Friday, November 23, 2007

Black Friday, San Francisco

In Joe's Ice Cream and Grill, Geary and 18th

Most of these are taken from Lincoln Park and around the old Cliff House.







Gratuitous Tiger Ann photo.

Fannie took this one while we were driving home. Check out the surfer dude.

Thanksgiving in Pacifica

It's been good. Thanksgiving dinner was great (see tofurkey below), Tiger Ann has been loads of peevish furry fun, and the weather has been perfect. And in Pacifica!

Thinking about heading up to Lincoln Park today (San Francisco), checking out the oil damage. Or just the beauty. Later!








Thursday, November 22, 2007

It’s beginning to look a lot like HELLMOUTH

--HERE IN Orange County, anyway. From the OC Register:

Tustin middle school students suspended for repeated hugging: Parents and students protested outside of Hewes Middle School:
Eighth-grader Noah Stillman was suspended and stayed home from school Wednesday after hugging a girl on Tuesday….

A few parents and some students picketed in front of Hewes Middle School Wednesday morning for about an hour with signs that included “Honk for hugs,” “Hugging is not a crime” and “Stop the war on hugs.”

Students who continue to hug after at least one warning violate the state's education code for defiance of authority….

…Another student, Gianna Cammarota, 13, was suspended this month for repeated hugging according to her mother, Christy.
Fire area threatened by slides and floods, report states:
People, property, water quality, wildlife and infrastructure once threatened by the flames of the Santiago fire are now at risk of floods and landslides caused by rain, according to a report released by the state Tuesday.

All areas near the 28,464-acre fire are at risk, but the risk is the greatest in Modjeska, Williams and the upper reaches of Silverado Canyon, according to the Burned Area Emergency Response report for the blaze. Sixty-eight locations were specifically identified in the report as being at risk of floods, landslides or falling debris….


…About 50 firefighters from the U.S. Forest Service continue to monitor the remnants of the fire 24-hours a day, said Jay Bertek, incident commander with the Forest Service. Authorities said the fire was intentionally set along Santiago Road Oct. 21.

…According to the state report, most of the land affected by the fire belongs to the Irvine Company, with 10,682 acres. Almost 6,000 acres burned were inside the Cleveland National forest and 3,834 acres are owned by small private owners. The County of Orange owns 3,446 acres of the burned area, and 4,507 acres are owned by the toll roads, the federal government or school and water districts.

…Homes near stream channels in Modjeska, Williams, Santiago and Silverado canyons face the prospect of floods, while homes below or on slopes are in danger of unstable soil. A total of 68 sites have been identified as being at risk of landslides, floods, rockslides and debris flow…

…The report also recommends that hydroseeding and mulching not be used to rehabilitate slopes because the strategy prevents natural plants from sprouting and does not help to stabilize the soil. Burned soil doesn't take long to show signs of regeneration, the report states.

Irvine Lake, a source of drinking water for Villa Park and some parts of Orange, should be monitored for debris and sediment flows when it rains, according to the report….
Turkey bowling a tradition at Los Amigos High:
…[T]hose who think they have all the uses for that big bird down to an art form may have overlooked one option pre-Thanksgiving: turkey bowling.

…Students at Los Amigos High School enjoyed the tradition Wednesday as the school marked the final day of its annual Turkey Olympics, a three-day event that included eating contests on Monday and Tuesday.

…One student from each of the four classes and two teachers rolled a frozen turkey down a 20-foot-stretch of red carpet toward 10 2-liter soda bottles filled with sand at the other end….
Now arrived: Toy Trains: Nixon Presidential Library hosts 250 toy trains in massive display


Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Read and master our hard-won faculty hiring policy

I called Sierra, who reports that the Sunny Bear is "eating like a horse," which is good.

Meanwhile, Tiger Ann and I are hangin' out together. She's a sweet kid. Kinda surly, though.

Early indications are that you-know-who is messing with the new round of faculty hiring.

Just remember: we fought hard for the full-time faculty hiring process that we now have. Study it. Learn it. Don't let these people violate it.

(To learn how that policy came about, read The Senate sues the district.)

(To access the policy, go to Board Policies. Go to 4011.1, a pdf file.)


