HomeMy WebLinkAbout07/18/2014
OFFICE OF THE CITY MANAGER
July 17, 2014 TO: Honorable Mayor and City Council
FROM: Alan Tandy, City Manager AT
Subject: General Information
Good News:
During the first six months of 2014, the City of Bakersfield experienced a 9% decrease in
Part 1 crimes when compared with the same time period in 2013. Crime was reduced
in all categories including homicide, rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary,
larceny and grand theft auto. The biggest decreases were realized in homicide (-46%),
rape (-70%) and grand theft auto (-23%). Reductions in other categories included
robbery (-1%), aggravated assaults (-8%) and burglary (-2%) and larceny (-9%). Please
see attached memo.
A new full-color digigtal outdoor marquee has been installed at the Rabobank Arena,
Theater and Convention Center. The new marquee replaces the original LED marquee
which dated to the arena’s construction in 1998. AEG, the managing company of the
Arena, Theater and Convention Center, funded the cost of the upgraded boards as
well as installation. The marquee features double high-resolution screens with vibrant
color and animation capabilities. The new marquee will be used to advertise
upcoming events and building sponsors. Please see the attached press release and
photos. Follow Up:
Proposed emergency water regulations were approved by the State Water Board at
its meeting held Tuesday, July 15th. As a result of the regulations be adopted and
approved by the Office of Administrative Law, they will go into effect August 1st.
Please see the attached resolution by the State Water Resources Control Board for
more information.
The City of Bakersfield will host its first community workshop Thursday, July 24th for the
City’s Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program and its other HUD-
funded programs. The community workshop will take place at the City’s Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr. Community Center from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
General Information
July 17, 2014 Page 2
TRIP:
Upcoming Closures for the State Route 58 Gap Closure Project
Chester Avenue/H Street westbound on-ramp: The contractor for the State Route 58
Gap Closure project will be installing shoring for a retaining wall near the Chester
Avenue/H Street westbound on-ramp during daytime hours Monday through Friday,
July 21st-25th. This work will require the closure of the Chester Avenue/H Street
westbound on-ramp between the hours of 7 a.m. and 4 p.m. each day. During the
closures, motorists can use the State Route 58/Union Avenue Interchange, located
approximately one mile to the east, or continue west on Brundage Lane for
approximately one mile to access northbound or southbound State Route 99.
Cottonwood Road at State Route 58 will also be closed during daytime hours, Monday
through Friday, July 21st-25th. This closure is necessary to allow for work on the newly
constructed bridge sections. This work will take place between the hours of 6 a.m. and
4 p.m., each day. Motorists can use either Union Avenue or Washington Street for
north/south access across the freeway.
State Route 58 westbound lanes: Motorists should anticipate nighttime lane closures of
the inside travel lanes on westbound State Route 58, Sunday through Friday, July 20th -
25th. The contractor will be restriping the roadway and placing concrete barrier rail
from P Street to the west end of the job site in preparation of median excavation for
the new travel lanes. This activity will take place between the hours of 7 p.m. and 6
a.m., each night. One westbound travel lane will remain open to traffic while
operations are underway. Two travel lanes will be open to traffic during daytime hours.
Madison Street: Motorists should anticipate a full nighttime closure for Madison Street,
at State Route 58, Sunday through Friday, July 20th-25th. The contractor plans to erect
falsework for the Madison Street Bridge widening, each night, between the hours of 8:30 p.m. and 6 a.m. During these hours, motorists can use either Cottonwood Road or
Union Avenue for north/south access across the freeway. Reports:
For your convenience, the following report is attached:
• Streets Division work schedule for the week of July 21st;
• Special Enforcement Unit’s monthly gang statistics report for June, 2014; and
• Letter from Bright House Networks regarding changes to KGOV digital delivery
General Information
July 17, 2014 Page 3
Event Notifications:
July is Recreation and Parks month, so enjoy the many spray parks, pools, skate parks,
playgrounds and BBQ’s throughout the City of Bakersfield for fun in the summer sun.
