春色视频

NEWS BRIEFS: Groundbreaking for Betty Irene Moore Hall

A groundbreaking ceremony is scheduled next week for Betty Irene Moore Hall in the educational core of the 春色视频 Health System in Sacramento.

Construction is already underway on the $50 million, 70,000-square-foot building that will house the Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing鈥檚 graduate programs. The building, due for completion in the fall of 2017, also will support interprofessional health science education.

鈥淭his innovative new building will set the standard in nursing and beyond and further the school鈥檚 great ambition to transform health care,鈥 said Chancellor Linda P.B. Katehi, who will join representatives of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation for the groundbreaking. The was founded in 2009 with the foundation鈥檚 $100 million commitment, part of which is going toward the new hall.

The groundbreaking is set to begin at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 10, on the Larry N. Vanderhoef Commons, near the corner of 48th and Y streets. (click on the 鈥淩SVP鈥 tab near the top of the page).

10th annual Mail Services Holiday Food Drive

The Mail Services Holiday Food Drive marks its 10th anniversary this year, and what better way to celebrate than by helping to make this one the biggest ever. The Davis collection goes to the Yolo Food Bank, and the Sacramento collection to Sacramento Food Bank & Family Services.

If you鈥檇 like to contribute, just leave food items with your outgoing mail. The drive runs through Friday, Nov. 20.

鈥淲e make it easy for employees to donate, and we're happy to do it,鈥 said Jen Carmichael, general manager of Distribution Services, who has been coordinating the combined Holiday Food Drive since it began in 2006.

The Davis and Sacramento mail teams actually started collecting food for the holidays in 2005, but did so independently of each other. They began marketing the drive as a collective effort the next year 鈥 thus making the 2015 drive the 10th annual, dating from 2006. The food drive statistics, however, go back to that first year, 2005. 鈥湸荷悠 employees have always been very generous,鈥 giving 8.5 tons of food over the years, Carmichael said.

Here鈥檚 a list of suggested items to donate: canned, ready-to-eat meals; canned meat, fish and soups; canned vegetables and tomato products; dry beans (any type); enriched rice and pasta; ramen; boxed macaroni and cheese; canned fruit (in juice); peanut butter (plastic container); iron-rich cereal (45 percent or more of daily value); powdered milk; fruit juice (100 percent, in plastic containers 48 ounces or smaller); and powdered milk formula and Similac baby food.

Abandoned bicycles to be swept up

personnel are targeting abandoned bicycles in another 鈥淥peration Clean Sweep,鈥 scheduled from Wednesday (Nov. 4) through Nov. 18.

The TAPS pickup crew has already been tagging bikes that seem to fit the description: flat tires, missing parts, dust, rust, cobwebs, or expired or missing registration 鈥 or any combination thererof. If this describes your bike, it鈥檚 time to make quick plans to fix it up, remove it or donate it (the ASUCD Bike Barn, TAPS, local thrift stores or the Davis Bike Collective may be able to take your bike).

Bicycles are tagged for at least 48 hours before being removed, to give owners time to collect their bikes. If you can鈥檛 move your bike because you鈥檝e lost your key or the lock isn鈥檛 working, Transportation Services will cut it 鈥 call (530) 752-BIKE (2453) or .

Each year, more than 1,000 bikes are abandoned on the Davis campus 鈥 and end up recycled, sold at auction or donated to various charitable groups. With up to 20,000 bicycles on the campus on peak days, abandoned bikes take up valuable parking spaces, are an eyesore and invite theft.

More information is available or by calling the Bicycle Program.

Reservations due for Meyer award dinner

Reservations are still being accepted for next week鈥檚 dinner and ceremony honoring Ken Tate, professor and Cooperative Extension specialist in rangeland watershed sciences, as the recipient of the James H. Meyer Distinguished Achievement Award.

It is the Academic Federation鈥檚 highest honor, recognizing a member鈥檚 achievements over a career at 春色视频. A secondary but important consideration is voluntary service to the campus and UC community, or state, regional and national bodies.

The Meyer award program is scheduled from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday. Nov. 10, in the Conference Center Ballroom.

RSVP by email or by calling Angela Oates, (530) 754-2010; the cutoff date is Wednesday (Nov. 4). Note: There is no charge for this year's dinner.

 

Reminders: Open enrollment, cybersecurity training, Big Ideas

鈥 Open enrollment 鈥 This is the time every year when you can make changes in your benefit choices and renew certain choices.   Open enrollment began last week and continues until 5 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 24 (two days before Thanksgiving.

Here鈥檚 some of what you can do for 2016:

  • Switch medical and dental plans.
  • Enroll or re-enroll in flexible spending accounts for dependent care and-or health care. REMEMBER: These accounts do not renew automatically.
  • Enroll in legal coverage.

The Health Care Facilitator Program announced the following presentations and help desk hours on the Davis campus:

  • Medical plan overview 鈥 8:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Friday (Nov. 6), AGR Room, . First-come, first-seated.
  • Help desk service 鈥 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Friday (Nov. 6), AGR Room, Buehler Alumni Center. No appointments needed.

Cybersecurity training 鈥 UC is mandating a new round of cybersecurity training for all faculty and staff. The online course should take about 50 minutes, and you have until Jan. 31 to complete it. The course is in the UC Learning Center. Log in with your Kerberos ID and search for 鈥淯C Cyber.鈥

Staff Development and Professional Services sent individual emails last week, advising empoloyees of the training course, and you鈥檒l find a copy of that email in your UC Learning Center messages folder.

The University of the 21st Century needs 鈥渂ig ideas,鈥 so let鈥檚 hear them! The chancellor and provost are asking faculty, staff and students for ideas that could be part of the university's next comprehensive campaign. 鈥淲e want ideas that are transformative, far-reaching, ambitious and well-reasoned. Ideas that, if given the proper resources, can change society.鈥

Media Resources

Dave Jones, Dateline, 530-752-6556, dljones@ucdavis.edu

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