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Wednesday, April 02, 2008

  • Student Alledges Conflict of Interest

    College student alleges conflict of interest after bringing complaint to DA's unit
    Michael A. Ramos
    San Bernardino Valley College
    student Dawn Crawford thought the unit was the perfect place for her complaint. The 32-year-old San Bernardino resident alleges that the community college district board of trustees discriminated against her and other people of color.

    Crawford, who has lawsuits pending against the college, is running in the November election for a seat on the board. Earlier this year she tried unsuccessfully to recall all seven district trustees.

    Crawford filed her complaint in person April 23, the day the Public Integrity Unit was formed, but didn't hear any response for months.
    ...
    "I kept sending e-mails, kept writing letters inquiring and he would totally ignore me and I couldn't understand why,' Crawford said. "He worked for the school and had no intention of doing anything about it. He can't investigate a complaint when he's working for these people.'
    ...
    But Crawford doesn't buy it.
    ...
    Crawford has sued the college over a series of incidents in 2000 and 2001.

    In 2000, she was serving as a senator on the college's Associated Student Body. After another senator directed racial slurs at her, she said, she refused to work in the Associated Student Body office. Crawford, who is black, was later removed from the senate for failing to perform her duties.

    Crawford sought to be reinstated but was unsuccessful. She filed a series of complaints against the college. Soon after filing a civil rights complaint with the state Attorney General's Office in May 2001, her apartment was searched by police. The search warrant said she was suspected of making terrorist threats against a fellow student and two staff members. Crawford denied making the threats.

    "They tried to turn me into this monster,' Crawford said. "At the time they raided my house, I was sitting on their dean's list, I had just won a scholarship. They didn't have probable cause. They claimed I was sending threatening e-mails. To this day I have never seen an e-mail I'm supposed to have written.'


    Crawford said the search and a subsequent decision to deny her financial aid are part of a pattern of harassment by the college since she began filing complaints.

    "It's not just one person,' Crawford said. "It's like every year there'sa demotion, and it's a black or Hispanic person in a leadership position.'

    The community college district could not comment on Crawford's complaint due to pending litigation and because she is a candidate for the board of trustees.

    Crawford sited several people who had been fired from the college and submitted newspaper articles about them to the Public Integrity Unit with her complaint.

    **** 



    Redlands Daily Facts - News


    Crawford, is a student at San Bernardino Valley College who filed a complaint with the District Attorney's office alleging she was a victim of racial discrimination.

    She forwarded her complaint to the Public Integrity Unit in the District Attorney's office April 23. In November, Crawford received a response rejecting her suit.
    ...
    Crawford began preparing a drafted petition to recall Ramos last week, but dropped the recall petition effort Wednesday, according to the e-mail.

    Crawford was unavailable for comment.
    ...
    After Crawford complained about Vanella's conflict of interest, her case was later forwarded to two other attorneys.

    The situation began in 2000 when the 32-year-old San Bernardino resident said her complaint about being the victim of racial slurs was ignored by the community college district board of trustees. Crawford, who is black, was kicked off the Associated Student Body Senate for "non-performance" the same day she was elected by her peers.

    In 2001, she unsuccessfully ran for a seat on the community college district board of trustees "to get attention" following her complaint against the college.

    If Crawford continued to pursue circulating her recall petition, she would have had 160 days to collect 65,000 valid signatures from registered voters within the county.
    ...
    Crawford currently has nine civil lawsuits pending against administrators at San Bernardino Valley College.


  • Student candidates to challenge College District trustees
    By LEIGH MUZSLAY

     

    SAN BERNARDINO - It's new school vs. old school in this November's San Bernardino Community College District Board of Trustees election.

    Four current board members with 68 years on the board between them want their spots back. And three students, all with community college experience, hope to bring fresh perspective to the board.

    "Instead of fighting against established ways of thinking, I'd like to come in with new energy and new ideas,' Riverside Community College student Arthur P.K. Anderson said.