Join us for the following activities:
o FREE Movies in the Park at Siemon Park! The movie is “EPIC” and starts at dusk.
o Dollar discount day at all pools is on Tuesday, July 23rd during open swim. This
means that Silver Creek, MLK and Jefferson are free, and McMurtrey is only $2.00
for the afternoon swim.
o FREE summer lunch program continues at the Martin Luther King Center until
August 1st.
o Day Camp at Silver Creek Community Center is held each week, now through
August 8th. Call (661) 326-3866 to register, or go to www.bakersfieldparks.us for
more information.
Rabobank Arena
o Goo Goo Dolls and Daughtry—Wednesday, July 23rd at 7:30 p.m.
Attached is the Event Calendar for Rabobank Arena Theater and Convention Center.
AT:rs:al:cb
cc: Department Heads
Roberta Gafford, City Clerk
MEDIA RELEASE
Contact: Nick Wynne
661-852-7301
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Rabobank Arena, Theater, and
Convention Center Installs New
Digital Marquee
Bakersfield, CA- Rabobank Arena, Theater and Convention Center has received a significant
upgrade with the installation of a new full-color digital outdoor marquee. The new marquee,
designed by industry leader Daktronics and installed by local experts City Neon, replaces the
original LED marquee which dated to the arena’s construction in 1998. AEG, the managing
company of the Arena, Theater and Convention Center, funded the cost of the upgraded
boards as well as installation.
Featuring double high-resolution screens with vibrant color and animation capabilities, the new
marquee will be used to advertise upcoming events and building sponsors. Businesses
interested in advertising on the upgraded display may contact Sam Williams, Rabobank Arena
Sales Manager, at 661-852-7305.
“We’re excited to upgrade our marquee to a state-of-the-art 21st century digital display,”
Rabobank Arena General Manager Jon Dorman said. “The new marquee should help keep
local residents up to date on the latest events taking place at our facilities, as well as provide
an important marketing resource to our arena business partners.”
###
About AEG Facilities
AEG, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Anschutz Company, is the leading sports, entertainment and venue operator in the world. AEG
Facilities, a stand-alone affiliate of AEG, owns, operates or consults with more than 100 of the industry’s preeminent venues worldwide, across
five continents, providing complete venue management, as well as specialized programs in operations, guest services, ticketing, booking,
sales and marketing. AEG Facilities also provides resources and access to other AEG-affiliated entities, including live event producer, AEG
Live, AEG Global Partnerships, AEG Development, AEG 1Earth, AEG Encore and AEG Creative to support the success of AEG venues
across the globe. The Los Angeles-based organization owns, operates or provides services to the world’s most elite venues, including
STAPLES Center (Los Angeles, Calif.), StubHub Center (Carson, Calif.), Nokia Theatre L.A. LIVE (Los Angeles, Calif.), Sprint Center (Kansas
City, Mo.), KFC Yum! Center (Louisville, Ky.), AmericanAirlines Arena (Miami, Fla.), Prudential Center (Newark, N.J.), Target Center
(Minneapolis, Minn.), BBVA Compass Stadium (Houston, Texas), Oracle Arena and O.co Coliseum (Oakland, Calif.), CONSOL Energy Center
(Pittsburgh, Penn.), Rabobank Arena (Bakersfield, Calif.), Mercedes-Benz Arena (Shanghai, China), MasterCard Center (Beijing, China), The O2 Arena (London, England), O2 World (Berlin, Germany), O2 World Hamburg (Hamburg, Germany), Ahoy Arena (Rotterdam, Netherlands),
Itaipava Arena Pernambuco (Recife, Brazil), Allianz Parque (Sao Paulo, Brazil), Allphones Arena (Sydney, Australia), ULKER Sports Arena
(Istanbul, Turkey), Ericsson Globe Arena (Stockholm, Sweden) and the Qatar National Convention Centre (Doha, Qatar). For more
information, please visit aegworldwide.com.
New Marquee Sign
STATE WATER RESOURCES CONTROL BOARD
RESOLUTION NO. 2014-0038
TO ADOPT AN EMERGENCY REGULATION
FOR STATEWIDE URBAN WATER CONSERVATION
WHEREAS:
1. On April 25, 2014, Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. issued an executive order to
strengthen the state’s ability to manage water and habitat effectively in drought
conditions and called on all Californians to redouble their efforts to conserve water. The
executive order finds that the continuous severe drought conditions present urgent
challenges across the state including water shortages in communities and for agricultural
production, increased wildfires, degraded habitat for fish and wildlife, threat of saltwater
contamination, and additional water scarcity if drought conditions continue into 2015.
