Meet Amber McNeil!

Current Position: Resident Director

Hometown: Westampton, NJ

What motivates you to do the work you do? I love mentoring students. I had really wonderful mentors that didn't try to make decisions for me but instead exposed me to many different opportunities. I enjoy being able to do that with students at UCSB. I also love being a part of a like-minded team.

Why did you decide to join PWA? I find the community and especially the information helpful to me as a young professional. I have a few friends in PWA and they've had a very positive experience.

What are you loving right now ? Right now I'm loving long walks to the beach and binge watching Queen of the South.

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Lisa Osborn

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By Liz Holohan

PWA member Lisa Osborn is a fantastic resource for students and community members interested in communications and radio broadcasting. In her role as News and Public Affairs Director at KCSB, Lisa supports the student-run radio station news team and frequently provides free workshops on podcasting and reporting with the Associated Students Media Center. I spoke with Lisa about her background in radio broadcasting and how her work has evolved due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

How did you start at KCSB and what’s your role?

I am the News and Public Affairs Director and I’ve been in my current position for 5 years. I work alongside two student news directors. My background was in broadcasting in Los Angeles and I moved up to Santa Barbara for a job hosting a morning show. I wound up at KCSB because it was a much better fit for me. 

Did you think about going into journalism?

I got into radio broadcasting a while ago because it was a career with flexibility--if I moved out of state, I could work in any market. I’ve done all sorts of things from being an on-air DJ to a news anchor at a station in Los Angeles called KFWB. Before I moved to Santa Barbara, I was a classic rock DJ at a music network that was on 200 stations. I’m kind of stuck in the 60s and 70s in terms of music. I’ve had some journalism training but it was more that I’ve gotten into news through my work experiences, learning on the job, and being able to match what stations wanted when I first started. For example, I got hired at KFI because I had the sound they were looking for at the time.

What’s a normal day for you right now?

The day starts and ends with figuring out the news and getting it out to our audience. I work with the two student news directors to put out a COVID-19 update. We started doing the COVID-19 update in March with just going to our KCSB programmers 6 days a week. Then we heard that people were interested in it and so we expanded. Now, we have a version that goes to all undergraduates 3 times a week and a version for the broader KCSB community on Saturdays. After getting the COVID newsletter out in the morning, I’ll work with reporters through zoom. We offer stories they can pick or they can pitch a story to us. Then they’ll write the story or do an interview and record for air. Or they might do an interview. Right now, we are in the process of training some new reporters and getting them up to speed. A lot of my time is spent working with students and then meetings with staff and advisers. At the end of the day, I start writing the COVID news for the next day. 

As a staff member, I was aware of KCSB but didn’t really know much else about it. This fall, my partner, who is a graduate student, started sharing the COVID-19 update emails.  I was immediately impressed with the depth and breadth of the reporting on local news. 

Thanks! We just try to recap the highlights. Most of the content comes from the weekly news conference when the local health officials update the media.

To me, the reporting feels transparent and comprehensive. You’re not trying to spin it too positively or be too cautious.

Thank you!  We strive to keep it factual, not opinionated. We’ve gotten practice with that. Our readers offer feedback and, sometimes, constructive criticism, which I always appreciate hearing—as it helps us improve our work.

What was it like to transition remotely in your work?

I was surprised at how much we could do remotely thanks to technology. I already had a home studio so I was all set. In March, we shifted our operation from mostly live programs to pre-recorded. We are very grateful that our last student general manager got it all going very quickly. But I’m really surprised at how much we’ve been able to grow and allow students to continue to have this hands-on experience and continue to train new reporters. Training is almost easier on Zoom because I can easily share my screen and teach reporters how to edit audio recordings.

What is something exciting about your work right now? 

I’m excited to see our brand new students getting involved. We have a lot of first and second year students which is different from other years. I’m so excited about the depth that the students bring to their stories. After the Capitol riots, we wanted someone to explore ideas around free speech. We had a student write a story about the riots and she brought in some of her knowledge of the first amendment from a class she had taken. The extra stuff that the students bring to their reporting is so exciting to see.

The KCSB News team continues to provide timely and meaningful reporting about the pandemic for our local and regional communities. For more information about KCSB and to sign up for the COVID updates, visit https://www.kcsb.org/category/news/. Go to kcsb.org and enter your email address at the bottom of the homepage where it says “Join our Newsletter.”


