Draper throws county counsel under the bus to save her
own skin...and she does it under oath
Oct 18, 2007 |
Open
Meetings | Permalink
Past board president Marlene Draper contended in her grand-jury testimony that the closed meetings and the board’s non-disclosure were legal because all of the agendas for Saturday performance-evaluation meetings were pre-approved by counsel from the Orange County Department of Education. But Ron Wenkart, general counsel for the department and the attorney who would have approved such agendas at the time, says he has no records of him or anyone in his office ever having conversations with Fleming about the Brown Act or of approving CUSD closed meeting agendas.
|
Stiff drives effort to indemnify trustees; makes no
distinction based on scope of employment or alleged
criminal activity
Sep 11, 2007 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Thanks for clearing that up for us, Duane. A lot of people have been confused about that "serving the public part" of what Fleming was doing when he got caught. Maybe you could stop thinking about protecting your own hide long enough to explain how this is good for the district and the constituents you are supposed to be "serving." Stiff is a Fleming-era CUSD trustee.
Trustee Addonizio calls Fleming trustees' failure to
hold Fleming accountable, "reprehensible"
Sep 01, 2007 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Ellen Addonizio and Anna Bryson, two of the newly-elected members of the CUSD Board of Trustees agreed to be interviewed by the press. Addonizio and Bryson both called for the remaining Fleming-era trustees to be held accountable.
Trustee Bryson calls for Fleming trustees to be held
accountable
Sep 01, 2007 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Anna Bryson and Ellen Addonizio, two of the newly-elected members of the CUSD Board of Trustees agreed to be interviewed by the press. Addonizio and Bryson both called for the remaining Fleming-era trustees to be held accountable.
RSM Councilmenber says Fleming trustees are complict in
CUSD scandals and should resign
Sep 01, 2007 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
In response to the indictments and continuing problems in beleaguered CUSD, local officials from across South Orange County are now speaking out and demanding change. Blais is a Councilmember of the City of Rancho Santa Margarita.
RSM Mayor Pro Tem calls for Fleming trustees to step
aside for the good of the community
Sep 01, 2007 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
In response to the indictments and continuing problems in beleaguered CUSD, local officials from across South Orange County are now speaking out and demanding change. Thompson is Mayor Pro Tem of the City of Rancho Santa Margarita.
Trustee Bryson supports board decision to hire Carter
as CUSD's new interim superintendent
Sep 01, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Bryson is one of the ABC reform trustees.
More CUSD happy tak - but the truth is, SJHHS access is
so dangerous, pilot cars are needed to escort parents
and students
Aug 30, 2007 |
San Juan Hills
HS |
Permalink
Do you think, Joe? A pilot car will guide staggered groups of vehicles through construction on La Pata, BUT district officials said they may allow drivers to move freely through the area if traffic becomes backed up. So, CUSD admits this drastic safety measure is needed to mitigate obvious danger and comply with the terms of the district's EIR, but the district could suspend this badly needed and embarrassing safety measure if traffic backs up too badly. After all these years, and $140 million (and counting) spent, this is the best our CUSD facilities planning wizzards can do? Dixon is executive director of Capistrano Unified’s maintenance and operations.
More CUSD excuses - new SJHHS principal offers more pap
to gloss over planning failures and serious safety
issues
Aug 30, 2007 |
San Juan Hills
HS |
Permalink
Sure, Tony. Just keep up the excuses and happy talk to cover-up another long-term facilities planning disaster from the folks at CUSD. And keep pointing fingers at the roadway as the culprit behind the delays. Be sure to ignore the fact that even now much of the campus looks more like a construction zone that a school. And good luck getting CUSD to take responsibility for the delays for which they clearly were responsible. Ferruzzo is the principal (and spokeshole) of CUSD's newest high school, the controversial, $140 million (and counting) San Juan Hills High School, that has experienced numerous cost overruns, delays and continues to raise serious safety, financing, contracting, facilities equity, environmental and other important issues, yet to be explained by the CUSD trustees or administration.
Board vice president says Carter made necessary changes
at FSUSD, and is disappointed that he is leaving the
district
Aug 19, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Griffin explained that the FSUSD trustees voted in the spring to extend Carter's contract to 2010. Griffin is vice president of the Fairfield-Suisun Unified School District.
FSUSD board president describes Carter as a "change
agent" and laments loss of Carter to CUSD
Aug 19, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Carter started out as a superintendent for Bourbon County Schools and served as interim superintendent and state administrator for Floyd County Schools, both in Kentucky, before being hired as a deputy superintendent for the Oakland Unified School District in 2003, which at the time was facing a multi-million dollar deficit. The Fairfield-Suisun trustees voted to hire Carter in March of 2005. Falati said that the changes were necessitated by thousands of students that had fallen behind in math, English, or science. Falati is the Governing Board President of Fairfield-Suisun USD.
Benecke welcomes and praises new interim superintendent
Woodrow Carter
Aug 19, 2007 |
Permalink
CUSD Board President Sheila Benecke made these remarks in an official CUSD statement.
Christensen agrees with constituents - district should
not pay Fleming's criminal attorney fees
Aug 17, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
CUSD Trustee Christensen commented after 21 individuals spoke at the August 13, 2007 CUSD board meeting in opposition to Fleming's request for criminal attorney fees (which trustee Marlene Draper brought to motion).
Christensen explains board's decision not to pay
Fleming's defense costs
Aug 15, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
Christensen was elected to the CUSD Board of Trustees as one of the ABC Reform candidates in November of 2006.
President of classified employees union: payment of
Fleming's attorney's fees would be unfair
Aug 15, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
Ronda Walen, The Orange County
Register "You
would be allowing Dr. Fleming to maintain his
lifestyle … when the rest of us are feeling the
pain."
Walen is the president of CUSD's classified employees union, and made this remark while noting that CUSD recently laid off workers.
Walen is the president of CUSD's classified employees union, and made this remark while noting that CUSD recently laid off workers.
Mission Viejo resident: payment of Fleming's legal fees
would constitute misplaced priorities
Aug 15, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
Kelly Henry, The Orange County
Register "When
the kids start (school), the teachers ask, 'Can you
bring in Kleenex boxes, because we don't get money
for that. It'd be ridiculous if we're paying for his
legal fees when teachers … are asking for Kleenex
boxes."
Henry is a Mission Viejo resident.
Henry is a Mission Viejo resident.
Bryson says denial of Fleming's criminal attorney's
fees request is in district's best interest
Aug 14, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
Bryson was elected to the CUSD Board of Trustees as one of the ABC Reform candidates in November of 2006.
Smith does right by his old district, but ignored or
covered up bad priorities and waste at CUSD
Jul 19, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
So, after Smith prematurely announced his implausible plan to "grow into" the CUSD Taj Mahal last May, he now gets his priorities straight as he helps the Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School District spend virtually all of $195 million in bond funds on improvements for children. Too bad he couldn't have been correspondingly honest and candid about the unresponsive and out-of-touch Fleming trustees who wasted tens of millions of redevelopment funds and tax revenues on improvements that could have, but did not benefit the children. Smith is the former CUSD interim superintendent who resigned six days after the Orange County District Attorney announced indictments against former CUSD administrators James Fleming and Susan McGill. Smith quickly retreated to resume his duties as superintendent of the Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School District, a post he never technically quit while acting as interim superintendent at CUSD.
Draper spins herself sleezy, under oath, to justify
secret meetings
Jul 08, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
This is Draper's testimony before the grand jury as she tried to defend the board of trustees' illegal, secret behavior. Since "secret" and "confidential" are synonymous, she offers a difference without a distinction. Now that really smells.
Former Trustee John Casabianca changes his testimony
and joins Marlene Draper in dishing out district
doublespeak
Jul 08, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Seema Mehta, The Los Angeles
Times "Former
Trustee John Casabianca initially testified that the
timing of the settlement, which occurred as district
critics were gathering recall signatures, also
played a role. But after consulting his attorney,
Casabianca said the board kept the settlement
confidential on the advice of its lawyer, and not
because of the recall attempt."
So, first, Casabianca swears the timing of the settlement was about the recall and, then, he swears it wasn't. Plausible? Hardly. But OK under the advice of CUSD's attorneys! Guess that's why we taxpayers pay those legal beagles the big bucks.
So, first, Casabianca swears the timing of the settlement was about the recall and, then, he swears it wasn't. Plausible? Hardly. But OK under the advice of CUSD's attorneys! Guess that's why we taxpayers pay those legal beagles the big bucks.
Draper spins herself deeper and deeper to justify
secret meetings
Jul 08, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Deputy District Attorney Michael Lubinski repeatedly asked how issues such as the road-naming were relevant to Superintendent Fleming's performance evaluation (the justification used by Fleming and the Board for conducting closed-door meetings to discuss virtually every aspect of the district's business). Trustee Marlene Draper told prosecutors that the board needed to consider a broad swath of topics to evaluate Fleming.
Draper reveals yet another excuse for not discussing
the peoples' business in public
Jul 08, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Thanks for the explanation, Marlene. At least now we can all rest easy knowing that the purpose of your secret wasn't to conceal more of your financial mismanagement.
Fleming refuses to testify, takes the 5th; McGill
testifies, is charged with perjury
Jul 08, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Susan McGill denies creating enemies list, but her
secretary Bobbie Thacker reveals McGill's involvement
Jul 08, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Civil charges planned against Capistrano Unified
officials
Jul 08, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Sheila Benecke's arrogant, caustic tongue dishonors
CUSD again, demonstrating she is unworthy to serve
Jun 05, 2007 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Benecke made these caustic remarks at the June 4, 2007 Borad meeting. Such lack of decorum proved that Benecke, the Queen of Mean, was the real jackass, and after spewing such venom from the dais, Benecke left no doubt who the real snake was. Volzke is the publisher of The Capistrano Dispath.
Recall Committee calls for Fleming-era trustees to
resign or face recall
Jun 01, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Russell is a CUSD parent and spokesperson for the CUSD Recall Committee and the Committee to Reform CUSD.
Additional indictments against the CUSD leadership may
still be issued
Jun 01, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Rackauckus is the Orange County District Attorney.
Grand jury found no legitimate educational purpose for
enemies lists
Jun 01, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Rackauckus is the Orange County District Attorney.
Resources of cash-strapped district shifted from
students to unlawful purposes
Jun 01, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Rackauckus is the Orange County District Attorney.
Fleming trustees failed to exercise oversight of
Fleming, failed to protect CUSD families
Jun 01, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Beall is the mayor of the City of Rancho Santa Margarita and a member of the CUSD Recall Committee.
Recall Committee hoped to work with Smith and held
comments pending meeting that was cancelled when he
resigned
May 31, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
See Transcript of CUSD Recall Committee speech delivered to Dennis Smith and the Trustees at the May 7, 2007 board meeting. Russell is a CUSD parent and spokesperson for the CUSD Recall Committee and the Committee to Reform CUSD.
Smith says he listened to some district critics who
didn't listen in return
May 31, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Smith said in an interview in early May that he would solve problems by inviting everyone to the table and making sure people felt listened to. At the time, though, he noted some tensions. Smith is the former Superintendent of the Capistrano Unified School District and, currently, the Superintendent of the Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School District.
RSM mayor says Trustees were informed of serious
wrongdoing, but chose to ignore evidence and
participate in cover up
May 26, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Beall is the mayor of the City of Rancho Santa Margarita and a member of the CUSD Recall Committee.
Stiff rebuffs calls for his resignation, taunts
reformers and reveals his arrogant, Fleming-era roots
May 26, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
We have a better idea. Do the honorable thing - resign now and save everyone, including the children, the trouble. But given Stiff's out-of-touch track record, his repeated failure to act in the interests of constituents and his willingness to join Benecke, Draper and Darnold in cover ups, it's surprising he woke up long enough to suggest the next best thing. Stiff is one of the four Fleming-era holdover trustees.
Fleming speaks "from the heart" by "standing tall" for
"the children" and playing the denial game to the
bitter end
May 26, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Fleming is the former superintendent of the Capistrano Unified School District.
Criminal defense attorney helps Fleming play the blame
game
May 26, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Robert Brower, The Orange County
Register “In
my client’s mind, the D.A. is a political animal:
He’s hearing a lot of complaints down there … and
there is political capital to be
made.”
No Fleming defense would be complete without a healthy dose of the classic Fleming blame game. Brower is former superintendent James Fleming's criminal defense attorney. Last fall, the Fleming-era trustees approved the district's payment of Fleming's criminal attorney's fees at nearly $400 per hour. Last March, the ABC reform trustees successfully brought a motion to reverse that decision.
No Fleming defense would be complete without a healthy dose of the classic Fleming blame game. Brower is former superintendent James Fleming's criminal defense attorney. Last fall, the Fleming-era trustees approved the district's payment of Fleming's criminal attorney's fees at nearly $400 per hour. Last March, the ABC reform trustees successfully brought a motion to reverse that decision.
Fleming dodges real issues in pathetic attempt to take
the moral high ground
May 26, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Fleming lists achievements during his tenure, such as building campuses and winning National Blue Ribbons for high-achieving schools, and says a district-commissioned [Judge Waldrip] investigation found no laws had been broken. That report criticized Fleming for actions that were “ill-advised and imprudent.” Hey, earth to Jimbo! Those decisions may have ticked people off, but those aren't the decisions you're being prosecuted for. Just think for a minute. Could it be the years of lies, deceit, retaliation, defamation and other abuses that have finally caught up with you? It was not your "responsibility" to cross every ethical and legal line possible. And as for the district-commissioned Waldrip report, it was only a matter of time before this made-to-order whitewash would be raised as a defense. Fortunately, the District Attorney looked into the same matters, and guess what? He saw at things a little differently.
