Author Archive for R. Oliphant – Page 121

COLLEGE SPENDS $225,000 FOR DESIGN/COST ESTIMATES OF MULTI-USE (SOCCER) FIELD

Tells Board at January meeting that funds for this project have been spent–where does such a project sit in terms of educational priorities?

 Vice President Dr. Clint Ewell reported at the morning workshop January 8 that Yavapai Community College had spent up to $225,000 to initially decide whether it wants to build a multi-purpose field on the Prescott Campus. This amount was approved 4-1 by the Governing Board in last year’s budget.

 Most observers are aware that the primary purpose of such a field is to replace the two leased fields now used by the boys soccer team and provide the soccer team with a field on the Prescott Campus. Critics argue that it is a needless expenditure of limited funds and unnecessary because the present leased soccer fields cost the College very little. Moreover, the current soccer fields have been used successfully for years and were selected for two national Junior College final championship events.

In addition to spending the funds for design, etc., last year the College moved over a million dollars from its capital construction fund for a parking lot adjacent the proposed soccer field to what it calls its “deferred maintenance fund.”  In essence, the move took the spotlight somewhat off the project and placed it in a less contentious area of the College budget.

Finally, the College Foundation has indicated it is willing to put almost a million dollars into the soccer field.

Neither the College nor the Governing Board has at any time indicated where such a project like this sits in the list of educational priorities for students in the District.  Wouldn’t it be nice to see a list of priorities?

GOVERNOR DUCEY PROPOSES INCREASED FUNDING FOR SOME COMMUNITY COLLEGES IN HIS BUDGET DELIVERED JANUARY 18 TO LEGISLATURE

Pima and Maricopa Community Colleges appear to be greatest beneficiaries; not Yavapai Community College

Arizona Governor Doug Ducey has proposed some increased financial aid to Arizona Community Colleges in his budget for the coming fiscal year. He delivered  his proposals to  the Legislature January 14. Legislators will, of course, debate and tweak the budget requests. Unfortunately, the Blog is unable to discover any significant increase in financial aid coming from the State to Yavapai Community College.

Ducey said he wants to provide $20 million for an expanded aviation program at the 40,000 student Pima Community College. This will double the capacity of the Aviation Technology Center, which trains people for aerospace industry jobs. This would add funds for another 75 students.

He also wants the legislature to provide $5.8 million for Maricopa County Community College District to get more equipment to expand its health-care programs. This will allow it to train more students in medical programs for staffing operating rooms, emergency care, oncology and intensive care units.

Under Ducey’s budget, Universities would receive $21 million to expand their teachers academies, designed to address the teacher shortage by allow education students a free college education if they agreed to teach in Arizona. The academies started in 2017, but never received any funding. 

The universities would also get $30 million to put toward health insurance costs and $35 million in one-time operating and capital funds to help support Arizona resident students.

House Minority Leader Charlene Fernandez, D-Yuma said in response to Ducey’s proposals that the state still needs to make up for years of cuts to district schools that have led to a teacher-retention crisis, and restore cuts to community colleges and universities.

COLLEGE ANTICIPATES RAISING TUITION BUT NOT TAXES IN 2019 BUDGET

Also assumes it will receive $1 million from the County’s new construction tax; big jump from past years

Yavapai Community College unveiled its assumptions about the 2019 budget in its meeting with the Governing Board last Tuesday.  In a short presentation, Vice President Dr. Clink Ewell explained that the College anticipated it would receive about $1 million in revenue from the Yavapai County new construction tax.  This is a substantial jump in revenue from this source when compared to the last several years.

Dr. Ewell also told the Board that the Administration did not anticipate asking for a property tax rate increase.  He said that the Administration would most likely ask the Governing Board to increase student tuition by about $4.00 per credit.

Dr. Ewell’s short presentation and explanation to the Governing Board regarding this aspect of the 2019 budget appears in the video clip below.

 

 

DR. RHINE REVIEWS POVERTY STATUS OF COMMUNITY COLLEGE STUDENTS

Lack housing, food, homeless; “How can we expect students to learn without fuel for their body and brains and without a roof over their head at night?”

