A reliable colleague and faculty leader has offered us the following picture of our sister college to the south right now. Early yesterday morning, he or she or it says, [College President Gregory] Anderson was roughly ushered off campus, leaving the college in the hands of someone still wearing his newbie name tag and wielding a temp parking sticker. Our source seems to think that administrative leadership at Saddleback is experiencing collapse or failure.
Gosh, the guy had just been hired seven months earlier (October).
We also reported:
Early this afternoon, there was a buzz on the top floor of Liberal Arts at IVC. People were saying that the President of Saddleback College [Gregory Anderson] had been “fired.”
I looked at the email that was the apparent source of this alleged factoid:
Dear Saddleback Community,
After discussions with district leadership, I have submitted my resignation as president of Saddleback College. In these past few months, you have shown me that this is a great institution, with a deep commitment to the students and their communities. Personal circumstances require me to return immediately to my home in the Bay Area, but I will remain forever grateful to all of you for this opportunity to serve.
—Gregory
College and District PR people did nothing to shed light on the situation. Total blackout.
The Register eventually reported that “faculty [were] perplexed over [the] sudden departure of school President Gregory Anderson” (4/1//18).
Yep.
Three months later, we reported:
Um, months back, Irvine police caught the Saddleback College Prez, Greg Anderson, with hookers 'n' drugs. So they contacted the IVC PD. Word got to the BOT, and the whole thing got hushed up quick, with Anderson sent packing.
That's the story anyway....
Well, we're sticking with that story. We have it on very good authority.
I'm serious.
Four months later, Anderson managed to be selected President of Riverside City College.
“Sheesh,” we thought. "I mean, seriously, SHEESH."
Riverside City College hires veteran educator as 12th president (November 15, 2018)
The Press-Enterprise (11/15) reported that
Riverside City College is getting its 12th president.
He is Gregory Anderson, a 52-year-old educator who has managed programs at colleges and universities in California, Japan, Saudi Arabia, South Africa and Venezuela, Riverside Community College District officials said.
Gregory Anderson has been appointed the 12th president of Riverside City College. He is scheduled to begin leading the campus in January. (Photo courtesy of Riverside Community College District)
Anderson is set to begin leading the district’s largest campus, which has a fall enrollment of 23,000, on Jan. 1.
For the past few months, Anderson served as interim vice president of instruction at Mt. San Antonio College in Walnut. Before that, he was president of Saddleback College in Mission Viejo in Orange County, but abruptly left in April after staying there about six months — catching faculty by surprise.
His appointment by the Riverside Community College District follows a 2016 candidate search for a Norco College president that led to the naming two finalists who were removed from top posts at colleges in San Francisco and Texas after serving one year, and a year and a half, respectively. The district hired a third finalist, Bryan Reece, who continues to lead that college. The district also operates Moreno Valley College.
. . .
Anderson’s short stint at Saddleback College raised questions during the selection process, said Wolde-Ab Isaac, Riverside Community College District chancellor.
“Any time something like that happens of course it raises concerns,” Isaac said.
But he said reference and background checks, an interview and Anderson’s experience eliminated those worries....
Hotel. Police. Hookers 'n' drugs. That's what happened.
* * *
Guess what? TODAY, Anderson is a finalist for the Presidential gig up at Foothill College up north:
[VIDEO] An Open Forum with Dr Gregory Anderson
According to Foothill,
Gregory Anderson is a student-centered and equity-driven leader with 30 years of higher education experience. Most recently, he served as president of Riverside City College, the largest college in the Riverside Community College District, serving 30,000 students annually. Previous roles in higher education include vice president, dean, strategic advisor, instructor, and director in California, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Lesotho, and Venezuela.
Oddly, there’s no mention of Anderson’s brief stint at Saddleback College and his curious sudden and unexplained departure.
An' nothin' about hookers 'n' drugs.