Author Archive for R. Oliphant – Page 35

YAVAPAI COMMUNITY COLLEGE PRESIDENT DR. RHINE REVIEWS HER RECORD AFTER FOUR YEARS

Long list of accomplishments in so short a time is notable

Dr. Lisa Rhine

Dr. Lisa Rhine, President of Yavapai Community College, reflected on her achievements during her first four years in office at the District Governing Board workshop on Friday, February 24. Her presentation was impressive as she shared many of her notable accomplishments with the Board. That  portion of her presentation that focused on her accomplishments may be viewed by clicking here.

 For those interested in her complete presentation, the video of the entire meeting will be available on the District Governing Board website when it is posted.

 Some highlights of her achievements include:

  • Broke ground for Verde Campus Career Technical Trade Center.

  • Began renovation of Building “L” on the Verde Campus.

  • Made  athletics and Division of Student Affairs responsible to Vice President Jenkins.

  • Created a true enrollment management unit under Vice President Jenkins.

  • Restructured the Academic Division and realigned the deans.

  • Moved Human Resources unit to be a direct report to the President.

  • Increased annual Associate Degree completion rates by 58% since 2019.

  • Increased completion of annual Arizona General Education certificates being awarded by 84%.

  • Improved first to second year retention rates by 5 percent.

  • Increases Hispanic student enrollment by 24 percent.

  • Increased Foundation invested assets by 37%.

  • Increased Foundation scholarships by 35%.

  • Decreased student default rate on loans from 25.5 percent down to 3.7 percent.

  • Re-accredited nursing program and just completed HLC re-accreditation of the Community College as a whole with no monitoring, which is rare.

  • Added Community College Promise program.

  • Selected as finalist for prestigious national Bellwether award for developing the Promise program.

  • Added Early College program.

  • Expanded Advisor support and support for first generation students and connections to community support.

  • Added three new athletic teams along with support staff.

  • Created College Council.

  • Received an award for budget reporting.

  • Received permission to offer the first four-year Bachelor’s degree in business.

  • Nominated for national award for student success initiative by the American Association of Community Colleges organization.

YAVAPAI COMMUNITY COLLEGE GOVERNING BOARD SCHEDULES BUDGET WORKSHOP FOR FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24 FOR 9:00 A.M. TO 4:0O P.M AT PRESCOTT CAMPUS ROCK HOUSE AND WILL LIVE STREAM THE MEETING

The agenda includes decisions regarding purchasing more land in Prescott Valley and leasing some additional land near the Verde Valley

The Yavapai Community College District Governing Board has scheduled a budget workshop for Friday, February 24 to begin at 9:00 a.m. on the Prescott Campus at the Rock House.  The Governing Board web page says the workshop is scheduled to run until 4:00 p.m.  The meeting will also be live streamed because of the poor weather conditions in the County. 

Among items to be discussed is the purchase of additional land in Prescott Valley for the College and possibly leasing some land near the Verde Valley.

Under Arizona law, the public has a right to attend, listen, tape record, or videotape these meetings. The public may not disrupt the meeting. See Ariz. Att’y Gen. Op. No. I78-001. There is no Call to the Public scheduled for this meeting.   

The full agenda for the meeting can be found on the Community College web site, which you can reach by clicking here.  https://www.yc.edu/v6/district-governing-board/sub/2023/02/dgb-workshop-agenda-packet—february-24-2023—revised.pdf

NOTE: Due to inclement weather conditions, the board has decided to livestream this meeting. YouTube stream of Workshop: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AEbPN6nOYvo. 

 

 

YAVAPAI COMMUNITY COLLEGE GOVERNING BOARD SCHEDULES STUDY SESSION AND BUSINESS MEETING FOR TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21 AT CHINO VALLEY CENTER

Board convenes at 1:00 p.m. and anticipates ending sometime around 4 p.m.

The Yavapai Community College District Governing Board will hold a study session and business meeting at the Community College’s Chino Valley Center on Tuesday, February 21, 2023, beginning  at one P.M.   The Chino Valley Center is located at 2275 Old Home Manor Drive Chino Valley, Arizona 86323

There will be an Open Call to the public prior to the business meeting around 1:00 p.m.  At the Open Call members of the public may address the Board for up to three minutes.

