Wednesday, November 15, 2017

The return of the curious "Shooting Star" saga

     Back in 2012, I wrote a series of posts about the mysterious sinking, in 1974, of the yacht "Shooting Star," which took the life of Tom Fuentes' then boss OC Supervisor Ron Caspers, arguably the seminal figure in OC political corruption of the last 50 years.
     We've just received new information about the Shooting Star story—in the form of FBI files. We'll report on that information soon.
     To get up to speed on the story, check out: The saga of the “Shooting Star”     

Monday, November 13, 2017

Guided Pathways, part 1: "Sooner, Cheaper, Faster"


What is this "Guided Pathways" thing? And where did it come from?
The first in a series, here on DtB, to help answer these questions.
The above video is put out by the State Chancellor's Office.
Good grief.

Saturday, November 11, 2017

Call me



Cover me with kisses, baby
Cover me with love
Roll me in designer sheets
I'll never get enough
Emotions come, I don't know why
Cover up love's alibi
Call me (call me) on the line
Call me, call me any, anytime
Call me (call me) oh love
When you're ready we can share the wine
Call me

Friday, November 10, 2017

IVC student prodding Rep. Walters into stronger DACA leadership

DACA recipients turn up the pressure on Mimi Walters, local Congress members
(OC Register)
By MARTIN WISCKOL
     Irvine Valley College student Rosa Rodriguez, like many among the nearly 800,000 other immigrants brought to U.S. as children, is increasingly nervous that she’ll lose her legal residency status and face deportation.
     That motivated her to meet with congressional staffers last week and plead for their boss, Rep. Mimi Walters, to take a leadership role in preserving protections made available to her and other so-called Dreamers by the Obama Administration.
     President Donald Trump announced in September that no more temporary extensions would be granted after March under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals or DACA program, and handed the Republican-controlled Congress the task of coming up with a replacement. But that process has largely stalled.
     Walters, who could prove a key Republican swing vote on the issue, is attracting particular attention from Dreamers and their advocates….
     “I’m in limbo,” said the 20-year-old [Rodriguez], who helps pay her bills with a part-time job at her school’s tutorial writing center. “I’m not waiting anxiously for my acceptance letter as much as I’m waiting anxiously to find out about my status. If I lose that, I probably wouldn’t go to school. I couldn’t work (legally) any more and even if I get my degree, I couldn’t work in my field.”
     Nearly 80,000 of California’s 223,000 DACA recipients are college students. More than 60,000 of those, like Rodriguez, attend community college. Rodriguez’s meeting with two Walters’ aides Nov. 7 was arranged by the South Orange County Community College District’s Public Affairs Office, as part of the school’s outreach on behalf of the more than 700 DACA recipients in the two-college district.
. . .
     Anti-illegal immigration stalwarts oppose giving legal status to anyone in the country illegally. Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Costa Mesa, is among those who have expressed reservations about extending special protections to DACA recipients.
. . .
 
     But some Republicans — including Reps. Walters, Ed Royce, R-Fullerton and Darrell Issa, R-Vista — have expressed support for continuing legal status for DACA recipients. Most congressional Democrats support giving DACA recipients permanent residency as well as a path to citizenship.
. . .
     Rodriguez, who’s permit expires in January 2019, was born in the small town of San Andres Ixtlan in Jalisco, Mexico. Shortly after she was born, her father headed to Napa Valley to better provide for his family. He’s worked at the same vineyard for 20 years and is helping her pay college bills, said Rodriguez, whose three siblings are U.S. citizens.
     During her meeting with Walters’ staff, Rodriguez described her harrowing efforts to cross the border with her mother. While completing high school in Napa Valley and researching colleges, she settled on UC Irvine because of the curriculum and because of the reputation of its immigrant help center.
     “It was just the energy — the vibe — UCI gave off,” she said. She selected Irvine Valley College as part of her path to UCI.
     Walters has issued sympathetic statements about DACA recipients, but Rodriguez told the congresswoman’s staff that wasn’t enough....
     [You should definitely read the rest!]

More on last Thursday's action at Walters' Irvine office:

From the OC Weekly:
Immigrant Rights Protester Arrested at Rep. Mimi Walters' Irvine Office

from Lake Forest Patch:
Dreamers Activist Arrested In Rep. Walters' OC Office

from MyNewsLA.com:
Korean activist arrested at Irvine congresswoman’s office
Dae Joong Yoon, president of the Korean Resource Center. Photo: Korean Resource Center

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

"Misguided Pathways"


     This semester, faculty—of Irvine Valley College's Academic Senate—confronted a hurried effort by the college to embrace a set of odd "meta-majors" as part of the dubious state-wide "Guided Pathways" initiative. (Money's at stake, natch.)
     The faculty pushed back: what's the hurry? Why not get faculty buy-in first? Who's the knucklehead who came up with these daffy majors?
     The brakes were applied. So far so good, but, as always, we should be wary of administration-driven and idiotic "reforms."
     See Nov 2, 2017, Senate Meeting: lowering the heat on Guided Pathways [Senate Capers].

Inside Higher Ed
     …But a new report is calling into question just how the system of seven two-year institutions [City Colleges of Chicago] has increased degree completions, alleging it softened standards and manipulated data in the pursuit of better graduation rates.
     According to the report from the Better Government Association, an Illinois-based nonpartisan watchdog group, “Since 2010, City Colleges has watered down its curriculum, violated its own rules on what constitutes a degree, changed the way it counts statistics and bestowed thousands of degrees -- sometimes in multiples to the same person -- to current and former students who in many cases neither requested nor wanted them.”
     Critics of City Colleges’ completion push see the system as having altered policy and created initiatives simply to improve its metrics and image….
Chronicle of HE
     …Faculty members at the University of Wisconsin at Superior said they were "blindsided" by this week’s announcement that the university was suspending more than two dozen academic programs, including majors in political science, sociology, and theater.
     The programs were being phased out, the university said, as part of a streamlining process to make it easier for students to graduate on time. First-generation students, who make up 46 percent of the student body, tend to get overwhelmed by too many course offerings, university administrators said. As a result, they added, students often make bad decisions that cause them to take too many credits, incur too much debt and take too long to graduate....
. . .
     Khalil Dokhanchi, a professor of political science who has been at the university for 25 years, said that he has "absolutely no idea what this means for me," but that he plans to stay on.
     "They’re saying that poor, working-class students can’t make decisions because there are too many choices. It’s offensive," he said.
     "This is a huge mistake and a good indicator of why faculty members should be involved in these decisions."....
The Conversation
     ...For the Golden State of California, 1960 was a golden year: It was a time of rapid development, when the state chose to use its tax revenues to fund magnificent freeways and other infrastructure.
     Part of this massive development was a system of public higher education – a model that put California center stage in the American imagination.

     The master plan has struggled to keep up. It has gone through many reviews and revisions, the latest of which, in 2017, emphasized improving access and affordability.
     But the convergence of these trends, combined with fluctuations in the state economy and tax revenues, has turned the Californian dream of higher education into an American dilemma….

Friday, November 3, 2017

This Week in Dreams


Rosa Rodriguez holds over 40 letters written by IVC students, faculty and staff
and community members while she waits outside Mimi Walters office. 
So, among the dreams realized this week:

Yes, on Monday night, the Board of Trustees did unanimously adopt Resolution 17-33 in Support of Codifying DACA into Federal Law.

Yes, on Tuesday morning, the SOCCCD sent a student delegation with a copy of that resolution to meet with the staff of Rep. Mimi Walters.  A report from inside the room suggests that the testimony of IVC DACA student Rosa Rodriguez brought at least one staffer to tears. She gave Walters' staff over 40 letters written by IVC students, faculty, staff and community members. The delegation also gave the staff over 1,000 letters collected by Rio Hondo College students which the staff refused to accept days earlier. 

Yes, Rebel Girl did receive a peevish email from former trustee now Irvine Mayor Don Wagner which delighted her as it suggested that Don does sit in an office somewhere and read Dissent.  We hope he enjoyed the photos of Don and Sheriff Joe Arpaio that Chunk dug up along with all the choice soundbites. 

Then, Thursday night Red received an email from Tracy La, former ASUCI president, inviting him to join another Dream Act action at Walters' office. So Friday morning Rebel Girl and Red Emma returned to the corporate park to attend an action sponsored by the Korean Resource Center (KRC). It was a lively group of 60-70, including representatives from Orange County Congregation Community Organization, SEIU United Service Workers West, ACLU and the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles - along with others and Red Emma and Rebel Girl, of course.  And drummers! With Korean drums! Red was pleased to discover that one of the lead organizers was a former student of his, Jonathan Paik, the KRC's Orange County director. Go figure.

Red Emma on the  march. 


Rebel Girl has been to countless marches and rallies, vigils and protests but there was something quite special about this assembly in an Irvine corporate canyon off Michelson and Jamboree.  Something about the range of ages, the spirit, and open pride - and yes, the Korean drums. You have not lived folks until you have walked in the shadow of the old Fluor Corporation to the beat of Korean drums, making your demands known in chants. You should try it.




Security didn't know what to do with us, except to say we could not could come in, not with the 2,000 postcards written to Mimi and certainly not with the drums. So we marched and rallied. At some point, a former student of Rebel Girl's showed up, inspired by a Facebook post.  And then Rosa arrived to a very different scene than Tuesday's. And when the time came for people to take the microphone and say their piece, Rosa did, speaking her heart out to those who gathered to listen.  Rebel Girl was proud of her, proud of all those brave DACA students. As a dear friend puts it: "Her voice is so important for all immigrants, for all who need to understand who an immigrant is."  Would that our elected leaders be as brave.

Rosa speaks.
Comprehensive coverage of the rally below.  Rosa's remarks begin at 1:05. (Rebel Girl thinks she may have cued it right, but maybe not.)

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...