DA charges Fleming with three felonies that carry
penalties of up to four years in prison
May 26, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Miller is the South County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
DA charges McGill with two felonies that carry
penalties of neary five years in prison
May 26, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Miller is the South County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Fleming indictment is vindication for reformers, who
are committed to finishing the job
May 25, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Dana Parsons, The Los Angeles
Times "You
bet they feel vindicated. What they aren't feeling
is charitable. You could say, in fact, they're just
getting warmed up. The foes of former Capistrano
Unified School District Supt. James Fleming — yes,
the man had enemies — had reason to celebrate
Thursday, if that's the right word. They had been
loudly proclaiming in recent years that Fleming was
running a corrupt administration, and now they've
got county grand jury indictments against Fleming
and his assistant superintendent to back them
up."
Parsons is a columnist for The Los Angeles Times.
Parsons is a columnist for The Los Angeles Times.
Fleming wrongdoings happened under Fleming-era
trustees' watch
May 25, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Beall is the mayor of Rancho Santa Margarita and a recall leader.
RSM mayor recalls surreal experience as Fleming-era
trustees praised Fleming on the very day the DA raided
his offices
May 25, 2007 |
People vs
Fleming |
Permalink
Beall was the last public speaker to address the Board of Trustees and Fleming at Fleming's final board meeting last summer. Just hours before, district attorney's investigators raided Fleming's office and took computers and files. Beall urged the board not to let Fleming leave with a sweet retirement package. Beall asked the board to terminate Fleming and, in the short term, put him on administrative leave. Beall is the mayor of Rancho Santa Margarita and a recall leader.
McCully intentionally buried his head when it came to
the CUSD Enemies List
May 15, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
When former Interim Superintendent McCully came to CUSD, the existence of the CUSD enemies lists was well known. Accusations that elected officials and high ranking CUSD staff members created the illegal lists were everywhere. So what actions did the superintendent take to ensure that this type of abuse was no longer happening? What actions did the superintendent take to ensure that this type of abuse would never occur again in the future? Once again, McCully admitted under oath that he basically chose to put his head in the sand and completely ignore this obvious abuse by the CUSD leadership!
CUSD had no chance for accountability with McCully at
the helm
May 15, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Smith addresses overspending and dangerously low
reserves, confirming recall advocates claim that CUSD
is a district in crisis
Reform advocates have exposed CUSD's financial mismanagement and corruption for years, often referring to CUSD as "a school district in crisis." Smith is the interim Superintendent of the Capistrano Unified School District.
District confirms years of deficit spending, confirms
reform advocates claims of Fleming Trustees' fiscal
irresponsibility
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register "The
district has spent more than it has taken in for
five of the past six years, resulting in a $4.1
million deficit in this school year and a $6 million
shortfall in 2005-06. Its reserves are a little
higher than the legally mandated 2
percent."
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Smith presents plan to end years of irresponsible
spending habits of Fleming Trustees
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register "Superintendent
Dennis Smith on Monday presented a general plan of
cuts, transfers and new revenues that he said will
get the district out of the habit of spending down
reserves and failing to plan for teachers raises.
The adjustments, which were not voted on by trustees
Monday, will be in the budget the board considers in
June."
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
CUSD spokeswoman prepares district for staff cuts
Beverly De Nicola, The Orange County
Register "The
next step will be to fine-tune it and figure out how
much this will affect people. Because when you cut
$13 million, you cut people."
De Nicola is the spokeswoman for the Capistrano Unified School District.
De Nicola is the spokeswoman for the Capistrano Unified School District.
Smith's plans for cuts and increased revenues
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register "Eliminating some bus
routes with few riders and consolidating some bus
stops, for a savings of about $1 million; Raising
facilities use fees and selling obsolete school
buses, part of a plan to raise about $400,000;
Cutting staff positions to save about $4.2 million,
including $2.1 million in teacher salaries."
Officials don't know whether the cuts will come from laying off people or not filling positions of employees who leave. Teachers under contract can't be laid off, as pink slips would have had to have gone out before March 15. Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Officials don't know whether the cuts will come from laying off people or not filling positions of employees who leave. Teachers under contract can't be laid off, as pink slips would have had to have gone out before March 15. Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Smith's four guiding principles in budget planning
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register "Smith
last week said he had four guiding principles in
budget planning: ending deficit spending; carrying a
larger reserve; planning with multiyear projections;
and budgeting teacher raises in
advance."
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Smith's plans for the new administration building
May 09, 2007 |
Administration
Building | Permalink
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register "Trustees
Monday voted to lease out one of three wings in the
new administration building. The decision will raise
about $338,000 annually, which will go to older
schools for facilities improvements. The district
will consolidate its operations into the building's
center wing and northernmost section. About 15,000
square feet in the southern section will be rented
out. No tenant has been identified. Smith said the
district will grow into the building."
Some residents had criticized the 126,000-square-foot building as too large for the district, and it was at the heart of a failed recall effort in 2005. School district officials moved in a year ago. Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Some residents had criticized the 126,000-square-foot building as too large for the district, and it was at the heart of a failed recall effort in 2005. School district officials moved in a year ago. Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Smith touts admin building pros but ignores cons and
prudent alternatives
May 09, 2007 |
Administration
Building | Permalink
District officials continue to promote the Fleming rationale for the new building - consolidation of operations, expansion needs for the next ten years - and a new twist by Smith - lease revenue from the portion of the building to be given to schools in the district. There was no mention of a comprehensive feasibility study to consider more prudent alternatives or any discussion about district-wide priorities and proper allocation of limited capital resources -- just plans to stay in the overbuilt facility until the district grows into it over the next ten years. Smith is the Superintendent of the Capistrano Unified School District.
Recall advocates said decision to lease showed that
building the admin building was wrong, other options
should be considered
May 09, 2007 |
Administration
Building | Permalink
District critics called the construction of the three-building complex unnecessary and extravagant. Reform advocates pointed out the false dilemma presented by the district - the old administrative facilities vs. the extravagant new Taj Mahal, without any consideration of alternatives like those modeled by other, more prudent school districts. The excesses of the new administration building are now clear - it is both extravagant and physically excessive. The district should call for a thorough, independent feasibility study to consider alternatives that are more prudent and fair to everyone, such as a sale/leaseback arrangement or a sale and relocation of operations to unused or under-utilized facilities in the district (a sensible option chosen by other award-winning, but more prudent Orange County school districts). Russell is the spokesman for the CUSD Recall Committee.
Admin building was a catalyst for the recall campaign
May 09, 2007 |
Administration
Building | Permalink
Seema Mehta, The Los Angeles
Times "Construction
of the center was controversial in 2005, when
community members and parents grew increasingly
critical of the board's decision to build it while
hundreds of classes were being held in aging
trailers. The center was a catalyst for a recall
attempt against the district's seven trustees. The
recall failed to make the ballot, but three recall
advocates were elected in November."
Mehta is a reporter for The Los Angeles Times.
Mehta is a reporter for The Los Angeles Times.
Admin building controversy is just one of many to
plague CUSD in recent years
May 09, 2007 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Seema Mehta, The Los Angeles
Times
"The
administrative center is just one of the controversies
to dog the district in recent years. Although many of
the district's 56 schools are ranked among the state's
best, other brouhahas have included an Orange County
Grand Jury probe; a raid of district headquarters by
the district attorney; the resignation of its longtime
superintendent after accusations he kept an "enemies
list"; and disputes over attendance boundaries, a high
school's location and portable classrooms."
Mehta is a reporter for The Los Angeles Times.
Mehta is a reporter for The Los Angeles Times.
Trustees' attempt to sell surplus land to cover budget
deficits comes up short
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register "Trustees also agreed to
try again to sell land in Laguna Niguel, a month
after bids for the 2.4 acres on Paseo de Colinas
came in smaller than expected. The largest bid was
$4.8 million, below the $6 million minimum required.
The school district reappraised the land and has set
the minimum bid at $4.8 million."
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
CUSD will lease a third of its $52 million Taj Mahal
for $400,000 per year
May 08, 2007 |
Administration
Building | Permalink
Volzke is the publisher of the Capistrano Dispatch.
Smith plans to lease entire wing of Taj Mahal &
consolidate operations, calls $52 million admin
building a "good investment"
May 08, 2007 |
Administration
Building | Permalink
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register "New
Superintendent Dennis Smith said the move will earn
the district about $338,000 annually, which he will
then distribute to older schools to use as they
please for facilities upgrades. The district will
consolidate its operations into the building's
center wing and northernmost section. The
southernmost section will be rented out ... Smith,
though, said it was a good investment and its size
will be needed as the district grows in the coming
decade."
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Superintendent Smith says trustees' plans to open $140
million San Juan Hills High School don't make financial
sense
May 07, 2007 |
San Juan Hills
HS |
Permalink
Volzke is the publisher of the Capistrano Dispatch.
Draper says nepotism and cronyism is OK because it's
not "technically" illegal, "It just smells."
May 07, 2007 |
Conflicts,
Nepotism | Permalink
Draper made this statement in response to a resident who criticized her for historically engaging in nepotism and cronyism by discussing and voting on district contracts with Culbertson, Adams and Associates, an environmental firm where Draper's daughter, Shawna Schaffner, serves as CEO. The Waldrip report had admonished the trustees to avoid the appearance of such improprieties, and cited the Culbertson and Adams agreement as an example. Judge Waldrip advised any trustee with such family relationships to abstain from such discussions or votes in the future, and speculated that the public would see the end of such improprieties as more reasonable judgement prevailed at CUSD in the future. Draper and the other Fleming trustees never apologized or took personal responsibility for any of the numerous wrongdoings confirmed by Waldrip. Instead, Draper disregarded Waldrip's admonitions and advice, discussed and voted for her daughter's contract at the first opportunity, and twisted Waldrip's words to justify her continued unethical conduct. Rather than raise the ethical bar at CUSD, as Waldrip recommended, Draper disregarded ethics and defended the bare legal minimum as good enough for CUSD ... even if it "smells." The crowd and the press were shocked. The new superintendent, Dennis Smith, put his face into his hands and shook his head in disbelief. The only person in the room who didn't seem to get it, was Draper.
McCully confirmed not all district schools meet CUSD
standards, contrary to claims of Fleming and Trustees
during recall
May 06, 2007 |
Facilities
Planning | Permalink
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register "The
images that recall volunteers most depended on were
photos of old portables that they said showed
failures in facilities planning. City officials in
Mission Viejo and PTA parents at Newhart Middle have
continued to call for more facilities work, and
Charles McCully, who recently served as interim
superintendent, said not all schools meet CUSD
standards."
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Union president says new superintendent needs to work
to let teachers know they’re heard on key issues
May 06, 2007 |
Teacher
Salaries | Permalink
Vicki Soderberg, The Orange County
Register “He
needs to improve communications between teachers and
him, and not have the barriers. With (former
superintendent James) Fleming, it was always a
one-way communication."
Soderberg commented upon the two-year teachers contract tentatively agreed to Monday (May 2) that will cover the 2007-08 school year. Soderberg is the President of the Capistrano Unifed Education Association, a teachers union.
Soderberg commented upon the two-year teachers contract tentatively agreed to Monday (May 2) that will cover the 2007-08 school year. Soderberg is the President of the Capistrano Unifed Education Association, a teachers union.
Newcomer Smith characterizes some critics of district
facilities as people who "scream and yell and throw a
tantrum"
May 06, 2007 |
Facilities
Planning | Permalink
Smith is the Superintendent of the Capistrano Unified School District.
Smith has five-year plan for deteriorating schools
May 06, 2007 |
Facilities
Planning | Permalink
Smith is the Superintendent of the Capistrano Unified School District.
Smith's four guiding principles for the budget,
addresses automatic allocation for teachers' raises
Smith is the Superintendent of the Capistrano Unified School District.
Smith expresses hopes for his legacy with CUSD
May 06, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Smith is the Superintendent of the Capistrano Unified School District.
Trustees hired Smith for several reasons, but based on
OC Register report, reform mandate issues were ignored
May 06, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register “Smith,
who had been chief in Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified,
was hired in March to help the district put the
tumultuous summer in the past, to rehabilitate its
relationship with the community and to keep the
schools’ focus on learning.”
Miller is the south-county education reporter for the Orange County Register.
Miller is the south-county education reporter for the Orange County Register.
Smith draws surprising conclusions about reform issues
and advocates without even speaking to reform leaders
May 06, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Smith may have misstepped early in the game by implying moral equivalency between district and reform advocates. If this is so, despite the opinions of some that he is "scary brilliant," he obviously has much to learn if he really wants to make positive changes at CUSD. Smith is the Superintendent of the Capistrano Unified School District.
Smith seeks reason for constituents' angst, but will he
really listen?
May 06, 2007 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Smith asks the right question. Hopefully he won't ignore the real answer - the culture of corruption that must be changed before any of the serious issues facing CUSD can be permanently solved. Smith is the Superintendent of the Capistrano Unified School District.
Tired of Mission Viejo taxes paying for CUSD facilities
in other cities while the children in Mission Viejo
schools are denied
May 06, 2007 |
Equalization
| Permalink
Sharon O’Brien, The Orange County
Register “It
is inspiring to read about all the hard work and
fundraising parents at Capistrano Valley High School
are doing to provide a performing arts center for
that community, but it is also aggravating to know
that these facilities were provided to other high
schools in the Capistrano Unified School District
with Mission Viejo tax dollars.” O’Brien is a CUSD
parent and resident of Mission Viejo.”
O’Brien is a CUSD parent and resident of Mission Viejo.
O’Brien is a CUSD parent and resident of Mission Viejo.
CUSD has made Mission Viejo a donor city for school
projects elsewhere, unfair to the children and
taxpayers of Mission Viejo
May 06, 2007 |
Equalization
| Permalink
Sharon O’Brien, The Orange County
Register “Mission
Viejo has been a donor city to this school district
for years and the result has been new and improved
facilities elsewhere and a Taj Mahal of a district
office. Meanwhile, high school parents have to raise
funds to get the theatre that every other CUSD high
school already has, and elementary and middle school
families have to send their children to some of the
oldest and most neglected schools in the
district.”
