Tuesday, September 28, 2010

The meaning of Monday

     To a great extent, as Dissenters, what we’ve stood for all these years boils down to process. District policies should require good, open, and decent procedures that involve genuine collegial consultation; and we should take care to follow those policies.
     In the last year or so, here at IVC, there’s been considerable worry about a certain dean hire that is now going forward. Our hiring policies are OK, but, given the evident character of some of our leadership, many of us have suspected that, nevertheless, the fix was in. (You should read the job description. Sheesh.)
     These people just don’t get it. We aren’t necessarily against the hire of the apparent beneficiary of the suspected fixitude. Nope. It’s about process. Unless the hire is fair and honest, we want nothing to do with it. Ignoring or violating process is corrupt and corrupting. It grounds the institution in rot.
     Naturally, in this district, we have every right to worry, too, about hires occurring higher up the food chain. I won't review the history.
     Our chancellor hiring policy is good, more or less. But can we trust the powerful to faithfully implement it?
     I was noisily concerned about the Chancellor search last Spring. I was particularly concerned that the duplicitous Raghu Mathur would be designated the overseer of the process.
     But the trustees steered clear of that error. Evidently, Mathur wasn’t considered for that role. It was given to mild-mannered and respected David Bugay. Whew!
     Still, there was so much else that could go wrong. And so I was very relieved when, at the February board meeting, Board President Don Wagner offered apparently heartfelt assurances that the chancellor hiring process would be aboveboard.
     At the time, I described his remarks thus:
Wagner then said—well, he said all that one might hope that he would say! He explained that he was committed to a process that was as fully open and exhaustive and aboveboard as possible. Speaking for himself, he pledged that there certainly were no candidates with a "leg up." He said that he was looking for a process that everyone could get behind. He was determined that the community would embrace the process as a good and honest one. (The Chancellor recruitment goes forward—but only after a brouhahahahahaha; for video, go here; jump to item 6.1.)
     That assurance plus the choice of Bugay as search overseer did much to assuage our concerns.


     The composition of the search committee was another real positive. They’re good people.
     We’ve heard rumors of issues and problems on that committee, but we’ve also been assured—by otherwise tight-lipped committee members—that the group came up with genuinely good candidates. They have put their names forward. Great!
     The board agenda that went out last week revealed that, at Monday's meeting, the board would spend five hours interviewing and discussing these candidates. And so we wondered: could it be that, at the evening opening session, a new chancellor would be announced?
     That seemed to be the plan.
     But, yesterday, when the trustees finally convened the open session (at about 7:30), that didn’t happen. No announcements were made about the hiring process (aside from the announcement that there was nothing to report).
     What does this tell us? It is possible, I suppose, that some trustees were pushing for, say, site visits or some other further step. But that doesn’t seem likely. It’s hard to imagine the trustees traveling to colleges or even a college. They're busy people. The legwork has been done. It is time to decide.
     Years ago, the board would make a great effort to hire a chancellor only unanimously, and that produced some peculiar negotiations (some of them illegal). Could it be that some trustees just couldn’t be persuaded to get on board with the popular choice?
     But nobody who has observed the board in the last year or so would suppose that unanimity would be required. Unrealistic.
     We need to consider the possibility (not the only remaining one, I guess) that the board just doesn’t like the candidates sent up by the search committee.
     If so, process will once again take a major hit, and Don Wagner's assurances of good and honest processes will now be seen to be, well....


“Incredulous stories,” said the corrupt and illiterate BUFFOON

     What do you do when an unstoppable audit of your office is coming down the pike?
     If you’re John Williams, you make a big show of asking for the audit. That’s right. As if it’s your idea. 
     "See how honest I am!" says the conniving twit.
     And, if you’re John Williams, while you're at it, you demonstrate that you’re an illiterate buffoon:

Bates, Public guardian ask for audit (OC Register)

     Public Administrator/Public Guardian John Williams has requested the county audit the operations of his office in the wake of criticism of how his office manages more than $38 million in estates and the lives or deaths of more than 1,000 people every year.
. . .
     But Supervisor Pat Bates had already requested an audit of the office, concentrating on how the office handles large estates. Bates, who made her request Sept. 16, wants the results of the audit within 45 days, said Bates’ chief of staff, Don Hughes.
     “The only way to finally and irrevocably put an end to the scurrilous and incredulous stories, rumors and allegations being spread about my office, my staff and myself, is to have an independent, respected third party look at our books, records, and operations,” Williams said in a statement.
. . .
     The public administrator/public guardian, targeted twice last year by the Orange County Grand Jury, was hurtled once again into the spotlight last month after District Attorney Tony Rackauckas fired Todd Spitzer, one of his hand-picked senior assistant district attorneys and widely believed heir apparent, over alleged “inappropriate contact” with that office.
. . .
     Spitzer claims his firing was politically motivated.
. . .
     “The whole idea he is grabbing little old ladies off the street, putting them in a box and stealing their money is just ridiculous,” [Williams attorney Phil] Greer said. “It’s absurd.”
     Several other groups, including California Coalition of Law Enforcement Associations – a statewide organization representing 80,000 law enforcement officers – have already called on the California Attorney General’s Office to look into Williams’ office.
     “Our members are deeply concerned that the health, welfare and financial estates of present conservatees and those presently under investigation are in jeopardy,” wrote CCLEA President Wayne Quint in a Sept. 7 letter to the Attorney General’s Office.

Atheists and Agnostics smarter than Theists. Deal with it.

