The Telescope 72.03

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Vol. 72, No. 3 ANA ACOSTA STAFF WRITER

The Palomar Faculty Federation has endorsed two newcomers for the open Governing Board trustee positions and choosing not to endorse 16-year Board incumbent, Mark Evilsizer. Faculty Federation CoPresident, Teresa Laughlin explained the reasoning for the decision not to endorse Evilsizer, as relating to issues with “transparency, and also responsiveness.” “We try to reach out and we’re kind of ignored, to be honest, and that is frustrating,” Laughlin said. “So we need someone who will at least listen to our concerns, whether they disagree or not that’s fine - It’s a matter of respect to listen to the concerns.” The Faculty Federation has instead chosen to endorse candidates Norma Miyamoto and Lee Dulgeroff. Miyamoto has spent nearly 30 years of working in educational environments and 21 of them were spent at Palomar, partially as a dean. “I will personally, as a trustee, make sure that I’m talking, and listening to different stakeholders,” Miyamoto said. “As one member of five, I will urge

Monday, October 22, 2018

Faculty Federation opts not to endsorse Governing Board incumbent

Trustee Mark Evilsizer has been on the Governing Board since 2002. He is running for reelection without the support of the Faculty Union. Linus Smith / The Telescope

my fellow trustees to do the same.” Dulgeroff is currently the Chief Facilities Planning and Construction Officer at San Diego Unified School District. “I do appreciate the role that [the Faculty Federation] play and so I was re-

ally honored when I heard that they support me and endorse me in my candidacy,” Dulgeroff said. “I’m looking forward to working with them, with all the faculty and the students.” Laughlin remarked upon Miyamoto’s long history with Palomar, and fur-

ther explained “she really knows community colleges, she really knows Palomar College. So she knows the questions to ask the administration.” In regards to Dulgeroff, Laughlin acknowledged his experience with utilizing resources effectively and ef-

ficiently. “So having somebody who has that kind of knowledge about facilities and efficiency, and efficient use of facilities, would be really good on the Board.” Laughlin further expressed “We don’t expect any board member to agree with us all the time,

we wouldn’t want that. We want to have discussion, we want to have debate.” Evilsizer, who is hoping to retain his position on the Board, despite not having received an endorsement from the Faculty Federation, said “I’m sorry I didn’t get their endorsement.” However, he remains hopeful that the outcome of the election will have a favorable result. “I feel that I’m offering a vision of the future that their candidates haven’t touched on yet,” Evilsizer said. “I try to be more focused externally on my campaign to the people that are voting, the taxpayers.” To some members of faculty, the Governing Board election has a lot at stake, former Co-President of the Faculty Federation, Shannon Lienhart went so far as to predict in a previous interview with The Telescope, “if we can’t get good board members elected, many of our really great administrators will be looking for work elsewhere.” “Mark Evilsizer has worked very hard for this college, I admire Mark. I just feel like we might need a new voice and a new vision on the Board,” Laughlin said. AACOSTA@THE-TELESCOPE.COM

Faculty Federation Trustee Candidates Student Government files lawsuit against pursues yearly goals Governing Board BETHANY NASH BETHANY NASH STAFF EDITOR

The Palomar Faculty Federation is suing the Governing Board for claimed violations of the Brown Act. During the July 2018 Governing Board meeting, the Board discussed and approved an amendment for the contract of Superintendent/President, Joi Lin Blake. The amendment raised her base salary by $62,027 from her starting salary two years ago. The Faculty Federation felt it was improper to do

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this in closed session and violated the Brown Act. The Federation then sent a “cease and desist” letter on Aug. 9, which are typically issued as a preceding step to a potential lawsuit, which notifies the recipient of their purportedly illegal activities, expressing their concerns with the violation and asked for a solution for the improper actions. On Sept. 10 the District’s lawyer, Sharon J. Ormond, responded to the Federation’s cease and desist letter

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The Telescope staff invited all the candidates for the position of Palomar College Governing Board trustee to the newsroom for an interview. All candidates accepted the offer to attend, and were asked a series of questions by the editor and writer staff. Each candidates was asked the same series of questions to ensure fairness in coverage. No follow up questions were asked. Each candidate was given an opportunity to speak on a matter unrelated to our questions at the end, whether the candidates took the opportunity was up to them. We then filtered through their answers to try and capture the essence of what they said, while do our best to remove excess material. The transcripts of the interviews conducted can be found within the paper, as well as the staff ’s endorsements for trustee candidates.

See pages 7 - 11 for candidates transcripts All candidate photos taken by Linus Smith / The Telescope

The_Telescope

The Telescope

STAFF EDITOR

Palomar’s Associated Student Government (ASG) has adopted their yearly goals, and have begun to implement them into the campus community. The ASG went on their group retreat and worked together to create goals for each individual committee goals. Their goals are geared towards connecting with the college community, getting more students involved, and bettering the campus for the students. “I want to leave the ASG much better off than when

I joined,” ASG President Amber Bancroft said in an email. “The ASG has been going through a rebuilding and revamping stage; by the time I leave, I would like to see it standing tall and making influential changes on a campus and state level.” Some of the goals for the upcoming year include developing better communication methods in order to reach the college community more efficiently. As well as make Palomar a polling location for elections, better support clubs on campus, and amending the ASG constitution to in

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