O’Brien is a CUSD parent and resident of Mission Viejo.
O’Brien is a CUSD parent and resident of Mission Viejo.
CUSD neglect of Mission Viejo schools reflects badly on
city, CUSD should repay its “debt” to Mission Viejo
May 06, 2007 |
Equalization
| Permalink
Sharon O’Brien, The Orange County
Register “Sharon
O’Brien, The Orange County Register “Every citizen
of Mission Viejo is affected by the conditions of
our schools because it is a reflection of our city
and will have a long-term impact on the status of
this community. Every citizen should be asking when
Capistrano Unified will repay its debt to the city
of Mission Viejo.”
O’Brien is a CUSD parent and resident of Mission Viejo.
O’Brien is a CUSD parent and resident of Mission Viejo.
Trustees to consider millions in budget cuts, leasing
out district office space to raise $400,000 per year
Volzke is the publisher of the Capistrano Dispatch.
Danna Hills locked down for two hours due to explosions
May 04, 2007 |
Traffic and
Safety |
Permalink
Volzke is the publisher of the Capistrano Dispatch.
Union leader hopes CUSD's commitment will improve
teacher/ district relations
May 03, 2007 |
Teacher
Salaries | Permalink
Vicki Soderberg "The
district has made a commitment to the teachers to
prioritize them in the budget. Hopefully, we're
seeing a new day in Capistrano Unified. Hopefully
there won't be any more picketing or mass
demonstrations at the district office."
Soderberg is president of the Capistrano Unified Education Association, a teachers union.
Soderberg is president of the Capistrano Unified Education Association, a teachers union.
Teacher raises will strain district with $4 million
more in cuts beyond $9 million shortfall already
identified
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register “Union
officials figure the raises mean 8.19 percent more
total pay over two years. The raises could mean more
cuts for CUSD, which had already faced a $9 million
shortfall after years of deficit spending. A package
of proposed cuts will be announced next week by new
Superintendent Dennis Smith.”
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Teacher salaries dispute settlement terms disclosed
May 03, 2007 |
Teacher
Salaries | Permalink
Volzke is the publisher of The Capistrano Dispatch.
RSM city council made tax audit of CUSD top priority
after discovering proof CUSD misinformed the community
May 01, 2007 |
RSM Mello-Roos
Audit |
Permalink
Beall is the Mayor of the City of Rancho Santa Margarita.
RSM tax audit of CUSD delayed due to lack of
cooperation, responsiveness by district; Mission Viejo
has had similar delays
May 01, 2007 |
RSM Mello-Roos
Audit |
Permalink
Beall is the Mayor of the City of Rancho Santa Margarita.
RSM mayor hopes audit efforts will improve after
promise of cooperation from new superintendent
May 01, 2007 |
RSM Mello-Roos
Audit |
Permalink
Beall is the Mayor of the City of Rancho Santa Margarita.
McCully says he didn't accomplish everything he wanted
to do as interim superintendent
Apr 28, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
McCully is the former Interim Superintendent for the Capistrano Unified School District.
McCully admits CUSD still falls short on transparency
Apr 28, 2007 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
McCully is the former Interim Superintendent for the Capistrano Unified School District.
New British study points to power lines as cause of
leukemia in children, confirms California study done
several years ago
Apr 27, 2007 |
San Juan Hills
HS |
Permalink
Endsley is San Juan Capistrano resident and business owner and a columnist for The Capistrano Dispatch.
Dump site not lined in plastic on side nearest to San
Juan Hills High School
Apr 27, 2007 |
San Juan Hills
HS |
Permalink
Endsley is San Juan Capistrano resident and business owner and a columnist for The Capistrano Dispatch.
Columnist misinterprets reasons behind recent lull in
activity by district critics
Apr 27, 2007 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Stroud is a former high school principal and an author and a columnist for The Capistrano Dispatch.
Capo Valley only high school without a theater; it's
hard on students who want to know why they've been
neglected
Apr 24, 2007 |
Capistrano Valley
HS |
Permalink
Amanda Glowish, The Orange County
Register "Capistrano
Valley High School's drama students gather after
school on a small stage in a common area of the
school called The Mall. Rehearsing for an upcoming
production of "Bye Bye Birdie," they compete to be
heard over the bouncing of basketballs, slamming of
lockers and a zamboni-like machine that washes the
floors. The school doesn't have a theater, so drama
students face endless interruptions during
rehearsals. The Mall also serves as a cafeteria and
garbage is left on the stage daily. The school's
Drama Teacher, Emily Holke refers to the area as a
"cafetorium. "The students are always asking me why
we don't have a theater," said Holke. "We are the
only school in the Capistrano School district
without one."
Glowish is a reporter for The Orange County Register.
Glowish is a reporter for The Orange County Register.
Contrary to OC trend, CUSD enrollment is up due to new
housing developments
Apr 23, 2007 |
Enrollment
| Permalink
Fermin Leal, The Orange County
Register "...
the declining enrollment trend does not extend to
every district. Eight districts have seen an
increase of a total of 6,083 students in the same
time period as the 19 others decreased. Districts
including Tustin Unified, Capistrano Unified and
Irvine Unified recorded significant growth mostly
because of more new housing
developments."
In just three years, the enrollment in 19 Orange County school districts has dropped by a combined 17,725 students. That’s enough to fill about 10 high schools, or 30 elementary schools. Districts typically cringe at enrollment declines because it means less funding from the state. They forgo about $4,000 to $6,000 a year for every student, meaning districts have to slash budgets and cut jobs. Leal is a reporter for The Orange County Register.
In just three years, the enrollment in 19 Orange County school districts has dropped by a combined 17,725 students. That’s enough to fill about 10 high schools, or 30 elementary schools. Districts typically cringe at enrollment declines because it means less funding from the state. They forgo about $4,000 to $6,000 a year for every student, meaning districts have to slash budgets and cut jobs. Leal is a reporter for The Orange County Register.
Arroyo Vista PTA should tell CUSD to fix P.E.
facilities deficiencies on school site, leave community
park alone
Apr 20, 2007 |
Arroyo Vista Joint
Use |
Permalink
School use of Arroyo Vista Park became an issue in 2002, when CUSD announced that it intended to cram facilities for 1,500 students on the adjacent, 8-acre Arroyo Vista School site. Despite widespread community opposition and promises by CUSD to honor an agreement with the City of Rancho Santa Margarita to cap the student population at 1,050, CUSD stubbornly proceeded to build facilities for 1,500 students, anyway. This created an overbuilt, under-utilized facility that has covered most of the children's playgrounds and sports fields. See Going Going Gone Feature.
Citizens for a Safe Rancho Santa Margarita (CSRSM), a local citizen action group, warned the community and CUSD about this very problem, but CSRSM’s arguments were rejected by CUSD and the current leaders of the Arroyo Vista PTA. CUSD stated in its EIR that adequate P.E. programs would be provided at Arroyo Vista without any need for the park, and children of parents who weren’t satisfied with P.E. or other educational programs at Arroyo Vista were given dual enrollment with the option of transferring to Las Flores Middle School. But rather than taking advantage of the dual enrollment option provided by the district, or working with CUSD to remove under-utilized facilities to make room for the children, these same PTA leaders are trying to solve the problem they helped to create by dishonestly campaigning to grab the adjacent, privately-owned community park, which will adversely affect residents who use the park to walk, walk their dogs and exercise daily.
CUSD's misplaced priorities have created this facilities planning disaster, dividing the local community in bitter, protracted controversy, wasting millions in taxpayer funds on under-utilized facilities and creating serious inequities for neglected and overcrowded campuses like Newhart Middle School in Mission Viejo. This waste and inequity could be mitigated if CUSD would relocate the under-utilized facilities to Newhart, which desperately needs them. Ironically, Mission Viejo taxpayers bore the cost of the Measure A bond funds used to expand Arroyo Vista, but Arroyo Vista parents were not subject to Measure A taxes. They just received the benefit without the burden, effectively giving Arroyo Vista more than they needed while denying even the basics to substandard schools in Mission Viejo. Russell is a member of CSRSM and the spokesperson for the CUSD Recall Committee.
CUSD doesn't support Arroyo Vista PTA, will remain
neutral and honor agreement with master HOA
Apr 20, 2007 |
Arroyo Vista Joint
Use |
Permalink
Beverly De Nicola, Rancho Santa Margarita
News “The
school district has an agreement with SAMLARC that
middle school students won’t be using the park
during school hours. We’re a neutral party. We won’t
be taking a position one way or
another.”
De Nicola is chief communications officer for CUSD.
De Nicola is chief communications officer for CUSD.
Master HOA doesn't support Arroyo Vista PTA, won't
support an issue that would split community
Apr 20, 2007 |
Arroyo Vista Joint
Use |
Permalink
Derek McGregor, Rancho Santa Margarita
News “If
it’s an issue that splits the community…how can we
support that?”
McGregor also said that SAMLARC will continue to honor the general park use policy now in place. McGregor is president of SAMLARC, the community's master HOA.
McGregor also said that SAMLARC will continue to honor the general park use policy now in place. McGregor is president of SAMLARC, the community's master HOA.
Arroyo Vista PTA caught misrepresenting national, state
and district PTA support, now spinning to cover up lies
Apr 20, 2007 |
Arroyo Vista Joint
Use |
Permalink
Alejandra Molina, Rancho Santa Margarita
News "The
park use issue recently resurfaced after the Arroyo
Vista PTA sent letters in February to SAMLARC and
CUSD asking them both to reassess the park use
policy at the school. Language in the letters
suggested that the national, state and district PTAs
supported the group in its efforts. The move angered
some CSRSM members, who later verified that the
national, state and district PTAs are not taking
sides on the issue. The Arroyo Vista PTA has said it
did not intend to make it sound like the groups were
on its side, and acknowledged that language in the
letter should be reworded."
The PTA letter was assertive and unequivocal in its misrepresentation about national, state and district PTA support ... so much so, that all three oraganizations saw right through the ploy and the state PTA minced no words, ordering the Arroyo Vista PTA to "cease and desist." The simple fact is, the Arroyo Vista PTA got caught doing something dishonest (again) and, as usual, they are compounding the offense by spinning to cover it up. Molina is a reporter for The Orange County Register.
The PTA letter was assertive and unequivocal in its misrepresentation about national, state and district PTA support ... so much so, that all three oraganizations saw right through the ploy and the state PTA minced no words, ordering the Arroyo Vista PTA to "cease and desist." The simple fact is, the Arroyo Vista PTA got caught doing something dishonest (again) and, as usual, they are compounding the offense by spinning to cover it up. Molina is a reporter for The Orange County Register.
Surplus property sale delayed due to low bids, could
strain budget
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register
"The
real estate sale Capistrano Unified needs in order to
balance its 2007-08 budget will be delayed at least a
couple months, after bids for the district's surplus
property came in lower than expected. The district is
counting on the sale – which has been planned since
2004 – in both its budget planning and its teacher
negotiations."
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Land sale delay could affect teacher salaries and
retirement fund
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register
"Part
of the district's offer to teachers includes a 0.75
percent pay raise once the land sale goes through;
waiting on the sale would mean a delay for when
teachers would see that raise, if agreed to. And CUSD's
2007-08 budget projections, to which trustees are still
looking to make cuts, depends on the land sale to erase
a $2 million-per-year annual debt the district owes to
a public retirement fund."
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter for The Orange County Register.
No part of budget should be exempt from cuts
Bryson is one of the ABC Reform Trustees.
District says deficit spending and flattening
enrollment caused budget crisis
Eric Hall, Laguna Niguel News
“Capistrano is facing significant budget challenges
because of two converging forces: three of four years
of deficit spending, and flattening enrollment ... It
has caused us to pause and take a look at making budget
reductions.” Hall is
CUSD's interim deputy superintendent of business and
support services.
Trustees should have anticipated teacher salary
increases
Ronda Walen, Laguna Niguel
News
“You’d think they would anticipate a salary
increase and build it into their budget ... Stability
is everything.” Walen is
president of the 2,000-member union for classified
workers.
Even with cuts, not enough to pay teacher salary
increases
Sam Miller, Laguna Niguel News
“Even with the expected cuts, CUSD would have
little left over to pay salary increases – about $3.7
million, or about 1.5 percent more for all employees.
Raises typically are nearer to the state-allocated Cost
of Living Adjustment, which CUSD expects to be more
than 4 percent.” Miller is
the South Orange County education reporter for the
Orange County Register.
Wrong for teachers to take out money issues on students
Mar 29, 2007 |
Teacher
Salaries | Permalink
Auditor says CUSD's non-responsiveness worst ever seen
Mar 24, 2007 |
Public
Records |
Permalink
New superintendent experienced and looks forward to
challenges at CUSD
Mar 23, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
The Capistrano Dispatch
“As
Superintendent I have had the opportunity to face
challenges similar to those that are being addressed
by the Capistrano Unified School District. CUSD is
known for its excellent instructional programs,
great people, and active community participation.
I’m looking forward to getting out to the schools;
working with the dedicated teachers, principals, and
parents; and inviting all stakeholders to join us in
providing our children with a world-class
education.” Capistrano
Unified Trustees this month unanimously approved
Dennis Smith as the district's new superintendent.
Smith, who formally starts in July, will get
$255,000 a year in salary, $900 a month in
transportation allowance, his retirement
contributions paid, up to 24 vacation days year and,
if he stays at least five years, his health benefits
paid until he's 65. The district will also
contribute $33,000 a year to a tax-sheltered annuity
for Smith.
CUSD has hindered auditor's ability to follow paper
trail
Mar 19, 2007 |
Public
Records |
Permalink
Irwin Bornstein, Agenda Report re Status
Report on CUSD Audit
“A field inspection of records would have allowed
VTD to thoroughly inspect records, ask questions, and
dig deeper. Having to go through the Public Records Act
to request information has truly hindered VTD’s ability
to follow a paper trail.” Bornstein is
Assistant City Manager and Director of Administrative
Services for the City of Mission Viejo.
