I REPORT, YOU DECIDE. Barry Levinson
This Tuesday evening at 5:30 PM, the North Orange County Community College Board will meet to consider approving a $574 million dollar bond issue, which the proponents say will be primarily used to revamp two Veteran’s Buildings within its facilities.
First, over a half billion dollars for two buildings should in and of itself sound warning bells for all taxpayers throughout all of North Orange County.
Second, if the language of the bond is not specific, the Community College Board could spend the money on items not having anything to do with the Veterans.
Third, do you want to give some bureaucrats the power to have over a half billion additional dollars at their disposal to spend probably at their own discretion. I for one say absolutely not.
Fourth, we demand accountability, transparency and a concern for spending every dollar of our tax money wisely and carefully. Giving the Community College that much money would not be a smart move by the North Orange County taxpayers.
Welcome from the NOCCCD Board of Trustees. |
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One should look to past bond issues to determine if we can trust these bureaucrats to carry out their promises.
Well in March of 2002, by a slim margin, the voters approved a $239 million dollar bond issue for the North Orange County Community College District, which governs Cypress College and Fullerton College It was called Measure X. Among the projects that would benefit from this bond issues were multimillion-dollar improvements to child development centers on the campuses that served preschool children of Fullerton and Cypress students and the communities at large.
This is what actually happened according to a story written by Dana Parsons of the Los Angeles Times on June 8, 2005. The existing Child Development Center in Cypress center closed in 2003, the year following the passage of the bond measure. In 2005, two years after the bond approval, significant cutbacks were proposed for the existing Fullerton center. According to the news story, neither center got Measure X money.
Name | Job Title/Employer/Pension | Pension | Benefits | Disability | Years of Service |
Year of Retirement |
Total pension & benefits amount |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jerome Hunter | Employer: NORTH ORANGE COUNTY CCD Pension: CalSTRS, 2013 |
$198,600.00 | N/A | $0.00 | 33.36 | 2008 | $198,600.00 |
This above can be explained in only one of two ways. Either the bureaucrats misinformed the voters, or they were totally incompetent or some of both.
Show up at this Tuesday’s Board meeting to tell those bureaucrats that we reject their attempt to use our great Veterans as a ploy to get their hands on over a half billion of our tax dollars.
Meeting Location:
NORTH ORANGE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT
NEXT MEETING TUESDAY JULY 22, 2014
BOARD ROOM AT THE ANAHEIM CAMPUS
1830 W. ROMNEYA DRIVE, ANAHEIM AT 5:30 PM
AND THERE ARE 21 MORE PAGES http://transparentcalifornia.com/salaries/2013/north-orange-community-college-district/?page=12
#1 by Barry Levinson on July 24, 2014 - 11:46 am
On Tuesday, July 22, 2014 the NOCCCD voted unanimously to approve the placing of the $574 million dollar bond issue on the November, 2014 ballot.
The vote was 8 – 0. This represents 6 out of the seven board members and two non-binding votes from the 2 student representatives. One of the board members apparently did not think it important enough to vote on a proposal that if passed will cost the taxpayers over 1 billion dollars (this includes interest charges). I guess that board member knew that the vote to place the bond issue before the voters would easily pass without his/her vote.
Please review the salaries along with great benefits given to so many. Look at these numbers and you will realize that the problem is not a lack of money but a lack of spending it on the students, infrastructure and apparently the maintenance of the NOCCCD campuses. One facility that looks beautiful is the new Administrative offices at the Anaheim campus. Those administrators sure know how to take care of themselves first and foremost, while much needed repairs and maintenance are waiting to be done.
We must send a loud and clear message that the days of wasting our tax money gotten by bond issue misinformation campaigns probably financed again with our tax dollars are over.
All students including the veterans going to NOCCCD and the taxpayers, all deserve and now demand a lot better.