From DtB file Q |
Serna resigns from Delta board: Trustee pleads no contest to charges she took double reimbursements:
STOCKTON - Longtime San Joaquin Delta College Trustee Maria Elena Serna resigned from the board Monday moments before pleading no contest to a charge that she claimed reimbursement twice for several business trips dating back to 2005.
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Serna, a Delta trustee since 1990, was accused of claiming nearly $1,650 from both Delta College and the Community College League of California [CCLC], which held conferences attended by Serna in San Francisco and Sacramento. The money has been paid back, prosecutors said.
"It's not the amount of the money. It's the audacity of the conduct," said Deputy District Attorney Stephen E. Taylor. "When people do that in public service, they have to leave."
Delta administrators noticed inconsistencies in Serna's reimbursement records and contacted prosecutors, who sent the case to Stockton police. A criminal complaint was filed Friday following a two-month investigation.
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The single felony charge levied on Serna could have resulted in up to three years in state prison.
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One example: According to an internal Delta College memo, Serna attended a meeting of the nonprofit college league June 20-21 in Sacramento. Delta College used a $179 credit card payment to reserve her room at the Hyatt Regency hotel; Serna wrote up her own reimbursement for the same amount and filed it with the league.
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Prosecutor Taylor accused Serna of "felony conduct" and said the case was treated very seriously because Serna held public office....
As we reported previously, our own trustee John Williams attended a one-day CCLC event, also in Sacramento, in June (17) of 2008. His lodging cost the district $605.56. Click on the graphic for details. (This is a public document from the last board agenda.)
▼ From this morning’s New York Times: Those Taking Graduate Test Abruptly Drop in Number
In bad times, the conventional wisdom has it, people flock to graduate school. But there is at least one sign that in this recession, that may not happen.
After years of steady growth, the number of students taking the Graduate Record Examination, which is required for most graduate programs, is on course to decline this year.
At the start of the year, the Educational Testing Service, which administers the $140 exam, projected that 675,000 students would take it by year’s end. Now the service estimates that the total will be only about 621,000.
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“If historic patterns hold, enrollments should rise in a recession, but they have not yet,” said Debra W. Stewart, president of the Council of Graduate Schools. “We’re trying to figure out why the pattern is changing, and the loan situation can’t be ignored….
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