Author Archive for R. Oliphant – Page 55

AFTER BEING POSTPONED LAST YEAR BECAUSE OF COVID-19, THE YAVAPAI COMMUNITY COLLEGE IS HOSTING THE PRESCOTT FILM FESTIVAL OCTOBER 14 – 17

All events on Prescott Campus; the Film Festival is good news for local west county film buffs

Yavapai Community College is host to the multi-day Prescott Film Festival October 14-17.  All events are held on the Prescott Community College Campus.

The Prescott Film Festival is a 100% volunteer organization dedicated to promoting tourism in Prescott and the quad city area through independent film and filmmakers. Each month the organization  screens a short feature with  a guest filmmaker for a Q&A with the audience. The events take place at  the Yavapai Community College Performance Center on the Prescott Campus  on select Wednesday evenings.

The Festival’s Executive Director for several years  has been  Helen Stephenson. She is also the Managing Director, Operations, Yavapai College Performing Arts Center.   She was generally in charge of the nationally recognized filmmaker program at the Community College’s  Sedona Center when it was closed down in 2014-15 by then College President Penelope Wills.

According to the Festival website, it markets itself across  Arizona (focusing on Phoenix, Tucson and Sedona) and also in the New Mexico and Los Angeles area. Both the Sedona International Film Festival and the Phoenix Film Festival help getting the word out about the Festival. It receives a high level of support from the  Prescott community.

YAVAPAI COMMUNITY COLLEGE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER ANNOUNCES ROBUST 50 PROGRAM CULTURAL SEASON FOR WEST SIDE COUNTY RESIDENTS ENCOMPASSING LIVE ORCHESTRAL CONCERTS, LIVE NATIONAL ACTS, LIVE THEATRE, AND EXTENSIVE LIVE SATELLITE PROGRAMS FROM LONDON

President says two (possibly three) ticketed programs and five free events scheduled for east side of County so far this fall; cultural activities a Community College priority

Among Arizona community colleges, Yavapai  has by far the largest and most modern theatre operation in the state in the   the Performing Arts Center.  Located at the Prescott Campus, most community college  have nothing approaching the grandeur of this  facility.

So far, the Performing Arts Center has announced it will host from October to the end of May over 30 live in-person events that encompass orchestral concerts, stage plays, and nationally known performers on its Prescott Campus.  It will also play host to more than 20 satellite live programs coming mostly  from New York and London, England. 

In addition to these programs, the Community College will host about nineteen  free special events on the Prescott Campus and about five special free events in the Verde Valley..

At the September 14, 2021, meeting of the Yavapai Community College District Governing Board President Rhine announced that there will be at least two live ticketed cultural events in the Verde Valley and at least five free events this fall. (See video below.)

Ticketed live cultural events October – June 8 at PAC Prescott Campus unless otherwise noted

 **October 15:  7:00 p.m. “Mission Joy – Finding Happiness in Troubled Times and “Under the Same Sky.”

**October 16:  4:00 p.m. “Cowboys without Borders,” “Women of the Sea.”

**October 16:  7:00 p.m.  “Rickshaw Girl,” “Margo Jam.”

**October 17: 3:00 p.m.  (Sculpture Garden)  Gourmet Boxed Dinners, catered by Chef Barry Barbe and Greenway Catering by El Gato Azul (advance purchase required).

**October 17:  4:00 p.m. Silent film with live accompaniment from the Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra : a five piece chamber ensemble (3:00 PM pre-show dinner)

October 23:  Bluegrass Mass

October 31Arizona Philharmonic: Brandenburg and Beyond.

November 12:  fundraiser presented with U.S. VETS – Prescott, four singing sergeants blend their voices in an evening of inspirational music to benefit comrades in local veteran’s programs.

November  21           1 p.m.  Wonderful Life Costume Parade, Performing Arts Center.

November 14Arizona Philharmonic: Sonoran Winds Quintet.

December; 2: Grammy/CMA nominee Josh Turner brings his “Holiday & The Hits” tour for one Yuletide performance.

December 4:  Handel’s Messiah (Community College and local residents)

December 5:  Handel’s Messiah (Community College and local residents)

December 12:  Prescott POPS Symphony. The Sound of Joy!

