Thursday, October 1, 2020

SOCCCD: the Trustee races

The good old days

I swiped this graphic from my pals over on the Orange Juice Blog.
They've swiped plenty of mine!

     Today, I'm critiquing candidates' stated "priorities," which can be found here.

     AREA 1.
     Raghu Mathur's old pal Helen Locke says she wants to eliminate "nonessential courses."  
     Golly, I didn't know we had any of those.
     She also wants to move the district somewhere else to make more room for classes. That's desirable (to move it to the middle: say, El Toro Rd.), but the board has considered that idea and has decided it's too pricey. —Pay attention, lady.
     Carolyn Inmon, an old hand at community college politics, says she wants to "prioritize limited resources to keep dollars in the classroom." Sure. Plus she wants to "support the needs of lifelong learners." That's a perfectly decent hobby horse, I suppose.
     Mr. Waid wants to "streamline systems" to save money: all three campuses should use the same ones, he says. Plus he wants to "integrate career guidance into each semester of a student's plan." Sounds like he's not up on the "Guided Pathways" initiative. Clueless.
     Kaushal has submitted nada, it seems, so to hell with him.

     AREA 3.
     I guess old Babs was just too bright a star for anyone to challenge. 

     AREA 6.
     Two of Ryan Dack's priorities concern worries about Covid-19 safety, which is blatantly unRepublican and thus refreshing. Also, he wants to "expand SOCCCD's college affordability commitment to ensure no student is kept from an education due to financial burdens." Sounds pretty good. Let's do that.
     Meanwhile, incumbent James Wright offers standard blather plus this odd priority: "Address my values as a fiscal conservative and solving pandemic problems." I'm sorry, but that doesn't make much sense, addresswise. Besides, I have never yet known him to fail to refer to Saddleback College as though it were the entire districtWe exist up here, dude! Get a frickin' clue.

     AREA 7.
     Exhibiting yet more cluelessness, Mr. Gawne wants to "complete the Advanced Technology Park in Tustin." As near as I can tell, after all these years, nobody knows what completing it would even be. He offers some blather about "improving certificate programs." Do they need improving? How so?
     He also wants to "Focus on meeting future challenges to the higher education business model due to changing demographics and fiscal realities." OK, that's seriously bullshitty bullshit.
     Mr. Entezampour submitted nothing, prioritywise, which is distinctly unpromising.
     Mr. Tim Jemal, the incumbent, offers some sharp and focused priorities. There's his usual focus on "business partnerships," but ones that "lead to jobs...." —A nice touch. He wants to "Ensure Saddleback College & Irvine Valley College Remain the top Colleges in the State." Sounds good. Love how he blows off ATEP. I guess he's been there. There's no coffee.
     He falters a bit, however, with his 3rd priority: "Balanced Budgets, Precious use of Tax Dollars, Transparency and No New Taxes." Precious use of tax dollars? That's confused. And the "no new taxes" line is just pandering to knuckledraggers. Still, I'll give 'im a B+. I've always liked him. I'm hopin' he isn't one of the dolts who kept giving Glenn Roquemore a contract, despite endless indications that Rocky was (and is) a blithering idiot and shit-weasel.

Fuentes' legacy

Arellano: Trump’s war on election integrity follows a racist playbook used in 1980s Orange County
 
—LA Times 
     This is our old pal Gustavo Arellano's column at the Times. No doubt this piece is about OC GOP chief Tom Fuentes and Anaheim’s Curt Pringle and their gambit of hiring poll guards to intimidate Latino voters, aka voter suppression. Check it out. 
     Fuentes—and OC—is where Trump gets some of his worst ideas.
     (From the summer of 2000 until his death in 2012, Tom Fuentes served on the SOCCCD Board of Trustees. He was the worst thing ever to happen to the district.)

Sana Ana, 1988

IVC's Chris McDonald running for local office

[SEE UPDATE]
So I was driving around the hills up on Portola yesterday and I spotted these political signs along the road for somebody named "Chris McDonald." He's running for Lake Forest City Council. 

I asked myself: "Could that Chris McDonald be MY Chris McDonald, i.e., the VP of Instruction at Irvine Valley College?"