CUSD uses delays and Public Records Act to obstruct
audit
Mar 19, 2007 |
Public
Records |
Permalink
Irwin Bornstein, Agenda Report re Status
Report on CUSD Audit
“On June 26th, we were advised by VTD that CUSD had
delayed field work until August. In August, the school
district advised VTD that they must use the Public
Records Act process to request information and they
would not be allowed to conduct a standard audit of
records on site.” Bornstein is
Assistant City Manager and Director of Administrative
Services for the City of Mission Viejo.
CUSD student speaks out about traffic safety issue at
Tesoro High School
Mar 16, 2007 |
Traffic and
Safety |
Permalink
Drew Goldenberg, The Ladera
Post "There
is a big issue that needs to be dealt with at
[Tesoro High School] and that is the tiny single
entrance to the school. I am not the only person at
the school that feels this way – there are many.
Every morning is a stress and struggle for me, my
mom, and many others that attend Tesoro. I live in
Las Flores, which is within a minute from the
school, and on a school day if I leave my house any
later than 25 minutes before school starts, I am
normally late. This is caused by the absurd, small,
single entrance that has to allow almost 4,000 kinds
through it everyday. Not to mention that this little
entrance is a building car accident maker as there
have been many car accidents on it since the opening
of the school in 2001." Goldenberg
is a freshman student at Tesoro High School.
New superintendent gets lucrative compensation package
Mar 13, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register
“Smith, superintendent since 2000 of the
27,000-student Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified, will be
paid $255,000 annually plus benefits – including $900 a
month for a car and a $33,000 tax-sheltered annuity
each year – to lead the 50,000-student
CUSD.” Miller is
the education reporter for the Orange County
Register.
Waldrip finds lists and employment arrangements
inappropriate
Mar 07, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register
“A January report by retired judge Stuart Waldrip
... said a variety of actions by staff members were
inappropriate or gave the appearance of impropriety.
Those included two lists of recall leaders Fleming kept
and district staff members' relatives' employment for a
contractor doing business with Capistrano
Unified.” Miller is
the South Orange County education reporter for the
Orange County Register.
Enemies list victim says Fleming's actions not in good
faith
Mar 07, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Kim Kefner, The Orange County
Register
"I don't think anyone here can seriously argue that
Fleming's actions were in good faith."
Lefner
learned from the Waldrip report that Superintendent
James Fleming kept her name and her children's names
after her involment in the CUSD Recall campaign.
"It is a misuse of taxpayers' money to defend the
indefensible."
Mar 07, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
Even after alarming evidence of Fleming's wrongdoings,
Benecke would use tax dollars to pay his criminal
attorney's fees
Mar 07, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
District has spent $5,000 on Fleming's defense, but now
there's evidence of Fleming's wrondoings
Mar 05, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register
“The district has spent about $5,000 on Fleming's
defense. Since the initial decision, three new trustees
– who ran on a reform platform – were elected, and a
district-commissioned investigation found evidence of
"imprudent" actions taken by Fleming.”
Miller is
the South Orange County education reporter for the
Orange County Register.
Waldrip report sustained recall allegations
Mar 05, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Jonathan Volzke, The Capistrano
Dispatch
“... none of the trustees have commented on the
report, which essentially sustained allegations made
during a failed recall attempt, but said nothing
violated the law.” Volzke is
the publisher of The Capistrano Dispatch.
Auditor advises city to demand that CUSD cooperate or
be reported to authorities
Mar 05, 2007 |
Public
Records |
Permalink
Joe Aguilar, Letter to City of Mission
Viejo re Status Report on CUSD Engagement
“The City should formally request that the District
provide annual reports of CFD monies for the past four
years, as required by State law, within the next 30
days. If the District is unresponsive, the City should
inform the State Controller and State Attorney General
of the District’s failure to make such reports
available to the public.” Aguilar is
with the firm of Vavrinek Trine Day & Co., LLP, the
CPAs retained by the City of Mission Viejo to audit
CUSD’s use of Measure, Mello-Roos and Tax Sharing
Agreement funds from the City of Mission Viejo.
Union leader says CUSD inflexible, teachers will be
angry
Mar 01, 2007 |
Teacher
Salaries | Permalink
Vicki Soderberg, The Orange County
Register
“This district is not willing to make any kind of
movement ... Let me tell you, my people are going to be
angry.” Soderberg is
president of the Capistrano Unified Education
Association.
Teacher frustrated with CUSD, wants to get back to
teaching
Feb 26, 2007 |
Teacher
Salaries | Permalink
Sue Willett, The Orange County
Register
"We asked the district to budget the increase last
year, but we haven't seen any progress ... We started
talks months ago. I just want to get back to doing what
I love: teaching." Willett is a
teacher at Tesoro high School.
Lackey filed lawsuit after obtaining evidence of
improper closed session
Feb 23, 2007 |
Open
Meetings | Permalink
Trustees stretch to make excuses for Brown Act
violations
Feb 23, 2007 |
Open
Meetings | Permalink
Trustees admit no wrongdoing, but settle and pay
Lackey's attorney fees
Feb 23, 2007 |
Open
Meetings | Permalink
Recall was unsuccessfull but touched off series of
events
Feb 23, 2007 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Waldrip report cost $30,000, finds trustee and Fleming
actions "imprudent" and "ill-advised"
Feb 23, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
McCully blames $9 million shortfall on bad decisions
McCully says district could save with in-house lawyer
Trustees cut 22 positions, but more cuts needed
Trustees hire criminal defense lawyers for Fleming and
themselves
Feb 23, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
Trustees agreed to pay Fleming's attorney if no
evidence of wrongdoing
Feb 23, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
Parents tell Trustees about Fleming misconduct
identified by Waldrip
Feb 23, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
CUSD eliminates top guidance counselor as
budget-cutting measure
PTA leader presumes to know what's best for Morgan and
ignores impact on children
Parent expresses concern about impact elimination of
guidance counselor will have on children
Donna Furniss, The Orange County
Register "We're
forgetting about the middle-of-the-road child. My
child is one of them. The only place I got help was
Debbie [Morgan]. He has a 2.7 GPA, but he's bringing
it up. Why is he bringing it up? He had someone who
cared." Furniss
is a CUSD parent.
Parent calls traffic conditions at Tesoro High School
dangerous, nightmare
Feb 16, 2007 |
Traffic and
Safety |
Permalink
Jeanne Johnson, The Ladera
Post "For two miserable years
I have driven my granddaughter to Tesoro High in the
morning before I go to work in San Clemente. What a
nightmare it has been. I have raised my
granddaughter for 12 years on my own and this has
been one of the most trying things I’ve had to
contend with, along with raising a teenager. It
usually takes 35 minutes out of my morning to get
her to school. I also think it is very dangerous for
new teenagers driving to school, as cars are quickly
cutting in front of other cars with very short or no
notice, or turning from a lane they shouldn’t turn
from. I pray this construction schedule will happen
soon ... We built a high school with only one
entrance to the school and now over 3,000 kids
attend it. And of course the traffic planning was
overlooked. What happened? Johnson
is a resident of Rancho Santa Margarita.
Newhart is example why city has concern over proposed
district-wide EIR
Poor conditions at Newhart and related impacts in city
agenda report
Amanda Glowish, Saddleback Valley
News “The
majority of classrooms on the Newhart campus are
portables and the increase in student population has
had a detrimental impact on the surrounding
neighborhoods where many students are dropped off
and picked up, according to [Trish] Kelley’s agenda
report.” Glowish
is a reporter for The Orange County Register.
Trustee Bryson affirms CUSD's obligation to comply with
state's open meeting law
Feb 16, 2007 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Reader critical of traffic planning at Tesoro High
School
Feb 16, 2007 |
Traffic and
Safety |
Permalink
Jeanne Johnson, Letter to the Editor, The
Ladera Post "We
built a high school with only one entrance to the
school and now over 3,000 kids attend it. And of
course the traffic planning was overlooked. What
happened?"
Trustees agreed to pay Fleming's attorney fees as long
as no evidence of wrongdoing
Feb 13, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
Independent investigator found evidence of Fleming's
wrongdoing
Feb 13, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
Waldrip confirms two lists linking childrens names to
activists
Feb 10, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Subcontractor says CUSD payment delays among worst in
30 years
Feb 08, 2007 |
Administration
Building | Permalink
Russ Patterson, Laguna Niguel
News
"...the district’s delays ‘are among the worst’ in
his 30 years of working with public
agencies.” Patterson
comments on the district's refusal to pay $1.6 million
to various contractors in connection with the
construction of the new administration building.
Patterson is president of The Patterson Company, a
subcontractor that did $310,000 in masonry work on the
project, which has been completed and occupied by the
district for several months.
Reader has no sympathy for CUSD parents who chose nice
homes instead of good school district
Feb 06, 2007 |
Inter-District
Transfers | Permalink
Reader says CUSD parents should improve CUSD instead of
transferring to Saddleback Unified
Feb 06, 2007 |
Inter-District
Transfers | Permalink
CUSD is investigating transfers and rounding up
violators
Jan 31, 2007 |
Inter-District
Transfers | Permalink
RSM city council letter urging CUSD to abandon blanket
EIR
Jan 26, 2007 |
CEQA Blanket
EIR |
Permalink
Alejandra Molina, Rancho Santa Margarita
News "The
city will send a letter to Capistrano Unified School
District, urging it to abandon the preparation of an
environmental report studying the effect of
maximizing the number of portable classrooms at
schools. The City Council on Wednesday voted 5-0 to
authorize Mayor Tony Beall, who made the
recommendation, to send the letter."
A report
to the City Council, written by Beall, says the
environmental report would threaten the
1,050-student cap at Arroyo Vista, a kindergarten
through eighth-grade campus, and possibly lead to
higher enrollment at crowded Tijeras Creek
Elementary.
RSM mayor pro tem dissappointed with interim
superintendent over blanket EIR
Jan 26, 2007 |
CEQA Blanket
EIR |
Permalink
CUSD proposes blanket EIR to maximize portables
throughout the district, City of RSM opposes EIR
Jan 26, 2007 |
CEQA Blanket
EIR |
Permalink
Alejandra Molina, The Ladera
Post "The
Rancho Santa Margarita City Council backed Mayor
Tony Beall in sending a letter to Capistrano Unified
School District, urging it to abandon the
preparation of an environmental impact report. The
EIR would study maximizing the number of portable
classrooms on each of the district’s school sites.
The discussion recalled hard feelings left from last
year’s conflicts with then-Superintendent James
Fleming and the CUSD board." The
proposed blanket EIR is particularly offensive,
since Marlene Draper and other CUSD leaders assured
voters during the recall and ABC reform slate
campaigns that CUSD had a "strategic plan" to remove
portables. Now, just weeks after the November
election, CUSD is scheming to circumvent the
environmental process with a district-wide EIR for
the purpose of "maximizing" the number of portables
at every CUSD campus. Molina is a reporter for the
Orange County Register.
RSM mayor makes audit of Mello-Roos spent by CUSD a top
priority
Jan 26, 2007 |
RSM Mello-Roos
Audit |
Permalink
RSM mayor pro tem requested audit of Mello-Roos taxes
spent by CUSD
Jan 26, 2007 |
RSM Mello-Roos
Audit |
Permalink
Columnist questions why SJC city council unanimously
endorsed the CUSD board during recall
Jan 25, 2007 |
Express
Advocacy | Permalink
RSM Mayor Tony Beall expresses hopes for CUSD in 2007
Jan 12, 2007 |
ABC Reform
Campaign | Permalink
Waldrip report revealed two enemies lists
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Waldrip report revealed nepotism and conflicts of
interest
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Waldrip leaves the biggest question unanswered: Were
the wrongful actions abrrations or business as usual?
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Waldrip conspicuously overlooks evidence of Fleming
trustees' knowledge of, or involvement in wrongdoings
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Fleming trustees have remained tight-lipped, in denial
and pointing fingers at others - it's time to take
responsibility
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Fleming trustees owe the public more than to sit back
and let time heal wounds
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
PTA leader calls Waldrip investigation a "taxpayer
funded cover-up"
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Barbara Casserly, The Capistrano
Dispatch "This
“independent” investigation was conducted by the law
firm that defends the district. The firm retained
retired Judge Waldrip who spent five months on a
report that contains important documents and but
draws weak conclusions. This was not an impartial
investigation because Judge Waldrip once worked for
that firm. CUSD must stop hiding behind lawyers and
using scarce funds for outrageous legal fees and
taxpayer funded cover-up
investigations." Casserly
is a Mission Viejo resident and PTA leader.
Trustees Draper, Benecke, Darnold and Stiff knew about
enemies list and "mole"
Jan 11, 2007 |
Enemies
Lists |
Permalink
Barbara Casserly, The Capistrano
Dispatch "CUSD
Trustees knew that Jim Fleming was actively involved
in fighting the recall and voted to fund an
investigation into matters which they knew to have
occurred that cost taxpayers over $35,000! ...
included in the [Waldrip] report is an April 21,
2005 memo written by James Fleming addressed to
Marlene Draper and the entire CUSD Board entitled
the “Report on presumed recall effort” that referred
to the parent list, and included a report from a
“mole” that infiltrated the recall group. The
Trustees continued to support Jim Fleming until he
retired in disgrace in August 2006, and subsequently
voted to pay Fleming’s criminal legal defense fees.
Trustees Draper, Benecke, Darnold and Stiff refuse
to acknowledge that they knew Jim Fleming was
illegally fighting the recall. The self-serving
“independent” investigation concluded that the only
crime that might have occurred was the leaking of
documents by Smollar!" Casserly
is a Mission Viejo resident and PTA leader.
