A N AT I O N A L PA C E M A K E R AWA R D N E W S PA P E R
Volume 57, Issue 6
theswcsun.com
February 22 - April 6, 2014
Ricasa sentenced, Sandoval pleads guilty EOPS director dodges prison term, gets fine and three years probation
Ex-president admits to one felony, faces possible prison time for corruption
Jaime Pronoble /Staff
Kristina Saunders /Staff
NO PRISON, NO DEMOTION — Arlie Ricasa and attorney Allen Bloom arrive for Ricasa's sentencing. He argued for leniency and said the college had "demoted" her. College officials deny Ricasa has been demoted.
STILL ON THE HOT SEAT — Greg Sandoval still faces sentencing. Though prison is a possibility, a district attorney said he doubted Sandoval would be incarcerated.
By Lina Chankar Senior Staff Writer
By Lina Chankar Senior Staff Writer
Southwestern College EOPS Director Arlie Ricasa officially avoided a prison term this week when Judge Ana España sentenced her to 33 months of probation, a $4,589 fine and 80 hours of community service. Ricasa originally faced 33 criminal charges, including 16 felonies in the South Bay Corruption Case. Ricasa’s attorney, Allen Bloom, told the judge in open court that SWC Interim Vice President of Human Resources Lynn Solomita wrote a letter addressing the impact the case has had on Ricasa. “This plea has put her position in jeopardy,” he said to the judge. “She has suffered the loss, a demotion from one position. She has not been fired, she has been demoted from an administrative spot to a staff position. That’s a loss of $16,000 a year.” After the hearing Bloom was asked by a reporter for a copy of the letter. He walked away while he recanted that Ricasa had been demoted as EOPS director. He then said Solomita wrote a letter confirming that Ricasa had been demoted from another position. Solomita denied writing any such letter. “I did not send Mr. Bloom or the court a letter stating Ms. Ricasa had been demoted,” Solomita wrote in an e-mail to The Sun. “There is no such letter. Ms. Ricasa is the director of EOPS and has not been demoted.” Ricasa’s San Diego County Superior Court file did not have a copy of a letter from Solomita. It had several letters from family members and supporters requesting leniency.
Greg Sandoval, former interim president of Southwestern College and a former Sweetwater Union High School District trustee, pleaded guilty to one felony count and one misdemeanor for his role in the South Bay Corruption Case. He was originally indicted on 34 counts, including perjury, filing false instrument, accepting bribes and wrongful influence by public official. Sandoval accepted gifts for dinners, sporting events tickets and hotel rooms, according to a thick San Diego County District Attorney affidavit. He appeared in court alongside Jesus Gandara, the former superintendent of the Sweetwater District. Gandara also pleaded guilty to one felony count. Sandoval was immediately placed on paid administrative leave from his position of vice president of student services at Moreno Valley College. His yearly salary is $151,811. Sentencing is set for April 28 in Superior Court in Chula Vista. Sandoval could face three years in prison, but a district attorney said that was unlikely. Sandoval worked at SWC for 32 years before resigning after he was charged with sexual harassment by a female subordinate. He was later cleared of the charges and asked to be reinstated, but the college, led at the time by Raj K. Chopra, refused. Chopra also pleaded guilty in the corruption case.
please see Ricasa pg. A3
Transfers to UCSD down sharply By Jason O’Neal Assistant News Editor
A vocal group of Southwestern College educators have said applications to UCSD should come with a disclaimer— local students need not apply. Fewer students from SWC and other community colleges in San Diego County were accepted by UCSD this year. SWC acceptances are down by nearly half. This marks another year of a decade-long trend of fewer transfers. UCSD Chancellor Dr. Pradeet Khosla attended a town hall meeting with SWC administrators and faculty recently and
offered no viable reason for the low numbers. When questioned about the declining number of students from SWC transferring to UCSD, Khosla accused dissenters of “throwing rocks in public.” SWC Counselor Norma Cazares said the topic is urgent and needs to be addressed. She said community colleges of San Diego and Imperial Counties suffered a 23 percent decrease in successful student transfers to UCSD last year. SWC had a one-year drop of 44 percent, the 10th straight year in decline. She said the effects of UCSD’s admissions policy are far-reaching and a threat to the livelihood of the South Bay,
INSIDE:
SWC Bachelor's under study
something she considers to be in conflict with the California Higher Education Master Plan established in 1960. S a n D i e g o C o u n t y ’s p u b l i c universities—UCSD and SDSU—have acknowledged accepting fewer students from the county and substituting them for foreign students, which pay much higher tuition and fees, and out-ofregion students that need student housing. Both universities have recently built expensive new dormitories and other forms of student housing. “We need to move away from viewing please see UCSD pg. A3
UCSD is freezing out its region's students Viewpoints, A5
By Fernanda Gutierrez Campus Editor
It will likely be years before a fouryear university comes to Chula Vista, but Bachelor’s degrees may be here by 2016. California Senator Marty Block, a former SDSU dean, authored Senate Bill 850 which enables about 50 state community college districts to create one Bachelor’s degree program apiece. SWC Trustees Tim Nader and Humberto Peraza both said the bill is a step in the right direction. “The absence of these degrees right
DREAM Act remains a dream for students Dreamers, A12
now is forcing many of our students into very high-cost for-profit private education institutions,” said Nader. “Those institutions are not in the best interest of our students. I think we should be offering a more affordable alternative for our community.” Academic Senate President Randy Beach said he has concerns about SB 850. He said he fears the college’s primary mission could be lost. “All opportunities to improve access to students should be considered very carefully,” he said. “We should be
Maria de Jesus Garcia is a soaring track talent Sports, B8
please see SB 850 pg. A4
Theatre students take a walk on the dark side Arts, A8