ROUNDUP UP therounduponline.net
Woodland Hills, California
Volume 113 - Issue 4
A FIRST AMENDMENT PUBLICATION October 13, 2010
One copy free, each additional copy 50¢
Delayed budget reduces funding
̶INSIDE̶
A look at Proposition 19.
Sienna Jackson/ Roundup
College professor to run for liutenant governor.
KPCRadio.com, Pierceʼs on-campus radio station, hosts music show for students.
Pierce Collegeʼs Weather Station: Still unknown to many. Amber-Rose Kelly / Roundup
MOURNING: Ani Atajyan displays a photograph of her son, Gombert Yepremyan. Yepremyan was fatally shot last year in a Sears parking lot.
The Gay Straight Alliance hosts a memorial
Family still seeking justice Pierce College student’s death nearing one-year anniversary Sienna Jackson/ Roundup
Womenʼs soccer defeats Santa Monica 2-0. Double quarterbacks stir curiosity.
P
hotographs line the walls of the Granada Hills home, of a young man with deep brown eyes and dark hair. It’s a warm Saturday afternoon. Beams of sunlight catch on the glass
frames. His bedroom is on the first floor, off the living room. It’s open and airy, with hardwood floors and a window that looks over the backyard. The bed is freshly made, clothes and other belongings tucked neatly away in the wall length closet. The room is bright, warm and lived in. But its former occupant, Pierce College student Gombert Yepremyan, has been dead for almost a year. “He was a good man. [A] very calm, very nice boy, his first goal was to become an astro-
naut,” said Ani Atajyan, Yepremyan’s mother, seated on a sofa beside a photograph of her son. “He was very interested in the stars. He was always searching, searching, searching to know more, more, more, and he never gave me half his time,” she said, wringing her long, thin fingers. Yepremyan, known as Mike to friends and family, was killed Nov. 18, 2009 due to an argument over a text message he had sent to his girlfriend, Denielle Wegrzyn. He sent the text to Wegrzyn early in the evening to complain about her companion, now 21-year-old Kat Vardanian. According to the Los Angeles Times, Yepremyan’s message read: “every time u hang out with that bitch u guys get hookah. Is there something cool bout her n hookah that u enjoy so much? [sic]” That text set off a chain of phone calls and text messages between Vardanian, her brother and cousin, and an unknown man, all culminat-
ing in a late-night confrontation in a Sears parking lot in North Hollywood, where Yepremyan was fatally shot. The shooter, an unidentified man, and Vardanian’s cousin, 22-year old Vahagn Jurian, fled from the scene in a black BMW with no license plates, which was later found by police. So far, no one involved in the shooting has been convicted for Yepremyan’s death. Vardanian, who was arrested and charged for murder nearly five months after the shooting, was dropped of murder charges during a preliminary hearing in April. Anthony Brooklier, Vardanian’s attorney, would not return calls from a reporter. Her next hearing on a lesser charge of conspiracy will be in November, marking the one year anniversary of Mike’s death. SEE TEXT MESSAGE ON PAGE #3
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a roughly $126 billion budget into law Friday that will cut funding for community colleges by $129 million, according to a summary published by the Dept. of Finance published that night. The reduced funding is in addition to the $840 million owed to California community colleges since July. “It wasn’t that they deferred the payments, it’s that the money wasn’t there,” said Kathleen BurkeKelly, president of Pierce College. The roughly $126 billion budget was passed 100 days overdue, four months into the fiscal year. “It’s too late to undo the damage by this delayed budget,” said Scott Lay, president and CEO of the Community College League of California, a corporately backed non-profit that lobbies for the California Community College system in Sacramento. “We estimate that [California] community colleges have spent over $5 million in fees and interest to borrow money to compensate for the late budget and cash deferrals the state has imposed on community colleges,” added Lay. “This could have funded 1,200 community college classes, at a time where students are being turned away every day.” While Pierce College has not needed to borrow money to cover expenses—instead relying on a reserve fund of around $9 million— four other LACCD colleges have borrowed money through the Los Angeles County Office of Education this past year. Burke-Kelly said that with Pierce’s reserve fund, the college could last without intervention from the state through December. “It’s hard to know what they’ll cut back on. If you’re funded by the state, they can come back and take that funding from you,” she said. The budget’s late approval also froze Cal Grant payments for more than 60 percent of community college students for the fall semester. Even with the budget passed, it is uncertain of how soon money will reach colleges or their students. “Considering how bad the budget situation is in California, I think we’ve done as well as can be expected,” said Burke-Kelly.
For the full story go to therounduponline.net *Additional reporting by Rosalinda
sjackson.roundupnews@gmail.com
Burke-Kelly becomes collegeʼs 21st president Rosalinda Pena/ Roundup
Amber-Rose Kelly / Roundup
FRESH START: New president Kathleen Burke-Kelly took office Aug.1.
There are many changes going on at Pierce College, and one of the biggest has been the addition of the newest president, Dr. Kathleen Burke-Kelly, on Aug. 1. “I am deeply committed to the role community colleges play in providing access to quality higher education for diverse populations,” she said. Burke-Kelly has 29 years of experience as a community college educator. She has worked in the Los Angeles Community College District (LACCD) since 2001, where she was the dean of East Los Angeles College for five years, then served as vice president of academic affairs at
Los Angeles Mission College, Los Angeles City College and Los Angeles Trade Technical College. Before working for the LACCD, she started her community college career at Glendale Community College, first as a professor teaching art history, then went on to become the division chair for visual and performing arts for 10 years. She then left that position to work at East Los Angeles College in 2001. Dr. Burke-Kelly is a community college graduate herself, having completed her general education requirements at Glendale Community College. “She was exceptionally well qualified,” said Mona Field, a trustee with the Los Angeles
Community College Board of Trustees. “She has a really strong sense of all the details of running a college.” Dr. Joy McCaslin, who served as interim president of Pierce last year, also had tips to give Burke-Kelly. “My advice to her would be to get to know as many college employees and community members as possible. People genuinely want to see the college succeed, and they are ready to help,” McCaslin added.
For the full story go to therounduponline.net rpena.roundupnews@gmail.com