OUR BATTLE OVER THE HIRING POLICY, THE SHORT VERSION:

2002. According to a statute, faculty hiring policies are to be “mutually” agreed upon by the district (i.e., the board) and the faculty (i.e., the academic senates). During the Summer of 2002, Chancellor Mathur established a committee, including no faculty, that developed a new hiring policy. The faculty were not even informed of this committee’s work. The product of the committee—a truly appalling and incompetent policy—was then adopted by the board. ("So sue us," said one trustee.)

Here’s what happened next:

Judge Clay Smith ruled that the district had indeed failed to include the faculty in the development of the faculty hiring policy, contrary to law. He thus ordered the district and senates to get together to develop a faculty hiring policy.

But, in the end, the district’s representatives and the senates’ representatives did not see eye to eye on major issues, and so the district unilaterally pushed through the version of the policy that it liked, and it pronounced that policy the product of the committee. That policy was almost as appalling as the one that was neutralized by Smith.

Surprisingly, despite the vociferous objections of the Academic Senates to the new policy, Judge Smith ruled that the policy was indeed the product of “mutual agreement.”

It was an absurd judgment.

2005. The Academic Senates appealed. By summer 2005, the appellate justices unanimously acted to overturn and vacate Smith’s absurd judgment. The board tried one or two last ditch efforts to have the court reconsider, but to no avail. The academic senates had won, and that was that.

The senates had prevailed, period. That meant that the only valid policy was the one developed at the end of 1993 (that one was mutually agreed to). It was a good one from the faculty’s perspective.

The appellate justices urged the parties to work out their differences, and so, in the Fall of 2005, district representatives (namely, Mathur, the instigator of the original unilaterally imposed policy, and Lang, now the board president) and Academic Senate reps (namely, the two senate Presidents and the union president) mutually developed a policy that both sides could agree on. That work was completed by late October, 2005. This mutually ageed to policy is a vast improvement.

The policy was adopted by the board in December of 2005.

Traveling up the 5, then through GarlicVille

IT'S BECOME NECESSARY to visit my sister Fannie again. She's got renal issues, among others.

Traveling up the 5 can be mighty boring. Plus I was in a hurry. No time to stop to take pics. Gotta keep rolling.

Not far past Tejon Pass, I did notice some place called "Pumpkin Patch," or something like that. It was off to the east. Didn't go there. Was tempted, though.

There was quite a bit of traffic for a Tuesday. We're closing in on Thanksgiving Day, of course, and I suppose lots of people wanted to leave early to avoid traffic.

Fannie and I are vegetarians. so I had a Tofurkey with me. Fannie's a good cook, and she manages to create wonderful dishes, even if she's working with something like Tofurkey.

I took a few pics while driving--and I do mean while driving. I think that's illegal. If it isn't, it oughta be.

It was getting dark as I drove west toward GarlicVille. Took some pics there.

Didn't smell no garlic.

When I got to Pacifica, Fannie had made all kinds of food. There were "twice-fried french fries"--evidently, something Martha Stewart dreamt up. Go figure. There was some kinda soup, too, which was terrific. I called it "Carrot McSpuds."

Plus she had made Sweet Potato Pie! She tends to have "potato" themed activities and enterprises. She says that they're in memory of her beloved dog, "Potata."

Tiger Ann says "hey."

The Beat Goes On


Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Doin' what it takes

FOR SOME REASON—plummeting real estate values?—the OC Register is reporting, yet again, that “Two OC cities make 'safest' list.” It asks: “Can you name them?”

Well, sure. According to the FBI, Mission Viejo is the safest city in the country.

Irvine gets the 14 spot and Lake Forest gets the 10. That's three cities, not two. The OC Reg never could count.

I teach in Irvine, and I can tell you it’s pretty darned safe in this silly town.

That’s cuz we play it safe.

For instance, a year or so ago, when a menacing sack of sand was found in one of the rooms in IVC’s A100 building, and it refused to respond to officer queries, they took no chances.

College officials called out the bomb squad. Yup, even one of those robots showed up and did some poking.

The sack of sand turned out to be a sack of sand.

I coulda told ‘em.

But, hey, if that's what it takes to make the 14 spot, I ain't carpin'.

See also
The bomb scare
Ill-advised bottle removal in Mission Viejo

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...