The next generation of environmentalists and climate change scientists gathered at the Youth for the Environment and Sustainability 2016 Conference-or YES Conference-at UC Berkeley's Lawrence Hall of Science on January 30 to present and discuss projects they have started at school to reduce the impacts of climate change.
Photo by Kingmond Young
By Stella Yip
Published: March, 2016
The next generation of environmentalists and climate change scientists gathered at the Youth for the Environment and Sustainability 2016 Conference—or YES Conference—at UC Berkeley’s Lawrence Hall of Science on January 30 to present and discuss projects they have started at school to reduce the impacts of climate change. Some 250 students from as young as eight to seniors in high school attended sessions on air quality, urban forestry, local water resources and Safe Routes to School programs.
Part of the Spare the Air Youth program, sponsored by the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) and the Bay Area Air Quality Management District, the YES conference encourages walking and bicycling to school and other efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Students and professionals in the environmental field from all over the Bay Area shared success stories and discussed ways to apply these strategies to their respective communities.
The all-day conference included student-led workshops, student keynote speakers, and a welcome from MTC Commissioner and City of Berkeley Mayor Tom Bates. Staff members from the Aquarium of the Bay parked their Baymobile on the lawn and led a hands-on activity to illustrate how increased carbon emissions have impacted the Bay’s marine ecosystem. Staff from the Bikemobile also led bike repair workshops to teach basic bike mechanics and to promote bicycling.
Seventh-grader Anna Silverman leads the Safe Routes to School program at A. E. Kent Middle School in Marin County, where she and her classmates have started creative campaigns like the “DoNut Drive,” which looks like the words “Do Not Drive,” to reward students that bicycle or walk to school. When asked why this was important to her, Anna said, “This is the only Earth we have. If we don’t do anything now, we could experience even greater climate change effects.”
Some parents of the students also chose to spend their Saturday at the YES Conference. Parent Bret Bartlett, who attended the conference for the first time with his son Brady, said, “I was impressed that the kids put so much effort into their projects. The students already learn this material in school, but the conference teaches students how to apply it in their lives.”
Inaugurated in 2013, the conference has doubled in size and has added new workshops with every year. MTC Public Information Officer and YES Conference coordinator Leslie Lara said, “The YES Conference is a unique opportunity for students to develop leadership skills, showcase their work and meet other teens equally as passionate about the environment as they are.”
As a returning attendee of the YES Conference, Evan Lu, a senior at Irvington High School in Fremont, said, “I want more friends to come to the conference because the more they know, the more likely they are to change the environment.” Evan is part of the Safe Routes to School program and organizes the Golden Sneaker Contest, which awards the classroom with the highest number of students using healthy transportation options with a class party and a golden sneaker trophy. To Evan, these efforts are needed because “we need to change the world before it’s too late.”
Transit Internship Program Now Accepting Applications
By BC Staff
Published: March, 2016
The Metropolitan Transportation Commission’s annual High School Internship Program is now accepting applications for paid summer internships with transportation agencies throughout the nine-county San Francisco Bay Area. Since 2000, the internship program has been providing Bay Area students the opportunity to work for a variety of local transit, planning and public works agencies. The program was conceived by MTC’s Minority Citizens Advisory Committee to encourage young people to consider careers in transportation.
Students will be employed, either full-time or part-time, for up to 250 hours between June and August under the mentorship of a transportation professional at the public agency. Previous interns have left the program with skills in marketing, public outreach, data analysis, AutoCAD, Geographic Information Systems and other valuable skills.
“The internship program is not only about helping students build technical skills, but also about giving them a head start and experience with the job application process,” said MTC Internship Program Coordinator Yulee Kim. “Applicants compete with other students for a position, answer typical job application questions, and many of them go through a formal interview process at the public agency.”
Thirty-nine paid internships are available throughout Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Solano and Sonoma counties. A list of internship opportunities and the online application are available at: jobs.mtc.ca.gov/InternshipOpportunities/jobinternship.html.
To apply, students can submit the completed application online, including an attached one-page document that describes, in the applicant’s own words, a transportation problem in his or her community and what the applicant thinks could be done to resolve it. A letter or letters of recommendation from a teacher, principal, counselor, religious leader or employer also must be included. Students must live and go to school in the same county that they are applying for, must have completed 10th grade and must be at least 16 years old by the start of the program in June. Students graduating in 2016 also are eligible to apply for the internships. The application must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. on March 20.