The National Integrated Drought Information System reported that nearly 80% of the
state was reported to be under "extreme" drought conditions at the end of June;
2. The executive order refers to the Governor’s Proclamation No. 1-17-2014, issued on
January 17, 2014, declaring a State of Emergency to exist in California due to severe
drought conditions. The January Proclamation notes that the state is experiencing
record dry conditions, with 2014 projected to become the driest year on record. Since
January, state water officials indicate that reservoirs, rainfall totals and the snowpack
remain critically low. This follows two other dry or below average years, leaving
reservoir storage at alarmingly low levels. The January Proclamation highlights the
State’s dry conditions, lack of precipitation and the resulting effects on drinking water
supplies, the cultivation of crops, and the survival of animals and plants that rely on
California’s rivers and streams. The January Proclamation also calls on all Californians
to reduce their water usage by 20 percent;
3. There is no guarantee that winter precipitation will alleviate the drought conditions that
the executive orders address, which will lead to even more severe impacts across the
state if the drought wears on;
4. Water Code section 1058.5 grants the State Water Board the authority to adopt
emergency regulations in certain drought years in order to: “prevent the waste,
unreasonable use, unreasonable method of use, or unreasonable method of diversion,
of water, to promote water recycling or water conservation, to require curtailment of
diversions when water is not available under the diverter’s priority of right, or in
furtherance of any of the foregoing, to require reporting of diversion or use or the
preparation of monitoring reports”;
5. Over 400,000 acres of farmland are expected to be fallowed, thousands of people may
be out of work, communities risk running out of drinking water, and fish and wildlife will
suffer.
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6. Many Californians have taken bold steps over the years and in this year to reduce water
use; nevertheless, the dire nature of the current drought requires additional conservation
actions from residents and businesses. Some severely affected communities have
implemented water rationing, limiting water use in some cases to only 50 gallons per
person per day, foregoing showers, laundry, toilet flushing, and all outdoor watering.
7. Water conservation is the easiest, most efficient and most cost effective way to quickly
reduce water demand and extend supplies into the next year, providing flexibility for all
California communities. Water saved this summer is water available next year, giving
water suppliers the flexibility to manage their systems efficiently. The more water that is
conserved now, the less likely it is that a community will experience such dire
circumstances that water rationing is required ;
8. Most Californians use more water outdoors than indoors. In many areas, 50 percent
or more of daily water use is for lawns and outdoor landscaping. Outdoor water use
is generally discretionary, and many irrigated landscapes would not suffer greatly from
receiving a decreased amount of water;
9. Public information and awareness is critical to achieving conservation goals and the
Save Our Water campaign, run jointly by the Department of Water Resources (DWR)
and the Association of California Water Agencies, is an excellent resource for
conservation information and messaging that is integral to effective drought response
(http://saveourwater.com).
10. Enforcement against water waste is a key tool in conservation programs. When
conservation becomes a social norm in a community, the need for enforcement is
reduced or eliminated;
11. The emergency regulations set a minimum standard requiring only modest lifestyle
changes across the state. Many communities are already doing more and have been for
years. They should be commended, but can and should do more. Others are not yet
doing so and should at least do this, but should do much more given the severity of the
drought;
12. On July 8, 2014, the State Water Board issued public notice that the State Water Board
would consider the adoption of the regulation at the Board’s regularly-scheduled
July 15, 2014 public meeting, in accordance with applicable State laws and regulations.
The State Water Board also distributed for public review and comment a Finding of
Emergency that complies with State laws and regulations;
13. On April 25, 2014, the Governor suspended the California Environmental Quality Act’s
application to the State Water Board’s adoption of emergency regulations pursuant to
Water Code section 1058.5 to prevent the waste, unreasonable use, unreasonable
method of use, or unreasonable method of diversion of water, to promote water recycling
or water conservation;
14. As discussed above, the State Water Board is adopting the emergency regulation
because of emergency drought conditions, the need for prompt action, and current
limitations in the existing enforcement process;
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15. Disadvantaged communities may require assistance in increasing water conservation
and state agencies should look for opportunities to provide assistance in promoting
water conservation;
16. Nothing in the regulations or in the enforcement provisions of the regulations, preclude a
local agency from exercising its authority to adopt more stringent conservation
measures. Moreover, the Water Code does not impose a mandatory penalty for
violations of the regulations adopted by this resolution and local agencies retain their
enforcement discretion in enforcing the regulations, to the extent authorized, and may
develop their own progressive enforcement practices to encourage conservation.
