Monday, June 25, 2007

Tonight's board meeting in pictures

WELL, this'll have to be quick, cuz I've got stuff to do.

It was an oddly unpleasant night at the old SOCCCD board room. Weirdness and tension filled the air.

THE OPEN SESSION started over two hours late! That means that the trustees were in the back room, fighting over something.

Judging by Mathur's pallor—it was dreadful!—I'd say that, if there was a fight, he lost it. Bigtime.


WE GET JUSTICE

Trustee Fuentes announced three closed session actions, including approval of Dr. Craig Justice of Chaffey College as the new Irvine Valley College Vice President of Instruction. Every indication is that Justice is a good hire. (See Craig Justice.)

The only public comment came from Cal Nelson, who is stepping down after 8 months on the job as temp IVC VPI. As usual, he was gracious, warm. Everybody loves Cal.

I bet Raghu hates 'im.


SPASMODIC & GHASTLY & GOD-FEARING

Before he took on the job at IVC, Cal was told that things were pretty bad at the college, but that's not what he found, he said. Nope, people were pretty terrific, working hard, cooperating. Cal went out of his way to praise IVC's Academic Senate President, Wendy Gabriella, for her work and for her assistance to him.

Trustee Fuentes and Chancellor Mathur seemed to snicker at that. Well, Mathur didn't so much snicker as make that rat-faced scrunch of his. You know the one. It's spasmodic and ghastly, a rat's tic.

Trustee Wagner gave the invocation, and he laid it on pretty thick this time.

"Wisdom begins with fear of the Lord," he said.


JAY, MILCHIKER, PADBERG, WAGNER v. FUENTES, LANG, WILLIAMS

After the consent calendar, item 5.12—Academic Personnel Actions—was moved to the front, in "deference" to Bill Jay, evidently. Judging by the tension in the air, this item was the likely cause of trouble during the earlier closed session.

Three elements were isolated from 5.12 for seperate discussion and approval. The central element, it seems, was h1, which, judging by factoids gleanable from trustee remarks, concerned the "transfer" of a "chemistry instructor" (an IVC chem instructor was on the closed session agenda). Based on an exchange involving Rich McCullough, the transfer was at or to his college (Saddleback).

In the end, trustees Jay, Padberg, Milchiker, and Wagner prevailed: the "reassignment indicated in h1" was not approved.

One wonders what that's all about.


PRESENTATIONS

Gary Poertner and the Bean Counters, a local rock band, gave a presentation about the tentative budget. Andreea Serban of Transylvania gave a presentation about "Grant opportunities and strategies for grant development."

"Good evenink," she said.

She's been very successful in getting super-duper grants for the district.

Both presentations were well-received.

Well, I've gotta feed the cat. Maybe I'll have more tomorrow. Maybe not.



See Tracy's BOARD MEETING HIGHLIGHTS

“This is not a good idea”

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OK, clearly, the state of NEVADA has gone friggin' nuts.

In this morning’s Inside Higher Ed: Professor’s Got a Gun:
Next time, if an unhinged student chooses a campus in Las Vegas or Reno instead of Blacksburg, Va., Stavros Anthony wants Nevada’s colleges and universities to be prepared. After April’s shootings at Virginia Tech, the Las Vegas police captain and member of the Nevada Board of Regents proposed that the Nevada System of Higher Education protect itself against a similar attack, in part, by enabling faculty and staff members to become reserve police officers.

“Virginia Tech hit home with me, and I thought, ‘What can we do here in Nevada to deal with an issue if, God forbid, if ever happens here?’ The answer, to me, was have more individuals trained to shoot back and kill somebody who’s committing a mass shooting.”

On Thursday, the Nevada Board of Regents gave the go-ahead to four public colleges in the state to develop policies — which would still require board approval in September — to allow faculty and staff members to become reserve police officers authorized to carry guns. Anthony is confident that the regents will ultimately approve the plan to allow armed employees on Nevada’s two- and four-year campuses. But administrators and faculty leaders are raising a bevy of practical and philosophical objections to the idea, which they vow to fight.

“This is just not a good idea,” said Bryan Spangelo, professor of biochemistry and chair of the Faculty Senate at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas. “It seems like a knee-jerk response to a very terrible situation that will result in more guns on campus, more accidents, and more problematic situations that are unintended.”

Under Anthony’s proposal, which was considered Thursday by the Board of Regents’s Cultural Diversity and Security Committee, which Anthony leads, faculty or staff members who sought to become reserve police officers would, if approved by administrators on their campuses, go on paid professional leave to attend a 21-week police academy and go through post-academy training. The colleges and universities would pick up the cost of the training.

The result, Anthony said, would be that campuses would have more people trained to step in if and when a horrific incident like the one at Virginia Tech unfolds on a Nevada campus. “The common denominator” in such incidents is that “you have one person with a gun killing massive amounts of people until police show up, and there’s always going to be a lag time,” Anthony said. Having more people on a campus capable of stepping in effectively in such a situation would reduce that lag time, he said….

Anthony rejected complaints that his plan would make colleges less safe by injecting more guns onto campuses. “If we were just handing people guns, that would definitely be a concern, but we’re going to make them reserve police officers so they have all the training and background,” he said. “This is not going to just be some guy with a gun.”

...Citing Robert Pirsig’s concept of the university as the “church of reason,” Spangelo said he feared that having faculty members with guns tucked into desk drawers would create an “immediate cultural change” on campuses where openness is a fundamental principle.

“I’d hate to think we’d have people walking around who are armed because of one terrible incident on one campus,” said Spangelo, who said Nevada-Las Vegas faculty and staff had responded overwhelmingly negatively to a query he put out asking for feedback on Anthony’s idea. “It’s a flawed idea to consider bringing something onto the campus that is potentially dangerous as a way to prevent a tragedy that has a very, very small chance of happening to begin with.”

Trailer park clout

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THE IRVINE VALLEY COLLEGE COMMUNITY will want to read an article in this morning’s OC Register: Train tracks to be moved above Jeffrey Road.

Near as I can tell, the $45 million project was inspired by complaints from denizens of a nearby trailer park (Geezer Meadows).

Why don’t they just give the 45 mil to the trailer park people? They'll go away, and the rest of us won’t have to put up with construction for 2 and a half years.

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...