PCC Courier 04/07/2016

Page 1

CO U R I ER Pasadena City College

Serving PCC Since 1915

ONLINE EXCLUSIVES AT PCCCOURIER.COM

APRIL 7, 2016 VOLUME 113 ISSUE 06

Germania Club brings their history back to life Katja Liebing Staff Writer

Cartoon by Samantha Molina

Local businesses pay the price for gentrification pg. 3

School scraps VA clinic plans Kristen Luna Editor-in-Chief

At last night’s board meeting, numerous members of the Veterans Club confronted the board about the failure of the administration and board to foresee the cut of the proposed Veterans Affairs (VA) clinic on campus that they fought so hard for over the past two years. With over 10 public comments from the Veterans Club, the board chose not to respond and the veterans left the meeting in protest. “As veterans we know what leadership looks like and we know what the opposite of leadership looks like,” said Veterans Club Adviser Harold “Doc” Martin. Over the past two years, members of the Veterans Club have been working with Veterans of Foreign Wars, The American Legion, and Sons of The American Legion along with school officials and others in the community, relentlessly trying to build a VA clinic on campus only to find out recently that it was actually never going to be possible. “It’s still unclear to this day why it’s taken so long because I do know the reason why they’re not doing it anymore and it has to do with legal issues,” said Veterans Club President Edwin Lopez. “But if it were legal issues then either the VA or PCC’s lawyers, should have known at least somewhere in the beginning but we didn’t find out until two and a half years later.”

Many in the Veterans Club are upset with the administration and their lack of transparency during the whole process. “We didn’t receive any updates that whole time. They [would] just kind of say, ‘Well, we’re still working on it,’ and that doesn’t mean anything,” Lopez said. Two months ago the club was given permission by the board to fundraise, which resulted in them raising over $400,000 in donations from private donors, clubs and individuals in the community. With those donors invested in a clinic, Lopez is left having to give answers he doesn’t have. “Everyone was waiting for an answer and the pressure came onto us and we had to do something about it and that’s what we did so we asked the questions,” Lopez said. “These are all questions that are still being answered and basically our mission right now is to get some answers. For example, where does the money go? I’ve heard [from Superintendent-President Dr. Rajen Vurdien] we can just give that money back but it doesn’t work that way because these people who donated the money have lost time and interest and who’s responsible?” Lopez is referring to the last president’s forum when several members of the Veterans Club addressed their concerns about the clinic to Vurdien and were finally met with answers. “The college through its legal

Monique LeBleu/Courier Veterans Club member Mark Castanon and club adviser Harold ‘Doc’ Martin at the Board of Trustees meeting on Wednesday.

counsel was working with the VA’s legal counsel and the final report that came out indicated that the college can work with the VA if certain things are met,” Vurdien said. Vurdien described three reasons from the final report as to why PCC would not be able to work with the VA. The first reason he stated was in regards to a joint powers agreement, meaning that PCC and the VA would need to implement equally all powers that are common to each of them for the purpose of achieving specific goals, and according to Vurdien, “the VA’s legal counsel don’t do joint powers with colleges and universities.” The second reason he stated had to do with a joint use agreement, which is a formal agreement be-

tween PCC, a state agency, and the VA, a federal agency, establishing the terms and conditions for the shared use of the clinic. According to Vurdien, “the VA’s counsel said ‘no we don’t do joint use agreements because whatever we do we run by ourselves.’” The final cause he stated had to do with the VA wanting a revocable license agreement, and according to Vurdien, “the state of California and federal law do not allow for community colleges to enter in revocable licenses with any federal agency.” Not only was the community on and off campus in full support of the clinic, several congress members, including Congresswoman Judy Chu, were in favor of PCC

VACENTER PAGE 2

“Suddenly, I woke up in the middle of the night from a horrible commotion. I thought someone had fallen down the stairs. Gretel proved me wrong. It was actually an air raid and it was really close by in the forest. 9 bombs had fallen as we learned the following day. Well, that was a close call.” Last summer two women from the Germania club took up the colossal task of translating a diary kept by a 17-year-old German girl during World War II, along with poetry she had written during the 1940s. Suzy Moser, a San Marino resident and the daughter of the diary’s author, Marlis Haas, was never taught German by her mother. So when she discovered a handwritten diary and poetry after her mother’s death, she couldn’t read the thoughts and memories her mother once brought to paper during a time of war in Germany. Moser wondered who could help her with the task at hand and while browsing the PCC website she came across the Germania Club. When Olivia Bueno and Laura Benitez were first approached by Moser, they were initially apprehensive and thought the task was out of their league. Benitez and Bueno presented the project to other club members, who backed out when they heard all the material was in German cursive handwriting, which is notably difficult to decipher for the untrained eye. However, Benitez and Bueno could simply not let the opportunity pass by. “We met with Ms. Moser and we’re getting excited,” Bueno said of their initial meeting. “We are touching the material and we are seeing the quality of the paper and we are realizing ‘This is history!’ And while taking pictures, we are saying to ourselves, ‘Wait a minute, only scholars get an opportunity like this.’”

WW2LETTER PAGE 7

MASTERS OF TASTE

Homeless services to receive benefits of Taste PAGE 5


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
PCC Courier 04/07/2016 by PCC Courier - Issuu