Wednesday, February 12, 2020

"No confidence" in NOCCCD leadership

Faculty declares ‘no confidence’ in leaders of Orange County college district
OC Reg
     Demanding health care for their family members and higher pay, faculty members of the North Orange County Community College District on Tuesday, Feb. 11, delivered a letter expressing no confidence in the district’s leadership.
     “I sincerely hope this statement shows the board how serious and dedicated we are to getting the salary and benefits we deserve,” Naji Dahi, a Fullerton College political science professor and chairman of the faculty union’s organizing committee, said at the district’s board of trustees meeting. The letter, symbolic in nature, was signed by more than 350 faculty members.
     District officials said their proposal in the stalled contract negotiations would provide a 9% increase in salary and benefits for the faculty over the course of two years, including health care for family members. But faculty union members said the proposal is inadequate in light of the district’s $102 million reserves and the mounting cost of living in Orange County.
     The district and its nearly 500 full-time faculty with Cypress College, Fullerton College and the North Orange Continuing Education school – which together teach about 80,000 students annually – have been negotiating for nearly two years for a new contract. Faculty members have worked without a contract since June….(continue reading)

9 comments:

Bob said...

That's a start. SOCCCD went through a number of impasses with Raghu and mostly uninterested and ill-informed BOT members.

Change the BOT in the district--time, commitment and money will be required.

Items in the press help when presented positively (always tricky).

Anonymous said...

Thanks - I have not heard of this before. They have been working without a contract since JUNE - appalling. I wish there were better local coverage of this!

Bob said...

Get to know some of the press folks. Sometimes making the point about the effect on students highlights the importance of faculty AND staff being their to get students started and guided on their paths. Not being able to afford the cost of living in SoCal is critical to retaining excellent teachers and classified members of the colleges. Student success is often reliant on well-informed faculty.

Anonymous said...

I wish there were reporters and news outlets that cared more about high ed issues and politics. There are still stories to be reported about misconduct and nepotism, the tendency for those in the past admin to use the college as their private ATM for them and their friends and their friend's pet projects at the expense of students' real needs. All the people who lost jobs plus the people whose incompetence was seldom remedied, merely tolerated if not encouraged. I am glad its over but where is the justice?

Anonymous said...

It's not that they don't care - it's that news outlets don't have the manpower they used to have. Slashed budgets have led to newsrooms with fewer reporters. As such they don't have the time to focus on us.

It's symptomatic of the public's apathy. So long, democracy.

Anonymous said...

8:54, Justice retired with a huge pension a few years ago.

Anonymous said...

Trump 2020!

Anonymous said...

Oooh, look, it's Glenn writing in!

Anonymous said...

Why does no one report that they want 18per cent increase? Board offered 9%.

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...