December 19Arizona Philharmonic: We Wish You Christmas.  Elks Theater (117 E Gurley St, Prescott, AZ 86301).

January 9: Arizona Philharmonic: ¡Andalusia!

January 14:  Remembrance of a folk-rock legend,  Croce Plays Croce.

January 16:  Yavapai Symphony Association 2021-2022 Classical Season, Steven Moeckel in Recital – violin.

*January 19: Dino-Light | Lightwire Theater. Phillip England Center for the Performing Arts (Camp Verde) Education series.

January 20: Dino-Light | Lightwire Theater. Education series. Performing Arts Center.

Jan 23    3 p.m.         Garrick Ohlsson Piano recital

January 23: Yavapai Symphony Association 2021-2022 Classical Season, Yefim Bronfman in Recital – piano.

January 29Arizona Philharmonic: Brahms Requiem.

*February 10: Call of the Wild: Illustrated Edition | Theatre Heroes. Phillip England Center for the Performing Arts (Camp Verde) Education series.

February 11:  Call of the Wild: Illustrated Edition | Theatre Heroes. Education series. PAC.

February 13: Prescott POPS Symphony: The Sound of Love.

February  17: Much Ado About Nothing | Utah Shakespeare Festival. For grades 7 and above. Education series. (Only at PAC)

February 20: George Li in Recital – piano.

February 27:   Arizona Philharmonic: Arizona Philharmonic Brass.

March 1:  The Very Hungry Caterpillar & Other Eric Carle Classics | Mermaid Theatre of Nova Scotia. Best for grades PreK-3 (Education series).

March  5 and 6:  The Voices of Dance. Ballet Victoria, with productions of The Nutcracker and Carmina Burana.

March 20. Yavapai Symphony Association 2021-2022 Classical Season, Daniel Hsu in Recital – piano.

March 27:   Arizona Philharmonic: James d’Leon Piano Quintet.

April 3, 2022: Yavapai Symphony Association 2021-2022 Classical Season, ASU Symphony Orchestra

May 1: 3:00 p.m. Yavapai Symphony Association 2021-2022. Classical Season, Yekwon Sunwoo in Recital – piano.

May 2:  Brian Regan, one of the best comics in the business.

* May 9: Doktor Kaboom! Look Out! Science is Coming! | David Epley. Phillip England Center for the Performing Arts (Camp Verde) Education series.

May 10: Doktor Kaboom! Look Out! Science is Coming! | David Epley. PAC.

May 15, 2022: Garrick Ohlsson in Recital – piano.

May 22: Prescott POPS Symphony. Prescott Pops Picks!

June 8: Boz Scaggs.

COMMUNITY COLLEGE BOTCHES GREAT OPPORTUNITY TO INTRODUCE VERDE VALLEY CAMPUS DEAN TINA REDD TO ELECTED OFFICIALS AT VARIOUS RECENT MEETINGS; VERDE CAMPUS DEAN’S ROLE APPEARS TO HAVE BEEN SIGNIFICANTLY DIMINISHED BY CURRENT PRESCOTT-BASED EXECUTIVES

Dr. Tina Redd has been the Verde Valley Dean for a year and a half | Recent College in-person reports to elected officials around the  Verde Valley about the Verde Campus and Sedona Center  given solely by Prescott based executives; Dr. Redd omitted| What is   Redd’s authority and is she allowed to act  effectively as  “voice” of the Verde Valley residents | Were these merely  PR gaffs or has  Dr. Redd been shelved and acts essentially as window dressing in the Administration’s operational scheme?

The Yavapai Community College President Dr. Lisa Rhine and Vice President of  Community Relations and  Student Development, Rodney Jenkins, have been appearing at various city and town council meetings throughout the Verde Valley over the past few weeks.  The purpose of those visits is to update the elected officials on what is happening on the Verde Valley Campus and at the Sedona Center while also answering sometimes tough questions and providing details about those facilities.

Sedona Vice Mayor Scott Jablow.

Dr. Rhine is always personable and charming in her presentations and Mr.  Jenkins attempts to fill in details about various courses and projects on the east side of the County. The Community College officials are also accompanied by Deb McCasland, the Governing Board Chair, and Third District representative Paul Chevalier. 

