Diamond Bar-Walnut|News|
The Little Litterbug Swatter
Megan Tran, age 2, has taken to help clean up Diamond Bar parks, one piece of litter at a time.

<strong>Email </strong>darren.fishell@patch.com<strong><br>Phone </strong>909.274.8345<strong><br>Hometown </strong>Diamond Bar<strong><br>Birthday </strong>May 12, 1987<strong><br>Facebook </strong>facebook.com/DiamondBarPatch<strong><br>Twitter </strong>twitter.com/DiamondBarPatch<strong><br>Welcome Video</strong>
<strong>Bio</strong>
Darren Fishell has a passion for journalism that began early, as a sophomore reporter and later editor in chief for the Diamond Ranch High School paper. After those early years growing up in Diamond Bar, Darren shipped off to Maine to attend Bowdoin College, where he spent summers and spare time reporting in Brunswick for The Times Record on everything from church bazaars to snow plow contract disputes and gubernatorial debates. After graduation, he worked as a correspondent for The Times Record, reporting in towns dappling Mid Coast Maine. His reporting on four men battling prostate cancer earned him an award from the Maine Coalition to Fight Prostate Cancer and was collected and republished for distribution throughout the state.
At Bowdoin, Darren co-founded and served as editor in chief of a student and community news website called Curia that provided students a platform to read about and discuss the issues of the day. That site introduced Darren to a new take on community journalism as an extended and community-wide conversation – the resource that Diamond Bar Patch will provide.
Darren has also contributed reporting for the Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting, an investigative journalism non-profit headquartered in Augusta, Maine.
Growing up in Diamond Bar, Darren attended Armstrong Elementary, Lorbeer Middle School, and Diamond Ranch High School. In his senior year at Diamond Ranch, he received a school service award for his work as editor in chief of the school paper.
See Darren's welcome video to Diamond Bar Patch for a video guide to the site.<br><br><strong>Our Beliefs</strong><br>At Patch, we promise always to report the facts as objectively as possible and otherwise adhere to the principles of good journalism. However, we also acknowledge that true impartiality is impossible because human beings have beliefs. So in the spirit of simple honesty, our policy is to encourage our editors to reveal their beliefs to the extent they feel comfortable. This disclosure is not a license for you to inject your beliefs into stories or to dictate coverage according to them. In fact, the intent is the opposite: we hope that the knowledge that your beliefs are on the record will cause you to be ever mindful to write, report and edit in a fair, balanced way. And if you ever see evidence that we failed in this mission, please let us know.<br><br><strong>Politics</strong><br>I was a registered Democrat until the 2010 mid-term elections, when I became unaligned to follow a compelling Independent candidate for governor in Maine. I strongly feel that party affiliation is only the tip of the iceberg with any candidate and I follow politicians of any stripe who are thoughtful, nuanced, and caring. My only hard-nosed political belief is that a better-informed public is more capable of governing itself. <br><br><strong>Religion</strong><br>I am not religious, but I value strongly the idea of Buddhist teacher and thinker Thich Naht Hanh that we have much to learn and to take from every world religion. I would suggest his book Living Buddha, Living Christ to people of any creed. I believe our creation is magnificent and rife with mystery and I would point anyone to Carl Sagan's Cosmos as a brilliant illustration of that.<br><br><strong>Local Hot-Button Issues</strong><br>Development is an ongoing tension, both at the proposed site of the Los Angeles football stadium and at Site "D," owned by Walnut Valley School District. The future of Diamond Bar could be shaped by the fate of the Los Angeles football stadium project.
School budgets will also be a point of interest throughout this year as districts will likely see significant cutbacks from the state.
Megan Tran, age 2, has taken to help clean up Diamond Bar parks, one piece of litter at a time.

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors unanimously approved funding for design costs of a new Diamond Bar Library. The library would occupy the first floor of a building the city purchased in September to serve as a new city hall.
A batch of 2010 U.S. Census data was released Tuesday afternoon and details general demographic shifts in Diamond Bar since 2000. While the city's overall population scarcely shifted, the Asian population grew 21 percent.
Diamond Bar High senior Manan Shah spoke Monday night in the 74th annual Lions Club student speaker contest, debating whether enforcing United States borders is a responsibility of federal or state government.
The Diamond Bar High School Science Olympiad Team will advance to State Championships after placing fourth in a field of 36 teams during regional competition at Occidental College.
Abbas Shileh, 47, pleaded guilty today to one count of bribery, paying $50,000 to the then-chariman of Soboba Band of Luiseno Indians for a valet parking contract at the Soboba Casino in San Jacinto.
The Diamond Ranch girls faced another tough break Sunday as CIF rules put two highly-ranked Division IV teams in the running for the Division III CIF spot that the Panthers had set their sights on.
This week in news at Diamond Bar Patch.
The Diamond Bar Pony Baseball league kicked off the season with lessons from a former major-leaguer, clear skies, and a lot of enthusiasm.
Police suspect there may be more victims in the case against a Diamond Bar man accused of molesting three young girls while he was a teacher at a Compton Elementary School.
The L.A. County Fire Department Explorers Post 19, based at station 187 in Pomona, serves young department hopefuls in the Diamond Bar area. Sunday, they will be serving pancakes as part of a fundraiser.
A Diamond Bar man was arrested Thursday in connection with three felony charges of molestation against females under the age of 14 while he was teaching at Foster Elementary School in Compton.
According to an Associated Press and Los Angeles Times report, the NFL asked Majestic Realty to change the stated location of the project to "Grand Crossing."
A YouTube video featuring male Diamond Bar teens pretending to hold up a yogurt store — one pretending to be a suicide bomber — should raise concerns for parents over how the online service is used.
Today is the last day to submit intra-district transfer requests to the Pomona Unified School District office.
The Regional Chamber of Commerce of San Gabriel Valley announced a new online, interactive map feature that aims to bring local advertising into the digital age.
Young In Cheon is no stranger to international competition. The Grandmaster of YIC Taekwondo coached the 2000 U.S. Olympic team.
The Walnut Valley Unified School district is hosting its second annual 5k and 1k fun run to raise money for schools in the district. Organizers said the event had over 2,300 participants last year and over 700 had signed up by Monday.
Evergreen Elementary fifth-grader Donovan Klein said that a fellow student introduced him to Michael Jackson's "Thriller," which kicked off a fascination with the King of Pop.
The city council approved an urgency measure last night to postpone any development at the site of the former Diamond Bar Honda dealership.