Archive for Politics – Page 18

Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee lives to die another day

Motion to extend life of Committee to two years sidelined—given a few more months to function–maybe?

The question of the future of the Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee to the District Governing Board came up during discussion at the Governing Board’ August 5 meeting. When Verde Valley Board representative Al Filardo moved to continued the Committee for two years, it was met with opposition from the West County majority voting block.  President Penelope Wills appeared less than happy with the motion. The District Board Chair was then joined by the other two members of the West County voting block to quash this effort.

AXEWhen it became clear there was not majority support for extending the Committee’s life for 24 months, a motion was eventually made to continue the Committee until “such a time that we have enough information from the strategic planning output and then determine whether we disband, discontinue, or whatever.” The Board Chair immediately jumped into the discussion to ask for a vote. The vote was unanimous. This left the Committee hanging precariously out to dry.

The strategic plan may be discussed as early as August 31, at which time the Committee’s life could be ended. It is the Blog’s perception that the Board Advisory Committee is a group the West County voting block want to get rid of as soon as possible while trying to politically avoid an enormous blow-back.

You may see the video of the discussion regarding the life of the Committee by clicking here.

 

Yavapai College Verde Valley Community Coordinator asked to leave meeting

Meeting adjourned when Linda Buchanan refuses to leave as asked

Yavapai College Verde Valley Campus Community Education Coordinator, Linda Buchanan, was asked by the Chair of the Verde Valley Community College Citizen Advocates on Thursday afternoon, August 14, 2015 to leave the Advocates meeting. The meeting was being held in Cottonwood at the VACTE facility. When she insisted she did not have to leave, the meeting was adjourned.

Linda BuchananThe incident arose out of comments Ms. Buchanan made in a recent letter to the editor in the Verde Independent.  In the article Ms. Buchanan stated in part: “Set aside the angry agendas of a few individuals . . .. Leave the political power plays to those with a vendetta . . .. .

The Advocates group apparently believed that Ms. Buchanan was aiming the remarks directly at them. This was the basis for their decision to expel her from the meeting.

The Verde Valley Community College Citizen Advocates is a private association of individuals who are concerned about post-secondary education in the Verde Valley.  They are not required to comply with open meeting laws and can restrict attendance to their meetings if they choose to do so.

Ms. Buchanan’s letter that triggered her expulsion may be read in full by clicking here

College Performing Arts Website promotes Republican Women invitation to radical speaker Dinesh D’Souza

Should a Community College website promote and support indirectly political programs not associated with the College and student education?

The Republican Women of Prescott invited radical right wing speaker Dinesh D’Souza to attend a political program at the Yavapai College Performing Arts Center that features  Dinesh D’Souza on Tuesday, July 28 at 7:30 p.m.  While the College has a right to rent to any political party, should it promote the political event on its web site and collect tickets for the showing?  Common sense suggests it should not.  In today’s political world, it should stay completely neutral.  Furthermore, if it invites a radical right winger, then it should offer the same opportunity to a radical left winger.

According to Reuters, the right-wing media star who will speak at the Performing Arts Center  “was sentenced [in September, 2014]  to spend eight months in a community confinement center” as part of five years of probation for violating federal campaign finance laws. In January, 2014 D’Souza was indicted for arranging excessive campaign contributions to the Senate campaign of his friend, Wendy Long. After spending several months protesting the charges and claiming he was being unfairly targeted for his political beliefs, D’Souza pleaded guilty in May, 2014.

In a May, 2015 article,  Evgenia Peretz writes that  after D’Sousa made “wild arguments about race, he would make even wilder arguments about 9/11, in the 2007 book The Enemy at Home: The Cultural Left and Its Responsibility for 9/11—whose title summed up its thesis. The real reason terrorists destroyed the Twin Towers, he wrote, was anger stirred by the left—Hillary Clinton, Nancy Pelosi, Planned Parenthood, Brokeback Mountain, and The Vagina Monologues.”

