Thursday, July 27, 2006

Wagner, Padberg, and Milchiker file for reelection

From this morning's Irvine World News (SOCCCD, p. 8):

Three board of trustees incumbents for the South Orange County Community College District have filed for re-election: President [sic] Donald Wagner, Vice President Nancy Padberg and board member Marcia Milchiker.

Wagner represents area two, which includes parts of Tustin, Santa Ana and Irvine. He has been on the board since 1998 and served as board president from 2002 through 2004. Padberg represents area four, which includes San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, Coto de Caza, Los Flores and Talega. She also has been on the board since 1998, serving as president for two years and vice president for five. Milchiker represents area five, which includes Laguna Woods, Laguna Niguel and parts of Laguna Hills. She has been on the board since 1985, serving as president, vice president and clerk.

Milchiker is the only candidate who has completed all the paper work necessary to run in the Nov. 7 election. Candidates have until Aug. 11 to file.


July, 1996

STATEMENT OF CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNING BOARD MEMBER
SADDLEBACK COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT


TRUSTEE AREA 3

DOROTHY FORTUNE
AGE 56

OCCUPATION: RETIRED COLLEGE ENGLISH AND HISTORY TEACHER

The Saddleback Community College District must prioritize its resources and restructure its budget to accommodate a growing enrollment. Increased class offerings and improved community service can only be achieved through budget restructuring.

Students cannot get into required classes to complete their programs. Redirecting funds will increase the number of basic courses transferable to state universities and offer additional job-skill classes.

Only 35% of Saddleback District's $70 million annual budget is spent on classroom instruction compared to grade and high school allocations averaging 65%. The District makes huge expenditures on a hierarchy of administrators, consultants and attorneys, but no proper cost accounting is made available to the public.

A majority of' District 'Trustees must be willing to force the administration to become student centered. Some current Trustees recognize this and will join my efforts to slash bureaucratic spending and establish prudent objectives

I support community outreach through satellite centers offering basic and Emeritus courses. I favor college activities promoting traditional values and responsibility.

Saddleback and Irvine Valley Colleges must focus on student needs and fiscal accountability. I promise to work for those goals. Thirty years [sic] experience in higher education and private business has prepared me for the position of Trustee.

(Signed by Dorothy Fortune, July 16, 1996)

SOCCCD's Kinsler pipes up

The OC Register reports today on the Capo district’s alleged Brown Act violations during closed board sessions:

Closed CUSD meeting draws criticism
Worst example of meeting-law violation in 25 years, attorney says.


According to the counsel for Californians Aware, Terry Francke, the Capo board’s violations are egregious. (The Reg calls Francke, who has in the past opined on SOCCCD issues, "One of the state's foremost experts on open-meetings law.")

In the relevant instances, the Capo trustees were supposedly discussing "criteria for evaluation" of the district Superintendent. But it's very hard to see how that is so.

But guess who’s on hand to defend Superintendent James Fleming and CUSD trustees’ broad interpretation of Brown Act provisions? Why, that would be SOCCCD’s own Warren Kinsler, the fellow who represented the district regarding its—illegal, as it turns out—imposition of a faculty hiring policy over Academic Senate objections.

According to Kinsler, you definitely get to go with a "broad" interpretation of "criteria of evaluation." So there.

The Register spoke with Francke and Peter Scheer, exec director of the California First Amendment Coalition. According to those two, CUSC meeting notes indicate that, in closed session, trustees discussed such items as:

•which school calendar to adopt,

•whether to advertise on school buses,

•a presentation on No Child Left Behind

According to Scheer: "Any reasonable person looking at these minutes would be unlikely to come away thinking he had just observed a performance evaluation…He'd come away thinking he'd just seen what most people would call a school board meeting."

Francke is calling on the district attorney to file charges.

Our district attorney? Don't hold your breath.

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...