Tuesday, January 26, 2010

More on Mathur


OC Reg Mission Viejo reporter Niyaz Pirani has updated his article on Mathur: College district chancellor resigns.

Here’s what he’s added:
...Under the terms of the settlement, Mathur’s last day at the helm of Saddleback and Irvine Valley colleges will be June 30. His contract would have expired on June 30, 2011.

He will be paid a base salary of $237,261, plus cost-of-living adjustments, for the remaining year of his contract. Expense reimbursements, a $700 monthly car allowance and electronics equipment for a home office will cease.

Additionally, Mathur will recoup up to $25,000 in attorney’s fees he paid in relation to the separation agreement within 30 days of signing the deal.

If he desires, he could return to the community college district as a part-time faculty member after June 2011.
. . .
[Don] Wagner, who was one of the five in support of the resignation, said he wouldn’t talk about personnel issues or his job satisfaction regarding a district employee.

In the separation agreement, it is made clear that neither [Raghu] Mathur nor trustees are allowed to talk publicly or privately about the terms of the separation, and that neither party may make disparaging remarks about the other.

“He was a faculty member, and a fine one for a number of years,” Wagner said. “He may come back to teaching at some point. It’s entirely up to him whether he does that or pursues something else in the future.”

John Williams, a trustee who disagreed with the resignation, said he voted for it “to protect Chancellor Mathur’s interests.”

“I voted for the agreement because I was looking out for his best interests, knowing that the majority of the board favored his departure,” Williams said.

“I’ve known Raghu for some time and I thought he did a good job,” Williams added. “ … You work for an elected board and you need a majority of those board members to vote to keep you. In this case, the majority of the board felt they wanted to have a change, so they voted to.”

Roy Bauer, an IVC philosophy professor named in Mathur’s 2000 lawsuit, said he was pleased by the announcement.

“We have attempted to get the board to see Mr. Mathur’s limitations and his character for many years,” Bauer said. “I think I’ll just leave it at that. There’s no point, now that he’s going, to lay it on thick.”

“We now look forward to a careful and honest search for our new chancellor,” he said.

He's decided: it's an ideal time to move on

ABOUT TWO MONTHS AGO, the word was out: Board President Don Wagner was furious at the Chancellor. Evidently, Mathur had been caught in a bold act of self-serving connivery. It concerned a curious communication between Mathur and an accreditation official. The details are unimportant. No doubt, Wagner had observed the impossibly wily side of Mathur many times before, but this time, somehow, he had had it. No more.

When Mathur learned that the jig was up and Wagner wanted his head, he did what he felt he had to do to protect the Mathurian behind. It is at such times, with his back against the wall, that Raghu can make mistakes. Evidently, he made one or two of them as he hastily scrambled to improve his, um, bargaining position.

If Wagner was steamed before, after Mathur’s desperate but unsuccessful gambits, Don was now the violent towering geyser of a nuclear meltdown.

But what about Tom? Tom’s the man among local right-wing wannabes. And Don was depending on Tom to win in his Assembly race.

But Tom protects his soldiers, no matter how clear to the world their corruption or sleazitude becomes. Going against Mathur meant going against Tom.

I don’t know why. You’ll have to ask others. But Don chose to go against Tom. Mathur would simply have to go, even if it meant turning the world of SOCCCD trustee politics upside down, heading who-knows-where.

I’ve heard stories about subsequent situations and episodes allegedly occurring in December. They don’t really matter. Mathur was headed for the district exit. All that he could do now was negotiate the best possible walk through that door.

(One might ask just who represented Raghu during this process. Had to be somebody. It wasn’t Mathur.)

I have never seen Tom Fuentes as angry as he became at the December 7 board meeting. It was a remarkable evening. It was, of course, that special time of the year when the board elected its officers. (See district video.)

Padberg (Padberg!?) nominated Wagner for President. Gosh.

Milchiker (Milchiker!?) seconded. There was a vote.

Fuentes, Lang, and Williams voted against Wagner. I was amazed.

But Don had his ducks in a row. (They weren't Brown ducks.) He had Marcia, Nancy, and Bill’s vote—and, of course, his own. Four votes.

A few seconds later, Padberg was the board VP; and Marcia was the Board Clerk.

In the course of a few minutes, Wagner managed to turn the board, and the district, completely on its head.

Over to the side, Mathur was silent. He looked bad.

Last night, Mathur again looked bad. His eyes seemed bloodshot, dark, sunken.

As Marcia read the actions taken in closed session, I looked at him. His head seemed to sink into his neck. He looked like a cat, hunkering, looking outward, but at nothing.

Comments

Anonymous said...
I feel badly for all the people who f---ed over.
He's walking away with $$$$ -

Anonymous said...
SO - the decision was made in December - that's what made Fuentes mad - and they spent the next month haggling over how, how much and when.

Anonymous said...
"bad," not "badly," and don't.

Anonymous said...
Thank you Don Wagner for having the b***s to get rid of Mathur. Can you do the same with Williams and Fuentes???

