Date: April 27th (Wednesday)
5:15 – 5:30 Chapter announcement / introduction
5:30 – 6:00 Senator Josh Becker’s presentation / Q&A
6:00 – 6:15 Diane Bailey, Menlo Spark – special presentation / Q&A
This is a FREE Event
Climate change is happening, and it’s hitting California hard—catastrophic wildfires, flooding, drought and sea level rise all threaten our state. Slowing, and eventually reversing, these effects requires swift and strong action. How is California tackling climate change and what do these actions mean for our communities?
4 Learning Objectives:
- The big picture for climate change and where architects and designers can help
- Reducing embodied emissions in building materials
- Reducing emissions from the use of buildings: energy efficient design, energy generation and storage and going on a “watt diet”
- Reducing emissions from transportation by enabling EV charging
Approved for 1 HSW/LU
Senator Josh Becker is a public policy innovator working at the nexus of community activism, technology and social justice. Elected to the State Senate in November 2020, Senator Becker represents the residents of California’s 13th Senate District, which comprises most of San Mateo County and the northern part of Santa Clara County.
He is the author of several bills focused on accelerating California’s transition to 100% clean energy and net zero emissions, voter access and justice reforms, and leveraging technology to provide greater economic mobility for all Californians.
He chairs the Senate Subcommittee on the Clean Energy Future and serves as vice chair of the Joint Legislative Committee on Climate Change Policies. He also is a member of the Senate Business, Professions and Economic Development Committee, the Senate Energy, Utilities and Communications Committee and the Senate Governmental Organization Committee, the Senate Transportation Committee and the Joint Legislative Audit Committee.
Josh’s commitment to service crystalized when he traveled to war-torn Guatemala to work with refugees in the early ’90s and later started a basic school for repatriated refugees in El Salvador.
In 2000, Josh created Full Circle, a community leadership and policy innovation organization that funds nonprofits creating positive change in the Bay Area and building civic leaders for the future. He has been the driving force for Full Circle, which has supported policy innovations and community organizations in economic opportunity, education, environmental sustainability and health.
Appointed by Governor Jerry Brown, Josh served seven years on the California State Workforce Development Board, and he served on the Child Care Partnership Council in San Mateo County. Josh also is a founding trustee at the University of California Merced.
Josh has long been a champion in pushing businesses to create social good. After losing his father to brain cancer, Josh helped start a biotech company researching cancer cures. Uniting entrepreneurial expertise with his passion for social change, Josh cofounded New Cycle Capital, a pioneer in building socially responsible businesses. In 2011, Josh joined Lex Machina, which has a mission of bringing openness and transparency to the law. As CEO, he grew the company from a Stanford University public interest project into a nationally recognized platform. Most recently he founded a legal tech accelerator to support entrepreneurs who want to innovate in our legal and public policy system.
Josh earned a JD/MBA from Stanford University in 1999. While a student, Josh cofounded the Stanford Board Fellows program, which trains students to serve on the boards of local nonprofits, engaging them in social progress at the beginning of their careers, rather than the end.
Josh is a 20-year resident of Menlo Park, where he lives with his wife, Jonna, their two children, Leo and Aaron, and the family dog, Percy.
Diane Bailey, Executive Director of Menlo Spark, is a climate and clean air advocate with a background in environmental science. She comes from the Natural Resources Defense Council, where she spent almost 14 years working at the local, state, federal and international level promoting improved air quality and public health through reduced fossil fuel use, advances in clean transportation, and pollution prevention in industry. Previously, Diane worked at Citizens for a Better Environment in Chicago and a local transportation planning agency in Houston. She holds a bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering from Washington University and a master’s degree in environmental engineering from Rice University.
Image Credits: Office of State Senator Josh Becker