Shop at AmazonSmile and Support CECO

Donating to charity is as easy as a smile. Simply shop on AmazonSmile and a portion of the sale will go to the County Employee’ Charitable Organization (CECO).

AmazonSmile functions the same as Amazon, but the online retailer donates 0.5 percent of purchases to a charity of your choice. You don’t pay anything extra. So get shopping! Smiles are just an online purchase away!

Using AmazonSmile is easy.

  1. Instead of visiting the standard Amazon website, go to smile.amazon.com.

  2. Sign in to your Amazon account or create one.

  3. If it is your first visit, pick your own charitable organization. Type “San Diego County Employees' Charitable Organization” or “CECO” as your charity.

  4. Shop as you normally would! (You will see eligible products marked as “Eligible for AmazonSmile donation” on product detail pages.)

  5. Save the AmazonSmile link as a favorite and always shop from there.

CECO donates all the money it collects to community organizations and employees in need. See recent recipients.

There are several other ways to support CECO throughout the year. Make a biweekly donation via payroll deductions for as little as $2 per pay period. See CECO pledge instructions. Or you could make a one-time donation by contacting your CECO Department Representative or a member of the CECO Executive Committee.

Employee Wellness Softball Tournament Is a Hit

Team Scared Hitless won the 2017 Employee Wellness Intramural Softball Tournament.

Sixteen teams took the field at Sweetwater Lane County Park on Sunday in the first-ever Employee Wellness Intramural Softball Tournament. The day-long event was a sure hit!

Congratulations to team Scared Hitless for clinching the championship. The runner-up was team Center City.

Scared Hitless Team Roster:

  1. Cecil Ashley, Protective Services Worker

  2. Loriann Carroll, Senior Protective Services Worker

  3. Jose Cintron, Protective Services Worker

  4. Steven Gachette, Protective Services Worker

  5. Rosina Flores, Assessment Clerk

  6. Brian Morris, Protective Services Worker

  7. Jade Nieto, Protective Services Supervisor, CWS South Region

  8. Carlos Olmeda Jr., Program Specialist II

  9. Lisa Quadros, Protective Services Worker

  10. Richard Pagdilao, Protective Services Worker

  11. Lisa Salsbury, Protective Services Worker

  12. Chris Soriano, Admin Analyst II

  13. Nicole Turner, Protective Services Worker

  14. Karlis Thorpe, Protective Services Worker

  15. Sergio Vazquez, Human Services Specialist

Miss out on the fun? Don’t worry, you can click through the gallery.

Catch the Employee Softball Tourney This Weekend

Come out to the ballpark to cheer on your co-workers this Sunday at the County’s first-ever Intramural Softball Tournament. Sixteen teams will take the field and go to bat for the championship.

The tournament, which promotes camaraderie, teamwork and fun physical activity, will take place at Sweetwater Lane County Park, 1312 Sweetwater Lane, Spring Valley, CA 91977. Games start at 10:30 a.m. with the championship game taking place at approximately 7:15 p.m.

Join us for what promises to be an exciting, fun-filled day!

6 Reasons Why You Should Get a Flu Shot

So you still haven’t gotten your flu shot! What are you waiting for?

A higher number of flu cases is being reported in San Diego County compared to previous years. And things are likely to get worse during the holidays when more cases are typically reported.

There are many reasons to get vaccinated against influenza. Here are six of them:

  1. The flu shot is the best protection against getting sick.

  2. The flu is serious and can lead to severe complications, including death.

  3. Every year, about 200,000 people end up in the hospital due to the flu, even people who are not at high risk of developing complications.

  4. People die from the flu. Last season, 87 San Diegans died from complications due to influenza.

  5. Young kids and the elderly are at higher risk of getting seriously ill from the flu. Get them vaccinated, and get yourself vaccinated, too.

  6. The flu shot is safe. It can’t make you sick because the virus in the vaccome is inactive or dead.

Get your flu shot now before the virus starts to spread. Getting vaccinated is easy.

Call your medical provider to get a free vaccine. You can also get your flu shot a local retail pharmacy. If you are a Kaiser member, you can get vaccinated Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at KP Care Now, located on the 2nd Floor of the 5530 building in the County Operations Center. 

UPDATED: Help Needed to Count the Homeless

Last year, 515 County employees signed up to count homeless people in San Diego.

Were you one of them? If so, would you join again?

If not, will you help this time around?

The Board of Supervisors is once again encouraging County employees to volunteer and spend a few hours early in the morning to help count homeless people in the region. The annual Point-in-Time Count will take place Friday, Jan. 26, 2018 from 3:45 a.m. to 7 a.m.

