Monday, November 2, 1998

THE CRISIS AT IRVINE VALLEY COLLEGE by Red Emma

[From Dissent 9, 11/2/98] 
Understanding the Crisis at Irvine Valley College 
by RED EMMA, instructor 

     Many IVC students and some faculty are still confused about the handmade signs posted on campus (“Recall Frogue” and “Mathur Must Go!”), recent news stories and letters to the editor regarding the recall of Trustee Frogue and the appointment of Raghu Mathur as president of this community college. There is reason for their confusion, in no small part resulting from the unwillingness of many to point to the unhappy direction suggested in the actions of the SOCCCD board, Mr. Frogue, the faculty union which elected and supports the board majority and their lackey, President Mathur. These, then, are my own complaints against this group, framed in a wider, national context which I see as a right-wing, corporate attack on public education by people who imagine that, yes, schools should be “run like businesses.” 

      1. They have attacked shared governance, the statewide policy of power sharing among students, faculty, staff and administration. Their attack sets a precedent for further undermining academic workplace self-government statewide. This is Frogue’s self-stated mission. 
      2. They have tolerated, even encouraged, anti-Semitism and homophobia in the auspices of an intellectual community. They have equated the value of a wacky seminar with intellectual discourse. It’s instructive to note the two minority groups targeted: gays and lesbians (by the teacher’s union) and Jews (by Mr. Frogue). Attacking the civil rights of politically weak homosexuals seems to fly in South Orange County, or at least Ms. Fortune and her colleagues thought it did. 
      3. They have successfully co-opted a labor union local. A small anti-democratic minority created a situation where labor colludes with management, prevents its own members from voting and funds candidates who pretend not to understand what’s going on, all the while lobbying for the perceived interests of a small power elite. 
      4. They have created a political opportunity, a testing ground for activism by far-right groups. The Christian Coalition sought to find a way into Orange County education politics and now has: Board members actually attended a meeting with Christian Coalition leadership, activists who oppose women’s rights, promote hate and anti-Semitism and homophobia, all in the name of establishing a religious state.
      5. They have promoted the corporatization and further privatization of the academy—changing IVC to IBM as it were, trying to transform public colleges into trade technical institutes “managed” to meet the perceived needs of industry. 
      6. They have championed the ghettoization of faculty. They have tried to turn full-time faculty into “employees,” exploited the slave labor of adjunct faculty and proposed turning real classrooms into so-called “distance-learning”; in other words, television shows. 
      7. They have marginalized students, turning them into political numbers valuable only as products to the corporations it is presumed (absent any evidence) will someday hire them. 
      8. They have limited expression, inquiry and engagement in the political process, designing rules suggesting a suburban homeowners association and not a dynamic college environment. 
      9. They have spent district money defending themselves against much of the above, including the recall and separate lawsuits brought by both students and faculty. 
      10. They have lied to the community which they claim to represent. They twice violated the Brown Act. Recently a mailer on behalf of two union-sponsored candidates bragged that they oppose the El Toro airport. In fact, these two have done nothing to oppose the airport and of course, their position on the airport has almost no relevance to the administration of SOCCCD. When asked on a recent OCN debate regarding their stands on the recall of Mr. Frogue, all either pretended not to know the problem or condemned intolerance in general terms. Similarly, IVC President Mathur, in a recent Irvine World News interview, questioned the well-document charges against Frogue. 