However,  the one person in the past who has often provided additional detailed information about the happenings on this side of Mingus Mountain and considered the tough questions has been the Verde Valley Campus Dean. However, in the presentations recently given in Clarkdale, Cottonwood, and Sedona, the Verde Campus Dean,  Dr. Tina Redd, played no role at all.  She was not introduced to the listeners nor was she even present. The information came from all Prescott-based executives.  

As of October 2021, Dr. Redd has been the Dean of the Sedona/Verde Valley Center and Campus for a year and a half.  She was hired with a sterling background and excellent reputation as a shaker and mover.  But so far the Prescott-based administration has not seen fit, or so it seems pretty clear at this point, to give her much authority or to allow her to take a “shaker and mover” role in the Verde Valley.  While the pandemic may have been an excuse for  her non appearances,  there was no reason the most recent trips to the podium by the administration in the Valley did not include an introduction and allow her to seriously participate.  

There are unspoken and spoken questions about what appears to be iron-fisted informational control by the Prescott officials.  For example, during the Community College’s presentation before the Sedona City Council on September 28, 2021, the Vice Mayor asked if someone had replaced former East side Verde Campus Dean James Perey.  He was well-known to the Council and regularly made reports to it and the Governing Board. Dr. Rhine explained that Dr. Redd was the new Dean and had been since the beginning of the pandemic (see video below).

In a March 2021 in opinion piece on leadership, the Blog asked whether the Verde Valley would have a strong voice in the Prescott-dominated Yavapai Community College’s administrative organizational structure.  The piece pointed out that President Lisa Rhine was  doing a great job. For the first time since 2000-2004, it appeared that   legitimate efforts were being  initiated by her to begin the challenging task of bringing significantly increased  community college educational development for the 75,000 plus residents living on the east side of Yavapai County. However, the role of the new Sedona Center/Verde Campus Dean seemed on paper to be little more than a manager for Prescott  when the College announced its administrative structure. (See college administrative structure below).  Has the role of the Verde Campus Dean been  the diminished? Has she been collared?

In the same opinion piece, the Verde Campus  Dean’s marginal role was further illustrated by the fact she is not included in the Community College’s leadership team and was not reporting directly to the President.  The most recent events appear to confirm that Prescott is ensuring that there  will not be a  strong College administrative voice coming from the Verde Valley.

 

SEDONA CENTER OPEN HOUSE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6 FROM 10 A.M. TO NOON

Sample pastries and tour facility | learn about culinary programs, admissions to credit programs and meet OLLI Ambassadors | meanwhile, culinary enrollment falling; Hotel and Restaurant program suspended for the year

Yavapai Community College will hold an in-person open house at the Yavapai Community College Sedona Center on Wednesday, October 6th, from 10 am to noon. It is located at 4215 Arts Village Drive,  Sedona.

The open house will provide visitors with an opportunity to tour the facility, sample pastries prepared by culinary students, learn about its programs, and meet Osher Lifelong Learning Institute  ambassadors.

Opened for first time: The Center was constructed  in 1999 and opened in 2000. It was essentially closed down by the end of  2014 when   the Community College was considering selling it. The Prescott based  plan was to  maintain a Community College presence in Sedona by  merely renting space somewhere in the city for the OLLI program and any needed classes.  However, outrange from Sedona/Verde Valley citizens, politicians, and educational advocates brought a halt to the plan.   It re-opened in the fall 2017 after extensive remodeling.

Land deal: Yavapai Community College and Sathcupa L.L.C., owner of the Sedona Cultural Park, completed a land-swap agreement in August 2014.  The Community College received about three acres of property contiguous to its facility in exchange for five acres the college owned elsewhere in the Cultural Park. The contiguous property was to be used  for student parking and direct access to the main thoroughfare, Highway 89A. The college planned  to spend about $1.5 million to complete the agreement and add the needed parking and access road. Prior to the agreement, the land immediately surrounding the Center was owned by the Cultural Park and made immediate access to the facility somewhat challenging.

