Saturday, January 24, 2009

CAPO crappo: union busting "reformers"?

From a recent OC Weekly article concerning the troubled Capistrano Unified School District’s “reform” trustees:
[At a recent meeting, supportive shouts] jab against rumors that the reform trustees, whose campaigns were largely financed by such conservative groups as the Education Alliance and Howard Ahmanson’s Fieldstead & Co., seek to sabotage public education from the inside out. The Education Alliance, which publicly opposes the influence of teachers’ unions, has been a point of contention for the new board’s critics. The Capistrano Unified Education Association, the local teachers’ union, endorsed trustee Christensen and current board president Ellen Addonizio when they ran in 2006; after the Education Alliance got more involved, though, the union vocally and financially backed the opponents of the “reform” slate in 2008. Posts on the website of the local chapter of the California School Employees Association (CSEA), which represents classified staff (including custodians and librarians), say Carter’s dismissal may have been part of a plan to “break the union,” a charge the trustees deny. (Have the problems of the Capo Unified School Board been solved after the recall/reform movement won?)


The President of the SOCCCD board of trustees, Don Wagner, is on the Education Alliance board.

SOCCCD trustee Tom Fuentes is a close friend of Howard Ahmanson’s. Ahmanson is a religious extremist and key financial backer of Creationism, Intelligent Design, and such measures as Proposition 8.

Education Alliance was first formed in the early 90s to promote anti-public ed and anti-union initiatives (e.g., 1994's “school voucher” initiative and 1998's union-busting Prop 226). For years, it was funded by—surprise, surprise!—Howard Ahmanson.

At the last SOCCCD meeting of the board of trustees, at Fuentes' request, OC Treasurer Chriss Street was on hand to explain that local property tax collections, on which the SOCCCD depends, will soon take a hit. With him was his employee Anna Bryson, a noisy Bush supporter, who happens to be among CAPO's "reform" trustees. Bryson has definitely received financial support for her campaigns from Education Alliance (see).

Gosh it's a cozy world.

Chunky feng shui

I bought a couple of bookcases recently—at Munro's in Santa Ana—and, yesterday, they arrived. Way cool. Made locally.

TigerAnn says "hey."

MUSIC FOR A SATURDAY EVENING:

GENE CLARK & CARLA OLSON: "Almost Saturday Night"

Gene Clark was in the Byrds, remember? Great song by John Fogerty.

RANDY NEWMAN: "Sail Away"

I love this guy's early stuff. Just the best.

RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS: “Other Side”

Don't know why I love this song so much, but I do. From about 8 years ago, I guess.

MOTT THE HOOPLE: “Sea Diver”

This is what I was listening to in high school. Still love this stuff. Ian Hunter is one of those lost geniuses, though he still performs.

"Not comforted": new So Cal earthquake data

I’ve long noted that, though individual humans are often dazzlingly perceptive, humans qua groups are dizzyingly stupid.

Our doltish Group Being is a sort of Svengali to most people, and so there you are.

As individuals, we are entranced; we are stupefied.

We are idjits.

This is one reason why, over the years, I’ve occasionally done stories about the real possibility of natural disasters, such as tsunamis, floods. Boy, when it comes to nature’s wicked but predictable ways, societies are way knuckleheaded. Way, way. And Southern Californians are no exception. They'll stare straight into the face of imminent disaster and blithely discuss their next trip to freakin' Disneyland.


Study finds troubling pattern of Southern California quakes (In this morning’s LA Times):

By Jia-Rui Chong
…The Carrizo Plain section of the San Andreas has not seen a massive quake since the much-researched Fort Tejon temblor of 1857, which at an estimated magnitude of 7.9 is considered the most powerful earthquake to hit Southern California in modern times.

But … new research by UC Irvine scientists … found that major quakes occurred there roughly every 137 years over the last 700 years. Until now, scientists believed big quakes occurred along the fault roughly every 200 years.

The findings are significant because seismologists have long believed this portion of the fault is capable of sparking the so-called Big One that officials have for decades warned will eventually occur in Southern California.

Many scientists thought the Carrizo area produced relatively infrequent but large-scale earthquakes such as the Fort Tejon temblor. The new work suggests the area produces more quakes but also ones of a smaller magnitude than Fort Tejon, said Ray Weldon, a University of Oregon geologist….

Such temblors, experts warned, would likely be at least as big as the 1994 Northridge quake, which had a magnitude of 6.7.