Waldrip confirms students names were used even after
recall campaign over
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Waldrip finds second enemies list more troubling than
first
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Enemies list victim offended by evidence that Fleming
involved children
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Kim Lefner, The Capistrano
Dispatch “In
my opinion, the existence of the second “enemies”
list outlined in Judge Waldrip’s report proves what
district officials have denied for so long; that
Fleming did indeed involve our
children.” Capistrano
resident Kim Lefner’s name was on the second
"enemies" list. So was her husband’s, their child’s,
the school he attends, the grade he was in, their
home address and their phone number.
Enemies list victim angered that Fleming targeted
children and used district resources to do so
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Kim Lefner, The Capistrano
Dispatch “The
idea that a Superintendent, whose responsibility it
is to protect children, would instead target them,
is completely unacceptable. For him to have used
district time and resources to do so makes it even
worse.” Capistrano
resident Kim Lefner’s name was on the second list.
So was her husband’s, their child’s, the school he
attends, the grade he was in, their home address and
their phone number.
First hit list was generated from information in email
by recall leader
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Fleming's explanation for first list implausible;
Waldrip finds information too extensive
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Former recall leader offended Fleming's enemies lists
targeted kids
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Fleming used a "mole" to spy on recall leaders in
private home
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Waldrip report confirms nearly all recall allegations
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Waldrip interviewed 32 people including Fleming, but
only one trustee - Marlene Draper
Jan 11, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Recall leader reacts to Waldrip report
Jan 09, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Trustee Stiff wants to move on without demanding
accountability
Jan 09, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Trustee Benecke spins Waldrip report as a "tool to
refocus," avoids any discussion of responsibility or
accountability
Jan 09, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Waldrip not impartial, but facts have vindicated
Smollar and proven Fleming a liar
Jan 09, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
David Smollar, The Orange County
Register "I
don't believe Waldrip has proven himself to be an
impartial judge. Everything I've said in any context
has been proven factual. Most, if not all the
things, Fleming said in denial have been proven
false." Whistleblower
and former CUSD Communications Director Smollar's
initial reaction to the Waldrip investigation
report.
Recall leader doubts Waldrip's impartiality due to
association with CUSD counsel
Jan 09, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Scope of Waldrip investigation limited, many other
issues remain
Jan 09, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Seema Mehta, The Los Angeles
Times “Waldrip's
investigation was limited in scope and largely
centered on the "enemies list," the employment of
district leaders' relatives by district contractors
and whether employees destroyed or removed
documents.” Mehta is
a reporter for The Los Angeles Times.
Fleming ordered creation of both lists, both included
children
Jan 09, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Seema Mehta, The Los Angeles
Times “According
to the [Waldrip] report, Fleming actually ordered
the creation of two lists: one with the names of
people who received e-mails from recall supporters
and a second with the names of those who gathered
signatures supporting the recall. Both included
personal information such as the schools attended by
the children of recall supporters.”
Mehta is
a reporter for The Los Angeles Times.
Former district spokesperson questions Waldrip's
impartiality
Jan 05, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
David Smollar, The Orange County
Register "Smollar
said a representative for Waldrip tried to set up an
interview, but he declined, saying he questioned the
impartiality of a district-hired
investigator." Based on
years of first-hand experience spinning messages on
behalf of CUSD at the direction of former
Superintendent Fleming and the Trustees, Smollar had
good cause to question Waldrip's
impartiality.
Draper supiciously confident about outcome of Waldrip
investigation
Jan 05, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Mission Viejo firm hired by CUSD to find new
superintendent
Jan 05, 2007 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Amanda Glowish, Saddleback Valley
News "Mission
Viejo-based Leadership Associates was hired by the
Capistrano Unified School District trustees to find
a superintendent for the 50,000-student school
district. The new superintendent will replace
Charles McCully before the end of the school year.
McCully has led the district since August, when
James Fleming retired as
superintendent." Glowish
is a reporter for The Orange County Register.
Waldrip hired at $400 per hour to investigate specific
issues
Jan 05, 2007 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register "Former
Orange County Judge Stuart Waldrip was hired last
summer at $400 per hour to look into claims that the
district had kept a list of political opponents,
violated the Brown Act with closed-session meetings,
and sent district staff to the Registrar of Voters
to examine confidential recall
petitions." Miller is
the South Orange County education reporter for The
Orange County Register.
Trustee Bryson cautions district's reserves dangerously
low
Trustee Bryson considers FCMAT to help with CUSD's
fiscal crisis
Sam Miller, The Orange County
Register “Anna
Bryson said she asked district staff to put together
a report on what role the Fiscal Crisis and
Management Assistance Team could play in CUSD, and
how much it would cost to hire FCMAT.”
FCMAT
conducts management reviews for California school
districts, charter schools and community colleges.
Its experts can review and recommend policies in
various areas of education administration, ranging
from student transportation to special education.
Miller is the South Orange County education reporter
for The Orange County Register.
Smollar believes he did right thing as whistleblower
Jan 03, 2007 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
David Smollar, The Orange County
Register “I
have no second thoughts about what I did ... The
stress, the disgust (of working for Fleming) have
disappeared.” Smollar
speaks bluntly about his former role as CUSD
spokesperson under former Superintendent James
Fleming.
Taxpayers should not pay Draper's criminal defense
lawyer fees
Jan 02, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
Reform trustee promises to put kids first,
accountability and transparency
Jan 02, 2007 |
ABC Reform
Campaign | Permalink
Reform trustee acknowledges November 2006 reform
mandate
Jan 02, 2007 |
ABC Reform
Campaign | Permalink
Fleming trustees remain only because they weren't on
the ballot
Jan 02, 2007 |
ABC Reform
Campaign | Permalink
Voters understood need for reform; Fleming trustees in
denial
Jan 02, 2007 |
ABC Reform
Campaign | Permalink
ABC slate ran on platform to reform CUSD corruption
Jan 02, 2007 |
ABC Reform
Campaign | Permalink
Mike Winsten, Trabuco Canyon
News
“The ABC Reform Slate candidates ran on a reform
platform, vowing to restore honesty, integrity and
accountability to CUSD – a school district whose
leaders are involved in a number of high-profile
scandals and who are currently the subject of a
criminal investigation being conducted by the Orange
County District Attorney and Grand Jury.”
Voters give ABC slate reform mandate in 3-way landslide
victory
Jan 02, 2007 |
ABC Reform
Campaign | Permalink
Mike Winsten, Trabuco Canyon
News
“The three "ABC Reform Slate" candidates -- Ellen
Addonizio, Anna Bryson and Larry Christensen -- won
easy election victories over two incumbents and five
other challengers to become the newest trustees of the
Capistrano Unified School District ... All three reform
candidates won by impressive 17% to 18% margins,
clearly demonstrating the voters' dissatisfaction with
the current leadership.”
Criminal defense lawyers for Fleming and trustees will
be paid from general fund
Jan 02, 2007 |
Criminal Attorney
Fees |
Permalink
Mike Winsten, Trabuco Canyon
News “The
Trustees unanimously approved the engagement of a
$400/hour criminal defense attorney to represent
former Superintendent James Fleming and a $395/hour
criminal defense attorney to represent themselves in
connection with the on-going criminal investigation.
These costs will come directly out of the district’s
General Fund.”
Draper voted to approve environmental reports prepared
by daughter
Jan 02, 2007 |
Conflicts,
Nepotism | Permalink
Mike Winsten, Trabuco Canyon
News “Draper’s
daughter, Shawna Schaffner, works for CUSD’s primary
environmental consulting firm, Culbertson, Adams
& Associates. Schaffner was personally
responsible for producing numerous environmental
reports and documents that were submitted and
approved by Draper and the rest of the Board of
Trustees.”
Enormous salary increases paid to two of CUSD's worst
offenders
Mike Winsten, Trabuco Canyon
News “CUSD
provided three enormous salary increases to two of
CUSD’s most controversial deputy Superintendents --
Dan Crawford and David Doomey. ... Doomey (who many
believe is the person most responsible for creating
the CUSD portable classroom crisis) admitted CUSD
had provided “misinformation” to the public as to
how CUSD would fund the new $52,000,000
administration office ... During the recall,
Crawford was roundly criticized for publishing a
letter in the O.C. Register that grossly understated
the total number of portable classrooms actually
utilized by CUSD.”
Trustees tried to conceal settlement involving millions
in illegal, closed session
Jan 02, 2007 |
Open
Meetings | Permalink
Mike Winsten, Trabuco Canyon
News “The
minutes from the illegal July 30, 2005 CUSD closed
session meeting which were published in the O.C.
Register reveal that Draper attempted to conceal the
terms of a multi-million dollar settlement with the
construction contractor for the infamous $52,000,000
administration building. Despite the fact that CUSD
had a “Guaranteed Maximum Price” contract with
Valley Commercial Contractors to construct the
building, CUSD agreed to pay an additional $3.8
million in settlement costs without any public
explanation.”
Condescending and disrespectful, CUSD says “Trust us,
we are telling the truth, this time.”
Dec 14, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Dwaine Goodwin, The Capistrano
Dispatch “To
the citizens of San Juan Capistrano from the
Trustees and Superintendent of C.U.S.D. “Trust us,
we are telling the truth, this time.” This is almost
like a Shakespearean comedy, if it was not so very
serious and involves so very much money. How so few
people can cause so much angst among a community is
frightening. We elect these people with a knowing
trust only to be deceived and lied to until such
time as the truth is unavoidable. Then they tell us
to “move on.” How condescending and disrespectful
can they become? Really bad choices on our
part.” Goodwin
is a San Juan Capistrano resident.
Reader disgusted with community dissention caused by,
and lack of accountability at, CUSD
Dec 14, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Dwaine Goodwin, The Capistrano
Dispatch "How
so few people can cause so much angst among a
community is frightening. We elect these people with
a knowing trust only to be deceived and lied to
until such time as the truth is unavoidable. Then
they tell us to 'move on.' How condescending and
disrespectful can they become?"
A CUSD
resident expresses disgust over the district's
refusal to assign blame or demand personal
accountability for admitted lies to the public about
the funding sources of the new administration
building.
CUSD won’t regain public trust and nothing will really
change without true accountability
Dec 10, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Brad Goff, The Orange County
Register “...
Capistrano Unified School District officials have a
long way to go if they want to regain the public’s
trust. There is a deep culture of corruption
throughout the administrative staff and the existing
board members and until those people are held
accountable for their misdeeds and removed from
office or removed from their administrative
positions, nothing is likely to really
change.” Goff is
the Chairman of Citizens for a Safe Rancho Santa
Margarita, a local citizen action group.
Fleming trustees in denial, refuse to take
responsibility for CUSD misdeeds, attack critics
instead
Dec 10, 2006 |
Conflicts,
Nepotism | Permalink
Brad Goff, The Orange County
Register “To
date, no one in the administration and not a single
CUSD board member has taken personal responsibility
for any of the district’s past wrongdoings. To the
contrary, the last two board meetings (since the
election) have seen trustees go on tirades against
the recall folks, the teacher’s union president and
the Orange County Register writer who reported on
many of the misdeeds.” Goff is
the Chairman of Citizens for a Safe Rancho Santa
Margarita, a local citizen action group.
It’s business as usual at CUSD, Fleming trustees appear
to have learned nothing
Dec 10, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Brad Goff, The Orange County
Register “We
should see fairly quickly over the next few months
if the old-guard has really learned its lesson or if
it intends to continue business as usual. The fact
that not a single board member has taken any
responsibility whatsoever for any of the mess that
the district currently finds itself in indicates to
me that they probably haven’t learned
anything.” Goff is
the Chairman of Citizens for a Safe Rancho Santa
Margarita, a local citizen action group.
No improvement at CUSD possible until those responsible
are held accountable
Dec 10, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Brad Goff, The Orange County
Register "The
fact that not a single board member has taken any
responsibility whatsoever for any of the mess that
the district currently finds itself in indicates to
me that they probably haven’t learned anything. In
fact, they appear to be in complete
denial..." Mr. Goff
shares the belief of many of his fellow district
residents that nothing is likely to change at CUSD
until those responsible for the district's past
wrongdoings are held accountable by their removal
from elected offices or administrative positions at
CUSD.
Critics right, district admits lies about admin
building funding but says "move on" with no
accountability
Dec 03, 2006 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Recall campaign set stage for ABC Reform Slate victory
in November 2006 general election
Dec 03, 2006 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Doomey admits public was misled, but takes no
responsibility as public is told to "move on"
Nov 30, 2006 |
Administration
Building | Permalink
Soderberg critical of Trustees' budget decisions that
repeat same mistakes
Vicki Soderberg, The Orange County
Register “If
you budgeted in salary increases for employees, you
wouldn’t have to cut anything ... You’re taking this
new money and putting it in other places, and you’re
telling me you have to cut? It seems like a
continued pattern.” Soderberg
is president of the Capistrano Unified Education
Association, a teachers union.
Trustees avoided cuts and paid raises during recall by
depleting reserves
Sam Miller, Saddleback Valley
News “It
is a turnaround from last year, when the district
gave teachers a raise, reinstated spending such as
the popular class-size reduction program and avoided
cuts that officials had warned were pending. The
district avoided those cuts last year by spending
reserve funds down to the legal minimum of 2
percent. No such cushion exists this year. Those
reserves are gone, while services, programs and
employees must still be funded.”
McCully identifies Trustees' budgeting failures and
challenges
CUSD says intersection improvements needed for new high
school
Nov 07, 2006 |
Traffic and
Safety |
Permalink
Shawn Lohman, The Orange County
Register "Without
La Pata improvements or intersection improvements
(at Ortega) there would be an impact on the high
school." Lohman is
the director of facilities planning for the
CUSD.