Peretz also wrote in the article that in a book D’Sousa titled,  “In The Roots of Obama’s Rage (2010),”  he wrote that President Obama “had a single goal: to avenge the injustices inflicted by colonialism upon his father’s Kenyan homeland, by intentionally weakening America’s economy and power in the world. The book was written in two months, he boasted in the introduction. And with sentences like these, it showed: “The most powerful country in the world is being governed according to the dream of a Luo tribesman of the 1950s—a polygamist who abandoned his wives, drank himself into a stupor, and bounced around on two iron legs … raging against the world for denying him the realization of his anti-colonial ambitions. This philandering, inebriated, African socialist is now setting the nation’s agenda through the reincarnation of his dreams in his son.” The conservative Weekly Standard called the book “lunacy.”  You may read the entire Vanity Fair article by clicking here.

The following shows how the College website is being used for this program.  One would think that the Administration would exercise better judgment.

website 1

 

Renaming College

Letter to editor suggests renaming Community College to “King George College”

Cottonwood resident Beatrice Keeber suggests that the Community College be renamed “King George College.”  She says that it would be a more fitting name and asks: “Is it time for Verde Valley to rise up as did the colonists in 1775? Is there another way for this entire valley to be heard in Prescott?” King George Crown

Her letter to the editor in the Verde Independent where she made this suggestion may be read in its entirety by clicking here.

 

Details of secret Allied Health meeting revealed

Meeting notes reveal YCC president Penelope Wills aggressively laying foundation for new campus in Prescott Valley with politicians, staff, and Northern Arizona University

TOP SECRETYou may recall that the Blog’s video reporter was denied access to a meeting held by College president Penelope Wills with NAU and the mayor and Prescott Valley Town Council on March 26. Since that time, Wills’ has been saying that the minutes of the meeting will be publicly available.  Finally, they were received by the Blog on June 16.

The minutes revealed that this was the third Health Summit Wills’ has been involved in.  It also reveals the aggressive nature of the Wills’ effort to move the plans for an Allied Health campus in Prescott Valley along.

Here, for the first time, is a published  list of the persons who attended this “secret” meeting in Prescott Valley.

Northern Arizona University:
Dr. Rita Cheng, President
Christy Farley, Vice President Government Affairs and Business Partnerships
Dr. Laura Huenneke, Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs
Dr. Leslie Schulz, Executive Dean, College of Health and Human Services
Debera Thomas, Dean of Nursing
Fred Hurst, Senior Vice President, Extended Campuses
Karen Appleby, Senior Assistant to Provost
Susan Johnstad, Assistant Vice President and Campus Executive Officer for Extended Campuses

Yavapai College:
Dr. Penny Wills, President
Dr. Stuart Blacklaw, Provost & Vice President for Instruction & Student Development
Scott Farnsworth, Dean for Sciences & Health
Mary Brown, Director for Nursing Programs
Nancy Bowers, Director for Allied Health
Rich LeClair, Director for Radiology Program
Tania Sheldahl, Dean for Student Development

Town of Prescott Valley:
Harvey Skoog, Mayor
Lora Lee Nye, Vice Mayor
Larry Tarkowski, Town Manager
Richard Anderson, Council member
Marty Grossman, Council member
Mike Whiting, Council member
Marnie Uhl, Director for Prescott Valley Chamber

Yavapai County Professional Leaders:
Mike Paredes, Director for Prescott Valley Economic Development Foundation
Donna Jacobs, Director, Northern Arizona VA Health Care System
Kerrie Whilhoite, Northern Arizona VA Health Care System
John Amos, Chief Executive Officer, Yavapai Regional Medical Center
Mark Timm , Executive Director of Human Resources, Yavapai Regional Medical Center
Frank Alemendarez, East County Administrator, Yavapai Regional Medical Center
Judy Baum, Chief Executive Officer, Mountain Valley Rehabilitation Hospital

Yavapai College:
Deb McCasland, District Governing Board member
Steve Irwin, District Governing Board member.

Former Superintendent says no tax increase

Retired school superintendent wants taxes paid for Community College in Verde Valley to remain there

Retired  Cottonwood-Oak Creek School District superintendent, Mrs. Julie Larson, expressed the views of most residents in the Verde Valley in an editorial in the May 27 Verde Independent. She stated she opposed the 2% property tax increase that will be voted on June 9 by the Yavapai College District Governing Board and wanted property taxes paid by Valley residents to remain in the Valley.

Julie Larson 5Larson wrote:  “Sadly, the direction Yavapai College has taken in recent years has caused me to agree with a growing number of our community members that it is now time to take control over how our property taxes are utilized.”