The Board believes this is such a worthy cause that County employees who participate will be paid on County time.

The Point-in-Time Count is part of the Regional Task Force on the Homeless’s WeALLCount campaign. The annual count gives a snapshot in time of the number of people experiencing homelessness throughout the San Diego region. The numbers help the region apply for federal funding and identify solutions on how to best serve this at-risk population.

Last year, there were 9,116 homeless men, women and children in the San Diego region, the fourth largest homeless population in the nation behind New York City, Los Angeles and Seattle.

Volunteers will work in teams in specific locations and simply tally how many homeless people they see.

If you are interested in participating, review the registration guidelines and FAQs and then obtain approval from your supervisor via the supervisor approval form.

Once completed, you can register for the WeALLCount campaign on the Task Force’s website.

HHSA Employees Keep Food Pantries Well Stocked

Employees of the HHSA North Central Family Resource Center held a bake sale fundraiser to restock their food pantry. The employees all wore burgundy that day in a show of unity and raised nearly $150 to purchase easy-to-open and nutritious items. Most HHSA FRCs have food pantries - stocked entirely by employee contributions - to provide immediate help to homeless customers and those with emergency food needs.

Volunteer for the Warrior Hike on Veterans Day

The County’s got a way for you to give back on Veterans Day.

The Department of Parks and Recreation is looking for some volunteers to help out with this weekend’s Warrior Hike Challenge. They need people to help with check-in and “celebration stations” throughout the trails.

Volunteers should wear appropriate clothing to include layers, as it warms up. They should wear sturdy shoes or boots - no open toed footwear! Remember to wear hats and sunscreen and bring water and snacks. Our VALOR employee resource group will provide some snacks, as well.

Sound like a nice way to spend Veterans Day? Email Cheryl Wegner or call her up at 858-966-1335 for more information, including parking and signing up.  

It's Pie, Sale, Bake Off Time!

Buy a pie and give to a good cause. Or bake some goodies yourself and raise money for a good cause. Or maybe, compete to be the best County baker in the annual Great County Employees’ Charitable Organization Bake Off.

Heck, do all three! But you need to act fast to take part.

County employees can order a delicious Marie Callendar’s pie — apple, French apple, razzleberry, pumpkin, cherry or peach — for just $16 through 4 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 15 online. Proceeds will go to CECO to be given out to local charities. It’s the perfect way to give to those who need it and get the perfect desert for Thanksgiving at the same time.

You can pick up pies Tuesday, Nov. 21 in room 402A at the County Administration Center, building 5600 at the County Operations Center and at the Mills Building downtown. Just be sure to bring your Eventbrite receipt.

Meanwhile, the Great CECO Bake Off and the Bake Sale will both take place Wednesday Nov. 15 in room 402A at the County Administration Center at 1600 Pacific Highway.

If you want to take part — either by baking goodies to raise money for CECO, or to compete in the Bake Off — you need to email sdceco@sdcounty.ca.gov no later than Monday, Nov. 13.

The Bake Sale will take place from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and all proceeds from the sale will go to CECO to distribute to local charities. Bakers can drop their goods off and CECO volunteers will handle the sales. Last year’s event featured 20 to 30 different items, from brownies to cookies, cakes and pastries. (A delicious time was had by all.)

Entries for the Bake Off must be dropped off in 402A at the CAC between 7:30 a.m. and 9 a.m. Nov. 15. Entries must be home-made; multiple entries are allowed. Judging will be done between 9:30 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. and entries will be judged by taste.

The winner of the Bake Off will be announced Thursday, Nov. 16. The winner may be asked to share their award-winning recipe and get their picture taken with the judge.

So, come on! Give a little, get a lot! 

Employees Practice Running Disaster Shelter

If a disaster struck tomorrow, do you know where you would go if you couldn’t go home? According to a recent study by the County Office of Emergency Services, 17 percent of San Diego County residents said that in the event of an emergency evacuation, they wouldn’t know where to go.  

That’s why, during disasters, the County and community volunteers provide designated shelters for people and pets who have to evacuate due to wildfires, floods, or earthquakes.  In the 2007 wildfires, half a million County residents evacuated their homes, and thousands took shelter at the Del Mar Fairgrounds. During the devastating wildfires in Northern California a few  weeks ago, 43 different shelters opened.

But shelters wouldn’t be possible without trained disaster workers who are ready to jump in and help at a moment’s notice. So drills like the Shelter Team Exercise the County held recently are critical to keeping up with the demand for disaster shelters when the need arises.