… About 100 miles northwest of Los Angeles, the Carrizo area was one of the main sections that ruptured in the 1857 quake. That rupture, roaring southwest into the Los Angeles Basin, rocked parts of the region so hard that men were thrown to the ground.

By looking at the pattern of soils and using radiocarbon dating on charcoal deposits, [Lisa Grant Ludwig, a principal investigator on the study] found evidence of five large earthquakes dating back to the early 1200s. She found a gap of some 400 years between the 1857 earthquake and the one before, but only about 100 years separating the three preceding quakes.

Back then, the earthquake age estimates were very rough and the samples had to be fairly large…. Ludwig saved field notes and hundreds of soil samples in glass vials in her garage for more than 15 years, hoping that radiocarbon dating techniques would improve.

[When that finally occurred, they] went back to her archive, and the redating effort, led by scholar Sinan Akciz, found that the four big earthquakes before the 1857 temblor probably occurred around 1310, 1393, 1585 and 1640.


Because they are looking at only a handful of earthquakes, scientists can't be sure that the pattern will hold, Ludwig said.

"But we know it increases the probability of an earthquake," she said. "There's not any way I can look at the data and be comforted by it."….

BE PREPARED:

OC Red Cross Urges Earthquake Preparedness, Awareness

Earthquake Preparedness Tip Sheets (Governor's Office of Emergency Services)

Southern California Earthquake Center

Friday, January 23, 2009

Rebel Girl's Poetry Corner: "hope made wise by dread"


It's been quite a week.

Rebel Girl found herself humming My Country 'Tis of Thee in the shower, in her car, while she cooked.

Something's up, she thought, or else she's turning back into the girl scout who used to carry the colors with such pride that she'd cry.

Maybe she's becoming, after all these years, Aretha Franklin.

Cool.

Here's a poem from Frank Bidart:

Inauguration Day

Today, despite what is dead
staring out across America I see since
Lincoln gunmen
nursing fantasies of purity betrayed,
dreaming to restore
the glories of their blood and state

despite what is dead but lodged within us, hope

under the lustrous flooding moon
the White House is still
Whitman's White House, its
gorgeous front
full of reality, full of illusion

hope made wise by dread begins again

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Tuesday's board meeting—Roy's report

Maybe you noticed that I haven’t actually given a report on Tuesday’s board meeting. I offered videos instead.
But Dissent readers don’t seem to like those, so here’s my belated verbiage. (That means "words," Walter.)

I had high hopes for spectacular fireworks Tuesday night, but they were dashed by Lee Haggerty’s email reporting that the contract item had been pulled. Haggerty’s memo was odd, what with its reference to (I guess) hard economic times. Well, it’ll be hard times next month and the month after that too, so is this a permanent tabling of the item? Let’s hope not.

During the meeting, board Prez Don Wagner, too, alluded to the rotten economic turn in his explanation for pulling the item. One hopes the plan is to allow more lobbying of trustees and/or more negotiating. Something.

Tomfoolery!

We’ve certainly got a special board. It was fun looking up there at 'em, contemplating the tangled web of hatred. Nancy Padberg hates John Williams, ‘cause Williams fired her three years ago. But Williams now has gotta hate Tom Fuentes (if he didn’t hate him before) for dropping a demagogue bomb on ‘im over his dastardly support of the faculty contract proposal.

But Fuentes and his crew of spin-meisters slimed Padberg, too—why not?—and so, though she must still loathe Williams, at least she and Johnny now have a #1 Loathe Object in common. Meanwhile, Don Wagner’s gotta be pretty peeved about Fuentes’ maneuver, which makes anything resembling fair deliberation about the contract pretty much impossible. Thank you, Tom.

And Dave Lang’s gotta be steamed, too, ‘cause he had no problem with the 5% COLA part of the proposal, but he’s getting slammed along with Fuentes as being anti-faculty and totally Neanderthal. Dave wants to be loved. He's only a quisling, not a Karl Rovian Neanderthal, thinks Dave.

Meanwhile, Bill Jay still likes the contract proposal (and seems to love everybody), and Marcia Milchiker—well, she can be found on Neptune.

At one point during the meeting, she said something particularly daffy, whereupon Fuentes quipped, “Quit while you’re ahead, Marcia!” Then Wagner yelled: “But she’s not ahead!”