Members of the Governing Board are not supposed to discuss or take legal action on matters raised during an Open Call to the public unless the matters are properly noticed for discussion and legal action. A citizen wishing to address the Board should complete a “Request to Speak” form, and give it to the Recording Secretary. The speaker should be prepared to limit his or her remarks to the designated time (at noted above, usually three minutes).

Under Arizona law, the public has a right to attend, listen, tape record, or videotape these meetings. The public may not disrupt, but may speak during the call to the public at the beginning of this meeting if the call is on the agenda. See Ariz. Att’y Gen. Op. No. I78-001.

The full agenda for the afternoon  meeting can be found on the Community College web site, which you can reach by clicking here

Among the items to be presented are “Chino Valley Program Highlights” and “3D Concrete Printing at Yavapai College.”

YAVAPAI COMMUNITY COLLEGE GOVERNING BOARD SCHEDULES BUDGET WORKSHOP FOR FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24 FOR 9:00 A.M. TO 4:0O P.M AT PRESCOTT CAMPUS ROCK HOUSE

The agenda will be posted on the Governing Board website

The Yavapai Community College District Governing Board has scheduled a budget workshop for Friday, February 24 to begin at 9:00 a.m. on the Prescott Campus at the Rock House.  The Governing Board web page says the workshop is scheduled to run until 4:00 p.m.

Under Arizona law, the public has a right to attend, listen, tape record, or videotape these meetings. The public may not disrupt, but may speak during the call to the public at the beginning of this meeting if the call is on the agenda. See Ariz. Att’y Gen. Op. No. I78-001. Normally, the Governing Board does not provide a call to the public at these meetings.  But check the agenda when it is posted.

The full agenda for the afternoon  meeting can be found on the Community College web site when it is eventually posted.

 

AFTER MONTHS OF COMPLAINTS FROM REPRESENTATIVES SIGAFOOS AND CHEVALIER, YAVAPAI COMMUNITY COLLEGE GOVERNING BOARD ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT STAFF BEGINS PROVIDING MORE DETAILED WRITTEN MINUTES

Representative Sigafoos lauds administrative staff for the improvement

It’s been a year or more since Representatives Ray Sigafoos and Paul Chevalier raised concerns about the incomplete minutes of the District Governing Board meetings.  The initial response to their concerns from some Governing Board members and others was that videotapes being made of a Board meeting were sufficient as a record and detailed written minutes were unnecessary.

Former Third District Representative Paul Chevalier

Representative Ray Sigafoos

The stripped down minutes had suddenly appeared months ago represented a significant change from more than a decade when detailed written minutes of Governing Board meetings were prepared. This was the case  even though for several past years the meetings were videotaped.

However, it became clear upon close inspection over a period of months that the videotape of Board meetings was sometimes less than complete.  Problems cropped up with the sound tracks, especially when microphones were accidentally turned off or not working, and what was said was lost. It soon became clear that more detailed minutes were was necessary. 

However, the change in the approach to preparing minutes in greater detail was not made until the January 2023 meeting. The long delay in response to the representatives concern,  it is believed, was due in part to a staffing issue.

Regardless of the reason, finally, the concerns expressed by Mr. Sigafoos and Mr. Chevalier about the absence of detailed minutes of District Board meetings is being met.

You may view Mr. Sigafoos congratulating the Community College administrative staff on their efforts to begin producing more detailed written minutes of Board meetings by clicking here.

PRESCOTT REGULATORS & SHADY LADIES NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION GIVES $10,000 TO VETERANS, MILITARY AND FAMILY FUND

Fund provides scholarships for student veterans and their families pursuing life-lifting education and career training at Yavapai Community College

The Prescott Regulators & Their Shady Ladies nonprofit organization recently donated $10,000 to the Yavapai Community College Foundation in support of the Foundation’s Veterans, Military and Family Fund. This is a scholarship fund created for student veterans and their families pursuing life-lifting education and career training at Yavapai Community College.  The contribution is the largest to date deposited in the Veterans, Military and Family Fund.

