On April 10, we at DtB reported on this curious event:
Good start! Now keep going!, April 10, 2018
We identified the rumored actual reasons for Anderson’s departure in July of 2018, recalled in March of 2019:
(Hint: hookers 'n' drugs.)
After leaving Saddleback, Anderson briefly served as interim vice president of instruction at Mt. San Antonio College. After a few months there, however, he got the permanent Riverside gig
A reader has recently alerted us to a new development in the Anderson saga:
Riverside City College President Gregory Anderson removed, The Press Enterprise, June 23, 2022.
Gregory Anderson, the president of Riverside City College since late 2018, has been removed, an email from Riverside Community College District Chancellor Wolde-Ab Isaac states.The decision was announced after a closed session at the Tuesday night, June 21, meeting of the district’s board of trustees. The board discussed the “discipline/dismissal/release” of an employee, according to the agenda.The move follows a May 17 no-confidence vote by the executive board of the Riverside Community College District Faculty Association, the union representing Riverside City, Norco and Moreno Valley colleges.On Tuesday night, board President Bill Hedrick reported that the trustees reached “a unanimous decision to release” Anderson from his post, effective immediately, Isaac’s Wednesday, June 22, email states.Anderson could not be located for comment Thursday, June 23.. . .Faculty Association President Rhonda Taube, who teaches at Riverside City College, said the decision was a long time coming.The union “had been trying to work with Anderson for some time” and wanted to “preserve the college’s integrity.” After months of trying to resolve issues “out of our control,” the group filed grievances and believed that employees’ contracts were violated, Taube said.The union filed two grievances in April, and they weren’t resolved “to our satisfaction,” she said.“As a union, we felt we could no longer work with (Anderson),” Taube said. “This isn’t about his collegiality with faculty or support of students. It was about the inability to resolve issues related to our work conditions. We regret having to make this decision … it just showed the level of frustrations we were experiencing in trying to protect our collective bargaining agreement and resolve faculty-student learning issues.”….
1 comment:
Honest, if naive, question: how do people like Greg Anderson get away with this sort of thing, landing jobs worth hundreds of thousands of dollars? How easy is it, really, to be an egoistic narcissist (yep, I know it’s redundant) while landing prestigious jobs in higher education? Or, am I asking the wrong question?
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