The Community College also announced in August 2014 that it would focus on what additional programming can and should be offered at its Sedona Center. The Sedona Film School, which had been housed at the center, was suspended by the fall 2014 while the college reviewed the program.  The College  also began studying the possibility of creating a hospitality certificate and/or degree program in the Verde Valley and Sedona and a Culinary Institute.

Critics:  The Community College eventually decided sometime in 2015-16 that it would shift from offering a Film School to  developing a Culinary Institute at the Center in addition to the Hotel and Restaurant Management program.  Major renovation was needed for Culinary Institute training.

 Construction of the Culinary Institute’s training facilities, which went on in  2016-17,  was considered inadequate by some in Sedona and the Verde Valley. One reason was that  a citizens’ group asked to help advise the Community College about renovating the Center  had studied how culinary facilities were designed  at other institutions. The group   had strongly recommended four training kitchens to provide adequate training. However,  the Community College rejected their ideas and built only two.

The Center  was remodeled and reopened in the fall of  2017. The Community College then sought to establish  culinary training and restaurant and hotel management programs.

Suspends Restaurant and Hotel Management program in fall 2021: Unfortunately, the Community College was forced to  suspend the Restaurant and Hotel Management courses in 2017 just after announcing it was offering them. The reason given was  poor enrollment. The program was re-launched in fall 2018.  However, in the fall of 2021 the Community College once again announced it  was not going to offer  any courses  in this program.  When and if it will re-offer courses in Restaurant and Hotel management is not clear.

Governing Board considers additional land purchase at Sedona Center:  It may come as a surprise to some that at both its February and  March 2020 meeting, the Yavapai Community College District Governing Board members discussed a purchase of additional land at the Sedona Center. In March the Board received  a detailed study commissioned by the College that was intended to determine the efficacy of possibly purchasing land and locating a hotel on property adjacent the Center.  The Board appeared most interested in purchasing an additional five acres adjacent the Center.  If a purchase was made, the Board would then decide its best use.

The study commissioned by the Community College claimed that “Market justification exists for development of a hotel adjacent to Yavapai College’s Sedona Center.” Third District Representative Paul Chevalier appeared to oppose a hotel (owned by a third party who leased land from the College) while urging the College to pursue a possible purchase of an additional five acres.  His vision was to use the land, if it could be purchased at a reasonable price,  to consider expanding the existing culinary school.

It was clear that no one on the Board (or College executives) wanted the College to consider building and owning its own hotel. Nothing more was heard about the proposal or purchase after the March meeting.

Enrollment difficulty at Culinary Institute: Enrollment at the Sedona Center for its Culinary programs was doing well in 2018, according to Sedona/Verde Valley Executive Dean James Perey.  He  updated  the District Governing Board on February 13, 2018,  about enrollment in culinary courses for the spring semester. He said there were 169 students enrolled.  He also said he was  considering adding another section in fall 2018 to accommodate the demand for the culinary offerings.

However, enrollment  appeared to have suddenly taken a downward slide by the fall of 2021. The Community College Administration reported to the Sedona City Council on September 30, 2021,  that it was having enrollment difficulty in its culinary program.  Early registration reports for the fall semester found only 20 students signed up with 68 open seats available.   The Community College administrators did not provide any final registration figures to the Sedona City Council at the September 30 meeting.

Facilities: The Sedona Center sits on what is described by the Community College as “an inspiring location, the perfect environment to achieve your educational goals.” It houses  a variety of classrooms and community spaces. The Sedona Culinary Arts Program and the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at Yavapai College (OLLI) are its current occupants.  Osher is an independently well-financed Institute that receives some operational financial support from the Community College.

OSHER  is successful: The Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, which operates on the east and west sides of the County, offers a rich and evolving array of courses, lectures, and special activities, taught by distinguished faculty, scholars, and community experts. Members, who must be over 50, come from all walks of life and bring a lifetime of experience to the classroom and OLLI’s activities. It is considered a very successful program.

Going back 20 years: Twenty years have seen great change in the Center’s operation. Back in 2001, the Center had been open only one year when in June 2001 the Administration began looking to purchase up to 80 acres of land of the Coconino National Forest adjacent the Center. The purpose was to expand the facility to meet the unexpected huge number of students seeking admission to the Zaki Gordon Film Institute, which was then based at the Center and worked cooperatively with Yavapai Community College.

