Archive for Politics – Page 16

Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee snubbed, insulted

Suggestion for joint meeting to resolve Verde Valley issues ignored; VVBAC neutered by Wills’ and attack on VVBAC led by  West side respresentatives 

The Blog told readers weeks ago that this would happen.

Mr. Paul  Chevalier, speaking for the Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee (VVBAC), suggested at the November 9, 2015 Governing Board meeting that the Governing Board, College administrators, and the VVBAC hold a series of joint meetings to work out solutions to the VVBAC’s 16 recommendations for improving post secondary education in the Verde Valley. As he pointed out at the meeting, the Board has erected a barrier to effectively deal with these issues by delegating virtually all operations to the President. She is shielded by the Board from any significant involvement by the public in how millions of taxpayer dollars are spent.  Mr. Chevalier stated that to resolve the post secondary educational issues raised by the VVBAC, it would take cooperation among everyone to solve them–the Board, the administration, and the VVBAC. 

Little did Mr. Chevalier realize at the time of his speech that Dr. Penelope Wills and the West County voting block would insult him and the VVBAC by totally ignoring his polite request. Instead, the West voting block, aided by Wills’ sought to neuter any further serious efforts by the VVBAC.  

The neutering was accomplished by giving the VVBAC a single charge: they may now  consider a half dozen essentially self-serving questions handed to them by the Board at the meeting. They are to discuss these questions among themselves and with residents.  But nothing else is to be done by the VVBAC if West County real estate developer Irwin’s comment, made when the motion regarding this directive was seconded, is followed.  

The goal of the West County representatives, and Wills, as the Blog has been telling its readers for weeks, has been to suppress the activities and voice of the VVBAC.  They accomplished that goal November 9—unless the VVBAC is prepared to ignore what was clearly intended and stand against the effort to suppress its voice.

Given the history of the College, the 16 recommendations for improving post secondary education in the Verde Valley, made by the VVBAC, will be smothered in broad community college administrative double speak, academic self-serving rhetoric. They  will find a dusty shelf in the administrators closet where they will be stored.

If you click here, you will be taken to Mr. Chevalier’s two minute speech asking for cooperation from the Board and the College administration.

His speech may also be read here.

November 9 to the Governing Board

Madame Chair and members of the Yavapai College District Governing Board.

My name is Paul Chevalier and I live in Sedona.   I am here today on behalf of the Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee to make a suggestion to the Board.

When our committee members were asked to join the Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee to give advice to the Governing Board we did it with the belief that our advice would be listened to and acted upon by the Board.

We understand now that the Board delegates all decisions on ‘means’ to the College President and that some of the Board members consider our recommendations as ‘means’. Yet this hands off approach by the Board is not solving the concerns of the Verde Valley.

An acceptable way out of this dilemma needs to be found and we believe that there is one.

Read More→

Irwin turns his back on tax promise

Irwin’s promises made to voters before election ignored; raise troubling issues of ?

Steve Irwin is a nice guy.  He is personable and likeable.  But his behavior since joining the Yavapai College Governing Board, when it comes to taxes, raises serious questions. 

On Mr. Irwin’s facebook he repeatedly indicated before he was elected that he would not increase property taxes — or at least to a rational person reading his facebook that was the message.  Yet, when he got his first chance to vote on whether to increase property taxes in the County, he voted to increase them.

steve irwinWorse, he was the swing vote on the property tax increase.  Two members from the Verde Valley were solidly against increasing property taxes; two members from the West side of the County were in favor of the increase.  The decision on the vote was delayed until he arrived.   He then voted to increase property taxes County-wide.

In fact, the College failed to adequately justify the tax increase request.  Or, to have a strategic plan in place that supported it.

The following, taken from his facebook page, are the promises he made to not raise property taxes–a promise he ignored the first chance he got.

“October 31, 2014.   You have a choice – get out and vote for Steve Irwin ‪#‎YavapaiCollegeGoverningBoard as a member of YavapaiCollegeGoverningBoard I promise to help guide the College in Financial Responsibility and be a strong supporter of not raising your property taxes while requiring a higher quality of education.”  (emphasis added)

“October 21, 2014. Lower property taxes, quality education, reasonable cost, campus life, courses for adults, etc. YES these are my concerns and I want your input.” (emphasis added)

“October 19, 2014. 10 for 10. Every year in the past 10 years the Yavapai Community College aka Yavapai College Governing Board has increased your property taxes. Higher property taxes lowers property value and the buying power of new home owners. A vote for me equals NO NEW TAXES” (emphasis added).