Community Environmental Council

Image from their website.

Image from their website.

Call to Action

In addition to the incredible amount of resources on living a more sustainable life, check out the CEC Webinar Series on important topics such as solar housing, electric vehicles, and addressing the crisis of plastic trash!

Mission: CEC’s mission is to identify, advocate, and raise awareness about the most pressing environmental issues in the Santa Barbara region. Today, CEC is focused on pioneering real life solutions in areas with the biggest impact on climate change–most notably energy, transportation, and food systems.

CAUSE (Central Coast Alliance United for a Sustainable Economy)

Image taken in 2019 from facebook.

Image taken in 2019 from facebook.

Website: CAUSE

Mission: CAUSE is a base-building organization committed to social, economic, and environmental justice for working-class and immigrant communities in California’s Central Coast. CAUSE builds grassroots power through community organizing, leadership development, coalition building, civic engagement, policy research, and advocacy. CAUSE's vision is that together we can create a global community where we all contribute to, and benefit from, a sustainable economy that is just, prosperous and environmentally healthy.

Call to Action

Follow CAUSE on social media (@cause805) for updated alerts and calls for support on critical issues to our Central Coast communities which include supporting eviction protections for renters, fighting police brutality, advocating for the rights of farmworkers, and more. Donate to CAUSE!

Los Padres ForestWatch

Image from LPFW facebook page.

Image from LPFW facebook page.

Website: Los Padres ForestWatch

Facebook: @lpfw.org

Mission: Los Padres ForestWatch protects wildlife, wilderness, water, and sustainable access throughout the Los Padres National Forest and the Carrizo Plain National Monument. LPFW achieves this through education, advocacy, and when necessary, legal action for the benefit of our communities, climate, and future generations. ForestWatch is the only organization focused solely on protecting our region’s public lands, from the famed Big Sur coastline, to San Luis Obispo’s Santa Lucia Range and the Carrizo Plain National Monument, to the rugged backcountry of Santa Barbara and Ventura counties.

Call to Action

Check out the ForestWatch Action Center website! They make it easy to become an environmental advocate by providing links to email your representative, sign petitions, and make public comments in support of environmental protections. Donate to protect public lands!

SURJ SB (Showing Up for Racial Justice)

SURJ logo from their website.

SURJ logo from their website.

Website: SURJ SB

Facebook: @SURJSB

Mission: SURJ SB is the Santa Barbara Chapter of a national organization with over 150 chapters and affiliate groups across the United States, committed to drawing white people into the multiracial movement for racial justice in ways that are effective and accountable. SURJ works in direct collaboration with organizing groups led by people of color in our community and across the nation, to whom we are accountable.

Call to Action

Are you new to SURJ or ready to get more involved? Join one of their “Welcome to SURJ” small group meetings. These meetings will outline SURJ’s mission, vision, and framework, as well as connect you with active SURJ SB members so you can get started on racial justice work right away.

In the meantime, you can join their Weekly Action Email list to receive information about specific actions, educational resources, and more opportunities to affect change in our local Santa Barbara community.

Mental Wellness Center

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Website: Mental Wellness Center

Instagram: @mentalwellnesssb

Mission: The Mental Wellness Center works with thousands of people every year to improve and maintain mental wellness. They are a community-based nonprofit organization that specializes in helping adults living with mental health disorders meet critical and basic needs as a foundation for their wellness. They offer programs for teens and adults and work to educate youth, families, and community groups about mental health so that we can take better care of ourselves individually and as a community.

Calls to Action 

The Mental Wellness Center’s Fellowship Club has provided a safe space and access to resources and activities for adults living with a mental health diagnosis for nearly 60 years. This holiday season, the Mental Wellness Center is seeking donations of $20 gift cards to support their holiday program and continue the tradition of giving each member a holiday gift. Some ideas for gift cards include grocery and food retailers, pharmacies, and coffee shops.

Additionally, they are currently seeking donations of the following items for the Fellowship Club Care Closet. They ask that all items be laundered and gently used:

  • Men’s casual clothing

  • Jackets and warm outerwear for men and women

  • Socks and undergarments for men and women

  • Shoes for men and women

  • Umbrellas and sleeping bags

For all donation inquiries, please contact Fellowship Club Manager Carrie Faulkner at 805.884.8440 ext. 3351, cfaulkner@mentalwellnesscenter.org.