Reader thinks term limits would lessen divisiveness and
bring accountability
Oct 22, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Mary Ann Andahl, The Orange County
Register “If
term limits were set for school-board trustees, I
suspect there would be far fewer recall attempts and
less divisiveness among parents, teachers and
supporting staffs. Perhaps saying, “not this time”
to incumbents, some of whom have serves 20, 30 or
more years, would eliminate the difficulties we read
about. From my experience, those who serve more than
eight or 12 years tend to lose focus and ignore the
constituency they serve ... Let’s start sending
messages to career politicians and let them know
that we hold them accountable for their actions even
at this level. Andahl is
a resident of the City of Cypress.
Fleming and Trustees knew or should have known
Mello-Roos taxes were used for new admin building
Oct 12, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Barbara Casserly, The Capistrano
Dispatch “I
had requested an accounting of 87-1 Mello Roos funds
in April 2004 via a legally binding California
Public Record request which resulted in 29 four inch
volumes being provided to search for answers. That
led to a meeting in June 2004 with Dave Doomey,
Assistant Superintendent where answers were still
not provided. On Sept 21, 2006 Sherry Hahn CUSD CFO
said she had been instructed by Mr. McCully to
provide the requested information. Two and one half
years after I first asked a question I learned that
$20 million dollars from the 87-1 fund had always
been allocated to a new administration building. The
Trustees all knew, or should have known that a
portion of Mission Viejo/Aliso Viejo 87-1 Mello Roos
was designated in 1990 to pay for a district office
building. In 2004 the Fleming Administration was
unwilling to admit that to the public.”
Casserly
is a Mission Viejo resident and PTA leader.
Trustees owe public an explanation for the lies they
told or condoned
Oct 12, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Barbara Casserly, The Capistrano
Dispatch “Now
is the time for the CUSD Trustees to explain to the
public why they lied, or allowed lies to be
promulgated repeatedly by Jim Fleming. Time after
time, publication after publication, the public was
informed that the funds for the administration
building were restricted to bricks and mortar in San
Juan Capistrano. Prominent members of the public
continue to believe that every dime for the new
administration building could only be used for an
administration building in San Juan
Capistrano.” Casserly
is a Mission Viejo resident and PTA leader.
Fleming Trustees should be ashamed, owe public an
apology
Oct 12, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Barbara Casserly, The Capistrano
Dispatch “The current CUSD
Trustees who allowed that environment to exist need
to be voted out of elected office because they were
responsible for the management of an out of control
superintendent, Jim Fleming. The Trustees should be
ashamed for what they allowed to occur during the
Fleming administration. The public deserves an
apology.” Casserly
is a Mission Viejo resident and PTA leader.
Fleming trustees cannot be trusted, new leaders needed
to save district from mess they created
Oct 12, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Barbara Casserly, The Capistrano
Dispatch “As
Friedrich Nietzsche said 'I’m not upset that you
lied to me, I’m upset that from now on I can’t
believe you' ... It
will take new leadership to restore credibility in
CUSD and lead this district out of this embarrassing
mess.” Casserly
is a Mission Viejo resident and PTA leader.
PTA parent was loyal to Fleming until investigated and
threatened
Oct 12, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Barbara Casserly, The Capistrano
Dispatch "I
was a loyal supporter of Dr. Fleming and the
Trustees until I was investigated and threatened
that if I continued to ask questions, future funding
might not come to Mission Viejo. I am ashamed that I
did not make my concerns public because of fear of
retaliation." PTA
member recounts heavy-handed tactics leveled against
her by former Superintendent Fleming and the
Trustees.
Candidate LeBon self-destructs in hilarious,
humiliating spectacle before GOP nominating committee
Sep 20, 2006 |
ABC Reform
Campaign | Permalink
Supervisors refer ROV investigation to Election Center
to avoid dealing with controversy directly
Sep 18, 2006 |
Registrar of
Voters |
Permalink
Like Waldrip, the Election Center was good choice for a
whitewash investigation
Sep 18, 2006 |
Registrar of
Voters |
Permalink
Registrar's errors leaned suspiciously in school
district's favor
Sep 18, 2006 |
Registrar of
Voters |
Permalink
Election Center prepared report without input from key
witness
Sep 18, 2006 |
Registrar of
Voters |
Permalink
Election Center report cost $25,000, resolved no
material issues and offered trival suggestions
Sep 18, 2006 |
Registrar of
Voters |
Permalink
Smollar testifies that Fleming lied about consultant
Mike Eggers and the funding sources for the new
administration building
Sep 15, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Deposition of David
J. Smollar, Lackey vs.
CUSD, p. 137
"Q
There's a sentence, and I'll read it to you, "I no
longer believe myself capable of communicating a
true picture of CUSD." Why did you write that? A
Because of what had occurred both with the lying on
Eggers, the lying about his voucher, and the fact
that the superintendent was still writing in his --
or dictating in his documents that the funding was
redevelopment money, it could only be used for, you
know, limited purposes, I mean, we were still trying
to pedal that line." Former
CUSD Communications Director Smollar testifies that
the district lied to cover up illegal express
advocacy in its hiring of political consultant Mike
Eggers at taxpayer expense, and to cover up the
truth about the financing of the new administration
building with its "redevelopment funds" lies.
Judge rules CUSD's "guiding principle" effectively
discriminated based on race
Sep 04, 2006 |
Racial
Gerrymandering | Permalink
CUSD should view people as individuals, not members of
racial groups
Sep 04, 2006 |
Racial
Gerrymandering | Permalink
Sharon Browne, The Orange County
Register “Our
public schools should teach students to view people
as individuals rather than members of certain racial
groups.” That’s
the right guiding principle – one that CUSD’s
leadership should readily embrace. Browne is a
Pacific Legal Foundation principal attorney.
Racial gerrymandering another symptom of arrogant CUSD
leadership
Sep 04, 2006 |
Racial
Gerrymandering | Permalink
Judge rules CUSD's racial gerrymandering violates Prop
209
Sep 04, 2006 |
Racial
Gerrymandering | Permalink
Many thought the proposed great expense of the new
admin building was a joke
Aug 31, 2006 |
Administration
Building | Permalink
If possible, admin building should be sold and money
spent on facilities and supplies for the children
Aug 31, 2006 |
Administration
Building | Permalink
Volzke asks whether voters will hold SJC Councilmembers
Hart and Swerdlin accountable for biased, backroom
politics
Aug 24, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
CUSD scandals followed by DA raid and grand jury
subpoenas
Aug 21, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Common thread of CUSD scandals - arrogance of power
Aug 21, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
CUSD a poster child to warn other districts as its
culture of corruption unravels
Aug 21, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Fleming resignation should not deter investigations,
new leadership, oversight
Aug 21, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Recall effort focused attention on CUSD, raised public
awareness
Aug 21, 2006 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Smollar explains enenies list facts to dispell drivel
of Fleming sychophant Erin Kutnick
Aug 10, 2006 |
Enemies
Lists |
Permalink
David Smollar, The Capistrano
Dispatch
"James Fleming denied for two weeks the existence
of any hit list, even though the OC Register had three
versions of such a list. He first had Asst. Supt. Susan
McGill tell the Register that it must be a list from
the Registrar of Voters. (Interesting that he
remembered his Registrar list instantly, although he
later lied to the OC Register and LA Times that he had
ever received
that
list.) The OC Register then faxed him the first two
pages of one version to “refresh his memory.” He still
claimed no
knowledge of the list, and then said that any such
list would have been prepared by me! He had special
software ordered to put on my old computer to find the
list. (Sorry, Jim, I never had it.) He made available
to the media various sycophants in his employ,
including Dan Crawford and Jeff Bristow, to say what a
miserable, disgruntled employee I was (Hmmm, I worked 4
1/2 years under Fleming, and never received any
evaluation, oral or written, complaining about my
performance.) The Register, fortunately, had the facts
and printed the article. And then a week later—two
weeks after first asked about the list—lo and behold
the good Dr. Fleming issues reams of paper worthy of
Rube Goldberg to explain that the list was all part of
a hacking investigation. Of course! Just slipped his
mind. How risible! To conduct a hacking probe, you
don’t need to compile an extensive list of 150 parent
names, including the schools attended by their kids and
replete with special notations on 40 of the
individuals. And Fleming
still
hasn’t said who created the list, which he now
admits was in his possession. “Journalist” Kutnick
conveniently glides over the fact that Fleming ordered
me to withhold the list from Kevin Murphy, as well as a
memo to Fleming from security director Ed Kovac,
despite the fact that they were public documents from
files in Fleming’s office." Kutnick is a
columnist for The Capistrano Dispatch. Smollar is the
former Director of Communications at Capistrano Unified
School District.
Smollar says preparation of such lists was Fleming's
modus operandi
Aug 10, 2006 |
Enemies
Lists |
Permalink
David Smollar, The Capistrano
Dispatch
"But preparation of the list was modus operandi for
Fleming. He’s not a great strategic mind; he thinks
ahead about five minutes most of the time. He craves
information, especially on his many detractors. And he
craved information about the recall people. Just
examine the raft of e-mails and memos that Fleming
prepared and sent across the CUSD universe of parents,
principals administrators the weekend of April 23-24,
2005, in preparation for the April 25 board meeting
when recall notices were presented. He was consumed
with the recall, and had just gotten the 150 names on
April 21, off an intercepted Kevin Murphy e-mail. He
surely wanted to know who they were. That’s his style.
Fleming wrote to trustees on April 22 in a fax that the
e-mail appeared to be a “veritable ‘who’s who’ list of
San Juan Hills and Arroyo Vista NIMBYS as well as some
of the more volatile opponents to the attendance
boundary proposal.” The list could not have been done
without Fleming’s express knowledge and direction,
because its compilation would have required hours upon
hours of tedious work using the district’s cumbersome
Aeries student information system. No person in his or
her right mind would otherwise have spent 10 hours-plus
doing it." Kutnick is a
columnist for The Capistrano Dispatch. Smollar is the
former Director of Communications at Capistrano Unified
School District.
Smollar exposes Erin Kutnick's blind eye concerning
Fleming's serious public records and open meeting
violations
Aug 10, 2006 |
Open
Meetings | Permalink
David Smollar, The Capistrano
Dispatch
"Maybe Erin Kutnick could develop some journalism
skills by exploring Fleming’s deliberate underreporting
of his true 2004-05 compensation by some $65,000, or
his efforts to subvert the public meetings act through
bogus closed sessions on his “evaluation,” called by
state Brown Act experts the worst violations they’ve
seen in a quarter century! An easy question to start
with: Why would Fleming even want to have mundane
topics about school uniforms, calendars, etc. etc. in a
closed session?" Kutnick is a
columnist for The Capistrano Dispatch. Smollar is the
former Director of Communications at Capistrano Unified
School District.
Smollar chides Erin Kutnick for ignoring the district's
illegal hiring of Mike Eggers as a political consultant
Aug 10, 2006 |
Express
Advocacy | Permalink
David Smollar, The Capistrano
Dispatch
"Or maybe Kutnick might want to ask Fleming and
Draper about their lies to Dispatch editor Jonathan
Volzke in fall 2005 when he had clear evidence that
Mike Eggers, a longtime Draper friend and the paid
political gun for the trustees, was writing Fleming’s
monthly column for the community newspapers. They said
it was just a “favor” by Eggers. Hah! The truth is that
Draper had forced Fleming to give Eggers final say over
both his weekly electronic newsletter and his monthly
column. Fleming only exploded over this unusual yoke
and forced Draper to back off when Eggers got too big
for his britches and approached deputy superintendents
Crawford, Dave Doomey and Marge LaRoe, behind Fleming’s
back, saying that Draper wanted them to work with
Eggers on a strategic plan for the district.
Unfortunately for Eggers, Crawford and Doomey went to
Fleming, who said he then had a “Come to Jesus” meeting
with Draper and forced her to scale back Egger’s
interference in district operations."
Kutnick is a
columnist for The Capistrano Dispatch. Smollar is the
former Director of Communications at Capistrano Unified
School District.
Smollar dares Erin Kutnick to cover Dave Doomeys role
in soliciting political contributions from a list of
district vendors
Aug 10, 2006 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
David Smollar, The Capistrano
Dispatch
"Maybe sleuth Kutnick could revisit Draper telling
the Dispatch and other media that contributions from
district contractors to the trustee’s Political Action
Committee “Kids First” were made from the goodness of
their hearts and weren’t solicited. Another
not-so-little lie. The business division under Doomey
printed out a list of major district vendors for
Draper, as directed to do so." Kutnick is a
columnist for The Capistrano Dispatch. Smollar is the
former Director of Communications at Capistrano Unified
School District.
Smollar reveals Erin Kutnick's bias in favor of, and
expectation of preferred treatement from CUSD
Aug 10, 2006 |
Permalink
David Smollar, The Capistrano
Dispatch
"Kutnick’s initial approach to me was not just as a
Dispatch columnist, but as a Dispatch
columnist
and
“friend of district” who expected inside
information. She was less than pleased initially when I
told her she’d be treated as any other reporter: with
respect but not as a friend, since any good reporter,
no matter how “friendly,” will slice and dice you, if
they uncover evidence that allows them to do so. After
that was clear, she called me occasionally for data,
and I usually referred her to employees who had the
information. Her columns didn’t really register much in
the district office, one way or the other."
Kutnick is a
columnist for The Capistrano Dispatch. Smollar is the
former Director of Communications at Capistrano Unified
School District.
Smollar educates Erin Kutnick on fact that Fleming
conceived and controlled CUSD's Media Watch
Aug 10, 2006 |
Express
Advocacy | Permalink
David Smollar, The Capistrano
Dispatch
"Regarding
the district’s Media Watch, Kutnick should do a little
reporting and find out that Media Watch was the
brainchild of Fleming, who directed and approved every
listing. Or has Kutnick forgotten that Fleming
prepared, before I ever worked in CUSD, a breathless
100-page rebuttal to articles written by OC Register
reporter Keith Sharon on overcrowding at Capistrano
Valley High, and made the rebuttal an agenda item at a
board meeting!! Fleming needed no lessons from me on
how to battle with the media. I actually improved the
relationship between the Register and the district over
time, no small feat." Kutnick is a
columnist for The Capistrano Dispatch. Smollar is the
former Director of Communications at Capistrano Unified
School District.