Click here for a link to his facebook page where he made these statements.  

 

Wills’ and West County representatives launch 3-pronged attack on Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee at Nov 9 meeting

Obvious goal to neuter VVBAC’s strong voice coming from the Verde Valley

President Penelope Wills and the three West County members of the College Governing Board launched a three-pronged attack at the November 9 Board meeting on the Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee (VVBAC). The goal was obvious. It was to significantly weaken, if not eliminate its voice and effectiveness.
The West County representatives were led in their charge to neuter the Committee by 4th District Chair Pat McCarver, who has repeatedly stated over the past several months her irritation at the Committee’s activities.

Phase 1: The first phase of the attack was orchestrated by Wills and apparently the Board President. Wills pulled out and distributed a draft document she claimed was a spreadsheet showing that she and the Governing Board had considered most, if not all, of the 16 recommendations made by the VVBAC. (The VVBAC would strongly disagree with Wills.) The document, prepared ahead of the meeting, was not included in the agenda material posted to the website prior to the meeting. One suspects that Wills’ withheld it from public disclosure so it would have an impact on the discussion regarding the future of the VVBAC by supporting the West County Block on the Board. Copies were not provided to the public at the meeting.

VVBAC Chair Paul Chevalier, stunned by the sudden appearance of the Wills’ crafted spreadsheet, was provided as a courtesy a minute to comment on it. (It had been kept secret until the meeting.)  He said that: 

“What we’re looking for in terms of this [referring to the Wills’ spreadsheet] is something more concrete.” “We’re looking for hard answers. That is what the communities are looking for.”

There was no response to Mr. Chevalier’s comment.

Chevalier had earlier urged that the Governing Board meet with the VVBAC, the College administrators, and together thoroughly discuss and review the 16 point proposal coming from the VVBAC to improve post secondary education in the Verde Valley. He urged a cooperative “working together” effort. His plea for cooperation was ignored by the Board and no doubt further rankled the feathers of the West side voting block who were out to weaken, if not eliminate, the VVBAC.

Phase 2: The second phase of the attack was led by Board President McCarver who was joined by Prescott representative Sigafoos and Prescott Valley real estate developer Steve Irwin.

McCarver repeatedly and somewhat irritably stated that the VVAC was a Governing Board Committee, implying it was acting too independently. She also stated in an apparent response to the plea for cooperation and discussion of the 16 recommendations coming from Chevalier and the VVAC that “you shouldn’t have to negotiate with our own committee.”

Representative Steve Irwin has clearly been on a path to neuter the VVBAC for some time. He said at the November 9 meeting that the VVBAC should have a “ very small, narrow scope.” He also said he felt the VVBAC was “more of a watchdog group sometimes,” which no doubt irritated him greatly.

Prescott representative Sigafoos stated his concern that the VVBAC “has an overriding part of the agenda.“ Apparently, actual effective input from community residents is not really welcomed in his camp if it comes from the Verde Valley.

Representative Filardo bobbed and weaved in response to the attack; trying to save some portion of the VVBAC from the West side barrage. Representative McCasland likewise attempted to thwart the effort launched by Wills’ and the West County voting block.

At the end of phase 2, McCarver and her West County voting block seemed to have forced Filardo and McCasland somewhat into a corner. A motion was made by Irwin that the VVBAC focus on a series of 4 or 5 very broad questions that might be used by focus groups in the spring.

McCasland asked whether the motion meant eliminating the current work of the VVBAC but received no clear answer.

Irwin seemed to believe that his motion meant that the four or five broad questions to be asked of Verde Valley residents was the only work the VVBAC was to do, which leaves it a neutered Verde Valley voice. Filardo and McCasland seemed to believe the VVBAC could continue its present work. The vote was unanimous in favor of the West block’s proposal.

McCarver stated after the vote that it didn’t preclude future direction; it was the “direction as of today.” McCarver concluded by adding more confusion about the vote by stating:

“We made a decision on something.”