The Prescott Regulators & Their Shady Ladies established the scholarship for veteran students in 2016. “Several of the members of our group themselves are veterans. That’s why we chose to support veterans at Yavapai College,” said Monty Packard, the group’s sergeant of arms.

Scholarship recipient thank-you letters and success stories, which are shared at meetings and functions, are all the reward and inspiration members need, said Paige Phares, the organization’s president. “I know that helps our fundraising.”

Photo from website.

The Prescott Regulators & Their Shady Ladies, Inc.  are an award winning 501(c)(3) re-enactment group.  They  are the “Official Old West Ambassadors of Prescott” and for over 12 years have represented Prescott in parades, re-enactments and events around the State of Arizona. 

They were chosen by the State of Arizona as one of only three Western re-enactment groups to perform at the State’s Centennial Celebration “BestFest,” both in Prescott and in Phoenix.  The organization has been honored by “True West Magazine” as the “Best In The West” re-enactment group twice in the last five years and hosted the “Western Area” of the City’s Sesquicentennial Celebration.

DEADLINE FOR SHOWING INTEREST IN COMPLETING THE LAST TWO YEARS OF PAUL CHEVALIER’S SEAT ON YAVAPAI COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT GOVERNING BOARD IS FEBRUARY 23

Letter of interest and resume must apparently be in the hands of County school superintendent by Thursday, February 23, 2023, at 5:00 p.m.

Board meeting at CTEC

If you are interested in filling the vacancy created by the resignation of Mr. Paul Chevalier on the Yavapai Community College Governing Board, you must send a letter of interest and a resume to Tim Carter, Yavapai County School Superintendent, Yavapai County Education Service Agency, 2970 Centerpointe East, Prescott, AZ 86301, Fax 928-771-3329, Email: [email protected]. You are instructed to include information about yourself, including family, education, and work experience, why you would like to be a board member, your residence and mailing address, your email address, and home/work phone numbers. Candidates may include up to three letters of recommendation of support if they wish.

To be eligible to hold this seat a person must be a registered voter who resides in District 3, be a citizen of the United States of America, be at least 18 years of age, possess their civil rights, and they or their spouse cannot be employed by the college district. This is a non-partisan seat and the appointment will reflect that statutory requirement.

Deadline for receipt of letters of interest, resumes and letters of recommendation is Thursday, February 23, 2023, at 5:00 p.m.

As has been the historical precedent for community college appointments, Superintendent Carter will make use of a five (5) member Candidate Review Committee. Committee members will reside in District 3. They will review letters of interest, resumes, and letters of recommendation. The committee will be made up of a taxpayer, a faculty member, a student, an elected official, and a person who works in the area of workforce development. The committee will decide who to interview, establish interview questions, interview the selected candidates on March 6th, and select candidates for consideration by Mr. Carter.

Note that prior to making the final selection, the Superintendent will meet separately with each of the currently seated Yavapai College Board Members for their input on the finalists.

Members of the public from District 3, will also have an opportunity to email their views of the candidates to Mr. Carter or to meet personally with him for a 10-minute meeting from noon to 4 pm on Thursday, March 9th at the Sedona Campus of Yavapai College after the finalists have been announced.  The meetings will be on a first come, first basis.

The appointment should be announced by Friday, March 10th. The term begins upon taking the Oath of Office on Tuesday, March 21, 2023 and will be valid through December 31, 2024. To continue beyond that date, the successful candidate will need to run for the seat in the 2024 general election for a new six-year term beginning January 1, 2025. If you have any questions, please call Mr. Carter at 928-925-6560 (cell).

SEARCH BEGINS FOR “APPROPRIATE” THIRD DISTRICT RUBBER STAMP CANDIDATE TO REPLACE PAUL CHEVALIER

It appears clear from January 2023 Board Workshop that a preferred outcome for many on the Governing Board and the Prescott based Community College executives would be a District  representative who quietly brushes under the table the inequitable treatment afforded  Sedona and Verde Valley when it comes to major development, programming, and expenditures

Editor Robert Oliphant

OPINION. With the resignation of Paul Chevalier, the effort is under way to find a replacement for him.  It is clear to most observers of Governing Board meetings over the past four years that there is a  preferred outcome among the Board and Prescott based executives when it comes to the next Third District representative. First, there’s a strong preference for a Representative  who will appropriately rubber stamp anything proposed by the Prescott-based Community College executives that comes before the District Governing Board for approval. 