Showers of Blessing

Image from Showers of Blessing’s Facebook page.

Image from Showers of Blessing’s Facebook page.

Facebook: @ShowersSB

Mission: Showers of Blessing, a non-profit organization under the Interfaith Initiative of Santa Barbara brings free hot showers and love to people experiencing homelessness in South Santa Barbara County in order to promote health and restore dignity to our most vulnerable neighbors. Everything provided is free: hot, private shower, socks, underwear, food, 30-day packs of biodegradable wipes and hand-sewn masks.

Call to Action 

In addition to financial support, Showers of Blessing accepts donations of personal hygiene items including undergarments, socks and clothing. Visit their website for more details.

Foodbank of Santa Barbara County

Image by Jacqueline Pilar / Foodbank of Santa Barbara County photo. Originally published by Noozhawk.

Image by Jacqueline Pilar / Foodbank of Santa Barbara County photo. Originally published by Noozhawk.

Foodbank of SB County - COVID-19 Disaster Relief

Mission: Foodbank of Santa Barbara County’s mission is to end hunger and transform the health of Santa Barbara County through good nutrition. Since Covid-19 safety measures took effect, the Foodbank has tripled the amount of food it provides to community members facing hunger and food insecurity.

CALLS TO ACTION

Right now, their most-needed items are financial donations, volunteers, and homemade masks! To start getting involved, create an account on their volunteer page and "Opt-in" to their emails for more details. Currently, they are most in need of Emergency Response Pre-Pack assistance and Emergency Delivery Drivers in both North and South County. Food donations can only be made at 4554 Hollister Ave. between 1 and 3pm, or at 490 W. Foster Rd. in the bin outside.


CALM - Child Abuse Listening Meditation

Website: calm4kids.org

Mission: “CALM has been a leader in developing a variety of trauma-informed, evidence-based programs and services that effectively treat child abuse and promote healing, as well as programs successful in preventing childhood trauma through family strengthening and support. Services are provided to all in both Spanish and English, at sliding scale or free of charge if needed; no one is turned away due to inability to pay.

CALM continues to be the only non-profit in Santa Barbara County that specializes in the prevention and treatment of childhood trauma.”

(CALM)

Call to Action

“CALM has identified the families we serve who could use the extra support and coordinated with staff to determine each particular family’s needs, then asked our generous supporters to shop for them.”

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Meet Viktoriya Babenko!

Current Position: 5th year PhD Candidate in Cognitive Neuroscience

Hometown: Sherman Oaks, California (Born in Ukraine)

What is your research about?
Receptors for women’s sex hormones (which greatly fluctuate week-to-week) are located all throughout the body and brain. They affect our behavior, decision making and emotions. However, research on this influence of sex hormones in women is often overlooked and understudied because it is difficult to control for. In fact, much of what we know in behavioral neuroscience in animal models is performed strictly on males. My research aims to understand how these female sex hormones interact with our stress response - and how this relationship influences changes in our brain, body, and behavior.

Why did you decide to join PWA? I attended a virtual “Get to know PWA” mixer and instantly felt a great vibe with the leaders and members of the club. I felt that I was surrounded by like-minded women who were all there to form authentic connections and knew that this is something that I wanted to be a part of.

What are you loving right now? I am grateful that this extremely tough time of societal trauma, global anxiety, and isolation has pushed me to go out of my way to strengthen my connections with friends and family. Although separated by distance, it has brought my friends and I closer in communication and vulnerability. Right now, I’m loving taking time to focus on self improvement and fostering openness and honesty with myself, my loved ones, and even those who I am not yet familiar with.

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Healing Justice Santa Barbara: BLM SB

Facebook: @BlackLivesMatterSB

Mission: “Healing Justice Santa Barbara aspires to uplift all Black/African-Americans to affirm that they are deserving of safety, love, equity, respect, and joy. We are a Black led and Black centered organizing collective in Santa Barbara County. Formed in response to the de-stabilizing impacts of racism and anti-blackness, we aspire to build resilient communities for the African diaspora and other marginalized people along the Central Coast.