Phase 3: The third phase of the attack to further weaken the VVBAC came from Wills’ at the end of the meeting. She said she was pulling all administrative support from the Committee. Since the rooms had been scheduled through December, the Committee was on its own. She saw no reason why the VVBAC couldn’t operate on its own without any administrative help.

Pulling administrative support from an effective group is the same modus operandi used by Wills’ when she decided to shut down the Greater Verde Valley Chapter of the Foundation over two years ago. The GVVC’s voice was becoming far too strong for the Prescott folks and Wills’ so she cut out desperately needed effective administrative assistance.

In the end, the orchestrated attacked meant that democracy in terms of the people’s right to be heard about how the College spends their taxes suffered a serious wound. Whether it is fatal remains to be seen.

(Note. The Blog will provide a video of this part of the meeting as soon as it is available.)

Editorial suggests Sedona Taxing District secede from College

“Imagine what could be possible after we secede from college”

Christopher Fox Graham

Christoper Fox Graham

In the October 21 editorial in the Redrock News, (Also in the Cottonwood Journal Extra) Managing Editor Christopher Fox Graham, outlines the future possibilities for Sedona and the Verde Valley if the residents could secede from Yavapai Community College and create their own East County community college.  Mr. Graham points out that secession “would be a costly and litigious process for Yavapai College, but if President Penny Wills, and the Governing Board that is supposed to direct her actions, doesn’t listen to the needs of the Verde Valley — and understand the value of our tax money — a proposal by state legislators could make secession an alternative for taxpayers to have a return on our investment.”

This is an interesting and informative editorial and Blog readers can access it by clicking here.  You are urged to read it.

 

 

Wills’ asked to explain future of Community College in Sedona

“For the taxes we pay, we’re not getting nearly enough back”

Yavapai Community College President  Penelope Wills is expected to face some tough questioning when she appears before the Sedona City Council at its October 27 meeting. The Council meeting is scheduled to begin at 4:30 in the Council Chambers, 102 Roadrunner Drive, Sedona.

SEDONA MAYOR

Sedona Mayor Sandy Moriarty

In a letter to the College Mayor Sandy Moriarty wrote: 

“The Sedona City Council feels strongly that Yavapai College should provide more educational opportunities and an active physical presence in Sedona, commensurate with the financial investment being made by Sedona’s residents and businesses through their property tax assessments.”

It is estimated that residents of the Sedona Taxing District annually pay $6,589,567 in primary taxes and $754,622 in secondary taxes to support the College.  At least 80% of that tax money is spent outside the District by the College.  It is also estimated that over $5 million dollars from Sedona/Verde Valley annually pass over Mingus Mountain where it is spent on the Prescott of CTEC campus at the Prescott airport.

For more information about this issue, please click here and you will be taken to the on-line article written by the Sedona Redrock News. 

West County Rep takes aim at emasculating Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee

Wants VVBAC put under control of President Wills or set afloat as an independent entity

Commentary

Commentary

It is no secret that the three members of the Yavapai College District Governing Board from the West side of the County are trying to neuter the efforts of the Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee (VVBAC).  The Committee has been methodically bringing into public view the enormous economic and educational offerings  discrimination that has been practiced on Sedona and the Verde Valley by the West County’s controlling majority for decades.  The West representatives, realizing that such pet projects as a new $45 million Allied Health campus in Prescott Valley are threatened by these disclosures, are searching for ways to silence the VVBAC.    

Here, using only the minutes of the Governing Board, you can clearly see the political efforts of the three West County Governing Board members as they pursue their goal of gagging the VVBAC.

August, 2015 Board meeting: Verde Valley representative Al  Filardo moved to continue the VVBAC for two years and was supported by Verde Valley Second  District representative Deb McCasland.  West County representatives along with President Wills’ strongly reacted in opposition to the motion.  Prescott representative and long-time protector of West County interests Ray Sigafoos suggested the VVBAC has met specific Verde Valley ownership linkage objectives, implying it should be terminated as a Board Committee.  Prescott Valley realtor Steve Irwin stated the VVBAC should be removed from the Governing Board and merged into a committee to be controlled by the Verde Campus dean. If his recommendation were followed, this would neuter the Committee and strip it of any power. In addition, it would remove  from public view the cover-up that has been going on for years. West County representative Pat McCarver, who appears to be in the pocket of President Wills,  agreed with Irwin. She then suggested that the future of the VVBAC be decided at the Board’s August retreat.  Seeing no hope of approval for continuing the VVBAC for two years, McCasland and Filardo agreed to give it life at least until the Board had enough information for strategic planning (which was anticipated coming at the August retreat).

