Who Should Run Our Community Colleges? Here’s Where Candidates Stand on the Issues (Voice of OC)
BY NICK GERDA
Oct 27, 2022
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Reporters reached out to all 12 community college board candidates and sent them a list of questions, several of which were submitted by readers in response to a public invitation for questions.
Nine of the 12 candidates provided answers.
Candidates were allowed up to 350 characters per answer, to keep the total length reasonable.
[DtB here offers excerpts of the Reeve and Dack interviews {SOCCCD board candidates}; for the FULL INTERVIEWS, go to Reeve and Dack]
Noted plagiarist Derek Reeve |
[AREA 4: Terri Whitt Rydell, the incumbent, will be opposed by Derek Reeve:]
What are your thoughts on the curriculum at the colleges in your district? What if any changes would you advocate for?
Derek Reeve: “As a former Saddleback College professor, I have seen first-hand the bias of the faculty and curriculum at our district. Many professors are openly hostile to students due to their political and religious beliefs. To properly educate students we must obtain a viewpoint balance among our faculty and the textbooks they assign.”
What’s your stance on pandemic measures like masking on campus, including during future waves of COVID-19? Have you supported or opposed the state’s pandemic rules regarding vaccinations, mask wearing and remote learning?
Reeve: “Unlike the incumbent [Whitt Rydell], I absolutely will NOT vote for a mask mandate. While I have been vaccinated, it doesn’t prevent transmission. Thus, a vaccine mandate is unnecessarily intrusive and a violation of one’s privacy. These mandates created a segregated student population, and are in many cases prohibiting students from attending classes altogether.”
What’s your stance on the debate about free speech on campus?
Reeve: “I will push for adoption and enforcement of a distinct wide ‘COLLEGE BILL OF RIGHTS’ that protects students and employees’ freedom of speech, expression and privacy. As a former Saddleback College professor, I have seen first-hand suppression of speech not approved by the union’s political action committee. Many examples are well documented.”
What’s your position on raises for professors? And what is your relationship like with the faculty union(s) in your district?
Reeve: “The district allocates all curriculum and hiring authority to the faculty. The professors thus hire like-minded professors with no chance of securing viewpoint diversity. I pledge I will never vote for a pay increase without a structural change to this process. My plan brings viewpoint balance to the faculty through the retention of new faculty.”
Do you support publicly posting meeting agendas earlier? If so, how early? And what if any steps would you take to increase public input in budget decisions?
Reeve: “I support all agendas being posted two weeks before each meeting. As I did with the city, I will not require residents to complete a speaker slip in order to make public comments and I will not stop a speaker from making unpopular comments. Furthermore, I will facilitate public comments at meetings via the internet or telephone.”
[AREA 6: Ryan Dack and Pramod Kunju* are running for the seat vacated by James Wright]
What are your thoughts on the curriculum at the colleges in your district? What if any changes would you advocate for?
Ryan Dack: “The curriculum in our community college district is developed by the faculty and their department. New courses can be suggested by any faculty member if the need for the course is justified (eg. is there an equivalent UC Course?). I think the Board’s role should remain limited in this process.”
What’s your position on raises for professors? And what is your relationship like with the faculty union(s) in your district?
Dack: “As a teacher in Orange County, I understand the challenges associated with working in education while living in a high-cost-of-living area. Additionally, our district was at one time a top community college district in California, but its ranking has dropped in recent years. Working with the union to increase compensation could reverse this trend.”
What is your solution for keeping colleges safe? What specific procedures and protocols?
Dack: “While our culture has improved since the Me Too movement, I do want to ensure that there is accountability when a student comes forward with a safety concern, including sexual harassment. These should always be taken seriously, and every report needs to be thoroughly investigated as a priority.”
Do you support publicly posting meeting agendas earlier? If so, how early? And what if any steps would you take to increase public input in budget decisions?
Dack: “Currently, board meeting agendas are made public five days before regularly scheduled meetings. The logistics of getting the board agenda out any earlier would be difficult, but again, I do think these agendas can be more easily accessible on the Board of Trustees’ website.”
What are the top three things you want to see get more or less funding as a board member?
Dack: “I want to see more funding directed toward mental health services, reproductive health services, and college affordability programs.”
*Note: Pramod Kunju, who, like Whitt Rydell, chose not to submit answers to VOC questions, has the endorsement of former SOCCCD trustee and current right wing lunatic Don Wagner, as does Whitt Rydell, another current right wing lunatic, despite union backing
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