(Healing Justice Santa Barbara)

Call to Action

  • tues 12/8: Demand SB County Stop Supporting Deportations

    Join HJSB at the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisor Meeting to demand that the Sheriff Department and the Board of Supervisors stop all ICE notifications and transfers, and put an end to the painful separations of our communities and families. Click here for details from their Facebook event.

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El Centro SB: Support Local Mutual Aid Efforts

Image from their website

Image from their website

Call to Action

  • Currently accepting donations for their Free Market for Mamas, Parents, and Babies event on Saturday December 19 from 11am - 4pm.

    • Donation drop off: Fridays December 4, 11, and 18th at 629 Coronel Pl, Santa Barbara

    • Donation suggestions: diapers, bottles, wipes, swaddles, warm blankets, teething toys, pacifiers, new or gently used clothing (size infant-toddler), maternity clothing, ointment, bibs, baby food & formula, sling or baby carrier care products for mama & parents

If you cannot make donation drop off and would like to donate, please contact carepackagesformamas805@gmail.com, direct message on Instagram @carepackagesformama_, or text (805) 617-6863.

Mission statement: “An activist-led grassroots community space located on the lower west side of Santa Barbara that centers people working towards the liberation and uplifting of people of color including but not limited to Womxn, Youth, Indigenous, Black, Latinx, Economically Underserved, and LGBTQIA+ communities.” (El Centro SB)

Addressing Food Insecurity

“As a community we have been concerned about the levels of food insecurity experienced by residents of the Lower Westside of Santa Barbara and are dedicated to ensuring that basic resources are redistributed in an equitable way among all members. Through partnerships with community organizations, non-profits, local farmers, educational institutions, and mutual aid networks we have been working to bridge the gap between food-insecure communities and abundant food sources in Santa Barbara county to provide direct service and educational opportunities to empower our community.” (Facebook: @elcentrosb)

As a 100% volunteer-run space, El Centro relies on individual donations and community support. If you want to donate to local mutual aid efforts, please consider donating to El Centro SB.

Pati Montojo

You might recognize her name among the myriad of daily D-List emails, but Pati Montojo ‘14 is one to watch. As Manager of the Academic and Staff Assistance Program (ASAP) and a licensed psychologist, she supervises a small team of staff committed to supporting the health and well-being of faculty, staff, and family members. ASAP provides confidential short-term counseling, consultation, wellness workshops, and assistance with threat management. This year, Pati was recognized by our community as one of this year’s Unsung Heroines, specifically for her role in starting a working mothers support group.

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PWA: What motivates you at work?

Pati: My two young children. I work harder, longer and better for them. From my professional role and work experiences, I hope to teach my children to love learning, care about people, and work hard for whatever they want or believe in. 

PWA: Work can be challenging. What would you say is your approach to facing challenges that arise?

Pati: We, at ASAP, are busier than ever during this difficult time in our state and country. I am a strong team player and value my team. I seek support and ask for help. I could not face the challenges we are currently facing without the support of my staff.

PWA: What is something you've worked on and/or accomplished that you are proud of?

Pati: As a daughter of immigrant parents, who understood the importance of education, I am proud of the advanced degree and specialized training I received from my doctoral program, CCSP at UCSB. I am proud to be a bilingual Spanish-speaking psychologist of color.

PWA: What is one way that you relax/decompress/have fun outside of work?

Pati: After having my first child, I understood the value of community especially as a first time mother. I relocated my family to Santa Barbara to be close to my people. My tribe consists of strong women, mostly psychologists who graduated from the same doctoral program at UCSB, and among us we have ten children under the age of four. Social connections are imperative, now more than ever. Also, I will never pass an opportunity to date my husband, which is rare these days having two toddlers, and both being essential workers during a pandemic.

The Backpack Drive Comes Full Circle

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This summer, much like everything else in our world, the fate of our 25th annual PWA backpack drive was uncertain. Given our health and safety concerns and with the Steering Committee working from home, we knew this year would look different.

In August, we were still finalizing the logistics when we got an encouraging email from a community member. Kundai Chikowero, a senior at Dos Pueblos High School, had always looked forward to the PWA backpack drive and was worried that it might not happen this due to COVID-19 and knew that the need would be higher than ever. So she organized her own successful supply drive! We had the pleasure of chatting with her about her fundraising efforts and what she’s looking forward to this year.