August 31, 2015 Board retreat:  The Board retreat was devoted to propaganda efforts by West representatives and a paid consultant essentially selected by them to indoctrinate Verde Valley representatives into the use of the Carver model of governance.  The Carver model has the effect of shutting down College Board representatives from discussing important matters with faculty and students, or even speaking out unfavorably on controversial issues with the residents of the Verde Valley after a Board vote.   However, there was no  decision on the future of the VVBAC made at the retreat.

September 1, 2015:  To the surprise and no doubt chagrin of the West County representatives, there was a huge turnout at the Governing Board meeting on the Verde Campus of Sedona/Verde Valley of residents and politicians from every corner of the East County.  All were in strong support of VVBAC and were aware of the threat posed by  West County representatives to neuter it.  So many speakers signed up to support the VVBAC that the Board Chair  limited the presentations to 2 minutes each.  About halfway through the meeting, and long after the speakers had completed their presentations, West County representative McCarver blurted out the following:  “At the last board meeting, the board did unanimously vote to continue the Verde Valley Advisory Committee.”  This is, of course, a misleading statement and one would think that McCarver must have known it was misleading.  However, with such a huge turnout in support of the VVBAC, it was politically expedient and even had the effect of persuading the Verde Independent to run a headlined story suggesting the dozens of residents who spoke in favor of continuing the VVBAC didn’t know what they were talking about when it came to ending the VVBAC. (The story can be accessed by clicking here.)  

The Verde Valley residents, of course, knew exactly what they were talking about and knew exactly what the West County representatives were up to—that the West representatives and President Wills’ are desperately searching for a way to neuter the VVBAC. The Verde Independent apparently did not know what was actually happening.

October 7, 2015 Board meeting:  Near the end of the Board meeting Chair Pat McCarver criticized the VVBAC because of a statement in the minutes of a meeting of the VVBAC where the VVBAC Chair had politely apologized to a College staff member if any questions from the Committee made him uncomfortable.  As explained to the Governing Board by Mr. Filardo, this was merely a polite gesture—there was no actual need to apologize. (The brief discussion regarding the apology can be viewed by clicking here.)

After this explanation, West County Prescott  Valley realtor Steve Irwin again took aim at the VVBAC.  He asked that the Board once again  consider closing down the VVBAC as a Board Committee and asked that this issue be placed on the November agenda.  (The brief discussion regarding his request can be viewed by clicking here.)

Prescott Valley has a huge stake in seeing to it that millions of tax dollars, tuition and state aid go to Prescott Valley for the planned $45 million Yavapai College Allied Health campus rather than go to the Verde Valley.  An effort by Mr. Filardo to have to meeting moved from Chino Valley to Sedona was ignored.  The Board chair, without discussion, immediately agreed to put the item on the agenda for the November meeting.  (You may view the video discussion of this part of the Board meeting by clicking here.)

In a story in the Verde Independent  of October 9, 2015 Mr. Irwin is quoted as saying:  “The committee was established to provide feedback from the various Verde Valley communities the college services. They have been successful at accomplishing their goal, end of mission.” He added:   “The committee is focused on operations, which may be of value to the president. If the committee continues, I would recommend it become independent or a committee of the president.” (The complete story in the Verde Independent can be accessed by clicking here.)

If Irwin’s effort is successful, the door will once again be shut tight insofar as obtaining information about the the College in a meaningful way.  In addition, the West representatives can rest easy that the $111 million capital plan for that side of the County will continue unabated. And that tax money from the Verde Valley will continue to pour into the coffers to support West County projects.

Robert E. Oliphant, Editor

 

 

Alexandria Wright, booted from Work Force Development Board; claims removal unwarranted

Board claims she was removed because she was “disrespectful and does not follow protocol, consumes meeting time and does not contribute to the WDB’s mission, vision or structure.” 