The Red Rock News of June 13, 2001, reported that Keith Harwood of the special projects office of the Community College president’s office was interviewed about the lack of space to accommodate applicants to the film program.  He said, “we’re bursting at the seams.  In the short term, we expected to have 100 in our Sedona multimedia program, and we have 500.”  The 20,000 square foot Center had only six classrooms. It was also reported that there was a two-year waiting list to get into the program.

The Community College did not purchase any additional land at this time.

However, the film school training program began to collapse following  a 2011 dust up between the Film Institute’s Director and the Community College president over curriculum and control. Shortly thereafter the Independent Film Institute fled to a private university.  The College insisted the program would continue to thrive and remain open. It did not.

In 2014-15 the film school was closed by the Community College President and the Community College director of the Sedona programs (who lived in Prescott). The Community College then began moving video training to the Verde and Prescott campuses.  Today, what little is left of original  film training program appears to be mostly based in Prescott. 

Despite the recent renovation and focus, it appears that the Center has been able so far to sustain strong enrollment. Moreover, the Community College has resisted offering a wide variety of class since reopening in 2017.

For the Community College, the Center remains a work in progress.

PRESIDENT RHINE SUGGESTS FUTURE COMMUNITY COLLEGE IMPROVEMENTS ON EAST SIDE OF COUNTY

Says enhanced partnership with VACTE “critically important” | Will offer unmanned aviation systems at “east high school” | Expand east side cultural opportunities | Investigate “affordable on-campus housing opportunities” | But provides few specifics

Yavapai Community College president Dr. Lisa Rhine outlined some of the future considerations for improving the College’s educational opportunities in the Sedona/Verde Valley area of the County at the September 14 District Governing Board meeting on the Verde Valley Campus.    She offered no specific details about the future plans and did not identify by campus where the improvements might  occur in the future. 

She emphasized that enhancing the Community College’s partnership with the Valley Academy of Career and Technical Education was “critically important.”  At least 25% of the Community College enrollment at the large CTEC campus operated at the Prescott airport comes from high school students on the west side of the County.  She did not indicate what percentage of high school students are now enrolled in Career and Technical Education training at the College’s new CTE facility. Or, at the VACTE training center on highway 89 in Cottonwood.

Another promise she made was to expand the cultural opportunities for residents of the east side.  For over 50 years the Community College has pumped millions of dollars into the west side of the County in its commitment to bring cultural activities to that area of the County while mostly ignoring the east side. Whether it has any money available to back up this commitment in a meaningful fashion is problematic.

Dr. Rhine also hopes to expand athletics into the east side of the County.  Again, for 50 years the large and growing athletic program has been exclusively one for the east side of the County.  By 2022 there will be at least eight athletic programs with a multi-million dollar support program driving them.  It remains questionable whether Community College athletics will find a significant place on the east side of the County.  There is little interest and all of the major matches and events are scheduled on the west side of the County.  The distance and challenging driving conditions plus an absence of public transportation between the east and west sides of the County are major obstacles for east side residence attendance at west side events.  

While suggesting the future possibility of an affordable residence hall on the east side of the County for Community College students, Dr. Rhine appeared somewhat less than enthusiastic about the idea.  While the Community College has built three residence halls on the west side (one was recently torn down), it has never seriously considered construction of a single one of the east side.  It remains problematic whether such a facility will arrive any time soon on the east side of the County.

You may view her remarks in the short video clip below.

 

FORMER VACTE SUPERINTENDENT INDICTED ON VARIETY OF FRAUD CHARGES INVOLVING MISUSE OF SCHOOL DISTRICT FUNDS

Follows former business manager Celestia Ziemkowski’s guilty pleas to felonies  in  2020 involving embezzling VACTE money for personal use

Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich announced Friday, September  24, that the state’s grand jury had handed down a six-count indictment charging former Valley Academy for Career and Technical Education (VACTE) superintendent Lois Lamer as being involved in  fraudulent schemes, artifices and  violating the  duties of a custodian of public monies. The alleged crimes occurred while Lamer was employed by VACTE. Lamer was VACTE’s  CTE program director starting in July 2002 and became superintendent in July 2011 until she resigned in March 2016. VACTE is a major provider of Career and Technical Education training on the east side of Yavapai County consisting of about 75,000 residents.  

