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College may seek foreign students to save aviation program

By R. Oliphant
Thursday, October 22nd, 2015

College may also have to buy or lease its own airplanes

If Congress has its way, Yavapai College, originally created to serve the needs of County residents, may soon own or lease its own fleet of airplanes and recruit wealthy foreign students to train in them.  This is a far cry from the original purpose of the Community College.  However, this is the reality of the Veterans Administration recent crack down on Yavapai College’s failure to meet student ratio guidelines of 15% non-veterans in its aviation program. 

AVIATION PROBLEMS  JOHN MORGAN SLIDE

College slide used at Board Meeting

The consequence of the VA decision about the College means the loss of thousands of dollars in tuition to the College, which charges $662 per credit to veterans in the program rather than the $75 normal per credit tuition.  It also means millions of dollars in lost revenue to Guidance Aviation, which can charge somewhere around $200,000 per veteran for some programs—all paid by the Federal Government.aviation picture of planes on tarmack

CTEC Dean John Morgan reported these possibilities to the Governing Board at the October 7 meeting. You may view Dean Morgan discussing this issue with the Governing Board by clicking here. 

Categories : Career and Technical Education, CTEC

Wills’ asked to explain future of Community College in Sedona

By R. Oliphant
Wednesday, October 21st, 2015

“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. 

Categories : Politics, Sedona Campus

Sedona Town Hall Meeting on College

By R. Oliphant
Friday, October 16th, 2015

Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee to hold Community event Wednesday, October 21, 2015, 5:30 p.m. at Sedona Center

The  Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee will hold a Town Hall meeting regarding Yavapai College at 5:30 p.m. at the  Sedona Yavapai College Building (the Sedona Film School building), Room 34, 4215 Arts Village Drive, Sedona.

Paul Chevalier, the Chair and Sedona Representative on VVBAC announced the meeting in a press release earlier this week.  He wrote:

How about more opportunities for higher education right here in Sedona, right here in the Verde Valley, right from our Yavapai College? The Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee (VVBAC) is holding a Town Hall Meeting to find out, to listen, to understand the needs of our Sedona community regarding higher educational learning opportunities from Yavapai College. We need your input to accurately present/convey to the Yavapai College Governing Board exactly what you feel is important to your future learning. To make sure we get your message perfectly clear, this meeting will be videoed so our Committee can accurately reference your concerns and requests. This will help us further develop our own recommendations and more correctly convey your higher educational needs to the College Governing Board.  MEETING NOTICE 1

We want Sedona residents, particularly Sedona students who need an easy-to-get-to local, affordable, and attainable education to have an opportunity to be heard and helped to achieve learning. Tell us what type of education you want. Do you want an education in hotel management? Do you want to learn how to build software? Do you want to get into a 4 year college after attending our community college? Do you need transportation or do you want to learn right here in Sedona? Do you need financial aid? Do you need help to figure out how to get financial aid At the Town Hall meeting you’ll have 3 minutes to speak, which is longer than Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, and let’s face it, what he had to say made a huge impact and forever changed our society. There is no requirement to speak; just showing up has importance and shows you care about your education/future.

If you are concerned about improving higher education in our City and our Valley, this is the time to represent. It doesn’t matter if someone else speaks on the same topic you want to address; we want to hear from all of you about your concerns. Our Committee is working hard to make recommendations to the Yavapai Governing Board and these recommendations have to fit the needs of people who want more in their life. The quality of your life matters to us. Your presence and participation matter to all of us.

Categories : Advisory Committees, Sedona Campus

College data confirms Sedona Taxing District receiving little for its $7 million dollar annual payment to Yavapai College

By R. Oliphant
Friday, October 16th, 2015

80 percent of tax revenue collected in Taxing District not spent on Sedona Center

There is little disagreement over the claim that the Sedona Taxing District annually paid  nearly $7 million dollars in 2014/15 in primary and secondary taxes to support Yavapai College.  In a document dated October 1, 2015, the College conceded that about 80% of the tax revenue from the Taxing District for 2014/15 will be spent elsewhere.  Here are some of the estimates made by the College in that document.SEDONA FINANCIAL ANALYSIS MADE OCT 2015

It estimated that it allocated $53,484 in direct costs to the Center. It then estimated, without any details, that it allocated $191,258 in indirect costs to the Center.  This brought the total direct and indirect costs to $244,742. It added without any details that it put in $95,324 for preventative maintenance. In addition, it claimed it put in furniture, fixtures, equipment and library books costing $44,932.  Since there were virtually no students at the facility, this figure seems questionable.

