Mobile services center brings essential tech to coastside farmworkers
The San Mateo coast is farm country but those who work the fields have a tough time accessing basic services to live a normal life.
Watch CBS News
John Ramos accidentally launched a lifelong career in journalism when he began drawing editorial cartoons and writing smart-alecky satire pieces for the Bakersfield High School newspaper.
Later, while attending Fresno State, John took a 3-week summer job at a local TV station filling in for a graphic artist...who never returned from vacation. Suddenly working full-time in television, he quickly moved from graphics to photography and spent many years covering news in the Fresno area.
John's career took a turn in 1995 when he was conned into taking an assignment to create a weekly news magazine show, for which he would be the sole photographer and editor. Defying all logic, the show succeeded and John ended up winning a regional Emmy Award, a national Iris Award for Television Programming, an Edward R. Murrow Award and was named Associated Press Editor of the Year two years in a row.
That's when he met Ann, his future wife. She was also working in Fresno, but wanted to move back to the Bay Area to be near family. John tagged along, taking a job at KPIX in 2003, working mainly in the Oakland/Contra Costa areas.
In 2011, John was asked to become a "Multi-Media Journalist" or MMJ, meaning he must produce, shoot, write and edit his own stories under daily deadline pressure...all while working out of a van. It's not for the faint of heart. Nevertheless, John has developed a reputation for telling thoughtful, human stories, often with a hint of irreverence. He loves to find the humor in situations while, at the same time, respecting the viewpoints of others.
"I try to be fair in expressing people's positions...even it I don't happen to agree with them." he says. "But I'm also not afraid to point out when something just doesn't seem to make much sense."
It's been a fun, fascinating, challenging career for a guy who never really planned anything in his life. But, you know, things tend to work out OK...if you just have a little faith.
John lives in Concord with Ann and their two smart-alecky daughters.
The San Mateo coast is farm country but those who work the fields have a tough time accessing basic services to live a normal life.
For a lot of people in the Bay Area Saturday, driving in the wet conditions felt a bit like playing a vehicular version of Russian roulette.
A North Bay man dealing with a serious health problem has discovered that volunteering at the food bank doesn't just help others. It also puts his own life into perspective.
So far this year in Marin County, the rainfall has been a bit disappointing. But the reservoirs are standing at about exactly average for this time of year, and "average" has never felt so good, especially after years of drought.
The controversial Tenderloin Center that was the cornerstone to Mayor London Breed's plan to fight crime and blight in the neighborhood closed Sunday, leaving thousands of addicts with nowhere else to go.
In Oakland, the fifth annual Black Sunday Holiday Expo provided an opportunity for African American business owners to benefit from the holiday shopping season.
Considering the severity of the drought these past few years, no one should complain when it starts to rain and, for the most part on Saturday, no one did.
At a World AIDS Day event Wednesday evening, iconic HIV activist Cleve Jones was honored with the National AIDS Memorial Lifetime of Commitment Award.
There are several pairs of family members working at the Alameda County Community Food Bank, but just recently the food bank got the distinction of employing three generations of the same family.
A modular home construction company hosted an open house in Santa Rosa to show off dwellings built to resist fire.
Pierre Smit has been donating turkeys to St. Anthony's Dining Room in San Francisco's Tenderloin District for years but he may have outdone himself this time.
On Wednesday, the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) will consider a plan to change the incentives offered to owners of rooftop solar panels.
A church in east Oakland has become a model for providing refuge during power shutoffs and brownouts.
A demolition derby at the Alameda County Fairgrounds Saturday benefited charities of the Hayward Firefighters.
"I got this wrong," admits CEO Mark Zuckerberg as his company grapples with faltering revenue and broader tech industry woes.