PWA: What has been your experience with the PWA Backpack drive over the years?

Kundai: My mom and dad work at UCSB, and through them I got to know about the PWA Annual Backpack drive. I have been a member of Youth Making Change (YWC), Santa Barbara, since 8th grade. Once I was aware of the PWA Annual Backpack drive, I decided to use part of my stipend from YMC each year to purchase school supplies and backpacks. I dropped off the supplies, mostly at the UCEN dropoff location. I was happy last year when for the first time you had a dropoff center in the UCSB Library. This was a very convenient location for me since my mom works at the UCSB Library. I look forward to the PWA drive every year because of its positive impact on Isla Vista Elementary School. IV being my alma mater, I have first-hand experience of how some students go without things like backpacks. It was exciting for me to learn how the PWA is doing this amazing work in our community. I feel fortunate to be a part of such a caring community.

PWA: Tell us more about your supply drive this summer!

Kundai: This summer we were in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic. My dad's former UCSB student did a backpack drive for his community. This drive made me think a lot about the PWA Annual Backpack drive. With almost all UCSB employees working remotely I started getting a bit worried about how the backpack drive was going to work. I asked my mom and she wasn't too sure as well. I decided to use my YMC stipend to secure some backpacks and school supplies. An idea came to my mind to organize a virtual backpack fundraiser to augment what I had bought. Since I am still a minor, my mom helped me out to plan a GoFundMe fundraiser. I had a $500 target but the response was overwhelming. In less than 2 days, the target was exceeded by $110. I am grateful to all who shared it on social media and those who donated. I managed to buy 76 backpacks in total and a variety of other school supplies like colored pencils, pencils, erasers, binders, glue sticks, sharpeners, and boxes of Kleenex for the teachers. I handed over the supplies to the IV school Principal Ms. Reyes, who was simply overwhelmed with gratitude. I have to thank PWA for instilling in me in this sense of caring for one's community.

PWA: What are some issues you are passionate about right now?

Kundai: I am very passionate about racial equality. I have participated in the Martin Luther King essay and poetry competitions since 7th grade. I have read my winning poems and essays at various venues in Santa Barbara. I have self-published two poetry books with themes ranging from racial equality, women's rights among other things. I also care deeply about our environment to the point where I might venture into environmental law.

PWA: What are you most looking forward to this upcoming year?

Kundai: We are in a pandemic, which has been really challenging. I am trying to always look at the brighter side of life, hoping for a brighter tomorrow. I am looking forward to a lot of things. I am in my senior year of high school, so I am looking into college options. I am also looking forward to my final MLK poetry competition. Above all, I am simply looking forward and hoping for a love-filled society.

PWA says, "Vote!"

Dear PWA friends,

We hope you're enjoying the last bits of summer as safely as you can in COVID season. For those with littles back in school, we see you. You got this!

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This past month, we hosted a discussion on the documentary, And She Could Be Next, a look at grassroots movements across the country aimed at gaining representation in politics for historically marginalized groups in this country (namely, women of color). In the age of communication, it is difficult for social and political strife to go unnoticed. Much of our country -- young and old -- is awakening to the importance of participating in the political landscape simply because so many social and human rights issues seem to be partisan issues. It often feels like the fight for human decency is at stake, and it's hard to believe we're still being forced to take sides.

The Professional Women's Association encourages everyone who can to vote. The future depends on it. We've seen how much can change in a few short years, and how much progress gets lost when we're not looking out for each other. Luckily, California has not made it too difficult to submit your ballot this year, but you do need to make sure you've got everything in order to do so successfully and effectively. Check out Vote Safely, Santa Barbara County! to make sure your voice is heard this election season. 

We'd also like to invite you to the live-streamed forums featuring upcoming local election candidates, hosted by the League of Women Voters of Santa Barbara next Thursday. See the "Upcoming Events" section below for details, and visit https://my.lwv.org/california/santa-barbara for more information.

If you'd like to get involved with PWA's efforts to promote the vote, reach out to us at connect-pwa@ucsb.edu!

