Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Tonight's board meeting in pics

Tonight's meeting of the SOCCCD board of trustees was largely uneventful, although Board Prez Don Wagner did shock the socks off of everyone when he offered a "Hopi prayer" during his invocation!

Well, that's gotta be a step in the right direction. Too bad he didn't demonstrate the mystical benefits of peyote too.

I'll provide a proper report some time late tomorrow. For now, I'll mostly just show some pics.

Some kids from IVC showed up with their proposal for some kind of recycling complex on campus. Their PowerPoint presentation was surprisingly polished.

Tom Fuentes seemed skeptical. Why not just have private firms do this stuff? He then genuflected to the name "Ronald Reagan" on the wall behind him. Shockingly, the "g" suddenly fell off the wall and shattered into a million tiny pieces. Some audience members gasped and shrieked, losing control of their bodies, with arms and legs akimbo, flag pins askew.

But these kids maintained their enthusiasm and doe-eyed innocence. Someone in the audience whispered to me: "Aren't they cute?"

"Yup," I said.

Trustee Tom gave me the stink-eye, natch.

When prospective Money Men for ATEP 2.0 made their presentation (see below), Tom offered a classic Fuentesesque query: what about the specter of a studio at ATEP producing "R- or X-rated films"!? OMG!

Later, Tom, looking out for the taxpayer again, urged the board to cease the printing and mailing of class schedules (which costs more than $400K a pop).

Trustee John Williams liked the idea. His eyes twinkled and his homunculus stirred. John suggested that we send cheap "post cards" instead! The post cards could say, "check us out online. FU." Something like that.

Aside from Trustees Bill Jay and Nancy Padberg, the board seemed to think that Tom's idea was the cat's meow. But Bill worried that the folks in Leisure World wouldn't be able to find us, cuz they're not "computer literate."

Dave Lang suggested that the Chancellor return next time with a report regarding the likely consequences of this kind of measure. By the time the proposal got to Mr. Goo, the little fellow seemed to think his task was not to determine the viability of Fuentes' idea, but to make it work. Good grief. I think that Tom and Co. are determined to have their way on this thing.

No action yet though. That matter was tabled.

A very sharp lawyer showed up to explain the latest resolutions concerning ATEP.

Gatewood, Taylor, and Peebles made a fine presentation concerning technical and vocational instruction at the three district campuses.

As you can see, the board had someone blast a big hole in the west wall so that TV viewers can watch speakers with Saddleback Mountain in the background. Nice touch.

The Money Men. Big shots. Nice suits. Evasive answers. Tom looked skeptical.

The faculty contract

Some of you have contacted us, asking us to report on the status of the faculty contract. We know only what faculty have been told in a series of emails:

Last Friday (March 20), faculty union Prez Lee H emailed the faculty, offering a cryptic remark: “The contract went to the Board of Trustees on March 19, 2009 and was approved by them....”

That communication produced considerable confusion.

Three days later (i.e., yesterday), faculty received an email from union negotiator Lewis L, who clarified the situation:
On Thursday, … the Board held a special meeting … to discuss the contact. As a result of that meeting, [the District] has contacted the Faculty Association Negotiating Team to inform us that the District will accept the Association's most recent salary proposal.

Lewis then explained the recent history of negotiations:
[I]in December, the two teams reached tentative agreement on a proposed contract…. However, because of the deteriorating economic condition of the state, the contract as proposed and ratified lost District and Board support….

Said Lewis, union officers were faced with a choice between three options, each of them unattractive. But a decision was made:
Reluctantly, the faculty team agreed to return to the table to make a new contract proposal, believing this to be in the best interests of the faculty.

This does seem to be the best option for faculty. (Well, that's my opinion.)

Lewis then explained the terms of the union’s new salary proposal (agreed to by the district). I won’t go into the details except to say that it includes COLA for full- and part-time faculty (2007-08) and a 1% increase for 2008-09 and then 2009-10.

Lewis noted that the faculty must vote to ratify this new contract prior to ultimate approval by the district/board.

A few hours later, Lewis provided an update in which he reported that, since the last communication, the union signed a new tentative agreement with the district (as per above). He then explained that the revised proposed contract would be available online for review by faculty for the next two weeks. Then, on Friday, April 3rd, the contract will be presented to faculty at a meeting at Saddleback College.

Finally, that evening, on-line ratification voting will start and continue for a week. If faculty approve this new proposed contract, the board will vote on it at the April board meeting (that's on the 27th).

Good!