Dr. Lisa Rhine

  • Dr. Lisa Rhine, the new President of Yavapai Community College, shared alarming statistics about the status of community college students with the  community college staff at their convocation last week. Here is a summary of the shocking information she shared about the current community college students in the United States:
  • Two of every three community college students in the nation are food insecure.
  • One of every two community college students is housing insecure.
  • Fourteen percent of community college students are homeless.
  • Sixty-three percent of community college parents with children are food insecure.

“How can we expect students to learn without fuel for their body and brains and without a roof over their head at night?” she asked.

A video clip of this portion of her speech to employees follows below:


 

LAND TAX LAWSUIT BY STATE ATTORNEY GENERAL AGAINST ASU HAS FUTURE IMPLICATIONS FOR VERDE CAMPUS

With 85 open acres on the Verde Campus, the issue is whether it could lease a portion of that land to a private company for a  vineyard or other purposes and the company need not pay taxes

Last week, the Arizona attorney general sued Arizona State University(ASU) in Arizona Tax Court over a real estate deal approved by the Regents who oversee ASU. 

He claims that it is illegal for ASU to allow for-profit companies to build on university-owned land, which is tax-exempt. ASU is essentially renting out its tax-exempt status to private businesses, Brnovich said. He seeks to force an unbuilt Omni Hotel to pay taxes.

The lawsuit is important to the Verde Campus in Clarkdale because it has somewhere around 85 acres of vacant land.  In the future, that land might be built on in partnership with the College and a private company. Will the private company have to pay taxes?  This lawsuit should answer that question.


 

WEST COUNTY BOARD MEMBERS QUASH EAST COUNTY EFFORT TO SHARE LEADERSHIP POSITIONS; WEST COUNTY POLITICOS MAINTAIN IRON FISTED CONTROL

In a vitriolic meeting and a show of their raw political power, the west county board representatives again name Sigafoos as Board Chair and reject McCasland, despite her credentials, as Board secretary

The West Yavapai County voting bloc (McCarver, Sigafoos, Irwin) made it clear at the somewhat vitriolic Tuesday, January 15 morning special meeting that it is unwilling to share even a modicum of Board leadership with a member of the east side of the County. In doing so, the west side politicos on the Board flexed their political muscle in a showing of raw political power.

Some observers at the meeting were startled by the hostile, almost angry voice of Pat McCarver when she nominated aging and occasionally rambling Ray Sigafoos for another term as the Board chair. To do this, she forcefully interrupted Paul Chevalier while he was speaking and refused (no kidding, look at the video) to allow him to speak. McCarver’s motion came only after an effort by the east county representatives to select a more neutral Governing Board Chair, Steve Irwin, had failed.  The vote to continue with Sigfoos was 3-2 with east county representatives Deb McCasland and Paul Chevalier in the minority.

In a second effort to obtain a modicum of leadership for the east side of the county on the Board, Paul Chevalier nominated Deb McCasland to serve as Governing Board Secretary.  He argued that she had made a life-long commitment to the College. She was also now entering her fifth year on the Governing Board. (McCasland was first elected to the Board in 2014).  Despite his argument, the west county voting bloc (McCarver, Sigafoos, Irwin) selfishly voted her down.

Paul Chevalier commented that the Governing Board chair had gone back and forth between west county representatives over the past several years.  He argued that the chair should be rotated among the members of the Board similar to how the Yavapai County Supervisors rotate their chair.  In response, Ray Sigafoos claimed that this was talked about once 12 years ago and rejected.  He also said the Board was not a “Rotary Club.”

The west Yavapai County voting bloc ended up giving the secretary’s position to Steve Irwin, which to some observers of the meeting appeared odd, to say the least.  It was odd because  only moments earlier he had told the Board members that medical issues prevented him taking the Board Chair’s position. He did not murmur anything about those issues when McCarver nominated him for the secretary position and astonishingly, he seconded his own nomination. To observers, it appeared that the medical issues disappeared when it came to ensuring that the west county politicos maintained total iron-fisted control of the Governing Board. 