Second, there’s a similar strong preference for a Representative who will not raise embarrassing questions during Governing Board meetings about the domination of Prescott in the operation of the Community College.   Third, there is a preference for a Representative who will not speak critically to the press, local political leaders,  or the public the Representative represents,  about the direction the Community College is taking in Sedona and the Verde Valley.

If you need proof about these preferences, spend some time reviewing the Workshop held by the District Governing Board on January 31.  It’s easily available.  You can view it by clicking  DGB Workshop (panopto.com).

Once appointed, should the new Representative appear to be stepping out of line, the Board has tools ready to bring the Representative back in-line. One of those tools is peer pressure. Something the Board has used to try and quelch Paul Chevalier’s advocacy for the last four years. If that doesn’t work, the Prescott-area dominated Governing Board will resort to applying and enforcing new Governing Board policies. They  have been specifically tailored to protect Prescott Community College interests from significant critical public disclosure relating to operations or inequitable treatment of areas outside Prescott. 

These tools are poised and ready because the District Board members and College executives fear having another strong advocate in the mold of Mr. Chevalier appointed. The fear is  a result of Mr. Chevalier’s persistent championing of Sedona and the Verde Valley during Board meetings.  It is also a result of his courageous revelations to the public during his tenure about the extraordinary inequitable treatment the east side of the County has received at the hands of the majority west side Governing Board and Prescott based College executives.   

It is clear that the College Administration and the west county Board members want to put an end to being constantly reminded of the enormous inequity in treatment and operation between the two sides of Mingus Mountain.

Chevalier exposed the inequity in such matters as the use of taxpayer money along with an almost total absence of  programming in many  areas on the east side of the County including aviation, athletics, music and the performing arts. He questioned the nonexistence of residence halls, athletic facilities, and  major cultural events on the east side of the County while all these  were exploding  on the west side of the County. It made him extremely  unpopular with the Board and the College executives.

Recall that the Prescott based Community College executives even refused on occasion to provide Mr. Chevalier with detailed information about plans for future Community College development in the Verde Valley and Sedona — forcing him to resort to Arizona’s Open Meeting law to obtain the information.  Also recall that he often asked that matters brought to the Board’s attention by the public during the call to the public be discussed by the Board. He was consistently rebuffed in those efforts. 

At times Mr. Chevalier was sternly lectured about never talking about operations, never speaking out critically of a Governing Board decision, never talking to students or faculty, and never talking with the press. He was admonished during one meeting, for example, for a truthful public comment he made about the lack of Community College involvement with  Camp Verde. 

If history is any teacher of what is ahead, the final appointment for the remaining two years of Mr. Chevalier’s seat will be made by County Education Superintendent Tim Carter. He just did this for the District five seat.  Recall that Mr. Carter, with a small committee, back in 2016  selected a third District representative who had not even lived in the area for one year to replace long-time resident Al Filardo on the Board. The appointment was made despite the fact that a candidate from Sedona, who was intimately  knowledgeable about the Community College and had lived in the area for several years, was rejected.  That 2016 appointment was a “safe” milk-toast appointment. Once in office, there was no rocking of the boat being captained by Prescott interests during the next two years.  (Chevalier ran a spirted campaign for the seat that ousted that person in 2018.)

So, goodbye to courage and serious openness when it comes to Yavapai Community College.  And goodbye to seriously enhancing the educational needs of the Verde Valley and Sedona. The College PR department will talk a good game over the next two years, the word “transparency” will be repeatedly heard, while College executives and the west county majority on the Board simultaneously ensure that Prescott interests are protected from public exposure to any criticism.

 Sedona and the Verde Valley will fade into the background and experience another period of little major development or programming. The most the 70,000 residents on the east side of Mingus Mountain can expect is receipt of leftover scraps from the Governing Board banquet table while  the main meal with all the trimmings remains ready to be devoured by Prescott interests.

Let us hope with the next District Three appointment that I can be proven totally wrong!