NEWS:

Marla Jo Fisher of the OC Register reports (on her College Life blog) that Colin Powell [is] coming to Chapman [University] Saturday. Check it out!

• Check out Gustavo Arellano's interesting historical piece on OC Weekly’s “Navel Gazing”: John Schmitz, the Institute for Historical Review, and Old World Village.

The IHR was that loony Holocaust denial outfit that Trustee Frogue liked so much. Remember?

Schmitz was the zany right-winger (and community college instructor) who ran for President in the early 70s. He was expelled from the John Birch society for "extremism."

Wow.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Annie's weird-assed Asian lacquer screens

Annie came home yesterday all excited. "What's up?" I asked.

"I went to that consignment shop and bought something really cool for the living room." She showed me the pile of I-know-not-what stuffed into the back of her Toyota.

"Um, yeah, looks good," I said. I didn't know what the hell I was looking at. "Yeah, wow, that's great."

So, tonight, we put the thing together—it's old and heavy and unwieldy—and it turns out to be crazy cool, just like Annie said.

"Paid just $100 for it!" says Annie, beaming.

The damned thing is hand-painted. If it falls on TigerAnn, she's done for. And I still don't know really what kind of thing it is.

But I like it.

TigerAnn says "hey."

Tuesday's board meeting: a big night for ATEP

The March meeting of the South Orange County Community College District board of trustees will be held this Tuesday, the 24th. If you go to the district website, you’ll find a link to the agenda and to a Notice of Public Hearing for ATEP Phase 3A—Concept Plan Project And Notice of Intent to Adopt an Addendum to FEIS/EIR Elsewhere, the district explains that “the concept plan provides details on the location, size and use of the first major building phase, including up to 305,000 square feet of classrooms, labs and educational support.” As you know, discussions between the district and the City of Tustin regarding the fate of ATEP have been tense and troubled. But I’m told that things have definitely taken a turn for the better in recent months, and, as things now stand, the city isn’t likely to veto SOCCCD’s plan. We’ll see, I guess. According to the agenda, Tuesday’s closed session begins at 5:00 p.m. (There’ll be the usual opportunity for public comments. Nobody'll take that opportunity, cuz this is America.) The agenda for the closed session includes discussion of union issues: contract negotiations. No mention here of the reported recent agreement that dare not speak its name. The open session is scheduled to commence at 6:30. A “certificate” will be presented concerning “display of President Reagan Memorabilia.”
I do hope it’s a poster of Reagan’s Bedtime for Bonzo or a videotape of the Gipper saying, "I don't recall." Or maybe a picture of Reagan signing the Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982. You know. Deregulation of the S&Ls?
I'd totally get behind that. The memorabilia, I mean. Dean Taylor, Interim Dean Gatewood, and Park Ranger Peebles will “present info on career technical education programs offered throughout the district. A gaggle of students will present a proposal concerning an IVC “Recycling Complex.” Among “consent calendar” items: 5.4: Looks like parking tickets at IVC will go up to $35 a pop. 5.22: Evidently, we’re gonna pay some printing place $405K for the printing and mailing of class schedules. That’s one juicy contract, boy. General action items: 6.1 – 6.3: There’ll be a recess to a public hearing re the ATEP study, concept plan, etc. 6.2 is a “resolution” to adopt the addendum to the final environmental impact report re ATEP, etc. It’s 46 pages long and includes 44 Whereas’s. I counted 'em. 6.3 (adopting the concept plan) has 33 Whereas’s. You really should peruse this stuff. I do hope the public (and the district community) is paying attention. I hope for world peace too. Reports: 7.1: Hudson Capital and Cyburt Hall Partners [aka "money men"] will make their pitch to be chosen for the next phase of ATEP. That sort of thing is always interesting—in the way that Mad Men is interesting. 7.2: Professors of the year. That’s about it. But you never really know what will flare up. I should point out that there exists at least one possible world in which, during Tuesday's board meeting, someone commandeers the Ronald Reagan Room projector and plays a video of Chancellor Mathur rockin' and rollin' with farm animals.
Much better sound/video: The famous SNL performance

Friday, March 20, 2009

An Orwellian decision about free speech

Here’s a “Steve Rocco” story that will blow the black knit-cap and dark glasses clean off your head.

Back in 2006, Rocco made some typically unpleasant remarks during a meeting of the Orange Unified School District’s board. He was censured by his colleagues.

How very unseemly.