Approximately 70  employees from the County came together at Golden Hall in downtown San Diego to practice setting up and running a realistic disaster shelter in a scenario most San Diegans know too well: wildfire.

“We tried to make it as real as we could,” said Julie Jeakle, OES’ Emergency Services Coordinator who ran the exercise. “These are all scenarios we’ve experienced in shelters before.”

Hundreds of County employees volunteer as trained shelter workers and managers, and the County provides trainings each quarter. The goal is to nearly triple the number of trained employees who would be available to respond in an emergency in the next few years.

One volunteer, Leonor Chairez, works by day as a licensed marriage and family therapist with Behavioral Health Services. She first volunteered two years ago to become a trained a shelter worker and was ready to help if called upon during the Northern California wildfires.

“It’s a passion of mine to help others, especially when they’re in need,” Chairez said. “I feel that part of our jobs as clinicians is to help in crisis.”

“You have to be prepared to drop what you’re doing and go help,” said HHSA Senior Office Assistant and shelter volunteer Tim Hahn. When he saw the recruitment for shelter volunteers on the County’s employee web page, he signed up.

“I just wanted to do something for the community,” he said.

Currently, over 240 County employees have been trained to act as emergency shelter workers and managers during a disaster, but there is still a need for volunteers. For more information on becoming a trained shelter worker and the County’s Advanced Recovery Initiative, check out OES’ InSite page. If you’re interested in volunteering as a shelter worker, fill out the Shelter Team application form and send it to the Office of Emergency Services. 

Protect the Public’s Information – and Your Own!

In the time it takes you to read this column, the County will block more than 500 incoming emails because they look like either spam or a more dangerous threat.

That adds up to millions – millions! – of attempts to get past our filters every month.

Much of the County’s business is about protecting the public. That includes protecting their information. This is not just a job for IT staff. It’s critical that each of us takes the steps needed to keep that information safe.

I also don’t want to see any of you personally ever fall victim to identity theft or scams. A lot of what I’m saying here about protecting our customers applies just as much to safeguarding your personal information. I hope you’ll be just as vigilant with both.

Even though the vast majority of spam email coming into the County gets blocked, some potentially harmful ones get through. I get them, and you probably have, too. Here’s an example:

Your e-mail ID exceeded its storage limit.  Click Here to Unblock and click on Submit to get more space or you won’t be able to send mail.

They ask you to click on something, or open an attachment. That’s all a hacker needs to get into our system and start to steal private information.

These emails have gotten more and more sophisticated. They’re no longer from a prince overseas promising to make you rich. Fraudsters are now able to make mails look as if they’re from County employees, even people you know. The messages sound like something they’d say. 

Especially dangerous are “phishing” emails. These ask for sensitive information like a password. Provide that, and you’ve just thrown the door open to thieves.

These are just a few examples of threats to our information. Protecting data has become one of the modern world’s biggest challenges. Security breaches at major companies or government agencies are now almost routine. The recent hack of credit reporting agency Equifax was just one of the latest. 

So, while we continue to fight this battle behind the scenes, we need everyone on the front line at the County to step up our guard. I’m raising the issue with all of you here, but we’re also introducing a set of three short trainings in the LMS that cover aspects of protecting private information. I strongly encourage you to take them. Technology will help us, but our security will depend on your understanding the risks and learning how to spot trouble. 

I won’t go into all the details, but the three topics are:

Privacy and Security. This covers the general concept of privacy rules about what we can share and security rules to keep it safe. This is not just digital. It includes things like leaving sensitive documents sitting on a copier. Or speaking about private matters in a way that could be overheard.

Mobile Devices. A smartphone is a little computer, and it is just as vulnerable to being hacked. The training’s tips include things to look for when downloading apps or when connecting to Wi-Fi, as well as settings you should disable when they’re not being used. 

Spam and Phishing. I mentioned these already, but there’s more to know. Like what to do if you get one of these mails. Don’t forward it to IT staff, or anyone else. Do send it, as an attachment, to spam@sdcounty.ca.gov. Then delete it. The training explains how to make it an attachment, if you’re not sure. We’ve also added a section on InSite’s Technology page as a quick reference.    

And about those phishing mails. Our Help Desk, or any legitimate organization, like major banks, will not ask for you to send password information in a mail. That’s an immediate red flag.

Millions of Americans are victims of identity theft each year. If it happens to you, remember that our Employee Assistance Program can help. Specialists can walk you through steps to resolve a case.

Living safely. That’s one of the three strategic initiatives that drive everything we do. It goes as much for information security as it does for any of the other ways we protect people. And as with any safety issue, the key is staying alert and informed. Think before you click!

 

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