In an interview with the Verde Independent, Yavapai Community College’s former representative to the Work Force Development Board, Alexandria Wright , claimed that the decision by the Yavapai County Board of Supervisors September 26– acting upon a request by the Workforce Develop Board’s  executive committee—to remove her from the Committee was unwarranted. 

kicked outMs. Wright  was removed, according to Anita Payne, executive committee member of the Northern Arizona Council of Governments and chair of the Workforce Development Board (WDB), because she was “disrespectful and does not follow protocol, consumes meeting time and does not contribute to the WDB’s mission, vision or structure.” She also stated that “Ms. Wright demonstrates a pattern of behavior that is considered to be unprofessional and disruptive without consideration for protocol, which she has been asked to follow on several occasions.”

Wright claimed that the “letter is unsubstantiated and unwarranted.”

When asked during her interview by Tom Tracy of the Verde Independent about her replacement on the Workforce Board, she replied her seat had been replaced by the “Hair Skin and Nail Institute.”

You may reach your own conclusion as to what was intended by the above statement.

The story in the Verde Independent and complete interview of Ms. Wright by reporter Tom Tracy can be found by clicking here.

Cottonwood Journal Extra editorial suggests Wills’ should go

“College’s culture needs overhaul, starting at the top”

In an editorial in the October 7, 2015 Cottonwood Journal Extra, written by Christopher Fox Graham, he suggests that the Wills’ Yavapai College Administration should go. 

Christopher Fox Graham

Christopher Fox Graham

Mr. Graham wrote, in part, discussing the decision by the Northern Arizona Council of Governments to remove the College representative from the Work Force Development Board: 

“Part of the top-down culture at the college * * * has little to no understanding about community needs or understanding how projects or operations at the other government agencies might serve the community.  A community college should be an ally, not a hindrance, to other local governments.”

He concluded his editorial observing that:

“Under Wills, the culture of the college has become so myopic and unresponsive to the Verde Valley that session from the college taxing district and the establishment of our own college is gaining ground.  The other option might be removing the troublesome administration from the top down, and build a new college culture responsive to all taxpayers equally.”

The entire editorial can be read by clicking here

 

Sedona Taxing District forks out $7 million annually to support College

Sedona Facility Receives little in return for its huge tax investment

Using 2012 data, the City of Sedona reports (9/25/2015) that the Sedona Taxing District annually forks out over $7 million dollars to Yavapai College.  Of that amount, $6,589,567 is paid through primary taxes and $754,622 goes to pay off General Obligation bonds.

Taxes 6With total primary tax-based revenue in 2012 flowing to the College from Yavapai County property taxpayers of $43,701,144.00,  this means the Sedona Taxing District alone contributed at least 15 percent of the revenue toward operating the College.

In the past two years the College has threatened to close and sell the Sedona Campus and shut down the well respected film program.  Because of a wave of outrage at the potential closing, the District Governing Board backed off selling the property by settling a dispute with an adjacent landowner that had festered for a decade.  However, the administration followed through on its threat to shut down the Sedona Film School.  In fact, the College administration stripped the Sedona Center of all but one or two College credit courses taught by adjuncts. After two years, it  has done little to return Yavapai College credit courses to the facility. 

There are Osher Lifelong Learning courses offered by the independent nonprofit Osher Foundation.  The Foundation is not a part of the College, rather it is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that pays Sedona Osher employees from a $2 million fund it set up for them.  The College provides in-kind support by allowing Osher to use its facility.

The full story carried in the Redrock News online can be read by clicking here.

Sedona City Government Demands Answers from College

September 21 letter to Dr. Wills demands meeting with City officials in Sedona on future of Yavapai College 

In a letter to Yavapai Community College, the Sedona Mayor and Sedona Council are demanding that President Penelope Wills appear before them and discuss the future plans for the Sedona Center and the Verde Campus. 

SEDONA MAYOR

Mayor Sandy Moriarty

In the letter, Sedona Mayor Sandy Moriarty states that the Council “feels strongly that Yavapai College should provide more educational opportunities and an active physical presence in Sedona, commensurate with the financial investment being made by Sedona residents and businesses through their property tax assessment.”

The Sedona Taxing District pays a little over $7 million dollars annually in tax revenue to support the College.  There are only one or two Yavapai College classes being taught on the campus since the College administration’s effort to close the facility failed almost two years ago.  Other programs held at the facility are financed and presented by the independent nonprofit organization, Osher. 

The full story that was carried in the Redrock News online on September 25 can be read by clicking here.