COMMUNITY HEALTHCARE SCHOLARSHIP ERASES TUITION COSTS FOR 6 YAVAPAI COLLEGE NURSING STUDENTS

“Scholarship program aimed at easing the financial burden of higher education for hometown healthcare heroes has extended its benevolence to six more Yavapai College nursing students.”

(The following is a press release from Yavapai Community College of February 3, 2023, authored by J.J. McCormick.) 

The latest cohort of Community Healthcare Scholars celebrated their awards Jan. 25 in the Yavapai College Foundation offices on the YC Prescott Campus. The spring 2023 recipients of the lucrative scholarship are: Katie Anderson, Sada Hendricks, Hailey Mayhan, Shannon Mayotte, Ryan Urban and Peyton Velasco.

The Community Healthcare Scholarship program is made possible by a consortium of philanthropic organizations and healthcare business entities in partnership with the Yavapai College Foundation.

Motivated by his own financial struggles as a medical student, retired physician Dr. David Hess of the Jewish Community Foundation of Greater Prescott established the scholarship for deserving nursing and radiology technology students in 2012. To date, the program has awarded more than $1 million in scholarships to nearly 200 students who, upon graduation, serve on the healthcare frontlines in Yavapai County.

Along with the Jewish Community Foundation of Greater Prescott and the YC Foundation, Community Healthcare Scholarship partners are the Margaret T. Morris Foundation, Dignity Health/Yavapai Regional Medical Center, the Harold James Family Trust, Prescott Radiology Group and Fain Signature Group.

The newest Community Healthcare Scholars were elated with their awards.

“Receiving the Community Healthcare Scholarship is an incredible blessing,” said Sada. “As a single mother, the financial challenges of inflation have been particularly difficult and I was afraid that my dream of becoming a nurse was out of reach. I’m so grateful to the donors who made the scholarship possible. It’s a wonderful gift not only to the recipients but also to the community that will benefit from more nurses to provide care in our local facilities.”

Katie said she will be “forever grateful” to Community Healthcare Scholarship donors. “Not having to find the money to pay for school when you already have to scrimp and save to make ends meet is a huge relief,” she said.

As valuable as the financial assistance is the confidence boost the scholarship provides, Katie said. “This is a scary process and it’s easy to doubt my abilities, so it is nice to have the backing of all those that picked mine out of the stack of applications.”

For Hailey, a nursing assistant at Yavapai Regional Medical Center, the Community HealthCare Scholarship means she can work less, study more and better afford her daily commute from Prescott to nursing school at the YC Verde Valley Campus. “With this opportunity, I am able to work part time, and fulfill my placement in the nursing program without the financial stress,” she said.

COMMUNITY COLLEGE SAYS DR. RHINE AND DEB MCCASLAND FINALISTS IN AMERICAN ASSOCIATION COMMUNITY COLLEGE AWARDS OF EXCELLENCE CATEGORY

Dr. Rhine is in the running for CEO of the year and Deb McCasland is in the running for Trustee of the Year

Yavapai Community College announced in a press release dated February 3, 2023, that Community College president Dr. Lisa Rhine has been selected as one of five finalist for the  CEO of the year by the American Association of Community Colleges. Deb McCasland has also been selected as one of three finalist as Trustee of the Year by the same organization.

Community College President Dr. Lisa Rhine

The American Association of Community Colleges (AACC) is the primary

District Governing Board Trustees Chair Deb McCasland

advocacy organization for the nation’s community colleges. The nonprofit association, which is based in Washington, D.C., represents more than 1,000 2-year associate degree-granting institutions and nearly 12 million students.

The five finalists for the CEO of the year are: Chad Brown, President, Zane State College (Ohio); Dorey Diab, President, North Central State College (Ohio); Ryan McCall, President, Marion Technical College (Ohio); Lisa Rhine, President, Yavapai College (Arizona); Beverly Walker-Griffea, President, Mott Community College (Michigan). 

The three finalists for Trustee of the Year are:  Amy Barker, Sinclair Community College (Ohio); Robert Gilbert, Holyoke Community College (Massachusetts); Deborah McCasland, Yavapai College (Arizona).

The winners will be announced at the Awards of Excellence Gala on April 3 during the AACC Annual April 1-4 in Denver, Colorado. 

You may read the Community College press release by clicking here.