Tom leaks

As you know, in recent weeks, OC Register blogger Steve Greenhut has reported the initial vote taken by the board in closed session. It was 4-3, says Greenhut, with Wagner, Fuentes, and Lang opposing the proposed contract. I did not know that.

But how is it that Greenhut knew what went on in a closed session? One naturally supposes that Fuentes unburdened himself to Greenhut about these highly sensitive deliberations.

Classy guy, that Tom Fuentes.

Everybody on the board must be just as pleased as punch about the guy. I wonder what the Lord thinks of ‘em? My guess is that Tom thinks that God thinks that a guy gets to lie and cheat and mess around, as long as he does it for Lordly ends.

I’m an ethicist, and we call such people “assholes.”

Motley crew

Saddleback College’s Ozzie-‘n’-Harrietesque student government crowd came back from the malt shop with a new and improved proposed budget—one that pretty much satisfied the board’s complaints of two months ago. These kids, and Thorny too, have now opted to spend big money on scholarships, etc., which is great. So Fuentes and the others fell over themselves praising these young people. It was amazing bullshit. Those ASG kids seemed to sniff the air.

The always-dapper Mr. Arnold Bray, the district’s consultant/lobbyist (I think), provided a budget update. (He has the best shoes I've ever seen.) He reported that there are officials who seek to hand over our “basic aid” tax money to the K-12 districts. Right now, it’s just an idea, he said. But he’ll keep us up to speed on this thing so we'll be ready to pounce and squeal if necessary.

Did I mention that Marcia Milchiker’s “invocation” sounded like a press release about community colleges? It didn’t sound to me like she was summoning the Deity. It was more like she was reading from the college catalog.

So we all stood there in this prayerful posture, wondering what in hell Marcia thought she was doing. And then, at the end, Marcia said, “Amen.” It was like watching a GEICO commercial that ends with the Pope blessing that goddam lizard.

Bad news

Trustees fell over themselves expressing grief, etc., about the death of Saddleback College’s Howard Adams, obviously a swell guy. We also learned that Saddleback College’s Cal Nelson (more recently a rent-a-dean at IVC) had suffered a stroke. Everybody loves Cal.

Because the meeting started late, the board decided to postpone the update on the “basic skills initiative.” I think Rajen was disappointed.

During board reports, Don Wagner referred to some basketball game last Friday between Saddleback College and IVC. He said that the gym was filled with presidents: himself, Burnett, Roquemore, Gabriella, et al. “You couldn’t swing a stick without hitting a president,” he quipped. Something like that, anyway. We had a good laugh.

Peevitude displayed

When Lee Haggerty got up to defend the faculty contract proposal (see video below), he and Wagner got into a pissing contest, and it was very unpleasant and, well, highly entertaining. Wagner looked seriously pissed. But then Haggerty suggested that he didn’t like being lectured at neither, and Don didn't have a comeback for that one, and so I suspect that Don now spends his evenings poking needles into a little Lee Haggerty "Union" doll.

Oddly, for once, Chancellor Raghu P. Mathur didn’t have much to say. Maybe Wagner muzzled him. Could be. He pretty much stuck to offering factoids about headcount and whatnot.

FTES (full time equivalent students) is up 9% at Saddleback College and (ahem) it’s up 15.4% at IVC. Sounds good. Later, Bob C added up those numbers and came up with 25%, but I suspect that he was just having a bout of goofiness, which happens to the elderly. (Just kidding Bob.)

I think mention was made of the “Ray Bradbury” event at IVC next Wednesday. That should be cool. I’ve already got my tickets, which were free. I’m taking TigerAnn.

She just loves The Martian Chronicles, that silly cat.

Investigation of Coast Chancellor remains mysterious

Marla Jo Fisher of the OC Reg (Coast college district names acting chancellor), reports that trustees of the Coast Community College District have appointed Coastline College President Ding-Jo Currie as acting chancellor.

Two weeks ago, Coast trustees put Chancellor Ken Yglesias on administrative leave while “unspecified charges” against him were being investigated.

Evidently, Currie offered no clues as to the nature of the investigation.

Fisher spoke with Dean Mancina of the faculty union. Mancina speculated that Yglesias' ouster “might have something to do with the fact that Yglesias and ousted trustee Armando Ruiz were friends.”

Tom Fuentes' clueless soldiers attack the contract proposal



Video clips from Tuesday's meeting of the SOCCCD board, including related comments by trustees Williams, Fuentes, and Lang.

For a kind of rebuttal to these public speakers, see yesterday's post.

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...