Wednesday, May 31, 2006

New apartment in Bakersfield

Life in Bakersfield has been good. I thought I'd have
my first trial, but it didn't end up happening. But
it looks like I'll have one in the next week or two.

Apart from work, I've mostly just been settling in to
my new apartment (after having rented a room in a
house for a month temporarily). I'm pretty amazed at
how much money I've spent already. I thought I'd be
living a pretty simple life, but even the simplest
furniture and fixtures and such seem to all add up.
And there's also clothes and shoes for work, too.

There's a lot of Hispanic folks in my apartment
complex, but I've yet to actually meet
anyone--probably because I'm at work so much.

The other thing I've started to do is look for a
church. I think this process may take a while,
because I'll be going back to Irvine for a good number
of weekends this summer, for various reasons,
including a few weddings.

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Another email soon after moving to Bakersfield

Hey all,

Hope you're all well. Some updates on what's been going on with me lately:

Up until 3 weeks ago, I've been living with my folks in Orange County, working for Kaplan as an occasional teacher and really more as an academic manager, supervising and training other teachers. And getting involved again at my church in Irvine. And watching a whole lot of tv (I joked that I made up for all the tv I didn't watch last year when I didn't have one). And sending out applications for legal work. And then, about 2 months ago, I got an offer from the place I'm at now.

So I've been at my new job for a little more than 3 weeks now. I'm now working for the city attorney's office in Bakersfield, CA. It's about 1.5 hrs north of LA, on the 99.

Before coming here, I'd had the fear that it would only be marginally bigger than those tiny towns you drive through on that drive (you know, those places with a handful of gas stations, fast food restaurants, and not much else). But as my friend J found out on wikipedia, it's a good sized city, the 11th largest in CA, with a bit more than 300,000 people.

The job has been really good, at least in the 3 weeks I've been here. I'm going to get a lot of experience doing a number of different things. Part of my time I'm in the office, doing legal research on issues affecting the city. The other part of the time (which may be the bulk of it), I'm in court or at the DA's office learning and starting to prosecute minor crimes.

(Which reminds me that I should write another post sometime about the level of certainty within a prosecutor's mind regarding the guilt of a defendant, both for trial as well as for plea negotiations.)

These last few weeks I've been spending a lot of time at work, partly to alleviate some of my vast ignorance, and partly because I don't have an Internet connection at the place I'm temporarily at. You don't appreciate what you've got until you don't have it anymore.

One of my co-workers in Irvine described Bakersfield as a blend of a central valley city (like Sacramento, Fresno, Stockton, etc) on the one hand and a greater LA area suburb on the other. Some of my coworkers leave town every weekend to go down to LA, or the bay area, or the central coast. The good thing is that there's a number of outdoor activities that aren't too far away, some camping, rafting, Sequoia isn't too far, and the coast (SLO) is about 2 hrs away. Or so I hear. I've gone back to the OC every weekend so far, though that won't continue for long.

One thing that a lot of people here say is not so good is the air quality. Since the city is at the southern edge of the central valley, we've got mountains on 3 sides that contribute to an inversion layer. So all the pollution from us (and partly from LA) stays in the area, and as the summer continues, my coworker tells me I'll gradually lose sight of the hills and mountains because of the smog. Apparently, LA puts some of its sewage in the fields in Kern county. Lovely.

Another thing almost everyone mentions is the heat. They say that Bakersfield summers are really really bad, and that while it's usually a dry heat, sometimes it's also humid, too. (I think it had something to do with that inversion layer.)

I'm not sure what to make of that. I spent the last 3 summers in Davis, and that first summer in particular, I remember was bad. Sitting in my apartment at 11 pm sweating and thinking to myself--when is it going to cool down? Visiting Safeway on a Sun afternoon to enjoy free air-conditioning.

And my second summer, working in Sacramento, it got so hot that the glue that held my rearview mirror in my car couldn't take the heat. A bit later, my brother glued it back on, but then another few months went by and the glue couldn't take the heat. So, how much worse than Davis is it going to be? Guess we'll see.

The plusses: Bakersfield is big enough to have all the major stores and restaurants: Costco, Walmart, supermarkets, Borders, Barnes and Noble, Trader Joe's, etc. There's a mall that has a Macy's though no Banana Republic.

And it's small enough not to have traffic. I live now about 5 miles from work, and on a good day, it takes 10 minutes to get to the parking lot at work. On a bad day, it takes 12 minutes.

And many of the people have the friendliness and genuine niceness that seems characteristic of the central valley.

Soon after moving to Bakersfield

Hey all,

I've been pretty bad about updating this. And I know I haven't made an effort yet to let people know that this blog has moved from its previous location. But I've been encouraged to write once again, especially given my new locale.

So, here are some edited excerpts from some emails I wrote to friends in the last few weeks. To start, what's below was written April 17, 2006.


Hey C,

Sorry I didn't write earlier--these last few weeks have been really hectic, trying to wrap things up in OC for work and church before coming here. And finding an apartment. And moving here.

Anyway, I had my first day of work here at the City Attorney's office. Lots of stuff and lots of meeting people whose names I promptly forgot about 5 minutes later. HR people, secretaries and attorneys in the office, police officers, more police officers, other people we met in the hall as our supervisor gave us tours. And tomorrow and the day after we'll be meeting a bunch more people, various police people and the DA's. Pretty much everyone was gone by 5:15 pm, so here I am checking email.

It's nice to know that I'm not in the kind of environment where everyone works really late. I hope I don't stand out too much by staying later than the others here.

My initial fear was that I'd be pretty bored here in Bakersfield, but it looks like there's lots and lots to learn here at work, both with regard to legal stuff and with regard to people and relationships and organizational stuff.

The other 2 people who started with me today seem nice. They're both a bit more experienced than I am, so I hope I can show myself to be at least competent.

Anyway, lots of first impressions, but we'll see how things pan out in a few weeks.

--Wanr