Monday, December 8, 2008

Only IVC and Saddleback are announcing no cuts

TODAY, Marla Jo Fisher of the OC Register (Community colleges cutting classes, sessions) reports on a “double whammy” for the state’s community colleges:
Just as more people are seeking to go to community college this year, either because they don't have jobs or they can't get into universities, state budget cuts are forcing [these] colleges to cut back on their offerings.

Even as the cuts begin, the statewide chancellor's office is projecting that enrollment increases will force the system to turn away 260,000 students.

People hoping to go back to school because they can't get jobs or want to retrain for different jobs are also having problems trying to get into class.

California has 110 community colleges in 72 districts, with about $6.2 billion general operating budget. $4.2 billion comes from the state's hard-hit general fun, and some $2 billion from property taxes.

But wait a minute! Aren’t we, here in the good old South Orange County Community College District, on that special gravy train called basic aid? Yup:

Irvine Valley and Saddleback colleges are on a different funding formula than other colleges because they derive most of their funding from property taxes, rather than state enrollment payments.

These so-called "basic aid" colleges are also taking a hit statewide as property tax rolls decline due to lower property values, but a district spokeswoman said neither Saddleback nor Irvine Valley is planning to cut any classes….

In a sidebar, the Reg presents cuts that local colleges have been forced to make. Only Irvine Valley and Saddleback have announced no cuts:
Coastline College: Spring course sections reduced 12%

Cypress College:
Winter intersession canceled. Monitoring low enrolled classes.

Fullerton College:
Winter intersession reduced 75%, hold on summer school until the final budget is known, Spring courses may be reduced.

Golden West College:
40 classes cut from winter intersession, only 15 offered. Spring course sections cut by 100 classes and 110 more closed for registration, could be reopened by demand.

Irvine Valley College:
No cuts announced

Orange Coast College: Winter intersession cut 10 percent. Spending freeze on equipment

Saddleback College:
No cuts announced

Santa Ana College: Winter intersession cancelled, spring course sections reduced 15 percent

Santiago Canyon College:
Winter intersession canceled. Spring course sections reduced 17 percent

▼ In the New York Times: Tribune Company Seeks Bankruptcy Protection:
The Tribune Company, the newspaper and television chain that publishes The Los Angeles Times and The Chicago Tribune, filed for bankruptcy protection on Monday….

Brother, can you spare a dime?
Nice arrangement, from 1932, by Charlie Palloy, who seems to have disappeared off the face of the earth in '32. Too bad.

A man and a lamb

KATHIE HODGE GOIN' SOUTH? In this morning’s College Life blog (Fullerton College president applying for job in Oceanside), Marla Jo Fisher reports that Kathie Hodge, the President of Fullerton College, is among the finalists for the Presidency of MiraCosta College in Oceanside.

Kathie is well known to denizens of the SOCCCD. During a period of heightened controversy at our district, she served as interim Chancellor.

MiraCosta has seen its fair share of controversy too. According to the San Diego Union-Tribune,

The [accrediting] commission sent representatives to the college's Oceanside campus after two years of turmoil and the departure of former President Victoria Muñoz Richart in June 2007.

Since then, the college has had two interim presidents while searching for a permanent leader.

The accrediting commission had faulted trustees for not working well with the faculty, the staff or one another. The seven-member governing board often split on 4-3 votes, and meetings were acrimonious.

Sounds familiar.

On Friday, the three finalists answered questions before an audience of about 100, including trustees.

How come President Richart left? Well, according to the Union-Tribune,

Trouble started in 2006 when Richart announced a probe into campus money-handling and the illegal sale of campus-owned palm trees. The head of the school's Horticulture Department eventually pleaded guilty to grand theft. The probe also led to the unwilling departure of two other administrators and a faculty no-confidence vote in Richart.

She left soon after trustees received a letter from 31 former trustees, administrators and teachers seeking her dismissal for a million-dollar investigation that found $305 in illegal tree sales.

LEGALIZED INCEST AND BESTIALITY? In today’s Inside Higher Ed:

About 200 students at the University of Washington held a protest Friday about a recent column in the student newspaper that denounced gay marriage and warned that it would lead to legalized incest and bestiality, The Seattle Times reported. Editors of The Daily have defended the column — while not endorsing its views — as free speech. But many students say that it crossed lines of appropriate commentary and that the paper was inflammatory in publishing it, with an illustration of a man and a lamb.

Downtown Orange, 1937

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...