She continued:  “Yavapai College is not held to the same financial restrictions that our local schools experience. The governing board of the college can simply vote to increase property taxes rather going to the voters for approval. Against the recommendation of the Verde Valley Advisory Committee, it now appears that the college board will follow administration’s recommendation to increase the property taxes by 2 percent. This is the sixth time in the last 10 years that property taxes for the community college have been increased. It also comes on the heels of a 4-percent tuition hike approved in February.”

Mrs. Larson’s complete editorial in the Verde Independent can be found by clicking here.

 

March 26 meeting with Prescott Valley remains a secret

Blog request for information delayed

You may recall that the Blog’s video reporter was denied access to a meeting held by College president Penelope Wills with NAU and the mayor and Prescott Valley Town Council on March 26. Since that time, Wills’ has been saying that the minutes of the meeting will be publicly available.

TOP SECRETSo far, Blog requests for those minutes have been unsuccessful.  Here is the last response from the Community College dated May 11, 2015:

“I have received your request for the minutes of March 26, 2015 meeting with Yavapai College, Northern Arizona University, and Yavapai County Professional Leaders. These minutes are waiting approval by Dr. Rita Cheng, President of Northern Arizona University and staff. Upon their consent, the minutes will be available.”  

The Blog will keep its readers informed on the progress of this request.

Verde Valley on the losing side of history

Essay provides a short history of the contest between the Verde Valley and Prescott over location and operation of Yavapai Community College

Analysis

Analysis

History is the witness that testifies to the passing of time; it illumines reality, vitalizes memory, provides guidance in daily life, and brings us tidings of antiquity.
Marcus Tullius Cicero

There is a long history of political domination of the West side of the County over the East side. Domination began in 1966-67 when there was a fierce contest between the citizens in the Verde Valley and those in Prescott over where the first Community College would be located. The Gulf States and Industries Corporation offered $1.5 million dollars in financing for student dormitories and a student center, an outright gift of $100,000 for building purposes, and 165 acres of what was described as “prime land in the Clarkdale area” of the Verde Valley.

A site review conducted by Northern Arizona University recommended Clarkdale as the most desirable location for the first Yavapai Community College. Despite the site review and the offer by the Gulf States and Industries Corporation, the Verde Valley failed in its effort to establish the first community college there.  Rather, Prescott was  selected by the State Junior College Board as the location for the Community College.

Voters on May 23, 1967 approved 3011 to 2904 (107 margin) a $2.5 million dollar bond for the creation of Yavapai College.  It is said that almost everyone in the Verde Valley voted against the proposal because of their anger over the decision by the State Junior College Board to not locate the college in the Verde Valley.

In 1975 another dispute arose between the Verde Valley and Prescott over the Community College. The dispute was twofold: When would initial construction of the Verde campus begin? Could the Verde campus be administratively separated from the control of Prescott? The buildings were eventually constructed on the Verde campus but the idea of a separate administrative college modeled after those in Maricopa County was rejected.  Read More→

District Board and Administration honors outgoing members

Dale Fitzner and Herald Harrington recognized at regular monthly meeting

lost electionDale Fitzner and Herald Harrington, both of whom were soundly voted out of office by County residents in November, were honored by the College Administration and three remaining Board members at the Tuesday, December 9 regular Board meeting on the Prescott Campus.

Harrington and Fitzner will have trees planted in their names on the grounds of the Prescott Valley Library (for Fitzner) and the Yavapai Community College Verde Valley Campus (for Harrington). Professor Vikki Bentz, president of the Yavapai Community College faculty senate, presented certificates of appreciation on behalf of the faculty to Fitzner and Harrington.

 

Ten-year plan must go

McCasland asks Governing Board to do away with ten-year master plan

Ms. Deb McCasland, one of the two newly elected Governing Board members, told the Governing Board at its November meeting that during her campaign  the people she met had serious concerns about how the College was using its funds. She said that this was especially true about services that should exist in the Verde Valley and do not.McCasland 1 She also said that the resounding victories of herself and Steve Irwin should send a message to the College that “our taxpayers do not like what is happening right now.”

She “strongly encouraged” the Board to set aside the Master Plan and stop its implementation.  She urged the Board to let the committees that have been formed in the Verde Valley provide input about the direction community college education should take there.