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED THAT:
1. The State Water Board adopts California Code of Regulations, title 23, sections 863,
864, and 865, as appended to this resolution as an emergency regulation;
2. The State Water Board staff will submit the regulation to the Office of Administrative Law
(OAL) for final approval;
3. If, during the approval process, State Water Board staff, the State Water Board, or OAL
determines that minor corrections to the language of the regulation or supporting
documentation are needed for clarity or consistency, the State Water Board Executive
Director or designee may make such changes;
4. These regulations shall remain in effect for 270 days after filing with the Secretary of
State unless the State Water Board determines that it is no longer necessary due to
changed conditions, or unless the State Water Board renews the regulations due to
continued drought conditions as described in Water Code section 1058.5;
5. The State Water Board directs staff to provide the Board with monthly updates on the
implementation of the emergency regulations and their effect;
6. Directs State Water Board staff to condition funding upon compliance with the
emergency regulations, to the extent feasible;
7. Directs State Water Board staff to work with the Department of Water Resources and the
Save Our Water campaign to disseminate information regarding the emergency
regulations; and
8. Directs State Water Board staff in developing an electronic reporting portal to include
data fields so that local agencies may provide monthly reporting data on (i) conservation-
related implementation measures or enforcement actions taken by the local agency and
(ii) substitution during the drought of potable water with recycled water to extend water
supplies.
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THEREFORE BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT:
9. The State Water Board commends water suppliers that have increased conservation
messaging and adopted innovative strategies to enhance customer awareness of water
use, such as applications that let customers compare their water use to water use by
others; reduce system losses, such as fixing system leaks which can deplete supplies by
10 percent or more; and establish incentives to reduce demand, such as tiered or
drought rate structures. The State Water Board also commends all Californians that
have already been working to maximize their conservation efforts, both at home and at
work;
10. The State Water Board calls upon water suppliers to take the following actions:
Educate customers and employees
Retail water suppliers should provide notice of the regulations in English and
Spanish in one or more of the following ways: newspaper advertisements, bill inserts,
website homepage, social media, notices in public libraries;
Wholesale suppliers should include reference to the regulations in their customer
communications;
All water suppliers should train personnel on the regulations;
All water suppliers should provide signage where recycled or reclaimed water is
being used for activities that the emergency regulations prohibit with the use of
potable water, such as operation of fountains and other water features;
All water suppliers should redouble their efforts to disseminate information regarding
opportunities and incentives to upgrade indoor fixtures and appliances;
All water suppliers should use education and the tools available through the Save
Our Water website (http://saveourwater.com); and
All water suppliers should educate and prepare their boards and councils on the
drought response actions contained in the emergency regulations and in this
resolution, and to make sure that drought response items are placed on agendas as
early as possible;
Increasing local supplies
All water suppliers should accelerate the completion of projects that will conserve
potable water by making use of non-potable supplies, such as recycled water,
“greywater,” and stormwater collection projects;
All water suppliers should improve their leak reporting and response programs and
request that police and fire departments and other local government personnel report
leaks and water waste that they encounter during their routine duties/patrols;
Smaller water suppliers – those with fewer than 3,000 service connections – should
take proactive steps to secure their communities’ water supplies and educate their
customers about water conservation and the status of their supply reserves;
All water suppliers should conduct water loss audits and make leak detection and
repair a top priority for the duration of the drought; and
All urban water suppliers should evaluate their rate structures and begin to
implement needed changes as part of planning for another dry year. Information and
assistance on setting and implementing drought rates is available from the Alliance
for Water Efficiency. (http://www.allianceforwaterefficiency.org/).