Unfortunately for the 70,000 residents living on the east side of the County, the west county voting bloc has once again cemented its position of control over them. The west side politicos, not east county residents and their representatives, will decide the future of post-secondary education on the east side of the county.  And the west side politicos will ensure that the millions of dollars necessary to continue further developing the community college on that side of Mingus Mountain will contain to flow unabated.

The seven minute video clip of the proceeding appears below. 

 

MARICOPA COMMUNITY COLLEGE GOVERNING BOARD COUP SUCCESSFUL

New President of Board Linda Thor selected in 4-3 vote

The Maricopa Community College Governing Board coup to oust existing Board president Laurin Hendrix while he still had six months left on his term was successful. According to Arizona Republic reporter Anne Ryman, the 4-3 vote to replace Hendrix  occurred at an unusual special meeting held January 15. He was replaced on the Board by Linda Thor.

Just before the meeting began, Hendrix resigned so that the Board could elect new officers, if they chose. According to reporter Anne Ryman’s story, Hendrix expressed regret over what has been a tough year, including a threat and unknown vandals leaving swastikas in the yard of his Gilbert home.  He also said that “not a single person spoke up,” to condemn the behavior, he said during Tuesday’s meeting.

Thor thanked Hendrix for his work, acknowledging that “it’s been a very difficult year and you’ve put in countless hours.”

You may read the entire story by Anne Ryman in the Arizona Republic by clicking here. 

NEW COLLEGE PRESIDENT INTRODUCES HER FAMILY TO THE COMMUNITY

Husband Jim, boys Alex and Ben plus rescue dog Rudy make up family

President Rhine’s family: Jim, Alex, Dr. Rhine, Ben and Rudy.

Incoming Yavapai Community College president Lisa Rhine introduced her family to the community during the employee convocation June 9 at the Performing Arts Center on the Prescott Campus.  Her family includes her husband Jim and two boys, Alex age 21 and Ben age 19.  Jim is currently a high school math teacher and both of her adult children are attending college.

Also included was the family’s dog Rudy.  Rudy is a rescue dog and has been with the family about 14 years.   You may view her introduction of her family at the employee gathering on the video clip below.

 

NEW BOARD MEMBER PAUL CHAVLIER TO BE SWORN IN JANUARY 15

Joins Second District Representative Deb McCasland as strong voice for the east side of the County

Paul Chavlier

Paul Chavlier will be sworn in as the new member representing the Third District on the Yavapai Community College Governing Board at the Governing Board meeting January 15.  The Third District encompasses Big Park, Bridgeport 1 and 2, Clarkdale, Clemenceau, Coffee Pot, Cottonwood, Fir, Jacks Canyon, Jerome 1 and 2, Mingus, Orchard, Quail Springs, Red Rock 1 and 2, Red Rock East, Red Rock West, Verde Village, Western, and Wild Horse.

Chavlier, who was opposed by sitting Board member Dr. Connie Harris, won the seat in November by receiving almost 55% of the vote. He will join Deb McCasland as a strong voice for the citizens living in the Verde Valley. 


 

YAVAPAI COMMUNITY COLLEGE GOVERNING BOARD TO SELECT NEW CHAIR AT JANUARY MEETING

West County Voting Bloc has controlled agenda for at least last eight years by making sure chair is from that side of County; issues regarding east side of County have been blocked from serious discussion

The Yavapai Community College Governing Board will select a new president at its January 15 meeting.  For the past eight years, it has maintained control over the agenda by selecting a member of the Board who represents the west side of the County at is chair.  Who is in the chair is important because he or she sets the agenda for each meeting and controls the ebb and flow of each meeting.

Because of agenda control, issues such as the location of centralized CTEC facility on the east side of the County, a request from the Chino Valley Council to meet regarding a potential raceway, a Board meeting with the Yavapai-Apache Nation, or a serious discussion about the future development of the east side Verde Campus and Sedona Center have been kept from the Board. 

There is hope that neither west-side hardliners Ray Sigafoos nor Pat McCarver will continue as Chair. It is also hoped that the roadblocks for discussion of important issues that current Chair Sigafoos has blocked in the past will be removed after January 1.