It also added into its costs the expansion and paving of the parking lot.  This is claimed came to $1,073,564.  Using the College figures, it appears that $1,458,562 was spent on the Sedona Center.  This left $5,926,436 to be used elsewhere.  That money found its way to the Prescott campus where it is helping build and renovate a $5 million fine arts building. 

The College conceded in writing that it did not have any full-time faculty assigned to the Center during the academic year 2014/15.   

Categories : Budget, Sedona Campus

Bill Regner; Carolyn Fisher analyze Yavapai College Funding for Verde Valley

By R. Oliphant
Thursday, October 15th, 2015

Every year 40 percent of primary property tax dollars and 60% of secondary property tax dollars going outside the Verde Valley

In an editorial in the Verde Independent of October 13, 2015 Bill Regner and Carolyn Fisher provided details about how property taxes being paid by residents of Sedona/Verde Valley to support Yavapai Community College are being used outside the Valley—primarily on the Prescott main campus and CTEC located at the Prescott airport.  Mr. Regner and Ms. Fisher are members of the prestigious Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee that has been thoroughly looking into how the Community College administrators have been collecting and spending tax revenue going to Yavapai Community College.where do my taxes go

According to them, 40 percent of the primary property tax dollars paid for the College in Sedona/Verde Valley and approximately 60% of secondary property tax dollars end up “each year to fund post-secondary education outside of our region?”

Verde Valley tax payers will be funding $55 million dollars over 10 years and  receive about $6 million in return.

When it comes to the 10-year-plan adopted in December, 2013 by a majority of the College Governing Board, “the Verde Valley was scheduled for about $3.5 million in capital improvements. Since its adoption, the Plan amount has risen to approximately $111 million with about $6 million coming to the Verde Valley and Sedona campuses. Using a conservative assumption at $5.5 million of excess revenues per year, the Verde Valley tax payers would be funding $55 million dollars over 10 years in order to receive about $6 million in return.”

They ask: “What we could do with somewhere between $5.5 million and $7.1 million every year of excess revenues (going to Prescott) to create and sustain programs and facilities for our local students of every age?” The answer, of course, is obvious.

The full editorial in the Verde Independent can be read by clicking here.

Categories : Advisory Committees, Underserving the Verde Valley

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

By R. Oliphant
Saturday, October 10th, 2015

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

 

 

Categories : Advisory Committees, Politics

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

By R. Oliphant
Friday, October 9th, 2015

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.

Categories : Politics

Cottonwood Journal Extra editorial suggests Wills’ should go

By R. Oliphant
Friday, October 9th, 2015

“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. 

 

Categories : Politics

Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee Meeting

By R. Oliphant
Tuesday, October 6th, 2015

Meeting scheduled for Wednesday, October 7, 2015 at 8:30 a. m. at the Sedona Center, rm 34

The Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee will meet Wednesday, October 7, 2015 at 8:30 a. m. at the Sedona Center, room 34.  The Center is located at 4215 Arts Village, Sedona, AZ.

MEETING NOTICE 1

Dr. Clint Ewell, Yavapai College CFO, will report on the budget of the Verde Valley.  The public is invited to attend.

 

 

Categories : Advisory Committees

District Governing Board Meeting Tuesday

By R. Oliphant
Saturday, October 3rd, 2015

Meeting scheduled for newly remodeled CTEC campus 

Yavapai College District Governing Board Meeting will be held Tuesday, October 6, 2015 at 1 p.m. at the
Career and Technical Education Center, 220 Ruger Road, Prescott, AZ.

MEETING NOTICE 1The full agenda for the meeting may be read before attending the meeting by clicking here.

Short tours might be available prior to meeting of the newly designed and refurbishing building.

 

Categories : CTEC, Meeting Notice
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