     The Pew Research Center released the results of a poll regarding Americans’ knowledge of religion today. It offers some surprising apparent facts:

U.S. Religious Knowledge Survey

     Atheists and agnostics, Jews and Mormons are among the highest-scoring groups on a new survey of religious knowledge, outperforming evangelical Protestants, mainline Protestants and Catholics on questions about the core teachings, history and leading figures of major world religions.
     On average, Americans correctly answer 16 of the 32 religious knowledge questions on the survey by the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life. Atheists and agnostics average 20.9 correct answers. Jews and Mormons do about as well, averaging 20.5 and 20.3 correct answers, respectively. Protestants as a whole average 16 correct answers; Catholics as a whole, 14.7. Atheists and agnostics, Jews and Mormons perform better than other groups on the survey even after controlling for differing levels of education….

*I took the quiz, got 14 out of 15. I mistakenly identified Saturday as the start of the Jewish sabbath.

Prendergast fundraiser on Thursday

     I forgot to mention that, at the start of last night's meeting (of the SOCCCD board of trustees), Board Prez Don Wagner introduced someone who's been "sniffin' around for his seat" (something like that): T.J. Prendergast.
     Speaking of that, here's an announcement for a Prendergast fundraiser:

2010 Campaign Kick-off Party and Fundraiser!
Come out and meet Thomas "T.J." Prendergast, candidate for the SOCCCD Board of Trustees.

5 to 8 pm, Thursday evening, September 30
Boosters, Mission Viejo
(corner of Marguerite and Avery, by the 405)

The Faculty Association is holding a campaign kickoff party and fund raiser on Thursday, September 30th, at 5 pm at Boosters in Mission Viejo. Come out, meet the candidate, and help us raise funds to support his election.

With an open seat on the Board of Trustees in the upcoming election, we have an excellent opportunity to elect to the Board a trustee who is familiar with the issues facing teachers, and dedicated to public education. But we need your help! We need money for television commercials, campaign mailers, postcards, flyers and signs; and we also need volunteers to participate in the phone bank and to hand out informational literature in your neighborhoods.

Come on out next Thursday, bring a check to help the campaign, enjoy pizza, soft drinks and beer, and meet T.J.

Williams’ PA/PG: a “lucrative patronage scam for GOP insiders”

     Check out our good pal Vern Nelson’s marvelous overview and update on the John Williams saga in this morning’s OJ Blog:

When Scumbags Collide: Let Spitzer do his damage to Williams and T-Rack

Some excerpts:
     As you may recall from our May essay (which failed to prevent this baboon’s re-election in June) the Original Sin in the John Williams saga was the combining of the elected, low-paying job of Public Administrator with the appointed, high-paying (up to 200K counting benefits & perks) post of Public Guardian. At the same time this newly combined office was made independent and removed from the supervision of HCA, the Health Care Agency. These two moves had the effect of making Williams’ position permanently unassailable and unaccountable, at least as long as low-information voters go to polls with slate mailers in their hands and/or skip the offices they’ve never heard of. Hence, given his character and that of his associates, the PA/PG office evolved into a lucrative patronage scam for GOP insiders. (As one lady disturbingly said to a friend of mine, “Ah, but John Williams has done so many good things for the Republicans!”)
     Money being no object, Williams began hiring new at-will managers at six figures a year – nearly a dozen, filling posts never before deemed necessary. These were good loyal Republicans who were owed favors, many close to DA Tony Rackauckas – most notably Williams’ top aide Peggi Buff who we’ve just learned is the DA’s bride-to-be. THAT’S quite a convenient set-up for someone who wants to avoid accountability, and a fact that ended up biting Spitzer in the ass. Preferring to spend his time traveling to Florida on the taxpayer dime as ostensibly part of his other gig as a SOCCCD trustee, the ex-bailiff Williams came to rely on all these T-Rack imports to manage the PA/PG job, while doubling the “annual base salary” at the agency by about $1 million a year.
     Well okay, to a degree money’s no object – when you’re pleasing your friends. But it’s gotta be made up somewhere, so staff was cut – the lower-paid “deputies” who do the actual work of going out in the field to meet and work with all these vulnerable people, the aged, mentally ill, sickly, friendless, who still have property of some sort to administer. Overworked underpaid deputies grow demoralized with doubled and tripled caseloads; cases that should take months drag on for years, while the whole time fees are charged to these people’s estates that go to the PA/PG’s office. Oftentimes these fees eat up the whole estate!
     Just last year two DAMNING Grand Jury reports were produced detailing all these fuckups and more, and recommending as a very START that the PA and PG jobs should be separated again, and those jobs brought back under the supervision of the HCA. Orange County CEO Tom Mauk agreed and brought the matter to the Board of Supervisors; Supes Moorlach and Campbell also concurred. John Williams, his position and reputation on the line, didn’t even bother to show up but instead sent his trusty attorney, the ethically challenged Phil Greer who seems to represent every powerful lowlife in the OC. The remaining Supes – Norby, Bates and Nguyen – seeing their trusty attorney on the stand, stood by John Williams.
     …who felt fully exonerated and has continued his reign of incompetence, cronyism and waste, a Teflon wig-topped tortoise of public squander.
     And as these sort of things tend to do, it only gets uglier.
     As his agency’s deficits kept building and he had no desire to terminate any of his highly-paid at-will employees, while the state and the nation began suffering the longest stretch of bad economy in memory, PA/PG John Williams and his circle began to look for ways to raise more money. And the easiest, most logical way seemed to be to pounce more aggressively on the estates of the people he was entrusted to protect and serve, to leech them for fees. And this is what the recent Spitzer kerfuffle helped bring to light….
Be sure to read the whole essay!

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...