 An indictment was also  handed down charging Dennis Fiscus, the Arizona Department of Education’s former CTE programs of study director, with similar offenses. He  was allegedly involved in a scheme with Lamer to divert federal grant money into personal accounts.

Ms. Lois Lamer in happier times (Facebook photo)

Lamer is scheduled for a hearing on the charges  on October 15 at the Prescott courthouse.

The Arizona Department of Education terminated Fiscus in November 2015 after “discovering discrepancies” with Perkins monies.  Fiscus was fired because he awarded excessive amounts of Perkins money to VACTE in 2011. VACTE  should have received $120,000 in Perkins grant money; however, Fiscus awarded VACTE $467,039. As a result of the Auditor General’s investigation,  in February 2018 the U.S. Department of Education requested re-payments totaling $426,451 from the state’s education department. They were repaid in full by January 2020.

The Auditor General’s Office investigation had also revealed that from June 2015 through March 2016, VACTE business manager,  Celestia Ziemkowski, “may have embezzled VACTE monies when she issued five unauthorized warrants totaling $19,851 for her personal purposes and used a VACTE credit card to make personal purchases totaling $10,746.” Because of the investigation, Ziemkowski resigned in May 2016 from her position at VACTE.

Ziemkowski was  indicted in June 2019 with misuse of VACTE public money, fraudulent schemes, forgery, and computer tampering for unsanctioned charges in 2015 and 2016 totaling more than $30,000.  After pleading guilty to two counts of the indictment in 2020, she received probation.

DR RHINE REVIEWS BUILDING IMPROVEMENTS ON VERDE CAMPUS OVER LAST FIVE YEARS; HIGHLIGHTS RECENT COLLEGE-WIDE PROGRAMS THAT HELP PUSH DOWN STUDENT TUITION AND BOOK COSTS

Opened renovated Building “L” in 2020 (first approved in 2017), constructed small new replacement greenhouse and  new 10,000 square foot CTE facility now operational; needs cooperation from VACTE, saved over $300,000 in student book costs, and offered  several tuition free classes this fall

Dr. Lisa Rhine

Yavapai Community College president Dr. Lisa Rhine outlined during a presentation to the District Governing Board September 14 a few of the recent physical improvements on the Verde Valley Campus. She also  highlighted her efforts to reduce student book and tuition costs.  She called for greater cooperation between the Community College and the Valley Academy  for Career and Technical Education (VACTE district in developing technical training programs on the east side of Yavapai County.

Among the physical improvement on the Verde Valley Campus, Dr. Rhine pointed to the reopening of Building “L” .  The renovation of Building “L” was announced back in December 2017 by then Verde Valley Campus Dean James Perey.   However, actual renovation began in May 2019. At the time it was estimated the Community College would spend around $4.9 million on the renovation.  The building was renovated to improve the facilities for its nursing program and add a manufacturing lab.  The renovation was completed in time for the fall 2020 semester.  It had a re-opening  ribbon cutting ceremony on October 15, 2020.

You may recall that it was November 2014 when then Verde Valley Campus Dean James Perey publicly announced that the nursing program already being taught on the Verde Valley Campus would remain there.  There had been an uproar among Valley residents and education advocates when it was learned the program might be moved and consolidated into the nursing program being taught at the  College’s Prescott Valley Center. In fall 2021 the Community College showed a robust nursing training program now in operation on the Verde Valley Campus with virtually all of the classes filled to capacity.

The Community College completed construction of a small 18’ x 48’ greenhouse by the 2021 fall semester.  An even smaller greenhouse was removed from the Campus during the summer of 2021.

The Community College  also constructed a 10,000 square foot Career and Technical Education building, which opened with 100% enrollment this fall.  By comparison, the Community College operates a 105,000 square foot Career and Technical Education Center at the Prescott airport for residents living mostly on the west side of the County. There was 100% enrollment in CTE classes offered at the Verde Valley CTE facility, according to Dean Rhine.

