Amended in Senate March 6, 2013

Amended in Senate February 12, 2013

Senate Concurrent ResolutionNo. 4


Introduced by Senatorbegin delete Rubioend deletebegin insert Fullerend insert

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(Coauthor: Senator Fuller)

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(Coauthors: Assembly Members Grove and Salas)

December 6, 2012


Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 4—Relative to the Vernon P. Valenzuela Memorial Highway.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SCR 4, as amended, begin deleteRubioend delete begin insertFullerend insert. Vernon P. Valenzuela Memorial Highway.

This measure would designate a specified portion of State Highway Route 204 in the City of Bakersfield as the Vernon P. Valenzuela Memorial Highway. The measure would also request the Department of Transportation to determine the cost of appropriate signs showing this special designation and, upon receiving donations from nonstate sources covering that cost, to erect those signs.

Fiscal committee: yes.

P1    1WHEREAS, Vernon P. Valenzuela was born January 15, 1949,
2to the late Louis and Nellie Valenzuela. He was raised in
3Bakersfield, California, the youngest of five siblings; and

4WHEREAS, In 1966 Mr. Valenzuela quit high school to join
5the United States Army and volunteered to serve in Vietnam; and

6WHEREAS, Mr. Valenzuela served in Vietnam from October
71967 to May 1968, when he was wounded in battle. After his
P2    1honorable discharge in 1969, he returned to Bakersfield and
2obtained his high school diploma by attending night school; and

3WHEREAS, The following September, Mr. Valenzuela became
4the first member of his family to attend college; and

5WHEREAS, Mr. Valenzuela discovered the large Associated
6Veterans Students Club at Bakersfield College, and his association
7with the organization began his life as a leader and veterans
8advocate; and

9WHEREAS, Mr. Valenzuela became an active student and held
10positions as President of both the Associated Veterans Students
11Club and the Bakersfield College Student Body; and

12WHEREAS, After graduating with an associate of arts degree
13in 1973, Mr. Valenzuela continued his education at California
14State University, Bakersfield (CSUB), where he was a charter
15member of the first student council and began working in the
16Veterans Cost of Instruction Program (VCIP); and

17WHEREAS, While still attending CSUB, Mr. Valenzuela was
18hired to be Assistant Director of the Bakersfield College VCIP;
19and

20WHEREAS, Mr. Valenzuela obtained his bachelor’s degree in
21June 1975 and began counseling students at Bakersfield College,
22many of whom were veterans. He touched so many people’s lives
23during his college years that for the rest of his life he would run
24into people he knew while at college, who remembered him, who
25were helped by him, or whose children thanked him; and

26WHEREAS, Mr. Valenzuela received his masters degree in
27counseling in 1977 and earned his license in marriage and family
28therapy in 1979, specializing in treating post-traumatic stress
29disorder (PTSD); and

30WHEREAS, Mr. Valenzuela began his private practice shortly
31after his marriage in 1981, focusing on veterans with PTSD. He
32worked as a contract counselor with the Sepulveda Vet Center
33from 1981 to 1989, inclusive; and

34WHEREAS, During the 1990s, Mr. Valenzuela traveled to the
35Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington D.C. and joined the
36Vietnam Veterans of America (VVA). He became the President
37of the charter chapter of Bakersfield VVA and gradually worked
38through local, state, and national levels of the organization; and

39WHEREAS, Mr. Valenzuela served as VVA’s California
40president in 1993, and went on to serve on national committees
P3    1for PTSD, substance abuse, and the Veterans Initiative, which
2involved several trips to Vietnam to recover MIA remains; and

3WHEREAS, Mr. Valenzuela presented PTSD seminars
4throughout the nation, and was called on to work with Oklahoma
5City bomb survivors and United Auto Workers members in the
6New York area after September 11, 2001; and

7WHEREAS, During his involvement with VVA, Mr. Valenzuela
8became a leading advocate for the Vet Center program, meeting
9quarterly in Washington with Readjustment Counseling Services
10Director Dr. Alfonso Batres to discuss issues related to the Vet
11Center program; and

12WHEREAS, In 1997, Mr. Valenzuela made a conscious decision
13to bring his efforts to a more local level and was welcomed into
14the Kern County Network for Children. His efforts over the last
15decade included advocating for children and bridging the gap of
16community services for veterans. Throughout the late 1990s, he
17collaborated with the network to raise funds for graduating seniors
18and families in need during the holiday season within Kern County;
19and

20WHEREAS, In April 2008, Mr. Valenzuela was recruited to be
21the first Team Leader for the new Bakersfield Vet Center, helping
22to establish a much needed counseling resource for combat veterans
23throughout Kern County; and

24WHEREAS, As Team Leader of Bakersfield Vet Center, Mr.
25Valenzuela’s goal was to meet all needs of the veterans, and make
26the vet center a safe haven, a place where veterans could come for
27any help or need. He wanted the vet center in Bakersfield to be a
28model for all other vet centers, knowing that the people of
29Bakersfield are truly unique in their giving capacity and
30collaborative efforts; and

31WHEREAS, In addition to providing counseling and overseeing
32the operation of the vet center, Mr. Valenzuela was instrumental
33in beginning the Veterans Justice Program in Kern County and,
34along with other veterans and community resources, created and
35chaired the newly formed Kern County Veterans Collaborative.
36Mr. Valenzuela’s goal was not just to provide counseling services,
37but also to provide any service or answer any question a veteran
38may have; and

P4    1WHEREAS, Mr. Valenzuela passed away at 63 years of age on
2Monday, March 26, 2012, overlooking the ocean and surrounded
3by his family; and

4WHEREAS, Vernon P. Valenzuela is survived by his wife of
530 years, Lise, and their three grown children, Robert, Alison, and
6Katie, all of whom are very proud to have been his family; now,
7therefore, be it

8Resolved by the Senate of the State of California, the Assembly
9thereof concurring,
That the Legislature hereby designates the
10portion of State Highway Route 204 between F Street and Q Street
11in the City of Bakersfield as the Vernon P. Valenzuela Memorial
12Highway; and be it further

13Resolved, That the Department of Transportation is requested
14to determine the cost of appropriate signs consistent with the
15signing requirements for the state highway system showing this
16special designation and, upon receiving donations from nonstate
17sources sufficient to cover the cost, to erect those signs; and be it
18further

19Resolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of
20this resolution to the Department of Transportation and to the
21author for appropriate distribution.



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