Anonymous said...
Unlike 9:27, I don't want to speculate on the physical integrity of Wagner's genitals (ewww) but I do want to say that Don only took action when Mathur finally hurt HIM, attacked HIM - Wagner could care less about the institutions, the staff or the community he is supposed to serve. In that way, he'll be PERFECT in Sacramento.

Chancellor Mathur makes an announcement

As you know, last night, Chancellor Raghu P. Mathur got canned. Near the start of the open session of the January meeting of the SOCCCD Board of Trustees, Clerk Marcia Milchiker announced that, in closed session, the board passed (in a 5-2 vote) an agreement according to which Mathur will exist in June and retire a year later.

At about 3:30 this afternoon, Chancellor Mathur spammed the district community with the following letter:
Dear Colleagues:

After a great deal of reflection and discussion with my family, I believe it is the ideal time for me to consider and pursue my next professional challenge.

I am very pleased and proud of our tremendous accomplishments over the past eight years as your chancellor. We balanced the budgets every year while maintaining substantial reserves for rainy days, and investing wisely in expanding our full-time faculty ranks to support existing and new educational programs. Online course offerings have exploded over 200% in the past few years and our overall student enrollment has grown over 25% in the past two years alone. Major construction and renovation initiatives continue to flourish on college campuses in compliance with our education and facilities master planning efforts. Investment in technology has increased services to students and resulted in bringing state and national recognition to our District. All these successes are due to broad-based discussion of ideas from all constituency groups and support of our board of trustees.

I derive great satisfaction in knowing that our colleges, the Advanced Technology and Education Park (ATEP) campus and District Services are positioned to successfully meet the educational challenges of the 21st century.

My last day in the office will be June 30, 2010 and I look forward to working this semester with the board and executive staff to foster a productive transition. I consider it a privilege to have served our District for the past thirty-four years and have treasured every moment of working with each of you in dedicated service to our students.

Thank you.

Raghu

Here's the latest version of an OC Register article concerning Mathur's new status:

College district chancellor resigns
Raghu Mathur, chancellor of the South Orange County Community College District, has sent out a letter to district colleagues announcing his resignation. He was reportedly voted out of his job by district trustees on Monday night.

The vote was first announced on Dissent the Blog, a blog run by Irvine Valley College philosophy professor Roy Bauer. The district oversees Irvine Valley and Saddleback Valley colleges. Bauer reported that the 5-2 decision was made in closed session.

[Here’s exactly what trustee Milchiker reported: “In the closed session, the board approved an agreement with Dr. Mathur persuant to which Dr. Mathur’s service as the district chancellor shall end on June 30th, 2010, and provides for his retirement from the district effective June 30, 2011….” Mathur's staunchest supporters on the board--Tom Fuentes and Dave Lang--were the only members of the board to vote against the "agreement."]

"It's official," he writes. "During tonight's board meeting, Board Clerk Marcia Milchicker read out board actions taken during tonight's closed session. She reported that a decision was made essentially to end Chancellor Raghu Mathur's continued tenure as Chancellor."

Mathur, who took the job as chancellor in 2002, has been criticized for the district's declining enrollment and poor accreditation reports. He was originally hired as Irvine Valley president in a closed-door decision that a judge later found violated the state's open-meeting law.

Mathur survived a May 2004 vote of no confidence by 93.5 percent of the Irvine Valley and Saddleback College faculties, the third no-confidence vote in his district career. In May 1998, 72 percent of the Irvine Valley faculty cast a vote of no confidence in Mathur. And in November 2000, 90 percent of the Irvine faculty voted no confidence.

In 2001, Mathur settled a negligent supervision and breach of contract lawsuit against the community college district for $36,000. The lawsuit came after Mathur lost an earlier suit against a teacher and a former college administrator. That suit charged that the two illegally obtained information from Mathur's personnel file and published the information in a newsletter.
The article ends with Mathur’s letter (which I had forwarded to the reporter).

Comments
Anonymous said...
I don't get it. Did he and his family ASK he board to fire him?
Anonymous said...
He crossed Don Wagner too many times - just ask Steven Choi.
Anonymous said...
I "treasure" all those moment where Raghu stood in front of faculty and told some of the hardest working people in the district that they simply weren't doing enough, that they failed to get involved in the process...(you know who I'm talking about).
He lies and lies and continues to lie. He was forced to "reflect" and "discuss" with his "family" - because the board was finally going to do what they should have done a decade ago. He is just trying to save what is left of his face.
Anonymous said...
Retired? Fired? same result - he's GONE.
Anonymous said...
Go Raghu! (Go away!)
Anonymous said...
Raghu's letter? Painting lipstick on a pig. How typical.
Anonymous said...
"... *exist* in June and retire a year later"? Don't get everyone's hopes up by implying that he might disappear from the universe a year later! -- ;) MAH
Anonymous said...
Love that picture of the girl with the mysterious smile.

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...