College-wide, the College offered  a host of free tuition classes in the fall 2021.  The students enrolled at the Verde Campus had all of their classes paid for the entire semester thanks to the COVID-19 relief funds it received.  Students signing up to take  12 credits a semester can take an additional three credits without cost.  A handful of CTE classes at CTEC on the west side of the County were awarded free tuition for the fall semester.  

So far, the effort to introduce Open Educational Resources (OER) course materials into the curriculum has saved students more than $300,00.  The OER program, headed by Dr. Diane Ryan, was launched in the fall 2020.  This was a part of President Dr. Lisa Rhine’s effort to make post-secondary education available to everyone in the County at the lowest possible cost. It was estimated in 2020 that the OER program would take three or four years to fully implement.

Dr. Rhine strongly suggested to the Governing Board that the partnership between the Valley Academy for  Career and Technical Education should be strengthened.  On the west side of the County, an estimated 25% of the students taking technical education courses at the CTEC Campus come from high schools on that side of Mingus Mountain.  She also suggested that VACTE should re-locate its headquarters with the Community College on the Verde Valley Campus.  If this were accomplished, it would be following the model used with success on the west side of the County.

You may view Dr. Rhine’s presentation on this subject in the four-minute video clip from the September 14 Governing Board meeting below.

ADVOCACY GROUP S.E.E.4VETS HAS GROWING ENDOWMENT PROGRAM AT YAVAPAI COMMUNITY COLLEGE FOR QUALIFIED VETERANS

Almost $40,000 in scholarships available to veterans as of 2021

S.E.E.4VETS, a veterans advocacy group based in Scottsdale, has created the S.E.E.4VETS Veteran Legacy Endowment with the Yavapai College Foundation. According to Jane Hersh, the Community College’s Director of Veterans Education and Transition Services, “Our partnership with S.E.E.4VETS has blossomed over the years and their support has grown to nearly $40,000 in scholarships to veterans at Yavapai College as of 2021.”

S.E.E.4VETS (an acronym for “Support Education and Employment for Vets,”) is an eight-year-old non-profit dedicated to helping veterans complete their education and find success in civilian life. Directed mostly by retired military members, S.E.E.4VETS works through community colleges in the Western United States to find transitioning military members that other programs might miss.

“We were looking for this niche where the veterans community was not being well-served. That’s where we thought we could help.” Lt. Gen (Retired) USAF Vern “Rusty” Findley, S.E.E.4VETS Board Vice Chair, explained. “We looked at the major universities and their [veterans] programs were pretty solid. But we did find some holes at the community college level. That’s where we zeroed in.”

COMMUNITY COLLEGE TO HOLD NAMING CEREMONY FOR VERDE CAMPUS ART GALLERY IN HONOR OF PATTY MCMULLEN-MIKLES

District Governing Board approved naming the art gallery on the Verde Valley Campus for Patty McMullen-Mikles a year and a half  ago at its February 2020 meeting; naming ceremony  to be held September  30 at 5 p.m. at the gallery on Verde Valley Campus

The Yavapai Community College District Governing Board unanimously approved naming the art gallery on the Verde Valley Campus for Patty McMullen-Mikles at its February 2020 meeting. Mikles was  a former Yavapai College art instructor who passed away from cancer in 2015. The honor recognized the ongoing financial contributions (at $40,000 in 2020) being made by her family in support of aspiring art students at the Verde Valley Campus, and celebrate and recognize her lifetime of teaching and giving to others.

Ms. Ruth Wicks spoke of Ms. Mikles’ work at the college during the Governing Board meeting.  Bob Oliphant commended the president and faculty for its support of this honor.  Mr. Paul Kirchgraber, then executive director of the Community College Foundation, presented the resolution to the Governing Board.

In a September 22, 2021 press release, the Community College announced a naming ceremony to be held on Thursday, September 30 at 5 p.m. at the gallery on the Verde Valley Campus in Clarkdale.  The press release from the Community College follows below:

Yavapai Community College Press release: September 22, 2021 (Mr. JJ McCormick)

The woman universally described by her former students and colleagues as a fiercely dedicated champion of Yavapai College art programs is being honored posthumously with the renaming of the YC Verde Art Gallery in her honor.

