Rock Out to Waterfront Park Playlist

Turn up your speakers for the Waterfront Park playlist. Each of the artists featured on this virtual mixtape have performed at Waterfront Park since it opened in May 2014—some at free events, others at ticketed festivals like CRSSD this weekend. The 20 eclectic tracks include everything from electronic to county and alternative rock—so sing along.

The playlist celebrates two years of fun and festivities at Waterfront Park, which is home to an expansive civic green, gardens, a children’s play zone, picnic tables and a spectacular 830-foot-long fountain.

Waterfront Park Playlist:

  1. “Say Hey (I Love You)” – Michael Franti & Spearhead – Soul Pose MLB All-Star Yoga -July 2016
  2. “I Don’t Want To Be” - Gavin DeGraw – Rock N Roll Marathon – June 2016
  3. “I Melt With You” – Jason Arimoto – San Diego Festival of the Arts – June 2016
  4. “Rise and Fall of Dr. Q-Tron” - GrooveSession – Brew and Food Fest – June 2016
  5. “Crazy Train” – Metalachi – Taco Fest – May 2016
  6. “Crossroads” – B-Side Players – Taco Fest – May 2016
  7. “It’s Now or Never” – El Vez – Taco Fest – May 2016
  8. “You Are My Sunshine” – Hullabaloo – May 2016
  9. “Say My Name” – ODESZA – CRSSD Fest – March 2016
  10. “No Diggity” – Chet Faker – CRSSD Fest – March 2016
  11. “Ready for the Love” – Gorgon City – CRSSD Fest – March 2016
  12. “Wolf Like Me” – TV On The Radio – CRSSD Fest – Oct. 2015
  13. “Do You Realize?” – The Flaming Lips – CRSSD Fest – Oct. 2015
  14. “I Know There’s Gonna Be – Jamie XX – CRSSD Fest – Oct. 2015
  15. “Jealous” – Chromeo – CRSSD Fest – March 2015
  16. “Walking on a Dream” – Empire of the Sun – CRSSD Fest – March 2015
  17. “Wild” – Royal Teeth – Beer and Music Fest – Oct. 2014
  18. “Uni” – The Lovebirds – Lunchtime Concerts – Nov. 2014
  19. “That’s You” - Gregory Page – Lunchtime Concerts – August 2014
  20. “When Sunny Gets Blue” – Steph Johnson – Lunchtime Concerts – July 2014

Take the playlist on the go. Stream it on your smartphone or at home on your computer through Spotify.

Photo Gallery: Pacific Islander ERG Kickoff

The County's newest Employee Resource Group (ERG) hosted a launch party with island style at the County Operations Center last week. The Pacific Islander Society of County Employees or PISCE had dance performances, a fashion show, local Pacific Islander organizations, food and fun.

PISCE formed to promote cultural awareness of the many island nation cultures that make up Polynesia, Melanesia and Micronesia.

See a gallery of the festive event.

Get Ready for Open Enrollment

Prepare yourself for one of the most important decisions you will make this year—your benefit elections for 2017. You can review the Open Enrollment Guide now. The guide contains important dates, rates and information every County employee needs to know in order to make informed choices when selecting medical, dental, vision and supplemental health insurance plans during the annual enrollment period.

Open Enrollment starts Monday, Oct. 3 and closes at 5 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 27.

You will need to participate in Open Enrollment only if you want to continue to waive medical coverage, enroll in new plans, change your current benefit coverage, add or remove dependents, or participate in a Flexible Spending Account (FSA) or Health Savings Account (HSA).

Once you have read the Open Enrollment Guide, you can take a refresher on how to log in to the Open Enrollment eBenefits system and hear how to navigate the eBenefits page by taking an LMS training.

In addition, the Department of Human Resources has a comprehensive Open Enrollment website that you can access anywhere. Look over plan information, rates, and more—all from the comfort of your home.

Do your homework now! These will be your elections for the entire 2017 year.

Have a question? Reach out to your Benefits Ambassador for more information.

Podcast Poll Follow-up

We asked you, County employees, if you listen to podcasts. The results indicate some of you do, but many of you don’t – and some of you don’t know what exactly they are.

