Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Good news for Don Wagner, bad news for goodness

Looks like (SOCCCD trustee) Don Wagner’s prospects of winning the 70th Assembly District seat have improved yet again. Matt Cunningham of the the Red County blog (Black Drops Out) today reports that Shawn Black has decided to withdraw from the race.

According to Cunningham,
That leaves the race to Tustin Councilman Jerry Amante and South OC Community College District Trustee Don Wagner. To the extent Black's withdrawal impacts the race, I think it will benefit Wagner, who has been tapping into the same conservative grass-roots soil Wagner has been tilling.
Right now, it looks good for Don. Don's partnership with Tom Fuentes has been good for him.

And so we’ve really got to start thinking about what Don’s exit from the board would mean for the SOCCCD.

And yes, a Democrat is in this race, though her chances are slim. See Melissa Fox for Assembly.

Don's site: Wagner for Assembly.

"looking amateurish"

The blogger who hosts Confessions of a Community College Dean and who also blogs for Inside Higher Ed, weighs in on the situation at Southwestern College.

excerpt:
Several alert readers sent me this story about Southwestern College, a cc near San Diego. According to the IHE account, the college has banned several faculty, including the past and current presidents of the union, from campus. Their indirect support of a student protest appears to be the reason. (The President is apparently on an extended vacation, which doesn't help.)

I won't go off on the evil of banning critics from campus, since I take that as given. And I won't do the usual administrators-are-the-source-of-all-evil rant, either, because it's neither true nor helpful.

Instead, I'll offer a critique as a college administrator. Simply put, Southwestern's administration is looking amateurish. This is not how it's done.
To read the rest, posted on Inside Higher Ed, click here.

You can also read it on his blog: click here.

Tracy Daly's Board meeting highlights now available.

After the protest: a “splinter group” encounters cops—but then what happened?

An article in yesterday’s Chronicle of Higher Education (Professors Suspended After a Protest Might Also Face Criminal Charges) sheds some light, but not much, on the curious suspensions of four faculty at Southwestern College last week:
Southwestern initially issued a statement over the weekend saying the faculty suspensions were due to a personnel matter unrelated to the rally. But a campus officials said on Monday that the suspensions were related to an incident after the main protest, which was officially limited to a one-hour time period and a proscribed "free-speech area" on the campus.

After the sanctioned protest concluded, a splinter group of about 50 protesters attempted to reach the office of President Raj K. Chopra. On the way, they met a line of police officers, according to Brent Chartier, the campus police chief. He said some protesters then committed "illegal activity," which is now under investigation.

A fairly typical splinter group
… A campus spokeswoman, Melissa Abeyta, declined to answer specific questions about the reasons for the suspensions. She said activity during the confrontation between the protesters and the police near the president's office was what led to the suspensions.

Philip Lopez, an English professor and president of the faculty union, said he had not done anything wrong. He said he was notified of his suspension on the night of the protest in a letter hand-delivered by the college's human-resources director and a campus security officer.

The letter did not explain the reason for his suspension, he said. Instead, it cited a section of state law that allows a campus leader to temporarily suspend an employee who has "willfully disrupted the orderly operation" of a campus.

"The important question that needs to be answered is, What are you accused of doing?" he said. "Well, I don't know."

Mr. Lopez said his lawyer had advised him against speaking about the specifics of the incident involving the police.…

"This is just an incredibly naïve screw-up by the administration," Mr. Lopez said. "I couldn't have written a better script."
Evidently, we may learn more soon.

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...