The school superintendent decided to edit out Rocco’s remarks in the DVD that served as a record of the meeting (sent to the press, I believe). But hey, the public has a right to know what goes on during meetings of its legislative bodies (the term for such elected entities as school boards and city councils). So an “open-government” group called Californians Aware sued to get the tape of the whole meeting. They asked the Orange County Superior Court to overturn the board's censure and declare the editing illegal.

Seems reasonable enough.

I do believe that OUSD’s attorney is/was Spencer Covert. (See Covert defends the covert). Yes Covert. You remember him. He’s the guy who defended the SOCCCD board against two open meetings lawsuits back in the late 90s. He lost. (UPDATE: apparently, the OUSD attorney was Michael Travis, who works for Parker & Covert LLP. See Professor to bear burden of failed suit against Orange County school district, in the Times, 3/21/09.)

Well, OUSD turned around and counter-sued Californians Aware using the state’s anti-SLAPP statute. That’s the law that protects critics from the expensive and burdensome litigation used by powerful interests to shut them down. (See A brief history of our district, "Mathur sues Dissent.")

Stunningly, the judge ruled in favor of the OUSD board, evidently agreeing that Cal Aware was attempting to stifle free speech when it sought to hear what went on during an OUSD board meeting!

An appeal to the state Supremes went nowhere.

The upshot: Cal Aware and its former president, Richard McKee, owe OUSD $86,000. It’s a ruinous amount.

Orwellian. That’s the word they’re using to describe this case. (See Bauer's 1st Amendment battles: Federal court preliminaries for another "Orwellian" episode.)

Read about it here and
here.

The latter is by Kevin Roderick, who quotes journalist Gary Scott:
I don't know of a newspaper in Southern California that hasn't benefited from McKee's work, either through his court victories or his free advice. Indeed, McKee often gave reporters just the boost they needed to get over the wall of obfuscation put up by government agencies trying to shield their corruption, or embarrassment, or plain bad decision-making.

First Amendment advocate Terry Francke says that McKee's wages have garnished and a lien has been placed on his home by the Orange County school district. He’s also paid $59,000 through a second trust deed on his home.

UPDATE: a lawyer friend sent me some information that suggests that, though CalAware's situation is indeed Orwellian, part of the blame should be fixed on that organization's lawyers, who failed to use powerful arguments that were available to them. Further, it may well be that the full tape of the board meeting in question was indeed available to CalAware, though some parts were edited out on the DVD prepared by OUSD's Superintendent. —RB

UPDATE: the above is, I think, confirmed by the Times story cited above.

See also Fuentes & the OUSD.

MORE NEWS:

• Daffo. Altan of OC Weekly (Spa Getaway Bites Ex-Superintendent in the Butt) reports that the Capo Unified School District board might have had good grounds for firing Superintendent Woodrow Carter. Check out Altan's post.

• OC Reg: Report: Ex-Capistrano schools chief 'insubordinate'

• On Marla Jo Fisher’s College Life blog: UC senior management won’t get their bonuses this year

I'm a Raghu



Thursday, March 19, 2009

Special board meeting today: the faculty contract

Sheesh.

You’ve gotta be on your toes in this district, boy. A few minutes ago, I happened to check the district website, and whadoo you know? The SOCCCD board of trustees is holding a “special meeting” this afternoon.

The meeting concerns the faculty contract.

They’ll call the meeting to order at 5:00. The public will then have an opportunity to address the board.

After that, the board will recess for a closed session discussion of:
A. Conference with Labor Negotiators (GC Section 54957.6)
1. SOCCCD Faculty Association
a. Agency Designated Negotiator: Dr. Raghu Mathur

They’re set to reconvene to an open session at 5:30 (wow, that’s fast). At that point, they’ll report any actions that will have been taken during the closed session.

The agenda outline is available here. (It's a small pdf file.)

Hey, this could be good. I've got my fingers crossed.




UPDATE:

3/20/09: I (and everyone else no doubt) just received a communication from faculty union Prez Lee Haggerty. It notes an error in a previous communication. Then, at the end, it states: "The contract went to the Board of Trustees on March 19, 2009 and was approved by them...." --That's it. No elaboration.

OK. I can take a hint. I won't elaborate either.

Boiled fish



Something in the March 10 Saddleback College Lariat that I came across, belatedly:

ASG to discontinue invocation at annual [Saddleback College] Scholarship Ceremony

The ASG decision was a reaction to last Spring's Wagnerian fiasco, it seems:

[Student Nick] Nikbakht attended the scholarship ceremony last year, and said that at the table where he was sitting, "a lot of the donors were offended when all of a sudden [they] just started praying without any warning."


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...