—Nah.

I kind of forgot about the whole thing until just before today's Academic Senate Meeting at 2:00. So I Googled "Chris McDonald Lake Forest" or some such thing and up popped this:

Whoa! It's IVC's Chris McDonald all right! And he's running for Lake Forest City Council!

Jolene in her youth
You'll recall that we covered some Lake Forest politics a few years ago when Lake Forest resident and SOCCCD Trustee Tom Fuentes died and then his widow, Jolene, came sniffing around to take over his seat. That didn't go too well. (See Whatever happened to Jolene Fuentes?, July 11, 2014)

So she ended up running for dogcatcher or something over in that goofy town (I think it was a seat on the planning commission or some such—somewhere where rich folks want things bad and find ways of getting them; that's sure what Tom was all about). I recall receiving the distinct impression that Jolene and her pals were about to introduce Tom Fuentes levels of corruption to the sleepy little town of Lake Forest. Too bad.

Jolene is still on the planning commission. I checked.

But Chris has nothing to do with any of that. 

I looked up Chris's Facebook page, where he announces: 

‘Hi, I'm Chris McDonald. I’m an educator, academic administrator, and I’m a proud resident of Portola Hills. I am stepping up as a candidate for the Lake Forest City Council because I believe I can make a difference for Portola Hills, Foothill Ranch, and our surrounding neighborhoods. We need a strong voice to represent our community in District 1 and I believe that I can be that voice.” (Aug 24) 

I believe that those who are entrusted in service of the community must be accessible to their constituents. Improving communication and increasing community engagement is key to our long-term success and that involves respect for individuals and their experiences. City leadership involves partnership with residents, and I believe that council members must represent the voice of the community. I believe patience is a prerequisite for the job because bringing closure to an issue may take more time when you collect and include feedback from the community. With that said, when I make a decision for the benefit of the community that is not in someone’s favor, I will make myself available for open and transparent dialogue about how the decision was made. (Sep 22)

Well, OK!

Here are a couple of things that pop up on his campaign website. Looks pretty professional, I guess:



McDonald's chief opposition appears to be a serious right-winger, who has the support of the County GOP, pro-lifers, and the likes of Don Wagner. See. McDonald has impressive support of his own.

UPDATE:

This appears to be the final tally. Chris lost by 22 votes.


Re Lake Forest's Jolene Fuentes, see also 
Monday, May 21, 2012  

Wednesday, May 30, 2012 
Monday, June 25, 2012
Monday, June 25, 2012  
July 1 2012 
The OC GOP machine lines up behind Tom Fuentes’ widow in Lake Forest,
December 23, 2013

10-1: The Insufferable Hubris of the Well-Credentialed PLUS Drudge ♥️ Trump no longer AND Newsom nixes high school Ethnic Studies requirement PLUS prof fired for mentioning others' use of N-word

Professor Fired for Using N-Word in Class
—Inside Higher Ed 
     Central Michigan University fired Tim Boudreau, a tenured professor and chair of the journalism department, for creating a hostile environment by using the N-word in class, MLive reported. 
     Boudreau “created a hostile learning environment through his reckless use of the n-word (and other racial and homophobic slurs) in his instruction,” said a report investigating the professor. “There was no defensible reason for [Boudreau’s] choice to use uncensored racial slurs. CMU will not permit such hostility to go unchecked and, as such, the employer finds separation of employment to be the appropriate sanction.” 
     An alumna filed a complaint. She said Boudreau used the N-word in describing the firing of a former basketball coach -- for using the N-word....

[Again, Boudreau didn't "use" the N-word; rather, he "mentioned" it, which is something entirely different and is entirely defensible. Political correctness—or something very like it—run amok. Example: "'Cunt' is a highly toxic word." That remark is not using the C-word, it's mentioning it; it is saying, essentially, that it is a word most of us should avoid using. That's what Boudreau did with the N-word, apparently, quoting a coach who controversially used that word in class many years ago. (Boudreau's course was about the 1st Amendment and its meaning. He was raising the question of whether the coach's remark was protected speech.) This kind of "use" (i.e., mentioning) is in no sense objectionable, at least among mature and intelligent adults. What is objectionable is that Boudreau was fired over such perfectly reasonable commentary. Outrageous! —RB See here.]

