College claims it intended to include Chevalier and other east side people in publication, but he rejected its efforts; Chevalier replied he “did not decline” to be in it; “that’s not the case,” he said
As the Yavapai District Governing Board was within a few seconds of adjourning its all-day meeting on February 22 in Prescott, Fourth District Board member Chris Kuknyo raised a question about the absence of any reference to Verde Valley Representative Paul Chevalier in the recent Community College publication, “Investing in The Verde.” Kuknyo asked, “Is there a reason he wasn’t asked to be in this magazine?” Dr Rhine quickly responded explaining: “Our original communication plan that we had with our marketing department in putting together this edition, particularly, we planned to include Mr. Chevalier and five other constituents from the east side and do a feature article. And we asked Mr. Chevalier to do that and he declined their request.”
Mr. Chevalier immediately responded that he did not “decline to be in it.” As Mr. Kuknyo began to further pursue the issue, Governing Board lawyer Lynn Adams stepped in saying “we, are way off topic now, we are supposed to be adjourning” and halted any further discussion. She said, “Paul, if you want to say that is not the case, that’s fine, but I do not want to get into a topic here that is not on the agenda”. Chevalier said, “that’s not the case.”
The Board adjourned and Ms. Adams avoided a potentially more lively kerfuffle from breaking out between the two representatives.
It is reported that Mr. Chevalier and a member of the staff who was in charge of the publication met shortly after the meeting adjourned. You may view the video of the brief back and forth on the video clip below.

The plans to shutter the Sedona Center completely were thwarted by local Sedona politicians and residents throughout the Verde Valley. However, the College refused to return the film school to Sedona.
For example, the Arizona Republic reported December 1, 2020 in an article by Rachel Leingang that “enrollment plumets at Maricopa Community Colleges for fall semester” and was down 14.5% in fall 2021 compared to fall 2020. In another article in the Arizona Republic on February 19, 2022, Ms. Leingang reported that “overall enrollment [at Maricopa Community Colleges] at the start of this spring [2022] semester was 23% below spring 2020 and 11% below spring 2021.” She also reported that Maricopa County Community Colleges District “is teetering on the edge of a fiscal cliff as enrollment continues to drop.”


Yavapai Community College held its second Master Plan public forum on the east side of the County November 14 on the Verde Campus in a one-hour afternoon session. The purpose was to share information about the progress of the Smithgroup’s efforts to generate an eight-year development plan for the entire District. And to gather additional public input about the plan.




Third District Community College Representative Paul Chevalier was chastised during the Board’s January Workshop by the Chair of the Yavapai Community College District Governing Board, Deb McCasland, for a remark he made during the first Community College public forum that focused on the College’s future development plan. That forum was held on the Clarkdale Campus in December. The new plan when finally announced will guide capital development in the District for the next eight to 10 years. In December Mr. Chevalier remarked during the public discussion portion of the Forum that the College was “not doing anything for Camp Verde” This upset Governing Board Chair Deb McCasland.
The Community College press release about this event follows below:
