SC Veteran Volunteer Jon Bashor Retires After 27 Years of Service to National Labs
Editor’s Note: the SC Conference Series is led by a team of dedicated volunteers from a multitude of backgrounds and specialties. Please consider applying to get involved in any capacity that you can volunteer. Jon Bashor served as a vital SC volunteer for two decades. Visit this blog in the future for other volunteer profiles. For more details on volunteering, please email here.Â
SCâs Jon Bashor’s Legacies Professional and Personal
The way he tells it, Jon Bashor fell into a science communications career when he landed a job at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL)Â in 1991. But talk to him a bit more and it becomes clear why he stayed for nearly three decades. He fell in loveâwith the science, the people and the mission of the national labs.

âWhat really struck me [[about LLNL] was the intellectual capital,â said Bashor. âThousands of smart people working on amazing projects, it can be overwhelming, but itâs really inspiring. The stuff they come up with is mind boggling.â
On April 6, Bashor retired after 27 years with the national lab system, 21 of those at Berkeley Lab promoting computing, networking, and mathematics.
âAs communications manager, Jon has been key to the visibility of Berkeley Labâs computing program, both through written articles and other material produced by Jon and his team and his community leadershipâincluding several years of organizing the DOE booth at SC, the annual supercomputing conference,â said Associate Lab Director Kathy Yelick.
âBeyond that, he has been very active in outreach and community building, not only with local high schools, but also within the lab itself, creating STEM workshops for kids, creating and co-chairing an employee resource group to advocate for a more accessible campus and much more,â Yelick continued.
For his career-long efforts, Bashor was recently recognized with a 2017 Berkeley Lab Directorâs Award for Exceptional Achievement.
âI love this job. I love the people. Iâm just tired of coming to work everyday,â chuckles Bashor, who intends to step up his volunteer work with Kennedy High Schoolâs IT Academy, the Friends of El Cerrito Library and the Turnabout thrift shop after retirement. âThere might also be some days I just stay home and pet my cat,â he said.
Tam difficile non debet
Bashor was hired at Berkeley Lab in 1997 by then NERSC Director Horst Simon. During the job interview, he recounts, Simon asked him to name one important thing that happened in high-performance computing (HPC) over the last year.
Bashor, who still describes himself as âthe least technical person in the room,â could only summon up the recent death of HPC pioneer Seymour Cray, of Cray Computer fame. That was enough to seal the deal, âbecause nobody else [applying for the job] could come up with even that,â he laughed.
But technical knowledge isnât what made Bashor successful, said Simon: âHe is a keen and witty observer. Thatâs what made him successful as a communicator,â and a lot of fun to work with.
It was Simon who encouraged Bashor to keep a âbook of quotes,â funny (sometimes Dilbertian) utterances encountered in the line of duty. Simon shared one of his own: âItâs nobodyâs responsibility, so it becomes everybodyâs panic.â In the same spirit, Bashor also jokingly signs all his emails âTam difficile non debet,â schoolboy Latin for âIt shouldnât be that difficult.â
Still, Bashor has taken his role as an advocate for the national labs very seriously. In 2016, he was asked to organize the computing portion of National Lab Day, an educational expo held for Congress, where he was photographed in the rear of a group with U.S. Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz:
âI think that particular photo reflects the nature of our job: to work behind the scenes and help researchersâor a DOE secretaryâto be recognized for their work,â Bashor said.
Personal Connections
Some of Bashorâs most enduring contributions, however, come from the many personal connections heâs made at the lab and beyond.
His collaboration with Kennedy High Schoolâs IT Academy, for instance, has grown from offering NERSC tours and resume-writing advice into daylong âbig dataâ workshops that give kids from disadvantaged and underrepresented backgrounds exposure to STEM careers
Another connection, with Sandia computer scientist Jeanine Cook, opened Bashorâs eyes to physical accessibility issues and inspired him to help start an employee resource group (ERG) dedicated to improving accessibility at the lab.
Cook, in turn, helped launch the ERG with a well-received talk given with Bashor in interview format.
âI like making connections and I think Iâm good at it,â said Bashor. Judging by his post-retirement plans, heâs going to keep on doing what heâs good at.
For starters, heâs serving as communications chair for Friends of El Cerrito Library and the Turnabout thrift store, which funds dental and orthodontia care for East Bay kids in need. Heâs also developing a study module for the Kennedy High School IT Academy. And, for all our sakes, letâs hope he keeps on making big, delicious batches of plum jam to share.
More on Volunteering
“Being a member of the SC planning committee has been an extremely rewarding experience, both professionally and personally. In developing strong working relationships with members from other institutions and companies, I built a virtual rolodex of people I could contact for advice, help and even commiseratingâand also do the same for them.
These contacts and the confidence I developed proved immensely valuable in helping me do my job better, as well as handling special projects for the U.S. Dept. of Energy. I also made a number of very dear friends through my committee work and kept in touch with them after our stints were over.
Lastly, it was extremely satisfying to have been on the committee for 21 years and to have contributed as the conference quadrupled in size and scope, growing from 3,000 attendees and 120 exhibitors in th elate 1990s to 12,000 attendees and more than 350 exhibitors today.”