     What’s instructive here is that these actions together reflect a wider trend. Our district represents a microcosm of what’s happening across the state and the nation. Sadly, the crisis at SOCCCD has received almost no state or national media attention since Mr. Frogue’s proposed seminar. Why not? It is in fact because in its way, this crisis nearly perfectly represents all the coordinated attacks on public education: the attack on intellectual integrity, the attack on labor and student rights, the promotion of corporate hegemony and so on. 
     Because our crisis is in fact so wonderfully representative of a single, connected trend it’s easy to pretend not to see that Big Picture. It’s easy for media to pretend that its readers won’t get it. It’s easy for students and teachers not to understand that as it happens here, it is happening everywhere. 
     We can, of course, end it here. We can write letters, vote out Mr. Frogue, democratize a union, replace President Mathur, restore shared governance; in short, we can speak truth to power and put IVC on the map as a place where supporters of public education took on the privatizers...and won. —RE

Andrew Tonkovich

The "board's unlikely secret allies" (the union supports anti-unionists)

From Dissent 9, 11/2/98

THE OC REGISTER BLOWS THE WHISTLE ON OUR ROTTEN LITTLE UNION by Chunk Wheeler (BvT)

     Have you seen it? On Saturday (the 31st), the Register ran an article on the front page of its Metro section entitled “Board’s Unlikely Secret Allies,” which describes the faculty union leadership’s habit of helping to elect undesirable candidates—the likes of Steve Frogue, John Williams, Don Wagner, and Nancy Padberg—and refusing to discuss these actions with the rank and file.
     The case of Wagner, a member of the explicitly anti-teachers union Education Alliance, is especially interesting. As he says,

“The teachers union?…The California Teachers Association is overwhelmingly liberal. I would seriously doubt they would support a conservative Republican like me. I was generally pleased to get the support…but I think it’s strange that it’s the union.”

     The solution to the mystery is, of course, simple:

“Why is the faculty union giving money to endorse candidates who are appealing to a segment of the voter population who is opposed to unions?” said [an] Irvine Valley College professor…”It’s simple. It’s the buying and selling of board members. They will do anything to keep control of the board majority.”

     Anything indeed. According to the article, “In 1996, the union paid $40,000 to mail out” the notorious homophobic “Same Sex” flier, which got Frogue, Williams, and Fortune elected and put our chapter on the CTA shit list. (“[T]he flier was bad…It was really bad,” says CTA’s David Lebow.) It also reports that, this year, the union formed the PAC “Community Taxpayers for Dr. Andy Kish for Trustee.” After Kish dropped out of the race, a new committee was formed, the “South Orange County Taxpayers for Quality Education.” According to the article, “More than $69,000 from [the] Andy Kish PAC and another union PAC [was] transferred” to the new PAC.
     Could it be that our odious union leadership has sunk that kind of money into electing the likes of Don Wagner and Nancy Padberg?


(Click on graphic for more detail.)




Andy Kish
     I’ve done a little research on Mr. Wagner, whom the union’s Curt McLendon [of the Old Guard], in his recent letter “to colleagues,” describes as “moderate.” Mr. McLendon must be joking. Those who are interested in understanding Mr. Wagner’s “moderation” are encouraged to examine the following:

     1. The website of “The Federalist Society” (www.fed-soc.org/who) (Wagner is the founder and president of the Orange County chapter.) The Federalist Society is committed to “reordering priorities within the legal system to place a premium on individual liberty, traditional values, and the rule of law.” The Society’s board of trustees includes those celebrated “moderates” Robert Bork and Edwin Meese!

     2. An article entitled “Defining Control” (Register; 6/16/98), which describes Wagner’s views on “local control” of schools and the dangers of “the federal government…overreaching its powers.”

     3. A letter, appearing in the 2/19/98 Register, in which Wagner argues for school “choice.” (“Only by returning choice…to parents and taking it from the education bureaucrats can we reverse [the decline in public education]…I trust parents much more than I do the government to make the right education decisions for children.”)

     4. An article Wagner published in the Register (July 13, 1998) concerning some judges and whether minors need “parental consent” before getting an abortion. (It’s the tone of the letter rather than its thesis that is perhaps revealing.)

[p.s.: [1-13-21]: ANDY KISH: a member of the founding faculty at Saddleback College. Submitted a dissertation on human psychology and physiology with Rich McCullough. 1928-2018.]

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...