In peace and health,

The PWA Steering Committee

The Lasting Impact of AOC's Speech

Image via The New York Times

Like many of us, I was memorized by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC)’s July 23rd speech on the floor of the House of Representatives in response to being accosted and insulted by Rep. Ted Yoho on the Capitol steps a few days earlier. Her words reverberated in my mind for days.

I was not shocked at all by Rep Yoho’s abusive behavior. We have seen situations like this played out in the media many times before. But AOC’s response felt different and, at first, I couldn’t put my finger on it. After reading some early press coverage, it seemed like the media was focusing on the story of two individuals—condemning Rep Yoho for his behavior and praising AOC for her succinct rebuttal to his pathetic non-apology about having a wife and daughters. This was all well and good but I still felt these articles missed the point.

To me, the most important part of her speech was when she said this: “This issue is not about one incident. It is cultural. It is a culture of lack of impunity, of accepting violence and violent language against women and an entire structure of power that supports that.” She wasn’t just standing up for herself and calling out one man’s bad behavior. She was articulating how easily he used his privilege as a white male to intentionally undermine her power, discredit her ideas, and intimidate her with violence.

In the following weeks, I read more essays—written by women—that helped me understand why her words stayed with me. As Emily Peck wrote in her article for the HuffPost, AOC “offered an eloquent and expert dismantling of the playbook that men have used to keep women in their place for centuries.” THIS! This is what I want to keep thinking and talking about long after this incident has left the news cycle. “Degradation and dismissal of women,” writes Rebecca Traister in her powerful article The Poison of Male Incivility, “...has been key to the building and maintenance of disproportionately male power in American political, economic, social, and sexual life.”

There’s a lot to unpack here and it’s exciting. How does this “playbook” show up in our lives? How is it used by men and women alike to maintain the status quo? What can we do to understand it more and dismantle it? By calling out this systemic misogyny, AOC demands that we address not only Yoho’s behavior but the power structure that enables it to continue—a more difficult but essential task.

In the week following her speech, AOC posted her notes on Instagram and wrote a caption that felt like she was speaking directly to me:

“Many have asked me if my speech was pre-written. The answer is no. But in some ways, yes. Yes because this speech was a recounting of thoughts that so many women and femme people have carried since the time we were children. It flowed because every single one of us has lived this silent script: stay silent (why?), keep your head down (for whom?), suck it up (to whose benefit?).”

I immediately want to make this into a sticker and post it on every surface in my apartment. Thank you, AOC, for speaking truth to power. Now it’s time to continue the discussion. How did her speech impact you? Did it affect you differently than other times that women spoke up?

In solidarity,

Liz Holohan

A Note from the Incoming Steering Committee President

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Dear PWA friends,

I want to take a moment to introduce myself as the new PWA president for the 2020-2021 term. I am excited to continue PWA’s longstanding commitment to professional development and building community at UCSB. This is my third term with the PWA steering committee, so you may have seen me working on programming and events in the past couple of years. I’m also in my second year as an Admissions Counselor for UCSB. I am a recent transplant to Santa Barbara, having moved here from Iowa by way of Denver. I love living and working in such a beautiful place, and feel passionately about making this place more accessible and inclusive.

Let me say again that PWA is here for you. We are always looking to our membership community for feedback on what professional development and programming opportunities you would like to see, as the advancement of our mission only works when you feel the benefits! If you would like to see your Profession Women’s Association prioritizing certain programming or partnership efforts, please reach out and let us know!

PWA stands with our friends and neighbors fighting for justice and equity in our community and around the world because Black lives still matter. We continue to look toward this resource for Anti-Racism materials, this list of Black-owned businesses in Santa Barbara, and more ways to help (via #BLM) to help close the racial wealth gap and recognize the contributions, power, and legitimacy of BIPOC.

The Steering Committee and I look forward to meeting and collaborating with you through workshops, discussion forums, and virtual hang outs this year! Please reach out to us at connect-pwa@gmail.com with any suggestions/feedback!

In peace and good health,

Breana Barak

Book Review: Goodbye, Vitamin

image via

image via

goodbye, vitamin by rachel khong

Sometimes we read books because we see them everywhere; they’re the talk of the town and we want in on the secret. It may take us years to open it up, but we do eventually because it’s always there. Then, there are books we happen across as if by magic. We don’t even know what made us slide over closer to get a better look. No one seems to be talking about these books, at least not in our circles, and we can’t figure out why. They’re just delicious, little morsels of something good, and we’re lucky that we found them.