Smollar rejects Erin Kutnick's suggestion that better
PR by Smollar could have averted recall
Aug 10, 2006 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
David Smollar, The Capistrano
Dispatch
"Kutnick’s
snide little remark, that a better PR effort from me
might have avoided the recall, is truly laughable. That
old bromide -- “if only we had communicated better” --
apes the broken-record spoutings especially of Mike
Darnold. He consistently bad-mouthed me to many,
apparently never taking the time to peruse his weekly
trustee packet from Fleming, filled regularly with
positive articles about CUSD teachers and students
published in the seven Register weeklies blanketing the
district. Perhaps Fleming and Draper failed to mention
to Kutnick the numerous op-ed articles I ghosted for
Fleming in the LA Times, or the School News Roll Call
newspaper I arranged for the district, or my success in
keeping the two from being flailed by John Stoessel on
ABC’s 20-20, and so on and so forth. The great pr ideas
of a $10,000 consultant hired during the recall effort,
at the insistence of Draper, were along the lines of
bringing real estate agents to the district boardroom
for a briefing and placing inspirational sayings on
school marquees." Kutnick is a
columnist for The Capistrano Dispatch. Smollar is the
former Director of Communications at Capistrano Unified
School District.
Smollar enlightens Erin Kutnick that no amount of PR
could overcome facts of CUSD wrongdoings
Aug 10, 2006 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
David Smollar, The Capistrano
Dispatch
"Unfortunately, no communicator on Earth could stem
community anger that built from genuine controversies
over attendance boundaries, school overcrowding in
Rancho Santa Margarita, machinations concerning San
Juan Hills High and Dennis Gage, and the scope of an
expensive new education center. As to the new center,
maybe Kutnick could offer me suggestions on how to be a
better communicator, when for more than three years
Fleming never told me that the cost would be covered
almost half through Mello-Roos fees, not solely from
redevelopment funds from San Juan Capistrano. You may
learn someday, Erin Kutnick, that your communication is
only as good as the truth of the information given you
by the people you have to trust for the truth. I
learned about the center’s complicated financing only
after real journalists filed public records requests
for funding details." Kutnick is a
columnist for The Capistrano Dispatch. Smollar is the
former Director of Communications at Capistrano Unified
School District.
Smollar "disgruntled" due to lies - Fleming, Draper and
others to blame for taking focus off teaching and
learning
Aug 10, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
David Smollar, The Capistrano
Dispatch
"Yes, Erin Kutnick, I grew most unhappy as I
learned of the lies, hype and exaggeration from the
top. Anyone with a moral compass would be disgusted,
and there are many in the district silently relieved at
the end of the Fleming regime. For the record, I
resigned, and Fleming then gave me a letter offering to
“be of assistance in my future endeavors.” So much for
your little innuendo hinting at something else. I’m
sure Fleming would love now to say he fired me, but
that’s one lie, if told, that would definitely have
legal consequences for him. And yes, it’s sad that the
community’s focus has been taken off teaching and
learning, but the blame lies squarely at the feet of
Fleming, Draper and the gang with their arrogance of
power." Kutnick is a
columnist for The Capistrano Dispatch. Smollar is the
former Director of Communications at Capistrano Unified
School District.
OC Register senior editor jubilant Fleming resigned
Jul 30, 2006 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Greenhut hopes Neal Kelley will resign due to acts of
illegality and favoritism
Jul 30, 2006 |
Registrar of
Voters |
Permalink
Greenhut emphasizes need for accountability among CUSD
leadership
Jul 30, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Clueless in The OC! No Fleming misdeed is too offensive
for OC Superintendent Bill Habermehl
Jul 21, 2006 |
State, County
Oversight | Permalink
Orange County Schools Superintendent William Habermehl said he felt sorry for Fleming and the Capistrano community because of the recent enemies list scandal. But despite that, he thought Fleming left a positive legacy – and a very attractive job opening. Looks like Habermehl has been drinking the CUSD Kool Aid. Hey Bill, you forgot to mention that test scores are high.
Legal expert says Fleming should be held accountable
for staff's wrongful actions and omissions
Jul 20, 2006 |
Public
Records |
Permalink
Smollar confirms Fleming's and Trustees' amoral
character
Jul 18, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
David Smollar, The Orange County
Register "Mostly,
I thought they were white lies, exaggerations, and
I'd correct them," Smollar says. "But then with the
recall, I realized they (Fleming and the board)
would stop at nothing." Smollar,
former CUSD spokeperson, confirms the amoral,
by-any-means-necessary characters of former
Superintendent James Fleming and the CUSD Trustees
he served under.
Smollar says Flemings kept list of names ilegally
obtained from registrar's office
Jul 12, 2006 |
Enemies
Lists |
Permalink
Registrar's conduct could undermine legitimacy of
democratic process
Jul 12, 2006 |
Registrar of
Voters |
Permalink
Registrar admits not knowing law restricting access to
recall petitions
Jul 12, 2006 |
Registrar of
Voters |
Permalink
Fears of retribution among recall supporters not
surprising
Jul 12, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Outside investigations in order for both CUSD and
registrar
Jul 12, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Outside investigations in order for both CUSD and
registrar
Jul 11, 2006 |
Registrar of
Voters |
Permalink
CUSD likely engaged in illegal express advocacy in
preparation of enemies lists
Jul 11, 2006 |
Express
Advocacy | Permalink
Conflicts prevent independent investigation of Fleming
by Trustees
Jul 11, 2006 |
Waldrip
Investigation | Permalink
Benecke supports Fleming's unethical use of mole to spy
on recall proponents in private home
Jul 11, 2006 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Fleming publishes CUSD's dishonest admin building spin,
lies about savings, CSR and funding source
Jun 29, 2006 |
Administration
Building | Permalink
Fleming confirms selfish, misplaced priorities of
trustees and staff
Jun 29, 2006 |
Administration
Building | Permalink
Fleming spins to justify Taj Mahal with more dishonest
rhetoric
Jun 29, 2006 |
Administration
Building | Permalink
Kevin Murphy resigns as recall chairman
Jan 12, 2006 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Kevin Murphy declares his political life at an end
Jan 12, 2006 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Kevin Murphy a gracious gladiator? Hardly. While other
leaders say "thanks," Murphy quits and points fingers
Jan 12, 2006 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Potential for retribution most chilling aspect of
enemies lists
Jan 11, 2006 |
Enemies
Lists |
Permalink
CUSD concealment of records likely violated Public
Records Act
Jan 11, 2006 |
Public
Records |
Permalink
OC Register says DA should investigate CUSD enemies
lists
Jan 11, 2006 |
Enemies
Lists |
Permalink
Kevin Murphy announces he quits efforts to reform CUSD
Jan 01, 2006 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Trabuco Canyon News
“In
related news, recall organizer and chairman, Kevin
Murphy, announced that he would no longer be
involved with the continuing efforts to reform
CUSD." Murphy
served as Chairman of the CUSD Recall Committee
until his resignation on December 22, 2006, the day
the Registrar of Voters announced that the recall
petition campaign had failed.
Recall Committee pays tribute Kevin Murphy; Committee
will continue to lead reform campaign
Jan 01, 2006 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Recall Committee says, "This battle is not over"
Jan 01, 2006 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Kevin Murphy quits local politics, Recall Committee
will continue reform campaign
Dec 29, 2005 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Sam Miller, Capistrano Valley
News
"Recall
leader Kevin Murphy said Thursday that he would step
out of local politics. Another leader of the recall
group said the effort will go
on."
Murphy
served as Chairman of the CUSD Recall Committee until
his resignation on December 22, 2006, the day the
Registrar of Voters announced that the recall petition
campaign had failed. The other
leader was Tom Russell, official spokesperson for the
CUSD Recall Committee. Russell served with Murphy as a
committee member since the inception of the recall
committee.
Murphy resigned, but Recall Committee will continue to
lead reform campaign
Dec 29, 2005 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Murphy says he has no further plans to continue
opposing the district
Dec 23, 2005 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Carolyn Williams conduct - Illegal? Probably not.
Unethical? Absolutely.
Oct 09, 2005 |
Express
Advocacy | Permalink
If Williams acted only as a citizen, she shouldn't have
used her position to persuade others
Oct 09, 2005 |
Express
Advocacy | Permalink
Using public money for politicking is illegal, but
agencies like CUSD routinely and unethically push the
envelope
Oct 09, 2005 |
Express
Advocacy | Permalink
DHHS Principal Carolyn Williams' use of school title
for politicking inappropriate and sleezy
Oct 09, 2005 |
Express
Advocacy | Permalink
Sita Helms says unhealthy environment was motive for
filing Williams Act claim
Jul 14, 2005 |
Las Palmas
Elementary | Permalink
Sita Helms, Sun Post News
"When
your kids are in an unhealthy environment, you'll do
whatever...but it never got rid of the
smell." On June
16, approximately 50 parents, headed by Sita Helms,
filed a complaint with Las Palmas Elementary School
and Capistrano Unified School District, alleging
unhealthy classroom conditions, deteriorated
buildings, sewer back flow and more. Helms expressed
concern because of the sewage smell in the
kindergarten rooms and kids coming home sick from
some kind of exposure in the portables. The
children, she said, should be provided for because
they are the No. 1 concern. She said parents try to
make situations better at the 75 year-old school by
cleaning or purchasing air filters, Helms said. She
cleaned the kindergarten bathrooms thinking she
could help with the smell.
Las Palmas mother says conditions at school are so bad,
she tells children to wait to use bathroom at home
Jul 14, 2005 |
Las Palmas
Elementary | Permalink
Kiki Macdonald, Sun Post News
"Las
Palmas is such a great school, I hate to complain,
but when it comes to health, cleanliness and
sanitation, I have to (say something)."
For Kiki
Macdonald, of San Clemente, it is a health and
sanitary issue at Las Palmas Elementary School.
Things at the school are in need of repair, she
said, and she isn't sure what's going to be fixed
with the remodel. Macdonald said she has heard of
health problems related to mold and knows the
bathrooms need help. She said she'll tell her
children, unless it's really bad, to wait and go to
the bathroom when they get home. In addition, she
said the carpets are in need of attention.
Las Palmas parent concerned over effectiveness of
repair efforts
Jul 14, 2005 |
Las Palmas
Elementary | Permalink
Shannon Archbold, Sun Post Post
News "No
matter how hard they work, it's hard to keep up an
old (75-year-old) facility... It's like putting a
Band-Aid on it (the problem)."
Archbold,
a Capistrano Beach residient, believes school
teachers, administration and staff are trying their
hardest to make her children's school (Las Palmas
Elementary) its best, but after watching the
problems continue and trying to be patient as other
pressing issues around the district arise, there she
believes there comes a point when parents have to
say enough is enough.
Las Palmas parent tired of district's misplaced
priorities
Jul 14, 2005 |
Las Palmas
Elementary | Permalink
Shannon Archbold, Sun Post Post
News "Before
I see another new school get another new lawn or
sprinklers ... I want to see my school
fixed." Archbold,
a Las Palmas Elementary School mother, hasn't seen
parents' patience with CUSD pay off as kids are
ultimately not the No. 1 priority. In terms of the
district's new administration building, Archbold
sees the profit and cost benefits of having staff in
one building, however, she feels the health and
educational impact of an old building on children
should come before that need. Archbold said the
remodel at Las Palmas is a nice effort, but she
wonders why a multipurpose room receives attention
when kids won't go into the third bathroom because
of the smell.
Las Palmas principal tries to take high road, but uses
DOE to ignore parent concerns
Jul 14, 2005 |
Las Palmas
Elementary | Permalink
Doug Kramer, Sun Post News
"This
point is important because neither I nor my
colleagues in the district would ever tolerate a
school having such deficiencies go without
repair." In his
letter to the parents, Las Palmas Elementary
Principal Kramer talked about an unannounced visit
by the Orange County Department of Education in May.
Incredibly, even with foul smells and other obvious
problems at the school, Kramer wrote that the
visiting team found the school to have sufficient
materials and had no visual signs of issues that
needed addressing. The Orange County Department of
Education continues to bat a thousand, turning
another blind eye and providing cover for CUSD's
failed facilities management.
CUSD Recall Committee: teachers good, administration
bad, no oversight by trustees
Jun 12, 2005 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Register senior editor predicts that the results of the
recall campaign may come down to the pictures
Jun 12, 2005 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Recall Committee spokesperson emphasizes "wretched
administration" as reason for recall
Jun 12, 2005 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Volzke questions SJC City Council's resolution opposing
recall
Jun 09, 2005 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
Nielson questions SJC City Council's resolution
opposing recall
Jun 09, 2005 |
Recall Campaign
2005 |
Permalink
At-large elections benefit incumbents, obstacle to
challengers
Jun 09, 2005 |
Culture of
Corruption | Permalink
Reader tired of trustees taking credit for results
obtained by teachers, students and parents
May 26, 2005 |
Test Scores,
Awards |
Permalink
Annalee Cappello, Capistrano Valley
News "I
care about hard-working people getting the
recognition and credit they deserve. Most of us in
the community are aware that the job of a school
board member is not an easy one. As Ms. Friess
states, 'They perform [it] knowing that they will
not be able to please everyone all of the time.' On
this topic, Ms. Friess speaks accurately, but she
grossly misspeaks by stating that 'These seven
individuals are responsible for the education of our
children.'"
Capistrano Valley News reader's reaction to the high
praise extolled upon the CUSD board of trustees by in a
letter by Jenny Friess published in the Capistrano
Valley News on May 12, 2005.
