Thursday, February 4, 2010

Lariat opinery: “We had a political opportunist as a Chancellor for eight years”

LARIAT COVER STORY:

The Bobster dropped by today with a copy of the Lariat, which sported a big cover story about Chancellor Raghu P. Mathur’s “resignation.” It is entitled, “Mathur resigns, will leave after June 30.”

The subtitle is better: “Board pushes chancellor out in 5-2 motion.”

I just read it. According to the article, Saddleback College President Tod A. Burnett “declined to publicly answer questions surrounding Mathur’s resignation, instead issuing a statement online.” The statement is the usual bland “wish ‘em luck” blather.

“Trustees and school officials,” says the article, “were hesitant to comment publicly on the abrupt turn of events.”

Confusing apples and oranges, the article notes that “This motion to remove Mathur…is the latest in a series of attempts,” including the 2004 faculty of vote of “no confidence.”

The Lariat quotes from Tom Fuentes’ statement, which attributes the district’s successes to Mathur and which describes Mathur as “uniquely courageous.”

I’m quoted, though a typo renders much of my comment incomprehensible. They did quite me correctly about hoping for an honest search for a new chancellor.

Board President Don Wagner, who spearheaded the action against Mathur, is quoted as saying,
Dr. Mathur’s resignation … means most immediately that the district will soon start its search for a new chancellor…. Dr. Mathur’s departure will not leave us with a leadership void. I look forward to a thorough and professional search for an outstanding Chancellor.
LARIAT EDITORIAL:

The Lariat editorial concerns Mathur’s “abrupt resigning/firing,” which, it says, has “caused a tussle.”

Evidently, in the mind of the editorial writer, this “tussle” is but one instance of “blatant” “power plays” that have long gone on in “closed meetings of the SOCCCD Board of Trustees.”

It sure sounds like the writer is condemning the recent Mathur-eliminating board action. But maybe not. It goes on to describe the controversy that has “surrounded” Mathur, including the violation of the Brown Act in his appointment in 2002 (they’re confusing that appointment with the two Presidential appointments of 1997).

I guess they don't like Mr. Goo.

The next remark is a bit confused:
The saddest part of this sorry affair [the board action? Mathur’s chancellorship?] is not that we had a political opportunist as a Chancellor for eight years, but that we continue to have a board of trustees whose membership roster has seemingly been in stasis for the past two decades, and whose every action is undertaken with an eye on the political scene.
Stasis? Don’t think so. (Most trustees since 1990 have been Republicans. Is that what he/she means?)

The slam on keeping an eye on politics isn’t bad.

After badly mangling the facts, the editorial lands on its feet, more or less:
Stop with the politics and start making positive strides towards transparency and a district famous not for its political ruthlessness, but for the quality of education.
Good idea.

CAMPUS COMMENT:

This edition’s “campus comment” asks, WHO IS RAGHU MATHUR? You know, it shows pictures of students and their answers to the question.

The student answers?

Get ready.
A rockstar.
The founder of Raghu tomato sauce?
Is it a secret agent?
Is it a German foreign exchange student?
Some foreign person.
Student body president.
Some weird foreign dude.
A political activist.
Good grief.

Annie and my folks just got back from LV. They stopped by the Bagdad Cafe. They're all nuts about that movie. Annie borrowed my camera. Took some good ones.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

German?

Anonymous said...

This sounds too wacky. Can't be true. But if it is true, and if Mathur gets this state gig, I'm finally gonna do something.
I'm gonna write a letter!

Anonymous said...

dissenttheblog.blogspot.com; You saved my day again.

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...