The Patty McMullen-Mikles Gallery of Yavapai College naming ceremony, celebrating the life and legacy of the successful artist and beloved former YC art professor who died in 2015, is happening at the YC Verde Valley Campus art gallery at 5 p.m. Sept. 30.

The ceremony coincides with the opening reception for an exhibition titled “Don Reitz Follow Your Bliss.” The exhibition showcases the art and life of Reitz, a renowned ceramic artist and longtime Verde Valley resident who, before his death in 2014, gifted the college a mural that now decorates the east wall of the Southwest Wine Center.

McMullen-Mikles’ family, friends and former YC colleagues are cheering the fact that she is being memorialized with her name gracing the Verde campus gallery that she founded and directed early in her 20-year tenure with the YC Art Department.

“She is severely missed and well-deserving of this memorial renaming of the Verde campus art gallery,” said YC Professor Dr. Barb Waak. Although a talented artist whose paintings, drawings and fiber art pieces were represented by galleries throughout the Southwest, Waak said teaching was McMullen-Mikles’ “true gift. She could take students who were daunted at the prospect of putting pencil, charcoal, or brush to paper and coax the very best work out of them,” Waak said.

YC Professor Dr. Amy Stein said she is grateful the gallery renaming is happening after a concerted campaign by YC faculty members past and present. Stein called McMullen-Mikles a “generous teacher” who was passionate about art and education. “And her greatest gift to all of us the last year of her life was she taught us all how to leave this landscape with grace, beauty and dignity.”

McMullen-Mikles taught drawing, two-dimensional design, oil, acrylic and watercolor painting, among many other credit and community education classes for YC. She is credited with developing YC’s Associate degree program in fine arts and was a talented vocalist who did some touring in Europe, the United States and Canada early in her career.

The Patty McMullen-Mikles Gallery naming ceremony and the opening reception for the Don Reitz exhibition are free and all are welcome. Learn more about the combined events at yc.edu/artgallery.

COMMUNITY COLLEGE PROVIDES LIST OF HOW SOME OF THE $5.5 MILLION IN COVID-19 RELIEF FUNDS FROM FEDERAL GOVERNMENT SPENT TO SUPPORT STUDENTS

Funds provided for  at least nine different student incentives and initiatives as administrators found creative ways to spend federal funds |free classes, $500 incentives to student workers, $500 to each individual registered student who claimed a need (no criteria other than claimed  need), free dorm room and board

The Yavapai Community College Administration provided a list of some of the ways it used the $5.5 million in COVID-19 relief federal funds it was awarded at the September 14 District Governing Board meeting.  The list was labeled “incentives and Initiatives” and was used specifically for students.

As noted in an earlier Blog posting, under a formula created by the federal government, before the federal funds can be used for institutional needs, it must first be spent on students.  The more funds spent on students; the more money becomes available for other institutional uses.

On the student side, the funds have been used for paying the first class free of every student at the Community College.  All of the classes taken by students at the Verde Valley Skilled Trades Center, which was just opened, were free for the first semester. 

It has used funds to provide a $500 incentive for each student worker. Free classes at the Career and Technical Education Center Campus at the Prescott airport in 3D printing, unmanned aircraft, and advanced manufacturing were made possible by the federal funds.

Free room and board at its student dormitories for the fall semester was paid for out of the award.  A majority of students living there are student  athletes from outside Yavapai County.  In addition, all students were eligible for what was described as a $500 per student grant for emergency assistance.

According to the Community College, to obtain a $500 emergency assistance  grant, a student filled out a form making a request.  There were no criteria other than a student claiming a need.  There was apparently no review by the Community College of the accuracy of the request. (See video below.)  The Community College reported that this category made up for a significant portion of the spending from the award.

The Community College did not report how many millions in total were spent on support of students. However,  if the explanation given the District Governing Board at its September meeting  was correct, to get the full $5.5 million half of that would have been spent  directly on some sort of  student support.

The video below contains an explanation of how these funds were spend by the Community College as described by Vice President Rodney Jenkins.