5
11. The State Water Board calls on all Californians to take the following additional actions:
Further reduce water demand, whether by using less water in daily routines indoors
and out, retrofitting appliances and installing greywater and rainwater catchment
systems; and
Check residential and business water bills to see if there are high charges that may
indicate a leak and to fix the leak, if they are able, or contact their local water utility if
they need assistance.
12. The State Water Board encourages its staff, the Department of Water Resources, the
Public Utilities Commission, urban water suppliers, and other local agencies to look for
opportunities to encourage and promote new technologies that reduce water usage,
including through timely access to water usage information and behavioral response.
13. The State Water Board encourages all state and local agencies to look for additional
opportunities to minimize potable water use in outdoor spaces.
14. The State Water Board encourages investor-owned utilities to expeditiously submit
applications for implementation of the regulations to the California Public Utilities
Commission.
CERTIFICATION
The undersigned Clerk to the Board does hereby certify that the foregoing is a full, true, and
correct copy of a resolution duly and regularly adopted at a meeting of the State Water
Resources Control Board held on July 15, 2014.
AYE: Chair Felicia Marcus
Vice Chair Frances Spivy-Weber
Board Member Steven Moore
Board Member Dorene D’Adamo
NAY: None
ABSENT: Board Member Tam M. Doduc
ABSTAIN: None
Jeanine Townsend
Clerk to the Board
PROPOSED TEXT OF EMERGENCY REGULATIONS
Article 22.5. Drought Emergency Water Conservation
Sec. 863 Findings of Drought Emergency
(a) The State Water Resources Control Board finds as follows:
(1) On January 17, 2014, the Governor issued a proclamation of a state of
emergency under the California Emergency Services Act based on drought conditions;
(2) On April 25, 2014, the Governor issued a proclamation of a continued state of
emergency under the California Emergency Services Act based on continued drought
conditions;
(3) The drought conditions that formed the basis of the Governor’s emergency
proclamations continue to exist;
(4) The present year is critically dry and has been immediately preceded by two or
more consecutive below normal, dry, or critically dry years; and
(5) The drought conditions will likely continue for the foreseeable future and
additional action by both the State Water Resources Control Board and local water
suppliers will likely be necessary to further promote conservation.
Authority: Wat. Code, § 1058.5.
References: Wat. Code, §§ 102, 104, 105.
Sec. 864 Prohibited Activities in Promotion of Water Conservation
(a) To promote water conservation, each of the following actions is prohibited,
except where necessary to address an immediate health and safety need or to comply with
a term or condition in a permit issued by a state or federal agency:
(1) The application of potable water to outdoor landscapes in a manner that causes
runoff such that water flows onto adjacent property, non-irrigated areas, private and
public walkways, roadways, parking lots, or structures;
(2) The use of a hose that dispenses potable water to wash a motor vehicle, except
where the hose is fitted with a shut-off nozzle or device attached to it that causes it to
cease dispensing water immediately when not in use;
(3) The application of potable water to driveways and sidewalks; and
(4) The use of potable water in a fountain or other decorative water feature,
except where the water is part of a recirculating system.
(b) The taking of any action prohibited in subdivision (a) of this section, in
addition to any other applicable civil or criminal penalties, is an infraction, punishable by
a fine of up to five hundred dollars ($500) for each day in which the violation occurs.
Authority: Wat. Code, § 1058.5.
References: Wat. Code, §§ 102, 104, 105.
PROPOSED TEXT OF EMERGENCY REGULATIONS
Sec. 865 Mandatory Actions by Water Suppliers
(a) The term “urban water supplier,” when used in this section, refers to a supplier
that meets the definition set forth in Water Code section 10617, except it does not refer to
suppliers when they are functioning solely in a wholesale capacity, but does apply to
suppliers when they are functioning in a retail capacity.
(b)(1) To promote water conservation, each urban water supplier shall implement
all requirements and actions of the stage of its water shortage contingency plan that
imposes mandatory restrictions on outdoor irrigation of ornamental landscapes or turf
with potable water.
(2) As an alternative to subdivision (b)(1), an urban water supplier may submit a
request to the Executive Director for approval of an alternate plan that includes
allocation-based rate structures that satisfies the requirements of chapter 3.4
(commencing with section 370) of division 1 of the Water Code, and the Executive
Director may approve such an alternate plan upon determining that the rate structure, in
conjunction with other measures, achieves a level of conservation that would be superior
to that achieved by implementing limitations on outdoor irrigation of ornamental
landscapes or turf with potable water by the persons it serves to no more than two days
per week.