I discovered Goodbye, Vitamin during one of my favorite pastimes: endlessly scrolling the library e-book app to see what’s available. (I’m a sucker for a good cover, too!) I don’t remember even reading a synopsis; I just cracked it open and the second I got a taste, I knew it was a goner. Like a song, I couldn’t get this book out of my head. I read it again a few months later and forced it into the hands of my mother. We found ourselves excitedly dissecting it, like a two-woman book club. Everything I loved about it, she did too. I’ve recommended it so many times, and even gifted it to someone when our office did a secret book exchange. Recently, on a quarantine walk through my neighborhood, I stopped at one of the free little libraries in someone’s front yard, as I often do; and there, where it hadn’t been any of the times I’d stopped before — a bright, hard copy. I gasped. Was word finally getting around? It’s only natural that I try to convince you, too.

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After her serious relationship ends, Ruth is beckoned home by her desperate mother hoping for some help in caring for her father whose dementia has caused a series of comical and concerning events. Her father has been a history teacher at the local college for some time, but was let go from his position due to his condition, and Ruth and his favored students pull together to give him a sense of normalcy.

This isn’t an easy book to just give a plot summary for, because the reading experience is about so much more than that. The story is told through bite-sized scenes and tidbits of memory, and the sparse language makes every moment intentional and wrought with meaning. Woven through it all is an adult daughter’s relationship with her father as his mind fails him and he becomes more childlike, and the poetry of that inevitable role reversal. These scenes bowled me over, as I am very fond of my own father and saw so many similarities in the ways that we bond and care for each other. There is a sweet structure throughout the book, in which it is revealed to Ruth that her father has saved many memories of the darndest things she would say as a very young child, and these tidbits have stayed with me even still.

Ultimately, I loved that Khong made a novel out of the simplicities — and by default, the complexities — of everyday life; the thoughts that run through our head as we make meaning of the things that happen to us. Her writing felt like reading my own journal. And her sensitivity toward her characters gave them a delicate quality; you just wanted to hold them and keep them safe.

“It’s about remembering, forgetting, and trying to be okay.” — Rachel Khong, on her novel

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Rachel Khong was formerly an executive editor for Lucky Peach magazine and founded a workspace for writers and artists in San Francisco for women and nonbinary creatives. Her debut novel, Goodbye, Vitamin won the 2017 California Book Award for First Fiction.

Statement from the Steering Committee June 11, 2020

Dear PWA Community,

Alongside our peers and colleagues across the nation and around the world, we mourn the loss of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and many others who have been murdered as a result of inhumane police brutality that is perpetuated by a culture of white supremacy. Black Lives Matter. 

As a Professional Women’s Association committed to equity and justice, we must work to dismantle white supremacy in all its forms--which includes toxic white feminism. Now is a time for reflection and humility as we learn how to become informed anti-racist allies and accomplices. We share the sentiments of our colleagues at Oregon Women in Higher Education when they write, “White supremacy’s focus on perfection can make this work challenging but don’t let perfect be the enemy of good.”

Although we were not able to hold our annual conference this spring, we stand by our centering theme: Speak Up. We ask that you will join us in using our voices to demand justice. Moving forward, we will be using this platform to organize for action; facilitate dialogue; elevate voices of Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC); and create spaces for our community to unlearn and learn together. 

In solidarity,

The PWA Steering Committee

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resources & calls to action

  • Donate to the organization of your choice that supports Black Lives Matter or any BIPOC organization, or a bail out fund through the National Bail Fund Network.

  • Start the work with this Anti-Racism Resources guide forwarded to us by UCSB’s Office of Black Development Staff that was compiled by Sarah Sophie Flicker, Alyssa Klein in May 2020.

  • Contact your local government officials or members of your City Council demanding that they adopt a city budget that prioritizes community wellbeing from the ground up, divests from the militarization of the police, and invests in social and holistic services. Use the text and contact information provided by Defund12.org.

These are just a few of many ways to be involved in this vital movement for change. We will be continuing to provide resources for the PWA community through our social media channels. More to come.