LAKE COUNTY
Library Literacy Program offers Americorps positions
The Lake County Library Literacy Program is recruiting for two quarter-time Americorps members to serve a one-year commitment. Members will tutor adults to improve literacy skills, recruit adult learners and volunteer tutors, and assist with other programs and operations including the Family Literacy program and community outreach.
The position will serve at the Lakeport Library with the potential to travel to other library branches in Upper Lake, Clearlake, and Middletown to support learners countywide. This position requires 450 hours per year, approximately 10 hours per week. Americorps members receive a modest bi-weekly living allowance to cover basic expenses.
The Literacy Program has partnered with the California Library Literacy Services (CLLS) and Literacyworks to participate in Americorps, a federally-funded program administered in California by California Volunteers, the State Commission charged with engaging Californians in service, volunteering, and civic action to tackle our state’s most pressing challenges. This Initiative is a collaboration between several different entities for AmeriCorps members to assist CLLS programs in the COVID-19 recovery process over a three-year period.
Applicants should have a strong interest in literacy and/or community outreach and be good at building rapport with diverse groups of people. Interested candidates can learn more about the positions at https://www.volunteermatch.org/search/opp3605653.jsp, or by contacting the Lake County Library’s Literacy Program at 707-263-7633 or literacy@lakecountyca.gov.
Visit the Adult Literacy Program’s page on the Lake County Library website at http://library.lakecountyca.gov.
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CALIFORNIA
Major votes intensify California climate controversies
If there’s one thing Thursday made clear, it’s that climate policy and controversy go hand in hand in California.
Depending on whom you ask, the two major actions state regulators took Thursday are either indicative of California “leading the world’s most significant economic transformation since the Industrial Revolution” (as Gov. Gavin Newsom put it) or represent “a complete retreat from California’s unrivaled position of leadership in the clean energy revolution” (as Ken Cook, president of the Environmental Working Group, described the state’s new rooftop solar rules).
What are those new rules? In the final installment of what some have described as “a kind of solar rooftop Hunger Games,” the California Public Utilities Commission voted unanimously to overhaul the state’s 27-year-old residential solar rules — reducing payments to homeowners for excess power but providing nearly $1 billion in incentives to encourage more solar projects for low-income homes, CalMatters’ Julie Cart reports.
Almost all of the comments delivered during the intense, hours-long meeting were in opposition — and neither utility companies nor solar advocates emerged happy.
- Kathy Fairbanks, spokesperson for Affordable Clean Energy for All, a coalition that includes California’s three largest utility companies: “This final decision was a missed opportunity that will prolong the harm to low-income Californians and renters for decades to come.”
- Bernadette Del Chiaro, executive director of the California Solar & Storage Association: The new rules “will result in business closures and the loss of green jobs.”
- Public Utilities Commissioner Clifford Rechtschaffen: “The decision strikes the right balance between many competing priorities and advances our overarching goals of ensuring California meets its climate and clean energy goals equitably.”
The divisive vote comes as California races to shore up its fragile energy grid — which narrowly escaped rolling blackouts this summer and remains at high risk of energy shortfalls during peak demand, according to a Thursday report from the North American Electric Reliability Corporation — while simultaneously relying more on solar power as part of its plan for achieving carbon neutrality.
Just how fast will that transition be? Well, the sweeping, ambitious blueprint approved unanimously by the California Air Resources Board calls for slashing the state’s greenhouse gas emissions by 48% below 1990 levels by 2030, up from the 40% reduction currently required by state law.
To meet the plan’s targets, state officials estimate that California over the next 20 years will need about 30 times more electric vehicles, six times more household electric appliances and four times more wind and solar generation capacity, CalMatters’ Nadia Lopez reports. The estimated cost: $18 billion in 2035 and $27 billion in 2045.
- Air Resources Board Member Daniel Sperling: “This is an extraordinary exercise and document, and it’s the most comprehensive, detailed plan for getting to net zero anywhere in the world.”
- But many members of the public who spoke during the eight-hour meeting opposed the plan’s reliance on carbon capture, a controversial strategy to capture emissions from oil refineries and other facilities and inject the carbon deep into rocks underground. Critics say that approach merely prolongs the lifespan of fossil fuel plants.
- Olivia Seideman, a climate policy advocate at Leadership Counsel for Justice and Accountability: “California’s shiny new climate strategies still sacrifice low-income and communities of color with increased pollution across the state.”
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