(c) To promote water conservation, each urban water supplier that does not have a
water shortage contingency plan or has been notified by the Department of Water
Resources that its water shortage contingency plan does not meet the requirements of
Water Code section 10632 shall, within thirty (30) days, limit outdoor irrigation of
ornamental landscapes or turf with potable water by the persons it serves to no more than
two days per week or shall implement another mandatory conservation measure or
measures intended to achieve a comparable reduction in water consumption by the
persons it serves relative to the amount consumed in 2013.
(d) In furtherance of the promotion of water conservation each urban water
supplier shall prepare and submit to the State Water Resources Control Board by the 15th
of each month a monitoring report on forms provided by the Board. The monitoring
report shall include the amount of potable water the urban water supplier produced,
including water provided by a wholesaler, in the preceding calendar month and shall
compare that amount to the amount produced in the same calendar month in 2013.
Beginning October 15, 2014, the monitoring report shall also estimate the gallons of
water per person per day used by the residential customers it serves. In its initial
monitoring report, each urban water supplier shall state the number of persons it serves.
(e) To promote water conservation, each distributor of a public water supply, as
defined in Water Code section 350, that is not an urban water supplier shall, within thirty
(30) days, take one or more of the following actions:
(1) Limit outdoor irrigation of ornamental landscapes or turf with potable water
by the persons it serves to no more than two days per week; or
(2) Implement another mandatory conservation measure or measures intended to
achieve a comparable reduction in water consumption by the persons it serves relative to
the amount consumed in 2013.
Authority: Wat. Code, § 1058.5.
References: Wat. Code, §§ 102, 104, 105; 350; 10617; 10632.
Week of July 21_2014_Work Schedule
Page 1 of 2
STREETS DIVISION – WORK SCHEDULE
Week of July 21, 2014 – July 25, 2014
Resurfacing/Reconstructing streets in the following areas:
Reconstructing various streets north of White Ln and west of Gosford Sealing streets in the area south of Stockdale Hwy and east of Buena Vista Rd
Oil-sand resurfacing of alleys south of Bernard and west of Alta Vista
Maintenance Grind & Pave on Mountain Vista between White Ln and Harris Rd
Maintenance Grind & Pave on Meacham between Calloway and Clay Patrick Farr
Miscellaneous Streets Division projects: Video inspection of City owned Sewer & Storm lines to evaluate condition of pipes
Repairing damaged sewer line found during video inspection
Miscellaneous concrete repairs throughout the city
Concrete work on various streets in the area north of E. California Ave and west of Williams in
preparation for street reconstruction / resurfacing (HUD funded area)
Dirt work at Mesa Marin for parking lot and playing fields
Concrete work on various streets in the area south of E. California Ave and east of Union Ave (HUD
funded area)
Concrete work on Chester Ave between California Ave and Brundage Ln
Assisting San Joaquin Valley Railroad with crossing improvements on MLK Blvd north of Brundage Ln
which will be closed starting late evening of Friday 7/25/14 thru Monday 7/28/14, the next crossing will be
Virginia Ave crossing east of MLK Blvd starting 8/9/14 thru 8/12/14
THIS SPACE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
Week of July 21_2014_Work Schedule
Page 2 of 2 STREETS SWEEPING SCHEDULE
Monday, July 21, 2014
City areas between 99 Hwy. & Stine Rd. – Panama Ln. & Taft Hwy.
Tuesday, July 22, 2014 City areas between Olive Dr. & Downing Ave. – Coffee Rd. & Knudsen Dr./Mohawk St., including Patton
Wy. From Weldon Ave. to Meany Ave.
Between W. Columbus St. & 34th St. – Chester Ave. & San Dimas St. Beween Union Ave. & Madison St. – Casa Loma Dr. & White Ln.
Between Westwold Dr. & So. Laurelglen Blvd. – Gosford Rd. & Woodglen Dr.
Wednesday, July 23, 2014 City areas between Snow Rd. & Rosedale Hwy. – Jewetta Ave., west to the City limit.
