Thursday, October 7, 2010

Public Education rallies across the country; unabashed liberal Fox

Photo from the New University

At Rallies Across the Country, Students Turn Out in Defense of Public Education (Chronicle of Higher Education)

     Less than a month before midterm elections, students, faculty members, and advocacy groups held rallies on campuses across the country on Thursday to show elected officials their support for public higher education.
. . .
     On several campuses of the University of California, which lost $637-million in state appropriations last year, groups also held events to mark Thursday's "National Day of Action to Defend Public Education."….

Unabashed liberal defies OC stereotype (R. Scott Moxley; OC Weekly)

     In Orange County’s vast sea of Republicanism, Melissa Fox stands nearly alone as a defiant Democrat. Espousing decidedly lefty political stances, Fox easily won her political party’s nomination in the fight for the 70th State Assembly District seat currently occupied by outgoing Republican Chuck DeVore. The district is overwhelmingly conservative and last elected a Democrat in, well, best I can tell, never.
     But in her race against traditionally conservative Republican Don Wagner, Fox isn’t trying to soften her stances or pretend she’s a conservative Democrat. In fact, she’s eagerly pushing a policy many Republicans label as class warfare. She’s calling for higher taxes on California’s corporations and wealthy citizens as the only way to correct an “unfair” tax burden on the middle class.
     Can that message resonate in suburban OC neighborhoods such as Newport Beach, Tustin, Irvine, Laguna Beach, Laguna Woods, Lake Forest and Aliso Viejo? Fox’s admirers insist it can, but I’m not so sure. Especially given the present anti-tax, anti-government political climate, this South County small-business attorney may have taken herself out of contention.

Williams on TV; Moorlach and the County CEO are agin 'im


     The latest KOCE-TV interview of trustee and OC Public Administrator/Guardian John Williams is now available here.
     It looks pretty bad for Williams. Reporter David Nazar speaks with OC Supervisor John Moorlach, who now states that Williams just isn’t qualified to do the job. Further, he is concerned about Williams’ action of hiring real estate auction firm LFC (that’s Tom Fuentes’ pal’s firm).
     He has two questions: was it a sole source contract?* And was the hire approved by the Board of Trustees?
     The scene then switches to Williams’ office. Williams asserts that “the PAPG departments in California are exempt under the probate code from having to go through their county-approved vendor lists and all of those restrictions.”
     You can tell that John worked really hard to memorize that sentence. His hair looks perfect.
     —So I guess that’s a "yes" and a "no" to Moorlach’s two questions. Uh-oh.
     Next: cut to a shot of legal books. Reporter Nazar states that, on the contrary, “according to California State law, the probate code does not exclude PGPA offices from complying with county regulations regarding who they contract with." Oh-oh again.
     Back to Williams: he declares that, after the investigation is over, he will be vindicated.
     Next: we see an official from the County CEO office who says that there is cause for concern and for a review of Williams’ office.
     Uh-oh #3.
     How come no interview of Tom Fuentes?
     Not bad, though.

     *“Sole source contract” is variously defined as (1) a contract in which only one company can provide the service in question or (2) a non-competitive hire after contacting only one source/vendor, thus precluding competition.

• KOCE Grills Orange County Public Administrator

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...