The SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT —
"[The] blog he developed was something that made the district better." - Tim Jemal, SOCCCD BoT President, 7/24/23
You might have to click on the letter below to see all of it.
A LARGER rendition of the letter follows the one below.
This was to be a part of the discussion at the May 2010 board meeting--discussion item re ATEP. Trustees acted to table the item (re ATEP) until July. This posting occurred May 25, 2010
Faculty in the South Orange County Community College
District overwhelmingly voted no confidence Monday in Chancellor Raghu Mathur.
Of the full-time professors at Irvine Valley and Saddleback
colleges who cast ballots, 93.5% voted in favor of no confidence, and 6% were
against the union-sponsored measure. One person abstained.
Out of 318 faculty eligible, 246 -- 77% -- voted, according
to the district faculty association.
"It's very clear that the chancellor does not have the
confidence of the faculty," said Lewis Long, head of the faculty
association. "Now it's up to the trustees to demonstrate whether they
support the faculty and the students they represent."
Mathur issued a statement late Monday attributing the
outcome to friction between him and faculty members relating to contract
negotiations underway. "They are unhappy that I take direction from the
elected board of trustees and not them," the statement said in part.
"I believe that my day-to-day decisions and policy recommendations to the
board need to continue to be guided by what is best for the students, first and
foremost."
Donald Wagner, president of the board of trustees, characterized
the vote as largely political.
"I'm not surprised that it passed," he said,
"because the folks who were agitating for no confidence refused to give
the chancellor a chance to address the issues they raised."
Faculty at Irvine Valley twice voted no confidence in
Mathur, where he served as president from 1997 until his appointment as
chancellor in 2002, putting him over Irvine Valley and Saddleback College in
Mission Viejo.
Faculty members have been at odds with the former chemistry
professor since shortly after the conservative-dominated board named him
president, and Mathur replaced a system that relied on faculty to handle much
of the college's administrative load.
Trustees appointed Mathur chancellor even though a hiring
committee did not rank him among the top three candidates, according to Lee
Haggerty, then union president, who sat on the panel.
Teachers say Mathur and the elected board have taken away
many of their powers to govern college life and added rules to control faculty.
Re "No-Confidence Vote Will Be 3rd for College
Chief," May 17:
I appreciated South Orange County Community College
District Board of Trustees President Donald Wagner's clarification about the
board's "differing views of the responsibilities and roles of various
players in the system." His role, the board's and Chancellor Raghu
Mathur's all seem to involve expensive lawsuits, scaring away top
administrators, alienating potential donors, violating district and state
policy and intimidating students.