Reader tired of trustees taking credit for results
obtained by teachers, students and parents
May 26, 2005 |
Test Scores,
Awards |
Permalink
Annalee Cappello, Capistrano Valley
News "Gosh,
if I'd known that, I wouldn't have spent the past 15
years of my life teaching English at Marco Forster
Middle School, nor would I have spent the past seven
years supplementing at home what my daughter has
been learning in CUSD schools. I think I would have
gone shopping, booked a day at the spa, or gone to
the beach. After all, according to Ms. Friess's
words, these seven people are responsible for the
education of the 140+ students that I see every day
in my classroom. I guess I don't need to be
there."
Capistrano Valley News reader's reaction to the high
praise extolled upon the CUSD board of trustees by in a
letter by Jenny Friess published in the Capistrano
Valley News on May 12, 2005.
Reader tired of trustees taking credit for results
obtained by teachers, students and parents
May 26, 2005 |
Test Scores,
Awards |
Permalink
Annalee Cappello, Capistrano Valley
News "Here's
the real deal: The seven CUSD board members are not
solely responsible for the education of our
children. They do make many policy decisions that
impact on our children's education. I feel confident
that CVN readers are savvy enough that it takes a
lot more than these seven elected officials, most of
whom have no experience actually teaching kids, to
be responsible for teaching our children. This
responsibility involves parents and teachers working
together. During these lean financial times, it
takes the help of community members and business
partners to make things happen for the benefit of
our children. All of us who work hard to educate
children deserve public praise, not just the seven
members of the school board."
Capistrano Valley News reader's reaction to the high
praise extolled upon the CUSD board of trustees by in a
letter by Jenny Friess published in the Capistrano
Valley News on May 12, 2005.
Reader critical of superintendents' compensation
Apr 26, 2005 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Al Fanelli, Orange County
Register "The
front-page article about school superintendents'
salaries reassured me of something I already knew -
that our tax dollars are once again being wasted
["O.C. superintendents in elite pay class," News,
April 24]. The salaries and benefits for these
positions are an outrage. They are paid these
salaries, it is said, because it is hard to get good
people and retain them. Maybe we should take a
closer look at those who are doing the
hiring." Reader's
reaction to an article published in The Orange
County Register entitled, "O.C. superintendents in
elite pay class," News, April 24, 2005.
Reader critical of superintendents' compensation
Apr 26, 2005 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Rosemary LaBonte, Orange County
Register "The
best quote? James Fleming of Capistrano Unified:
'This job is hard and demanding.' Cry me a river.
Here are some hard and demanding jobs: air traffic
controller; paralegal with a demanding boss; a guy
picking strawberries in a field for eight hours. The
superintendents think they are part executive, part
mediator and part politician. Actually, the job is
100 percent politics. And when did those in the
teaching profession become company executives with
"lifestyles" that had to be maintained?"
Reader's
reaction to an article published in The Orange
County Register entitled, "O.C. superintendents in
elite pay class," News, April 24, 2005.
Reader critical of superintendents' compensation
Apr 26, 2005 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
John Boag, Orange County
Register "If
there is one thing government officials do well, in
monarchies, dictatorships or democracies, it is to
ensure their own financial well-being. It should
therefore come as no surprise that local government
bureaucrats, with their six-figure salaries for
life, have used their positions for personal
financial gains. It is absurd to compare
private-sector compensation to that of government
employees, since the latter do not have to worry
about profits; they just spend unlimited taxpayers'
money." Reader's
reaction to an article published in The Orange
County Register entitled, "Perks fill out city
managers' compensation," News, April 25,
2005.
Fleming says boundaries couldn't be changed without
upsetting someone
Mar 30, 2005 |
Attendance
Boundaries | Permalink
Casabianca makes excuses for Arroyo Vista overcrowding
Aug 22, 2003 |
Arroyo Vista
K-8 |
Permalink
Casabianca acknowledges severity of community division
caused by district's Arroyo Vista School expansion
plans
Aug 22, 2003 |
Arroyo Vista
K-8 |
Permalink
Draper makes sarcastic remarks to anti-school expansion
crowd
Mar 14, 2003 |
Arroyo Vista
K-8 |
Permalink
Volunteer speaks out against Draper conflict of
interest
Aug 15, 2002 |
Conflicts,
Nepotism | Permalink
Pat Bauer, Capistrano Valley
News "Either
the company has to pull out or Marlene shouldn't be
involved with the high school. It's a true conflict
of interest because it's a financial gain for her
family. It's the same old good-old-boy thing. There
are innuendoes and you don't know what's
happening." Bauer, a
League of Women Voters volunteer and a Whispering
Hills opponent, speaks out against Marlene Draper
voting to give business to Culbertson, Adams &
Associates, a firm working on the Whispering Hills project
that also employs her daughter — raising concerns
about a conflict of interest.
Fleming tries to preempt rejection with sleezy letter
to save face and lay false foundation for future
denials
Dec 20, 1999 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Terry Webster, The Las Vegas
Sun "Two
other finalists, George Garcia, superintendent of
the Tucson Unified School District in Tucson, Ariz.,
and James Fleming, superintendent of the Capistrano
Unified School District in Southern California, were
previously eliminated by the School Board. Almost
simultaneously, Fleming produced a letter to Attea
stating he was no longer interested."
Fleming
was being interviewed as a candidate for the
position of superintendent of the Clark County
School District in Las Vegas Nevada. Webster is a
reporter for The Las Vegas Sun.
Fleming rejected by Clark County School Board, not a
team player and concern over leadership style
Dec 08, 1999 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Terry Webster, The Las Vegas
Sun "One
superintendent candidate for the Clark County School
District was eliminated by the School Board on
Tuesday, leaving two hopefuls in the running. James
Fleming, superintendent of the Capistrano Unified
School District in San Juan Capistrano, Calif., was
scratched from the board's list of finalists ...
Board President Ruth Johnson and board members Mary
Beth Scow, Susan Brager, Shirley Barber and Lois
Tarkanian all named Fleming as the candidate they
were the least interested in ... Barber said she
didn't support Fleming because she prefers someone
with more of a team approach. For Johnson, it was a
matter of fit ... I think it was just his leadership
style.' " Fleming
was being interviewed as a candidate for the
position of superintendent of the Clark County
School District in Las Vegas Nevada. Webster is a
reporter for The Las Vegas Sun.
Fleming reveals organizational philosophy behind later
conspiracies of silence at CUSD
Dec 06, 1999 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Fleming rejected as "too bureaucratic," Fleming dodges
the allegation, says "bureacrat" means nothing
Dec 06, 1999 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Terry Webster, The Las Vegas
Sun "One
of the main objections the board presented to
Fleming during his final interview was a perception
that he seems too bureaucratic. Fleming said he
would address that by "humanizing" all of the
so-called bureaucrats in the school district. This
could be done by placing articles about school
executives in school newsletters or magazines.
Bureaucrat is a term that is overused and means
nothing, he added." Fleming
was being interviewed as a candidate for the
position of superintendent of the Clark County
School District in Las Vegas Nevada. Webster is a
reporter for The Las Vegas Sun.
Fleming addresses his controversial image in connection
with special education issues
Dec 03, 1999 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Fleming too bureaucratic, bad for low-achieving
students
Dec 02, 1999 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Patricia Cunningham, The Las Vegas
Sun "Fleming
is exactly what we don't need. He's too bureaucratic
and he puts on a good face. It's everything
low-achieving students don't need in
education." Cunningham
made this remark after watching Fleming in action
while being interviewed as a candidate for
superintendent of the Clark County School District
in Las Vegas, Nevada. Cunningham is the chairwoman
for the Alliance for Social Justice.
Fleming showcases his success at building schools and
says "accountability" is an essential part of his
education philosophy
Dec 02, 1999 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Terry Webster, The Las Vegas
Sun "Since
1992 Fleming has been involved in opening 17 new
schools in Capistrano, all of them on time and on
budget. His education philosophy covers four main
areas: high academic expectations for students,
hiring the best teachers, fostering community
involvement and accountability."
Fleming
was being interviewed as a candidate for the
position of superintendent of the Clark County
School District in Las Vegas Nevada. Webster is a
reporter for The Las Vegas Sun.
Fleming criticized as a name-dropper, bureaucrat, too
self-promoting
Dec 02, 1999 |
Superintendent
| Permalink
Terry Webster, The Las Vegas
Sun "The
strengths and weaknesses of all of the candidates
were aired during public interviews held by the
School Board and the Superintendent Search Process
Committee. Following his interviews, some of the
criticisms made of Fleming were that he was a
name-dropper and a bureaucrat. Some also said he was
too self-promoting. But Fleming said he sees nothing
wrong with demonstrating he can do the
job." Fleming
was being interviewed as a candidate for the
position of superintendent of the Clark County
School District in Las Vegas Nevada. Webster is a
reporter for The Las Vegas Sun.
CUSD admits it has covered the children’s playgrounds
with portables
CUSD portrays portables as a problem when it suits
their purpose - when they need money from taxpayers
CUSD said Mello-Roos residents exempt from Measure A,
but didn’t explain they would receive the benefit while
others paid
CUSD promised taxpayer safeguards but didn’t tell the
whole story and taxpayers where taken advantage of
anyway
CUSD promised that “all” schools would reap the
benefits of Measure A - they lied
CUSD admits its schools are aging and deteriorating
Despite promises of Measure A improvements, serious
issues remained during Recall Campaign years later
CUSD admitted schools face health, fire and safety
issues during their Measure A bond campaign
Jul 19, 1999 |
Traffic and
Safety |
Permalink
CUSD told taxpayers that comprehensive needs lists
would govern spending at each school
Mello-Roos taxpayers exempt from Measure A election and
taxes, but trustees didn't restrict them from taking
the benefits
Trustees include "taxpayer safeguards" but none to
address later abuses
Lunch on the run at Capo Valley High
Sep 11, 1998 |
Facilities
Planning | Permalink
The Orange County Register
"The
feeding frenzy began at 12:06 p.m. on Thursday at
Capistrano Valley High, where lunch lines were as
long as those at a Moscow money
exchange."
The 2,900 students were left with just 30 minutes to eat lunch. This is the fastest-growing high school in Orange County's fastest-growing school district.
The 2,900 students were left with just 30 minutes to eat lunch. This is the fastest-growing high school in Orange County's fastest-growing school district.
All portables, no buildings
Keith Sharon, The Orange County
Register "This
week, the Capistrano Unified School District agreed
to put an entire school of trailers [portables] in
Coto de Caza to relieve some of the overcrowding at
Wagon Wheel Elementary."
Sharon is a reporter for The Orange County Register
Sharon is a reporter for The Orange County Register
CUSD spent larger portion of state-mandated developer
fees on portables than most districts
Jill Harmon, School Wise Press: Learning
Bricks "This
shouldn't happen. I don't know that my children are
ever going to see the inside of a real school
classroom."
Harmon is a PTA member in Capistrano Unified School District, where her two daughters attend classes held in portable classrooms. The district has spent a large portion of its state-mandated developer fees, usually used for school construction, for 673 portable classrooms.
Harmon is a PTA member in Capistrano Unified School District, where her two daughters attend classes held in portable classrooms. The district has spent a large portion of its state-mandated developer fees, usually used for school construction, for 673 portable classrooms.
Superintendent Fleming on portables
Fleming is the Superintendent of the Capistrano Unified School District.
Superintendent Fleming blames partisan politics for
district construction whoas; ignores district's own
facilities planning failures
May 18, 1998 |
Facilities
Planning | Permalink
The state legislature voted against putting a statewide bond measure for school construction on the June 1998 ballot. A bloc of Republicans thwarted the bill, which would have allocated $6.5 billion for primary and secondary school construction. Of course, Fleming offers no explanation why the Irvine and Saddleback school districts, with similar growth and demographics, were able to cope much better. Fleming is the Superintendent of the Capistrano Unified School District.
Grand Jury finds CUSD closed meeting violated Brown Act
Feb 01, 1991 |
Open
Meetings | Permalink
1990-1991 Orange County Grand Jury,
Examination of CUSD Mello-Roos Election
"A
meeting to discuss clandestine 'incentive pay'
cannot be reconciled with any of the above listed
Code sections [the Brown Act]. Neither can a
decision to employ a political consulting firm to
assist in the efforts to pass Measure A. Therefore,
it is the opinion of the Grand Jury that the closed
door meeting held on March 6, 1989, was highly
improper." Not only
was the subject matter discussed found to be illegal
express advocacy (i.e., incentive pay for school
principals who succeeded in obtaining favorable
voter results), the closed meeting at which this was
discussed was found to be a violation of the Brown
Act, as well.
Grand Jury condemns CUSD's attempts to cover up express
advocacy under the guise of "informational" activity
Feb 01, 1991 |
Express
Advocacy | Permalink
1990-1991 Orange County Grand Jury,
Examination of CUSD Mello-Roos Election
“In
the opinion of the Grand Jury, it would appear that
the District is far from inexperienced in conducting
political campaigns and, in fact, the District’s
behavior in this case shows a carefully planned and
often secretive effort to push the law to the limit.
Moreover, the District did not willingly file its
reports when notified of the obligation. It did so
under protest. Finally, the fact that the District
attempted to conceal its advocacy under the guise of
“informational” activity, evidences a more
sophisticated approach than just an innocent
mistake.”
CUSD failed to report political expenditures, CFPPC
will consider this precedent in future violations
Jan 23, 1991 |
Express
Advocacy | Permalink
John G. McLean, Letter to Connie Ferris
Johnson, Deputy District Attorney
“While
we have decided not to take formal enforcement
action, we have advised the Districts of their
obligations, and have advised them that this matter
will be considered when evaluating future alleged
violations of the Act.” On behalf
of the California Fair Political Practices
Commission, McLean concludes that Placentia Unified
School District, Yorba Linda School District and
CUSD violated the California law requiring
disclosure of political expenditures. McLean is
counsel for the Enforcement Division of the
CFPPC.