A four-year university degree has become necessary for dignified work. Michael Sandel says that’s a huge mistake. 
—CHE 
     ...Sandel: Meritocracy is an attractive, even inspiring ideal, but it has a dark side: It generates hubris among the winners and humiliation among the losers. I suppose you could say this is a reading of the moral psychology of our political moment. 
     The meritocratic hubris of elites is the conviction by those who land on top that their success is their own doing, that they have risen through a fair competition, that they therefore deserve the material benefits that the market showers upon their talents. Meritocratic hubris is the tendency of the successful to inhale too deeply of their success, to forget the luck and good fortune that helped them on their way. It goes along with the tendency to look down on those less fortunate, and less credentialed, than themselves. That gives rise to the sense of humiliation and resentment of those who are left out…. 

—WashPo

—OC Reg 

He has pursued policies to weaken insurance protections, but that’s not reflected in polling of Republicans. 
—NYT 
     ...“I think people should be able to have insurance even if they have pre-existing conditions,” said Ms. Locke, 59, who works in Jacksonville, Fla., as a children’s museum director. She recalls jumping from one plan to another before Obamacare, when her husband’s heart condition threatened to cut them off from coverage. She plans to cast her vote for President Trump in November, and expects he’ll do a good job on the issue, despite a policy record that is at odds with that premise…. 

A rift between the president and the online news pioneer Matt Drudge is playing out in pithy headlines and needling tweets as the campaign heats up. 
—NYT 

California moves toward policing changes, but activists hoped for far more -- California will ban certain police choke holds and establish independent investigations for some law enforcement shootings under legislation Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Wednesday — the remnants of what activists once hoped would be a far more ambitious overhaul of policing practices. Alexei Koseff in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Hannah Wiley in the Sacramento Bee$ Nico Savidge in the San Jose Mercury$ Don Thompson Associated Press Alexander Nieves Politico-- 10/1/20 

Ethnic studies requirement for California high school graduation is vetoed by Newsom -- Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed a bill Wednesday that would have required all high school students in California to take an ethnic studies course to graduate — a move he said was driven by concerns that the draft curriculum was biased. Dustin Gardiner in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 10/1/20 

Tom Fuentes & St. Ronald
Trump call for poll watchers evokes chilling memories of Orange County, 1988 -- When debate moderator Chris Wallace asked President Donald Trump last night whether he would urge his supporters “not to engage in any civil unrest” while ballots are being counted and to “not declare victory until the election has been independently certified,” the president responded with a very different appeal to his base. Ben Christopher CalMatters -- 10/1/20 

Mental health ‘tsunami’ looms: Can California prevent a surge in suicides? -- Humboldt County, tucked into the redwoods on the state’s far North Coast, also has a much higher suicide rate than most of California. The pandemic has fueled new concerns. Jocelyn Wiener CalMatters -- 10/1/20 

Police in L.A. and across California disproportionately cite Black people for minor infractions, study finds -- Police in Los Angeles and other major cities across California issue citations to Black residents for minor infractions such as loitering, drinking in public and sleeping on the street at far higher rates than white residents, according to a new study by the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area. Kevin Rector in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 10/1/20 

Belligerent Trump debate performance stokes fears among Republicans about November -- The aftermath of the first presidential debate between President Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden triggered a reckoning among Republicans on Wednesday about the incumbent’s incendiary remarks on white supremacy and his baseless claims of electoral fraud, with GOP officials privately expressing alarm about the fallout with key voters as the president’s allies argued that he electrified his core supporters. Robert Costa and Matt Viser in the Washington Post$ -- 10/1/20 

Coronavirus economy: California is years away from jobs recovery, report says -- The California job market, which was at an all-time best level only last February, appears to be years away from a return to the lofty heights it enjoyed before the coronavirus unleashed wide-ranging economic woes, an unsettling forecast released Wednesday shows. George Avalos in the San Jose Mercury$ Margot Roosevelt in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 9/30/20

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...