Podcasts are basically radio shows, reinvented. They are downloadable digital files available in series – like a show. There are a seemingly endless amount of topics to choose from – food, true crime, history, sports, wordplay. You name it, there’s probably a podcast for it.

You can download podcasts on iTunes and Google Play Music so that you have episodes on your phone. Once you download them, you don’t need internet access to listen. Listen on your commute, at the gym or anywhere else.

 

 

So we want to know what the 37 percent of you regular or sometime podcast listeners are downloading. If you voted yes in the poll above, share your favorite ‘casts with newbies and veterans alike in the comments!

Pacific Islander ERG Launches Thursday

Come say hello or aloha (Hawaiian), talofa (Samoan), malo e lelei (Tongan), bula (Fijian), kia ora (Maori), iorana (Tahitian),  hafa adai (Chamorro), ran allim (Chuukese) and iokwe (Marshallese) to the County’s newest Employee Resource Group  (ERG) on Thursday. The Pacific Islander Society of County Employees, or PISCE, will host a launch celebration from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the County Operations Center’s Commons area.

The festivities include food, dance performances by employees and their families, a fashion show, local Pacific Islander organizations and introductory presentations by the PISCE’s board.

PISCE Interim President Jennifer Samuela said the group formed to promote cultural awareness of the many island nation cultures that make up Polynesia, Melanesia and Micronesia.

“It is all about promoting diversity and inclusion,” said Samuela, an administrative analyst with the Assessor/Recorder/County Clerk. “We welcome membership from all cultural backgrounds and encourage cross membership in all ERGs.”

PISCE joins eight other established ERGs at the County. Each ERG works to enhance cultural awareness, support workforce outreach, recruitment and retention, promote County initiatives though partnerships with departments and community based organizations and to provide professional development and networking opportunities for members.

 In addition, an ERG for employees with disabilities is in the planning stages. For more information on the employees with disabilities ERG, contact Nicole del Toro Cummings at Nicole.delToroCummings@sdcounty.ca.gov.

To learn more about PISCE, attend Thursday’s party or email PISCE@sdcounty.ca.gov or visit them on InSite.

Change the Zika Headlines; Don't Let Mosquitoes Grow

No doubt, you’ve seen the headlines — “County spraying,” “Zika virus,” “Invasive Aedes Mosquitoes.”

Four times in the last month, the County’s Vector Control Program has had to do something it’s never had to do before. It’s had to hike through people’s yards to spray and kill invasive Aedes mosquitoes to prevent them from coming into contact with, and potentially spreading, the Zika virus.

In four neighborhoods — South Park, Mt. Hope, Normal Heights and Grant Hill — the County had to spray to protect the public health. Because in each spot, a resident who was either suspected or confirmed of contracting the Zika virus outside of the country was living next to invasive Aedes mosquitoes — the vector that can spread Zika to other people if they bite an infected person.

The headlines might seem a little scary.

But there’s good news. And it involves you. See, you have the power to change the headlines.

Here’s all you have to do. Check around your home, your yard and your property and dump out any standing water to make sure mosquitoes don’t have any place they can breed.

If this sounds familiar, it should. It’s the “Prevent” part of the “Prevent, Protect, Report” guidelines the County has recommended for years to help people fight West Nile virus.

But it’s a message that has become more important because of these two invasive Aedes mosquitoes: the Aedes aegypti, or yellow fever mosquito, and the Aedes albopictus, the Asian tiger mosquito.

That’s because these Aedes mosquitoes really only want to breed in one place — right nextto you.

Not in a stream, a swamp or in a neglected green pool. Those are places where our native mosquitoes like to breed, the ones that can transmit West Nile virus to people. And that’s why County Vector Control has been able to use helicopters for years now to drop larvicide on 48 local waterways to help keep those mosquito populations down, and West Nile virus in check.

But the invasive Aedes mosquitoes prefer to live and breed next to people — in people’s homes and yards.

 The invasive Aedes battleground is not in wide open spaces. It’s in your yard.

Now, you might be thinking, “I don’t have any standing water around my property.” But you might be surprised. Most mosquitoes can breed in small amounts of water. But Aedes mosquitoes can breed in the tiniest amounts of water.

