Then refuses to clarify what he meant by alleging the newspaper made “bonus claims” or apologize
We are all warned about careless handling of email. We know that caution must be exercised about what and how we say things in emails because it is so easy to accidentally send one to a person we didn’t intend to receive it. What happens when you make that mistake is illustrated by the mess Yavapai Community College Vice President Rodney Jenkins finds himself in.
Jenkins apparently sent out an email intended for Vice President of Academic Affairs Diane Ryan about questions being put to the Community College president by the Red Rock News and Cottonwood Journal Extra. However, somehow the email ended up in the computer email boxes of the Red Rock News.
In the errant email Vice President Jenkins alleged in part the following: “Diane, below Larsen (sic) Newspapers are making bogus claims.” Larsons’ operate both the Red Rock News and the Cottonwood Journal Extra. What Jenkins was apparently referring to as “bogus claims” involved the 11 questions the newspaper had sent to President Dr. Lisa Rhine for comment.
The problem he created is that If you are going to make allegations a newspaper is making “bogus claims,” you need something to back you up. Unfortunately for VP Jenkins, it appears he could not support his use of the bogus claims phrase.
The newspaper asked him directly for clarification of his “bonus claims” allegation. According to the October 26, 2022, Cottonwood Journal Extra newspaper, Jenkins “declined to clarify” what he called “bogus claims.” The newspaper also noted that he also did not provide a response to any of the 11 questions posed to Dr. Rhine.
Someone should advise VP Jenkins to send the newspaper an apology. That shouldn’t be too hard and it’s what a person in an errant email hot seat normally does. We are waiting.
The Tuesday meeting was poorly advertised by the Yavapai Community College to east side residents. Moreover, residents are aware that whoever is chosen will have little or no actual decision making authority in the development and operation of the College on the east side of the County. All decision-making is tightly controlled by the Prescott based executives who operate from their headquarters on the Prescott Campus.




avapai Community College was awarded the Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA) Distinguished Budget Presentation Award for its budget. This was the second year in a row that the College has received this award.
The Blog also notes that Dr. Karen Reed from Shaker Heights, Ohio was selected as the Interim Dean of the Verde Valley for Yavapai Community College to begin work April 11, 2022. The College anticipated, according to its press release in April, that Dr. Reed would serve in the role until October. A national search for the permanent dean was to be conducted.
Yavapai Community College briefly went into lockdown Sunday
afternoon after a report of shots fired near the campus in Prescott. The Prescott Police Department reported receiving a call at around 2:30 p.m. that gun shots were heard in the 800 block of East Gurley Street, near the intersection of Gurley and Arizona streets. The Police Department says that a caller reported a man waiving something at passing cars and heard shots fired after that.