Between Ming Ave. & So. Laurelglen Blvd. – Coffee Rd. & El Portal / Laurelglen Blvd
Thursday, July 24, 2014 Between Snow Rd. & Olive Dr. – Jewetta Ave., east to the canal boundary.
Between Olive Dr. & Hageman Rd. – Jewetta Ave. & Calloway Dr.
Between Niles St. & Sumner St. – Union Avenue & Beale Ave.
Between Sumner St. & E. Truxtun Ave. – Beale Ave. & Brown St.
Between Brundage Ln. & E. Belle Terrace St. – Union Ave. & Kincaid St. Between Camino Media & Kroll Wy. – Coffee Rd., west to the PG&E easement.
Friday, July 25, 2014
Between Etchart Rd. & Pavilion Dr. -- Calloway Dr., west to the canal boundary. Between Norris Rd. & Olive Dr. – Calloway Dr. & Coffee Rd.
Between Olive Dr. & Noriega Rd. – Calloway Dr. & Verdugo Ln.
City areas between Coffee Rd./Riverlakes ext. & Allen Rd. – Hageman Rd. & Rosedale Hwy.
City areas between Pacheco Rd. & Harris Rd. – Stine Rd. & Wible Rd.
NOTE: If raining, there will be no street sweeping service and all street cleaning personnel will be assigned to cleaning plugged drains and part circle culverts. This also applies when a large number of
street sweeper are in Fleet for repairs. Areas that have been missed during this time will be swept at the
end of the month.
BAKERSFIELD POLICEBAKERSFIELD POLICEBAKERSFIELD POLICEBAKERSFIELD POLICE
MEMORANDUMMEMORANDUMMEMORANDUMMEMORANDUM
Date: July 7, 2014
To: Alan Tandy, City Manager
From: Greg Williamson, Chief of Police
Subject: Special Enforcement Unit/Gang Violence Report
I have enclosed the Special Enforcement Unit’s monthly gang statistics report for
June, 2014. Please call if you have any questions.
GSW/vrf
BAKERSFIELD POLICE DEPARTMENT SPECIAL ENFORCEMENT UNIT MONTHLY REPORT – JUNE 2014
Special Enforcement Unit Monthly Stats for June 2014
Year to Date Special Enforcement Unit Statistics January – June 2014
305 Felony Arrests 545 FI’s 87 Search Warrants
227 Misdemeanor Arrests 106 Citations 485 Court Prep - Hours
94 Felony Warrant
Arrests 1808 Probation and
Parole Searches 19 Community
Contacts
159 Misdemeanor
Warrant Arrests 144.5 Hrs. Assisting Other
Department Sections 43 Project Logs Hours
Worked
23 AB109 Arrests –
186.22 367 Supplemental
Reports 483 Hours Assisting
Patrol
3 AB109 Arrests - Other 484 General Offense
Reports 406 Hours Assisting
Investigations
380 Hours In Training 42 Vehicle Reports 42
34
31
15
2014 Shootings
2013 Shootings
2012 Shootings
2011 Shootings 93 Guns Seized 514 Patrol Call Response
38 Felony Arrests 48 FI’s 15 Search Warrants
15 Misdemeanor Arrests 6 Citations 86 Court Prep - Hours
12 Felony Warrant
Arrests 257 Probation and
Parole Searches 2 Community
Contacts
22 Misdemeanor
Warrant Arrests 40 Hrs. Assisting Other
Department Sections 10 Project Logs Hours
Worked
4 AB109 Arrests – 186.22 60 Supplemental
Reports 120 Hours Assisting
Patrol
1 AB109 Arrests - Other 49 General Offense
Reports 51 Hours Assisting
Investigations
0 Hours In Training 2 Vehicle Reports 7
5
6
4
2014 Shootings
2013 Shootings
2012 Shootings
2011 Shootings 12 Guns Seized 76 Patrol Call Response
BAKERSFIELD POLICE DEPARTMENT SPECIAL ENFORCEMENT UNIT MONTHLY REPORT – JUNE 2014
June 2013-2014 COMPARISON
105
87
20
11
50
37
12 15
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
Felony Arrests MisdemeanorArrests Guns Seized Search Warrants
2013 2014
179
528
199 211
257
48
0
100
200
300
400
500
Assisting Other Departments(Including Investigations)Probation / Parole Searches Field Interviews / StreetChecks
2013 2014
BAKERSFIELD POLICE DEPARTMENT SPECIAL ENFORCEMENT UNIT MONTHLY REPORT – JUNE 2014
2012-2014 YEAR TO DATE COMPARISON
2640
2404
1229 1301
3197
944 1033.5
1808
545
0
400
800
1200
1600
2000
2400
2800
3200
3600
Assisting Other Departments(Including Investigations)Probation / Parole Searches Field Interviews / StreetChecks
2012 2013 2014
792
53 12
972
133
46
785
93 87
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
1000
1100
Arrests Guns Seized Search Warrants
2012 2013 2014
BAKERSFIELD POLICE DEPARTMENT SPECIAL ENFORCEMENT UNIT MONTHLY REPORT – JUNE 2014
31
34
42
7
10
3 0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
2012 2013 2014
SHOOTINGS HOMICIDES*
YEAR TO DATE GANG VIOLENCE INDEX 2012-2014
*Please note that the homicide stats include all gang related homicides, including but not limited to
shootings and stabbings.
