching others, including helping the County’s Department of Agriculture, Weights & Measures or Department of Planning Services inspectors who have to go out and photograph evidence of infractions.

“I teach them how to photograph with whatever camera they have - anything from a cell phone to a $3,000 camera.”

He’s also a popular request for presentations at several County library branches. He shares everything from tales of crime scenes to what cameras to buy around the holidays or how to use photo editing software.

“Being a photographer – there’s more to it than meets the eye,” Feuerstein said. “There are a lot of things people take for granted in images, but a good photographer knows how to control all (the elements) and know how what the end results in going to be in his head and make it turn out that way somehow.”

Employee Wellness Gets Cookin’ in LMS

Beat the heat by getting out and grilling this summer season. Employee Wellness recently cooked up an appetizing lunch-and-learn class focused on healthy eats made on the grill. And now you can watch that cooking demonstration on LMS.

The video features four delicious dishes: gazpacho shooters with tomatoes and peaches, grilled veggie and quinoa salad with basil lemon dressing, grilled Portobello burgers with sun-dried tomato pesto, and a summery sweet dessert of grilled peaches, raspberry sauce and whipped coconut cream.

Search for “2015 Q2 Cooking Demo” to watch during your break. Attending at least one Healthy Cooking Demonstration or watching it on LMS is one of the requirements to enter the Employee Wellness opportunity drawing for a beach cruiser.

For more information on wellness programs, visit the Employee Wellness site.

'Fitness Fanatic' Rides Across California

Dave Krosch, a workers compensation adjuster, has strength, endurance and commitment. Krosch has competed in 300 triathlons, including five Ironman races, and countless other fun runs including the Tough Mudder and Spartan Races.

The self-proclaimed fitness fanatic has spent up to 25 hours per week, largely by himself, training for big races. He got into competitive swimming, biking and running in the mid-1980s. But these days, he has a workout partner who proves that fitness is in his blood.

“It’s been fun for me to train with someone else—it’s been so much fun to train with my 11-year-old son, Sam,” said Krosch.

There is no doubt that Krosch has passed on his natural athleticism, love of fitness, sense of adventure, and competitive spirit to his son. Sam participates in wresting and football, and enjoys biking and running.

“He’s a long-time athlete, having run across finish lines with me when he was small at various races and having run a 10:29 mile at 3 years old,” said Krosch.

During the week, the two lace up their sneakers after work or school for quality time together on a run or bike ride. And on weekends, they’re off to 5K races or longer competitions.

One of the most memorable races was a “Ride Across California” this spring, said Krosch. The two rode 267 miles from the Arizona border to the coast in San Diego County with a group of Sam’s peers. The event for 5th grade riders from the Poway Unified School District is sponsored by the Rancho Family YMCA in Rancho Penasquitos.

Krosch explained that the group pedaled 20 to 54 miles each day for 7 days. And every night they stopped to camp underneath the Southern California stars. All of the riders were accompanied by an adult and most had a “chase driver” carrying gear and extra food and drinks. The father and son pair made it a family affair—Krosch’s wife Jeanne followed the route.

“The ride started by dipping our rear wheels in the Colorado River at the Arizona-California border and finished by dipping our front wheels in the Pacific Ocean at Moonlight Beach in Encinitas,” Krosch explained.

“It was a pretty emotional week watching my son do so well, and just generally spending 7 straight days, mostly all day with him,” he said.

The two are focused, driven and even a little obsessed with training. Krosch gets in an average of 11 workouts per week, several while at work.

“I use the gym here at COC five times a week to lift weights or as a launching point for runs around Kearny Mesa, so the gym is an awesome benefit,” Krosch said, who has also participated in several Employee Wellness campaigns such as Thrive Across America.

While at work, he also gets outside to run the stairs in the parking garage.  One of his favorite quick workouts is 2,500 stairs and 100 push-ups.

What is your secret to fitness success? Do you have a fitness buddy or take advantage of County gym space? Let us know in the comment section below.