How tiny? They can breed in a thimble. They can breed in that bottle cap that was dropped in your yard, within shot of your sprinklers.

So far this year, Vector Control officials — in the field and around their own homes — have found Aedes larvae growing in buckets, trash cans, landscape drains, leaky sprinkler boxes, rain barrels, ornamental garden lights, and in saucers under flower pots. They can also grow in pet dishes and inside toys collecting sprinkler water in your yard. One person even found them in her bromeliad — you know that Christmas cactus plant you see around the holidays? Larvae were growing in the folds of the plant!

Unlike the West Nile virus, which has been prevalent in our county’s environment since 2003, we don’t really have the Zika virus and tropical diseases like dengue and chikungunya here. That is, they don’t naturally occur here. We do get cases of them, mainly when county residents travel to other countries where the diseases do occur, get infected and then bring them home.

We’re also not supposed to have these invasive Aedes mosquitoes here either. They can transmit those tropical diseases by biting an infected person and then feeding on someone else. However, we started finding them in San Diego County in 2014. They are smaller than native mosquitoes, have distinctive black and white markings, are known as aggressive biters and — unlike our native mosquitoes that prefer to feed between dusk and dawn — like to bite and feed during daylight hours as well.

So now, when a local resident is suspected of having Zika, or confirmed as having Zika, we check around their home. If we find these invasive Aedes mosquitoes, our Vector Control folks go out and spray to kill the mosquitoes. The pesticide the County uses, Pyrenone 25-5, has been approved for use by the Environmental Protection Agency. It is derived from chrysanthemums, poses low risk to people and pets, and dissipates in roughly 30 minutes. Vector Control teams do wear protective gear and the County provides people in the spray areas with simple steps they can take to protect themselves. 

The spraying goal is simple. Make sure no one else gets Zika by keeping the mosquitoes away from anyone who has the virus.

That’s why we’ve sprayed in those four neighborhoods, in South Park, Mt. Hope, Normal Heights and Grant Hill.

But you can change the headlines.

Police your home and your yard at least once a week. Dump out that water.

Don’t let those invasive Aedes mosquitoes grow!

Your Insight on InSite

We’re looking for your insight about InSite.

Employees use our intranet to connect to County resources, learn what’s happening at the County, and see what their coworkers are up to.

But there’s always room for improvement. We’re asking you to take a few minutes of your time to fill out a short survey and tell us how you feel about InSite.

Maybe you like the way it is. Maybe you don’t. We want to know either way. Take the survey and inspire us with your ideas! Survey will be open through Sept. 23.

Employee Resource Group Helps Educate Voters

Submitted by the Emerging Workforce Association

The Emerging Workforce Association want you to be an informed voter! That’s why, on Monday, Sept. 12, the employee resource group co-hosted a voter education forum in partnership with the Registrar of Voters and League of Women Voters – San Diego Chapter.

The event was done to de-mystify the elections process, as well as explain the numerous state propositions on this November’s ballot. People loved the tour and learned about some common voting and election myths.

It was also an opportunity for people to check their voter registration or register to vote right there! Attendees learned about the vast numbers needed to have the November election run smoothly and were told of opportunities to volunteer as a poll worker.

For those who missed it but are interested in becoming a poll worker, can find information online.

PerkSpot Alert: Subscription Meal Service

Enjoy a tasty deal—$35 off your first order to Blue Apron through PerkSpot.

Blue Apron is a subscription service that delivers everything you need to make a delicious meal at home. Whether you are a seasoned chef or newbie in the kitchen, cooking is made easy with premeasured ingredients and a wide variety of recipes delivered straight to your front door in a refrigerated box.

Learn more about Blue Apron and the promotion for County employees at PerkSpot.

PerkSpot offers benefits and discounts to County employees through hundreds of service providers and retailers from movie theaters to florists and jewelers. Using PerkSpot is both easy and free! Simply go to SDCounty.PerkSpot.com and shop. If you are new, click on “create an account” to complete the registration process.

Each month, one of the most popular PerkSpot deals will be highlighted on InSite.