BAKERSFIELD POLICE DEPARTMENT SPECIAL ENFORCEMENT UNIT MONTHLY REPORT – JUNE 2014
GANG RELATED SHOOTINGS – 2012-2014 (YEAR TO DATE ONLY)
5
4
3
7
6 6
13
7
4
2
3
5 5
0
11
9 9
7
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
JAN.FEB.MAR.APR.MAY JUN.
2012 2013 2014
BAKERSFIELD POLICE DEPARTMENT SPECIAL ENFORCEMENT UNIT MONTHLY REPORT – JUNE 2014
GANG RELATED SHOOTINGS COMPARED TO THE AVERAGE OF THE PREVIOUS 5 YEARS – PER WEEK
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0
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6
7
8
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52
2013
2013 Weekly Numbers Previous 5 Years (2008-2012) Average
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0
1
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6
7
8
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52
2014
2014 Weekly Numbers Previous 5 Years (2009-2013) Average
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BAKERSFIELD POLICE DEPARTMENT SPECIAL ENFORCEMENT UNIT MONTHLY REPORT – JUNE 2014
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
Nu
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o
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S
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2011 - 2014 Shooting Comparison to date - 12 Week Time Frame
2011 Weekly Numbers 2012 Weekly Numbers 2013 Weekly Numbers 2014 Weekly Numbers
Week of the Year
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BOX OFFICE HOURS
Mon-Fri 10 AM - 5 PM
Closed Saturday & Sunday
(Excluding Event Days)
TICKETMASTER LOCATIONS
Walmart - 2601 Fashion Place
Walmart - 6225 Colony Street
Walmart - 8400 Rosedale Hwy
CHARGE-BY-PHONE
1-800-745-3000
GROUP SALES INFORMATION
661-852-7309
SEASON TICKET INFORMATION
Bakersfield Condors
661-324-PUCK (7825)
www.bakersfieldcondors.com
Bakersfield Symphony
661-323-7928
www.BSOnow.org
Bakersfield Community
Concert Association
661-589-2478
661-663-9006
www.bakersfieldcca.org
UPCOMING EVENTS
July 23 – Goo Goo Dolls & Daughtry 7:30 PM
$59.50 & $44.50 On Sale Now
August 24 – WWE Live 5:00 PM
$95, $50, $35, $25, $15 On Sale Now
November 22 – PBR Velocity Tour 7:00 PM
$75, $60, $45, $20, $15 On Sale Now
April 30-May 3, 2015 – Marvel Universe Live!
$150, $100, $50, $40 On Sale Now
August 7 – Prince Royce 8:00 PM
$198.50, $53.50, $43.50, $33.50 On Sale Now
August 10 – Gurdas Maan 7:00 PM
$20 On Sale 7/15
August 23 – Baby and Child Expo 11:00 AM
Free
October 14 – Straight No Chaser 7:30 PM
$47, $37, $27 On Sale Now
September 13 – Starship 8:00 PM
$12.50 On Sale Now
October 4 – Bluffett 8:00 PM
$12.50 On Sale Now
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