    Anderson attended San Bernardino Valley College for two years, serving as a senator then president of the Associated Students. But he transferred after becoming frustrated with disorganization at the school.

    "Services at (Riverside Community College) are more student friendly,' Anderson, 24, said. "I don't think the board is aware of a lot of the problems.'

    Anderson, who lives in San Bernardino, plans to declare his intention to run today.

    Dawn E. Crawford, a San Bernardino Valley College student, is also running as a protest of sorts. She decided to run after signature problems halted her effort earlier this year to recall all seven of the district's trustees.

    Crawford, a former student senator, has sparred with the community college district over alleged violations of her civil rights.

    She has filed a lawsuit against the college and the district, along with several complaints with state and federal officials, charging the college has attempted to retaliate against her for asserting her civil rights. "Our current board members are corrupt,' Crawford, 32, said. "Even if I'm outvoted, I'll be there to blow the whistle. They vote in a block. No one's there to act as a watch dog I'm the perfect person for doing that.'

    Cal State San Bernardino graduate student Mark A. Sheppard also plans to file papers to run for the board today. A community college graduate, Sheppard said he wants to help the district "maximize its resources' during the state budget crisis.

    Sheppard is working on his master's degree in public administration and works for the Baldy View Chapter of the Building Industry Association.

    The 34-year-old Redlands resident also spent 3 years as a district representative for state Senate Republican Leader Jim Brulte of Rancho Cucamonga.

    Incumbents Charles H. Beeman of Highland, Allen B. Gresham of San Bernardino, Carleton W. Lockwood Jr. of Redlands and Mary E. Sampson of Colton say they want to finish what they've started on the board.

    For example, San Bernardino Valley College is in the middle of a major reconstruction project.

    This is "a project we started over 10 years ago,' Beeman, 72, said. I want to see it to the end, and it'll be done by the time this term is over.'

    The current board, incumbents said, will know best how to handle problems such as the state budget crisis.

    "Alan (Gresham) and I both feel that it's important we keep the members on the board who are familiar with this,' Beeman, a board member for 20 years, said. "We have stability and that's what we want to keep.'

    Sampson, who is wrapping up her first term on the board, agreed.

    "I think we compliment each other with our skill sets,' Sampson, human resources director for Riverside Transit Agency, said. "We really mesh well.'

    Conservative spending, she said, has kept the district afloat.

    "The board has been able to keep the district in a real good financial condition,' Beeman said. "We're not laying anybody off. We're continuing to take anyone that comes in and give them an education.'

    Carleton W. Lockwood Jr., first elected to the board in 1991, said it's important to stick things out during tough financial times.

    "We aren't jumping the ship when water seems to be leaking,' Lockwood said.

    He plans to declare hisintention to run today, he said.

    Lockwood, 47, is president of Lockwood Engineering Co. in Rialto.

    Board Vice President Allen B. Gresham was first elected to the board in 1971. He is the senior partner in the law firm of Gresham, Varner, Savage, Nolan & Tilden.

    He is on vacation this week and could not be reached for comment.


  • Some residents of Muscoy and Bloomington want to recall Gonzales

     

    Some residents of Muscoy and Bloomington want to recall Gonzales

    Some residents of Muscoy and Bloomington are angry with San Bernardino County Supervisor Josie Gonzales and are trying to collect the necessary signatures to put a recall vote on next year's election ballot.

    Gonzales, a former Fontana City Councilmember who was elected to the Fifth District seat last November, is interested in increasing the development of Muscoy and Bloomington, to the dismay of some of the people living in those areas. Gonzales' district also includes the eastern portion of Fontana as well as Rialto, Colton, and San Bernardino.

    Linda Thacker, the former chairwoman of the Muscoy Municipal Advisory Council, is helping to spearhead the recall attempt. She is alleging that Gonzales is using derogatory remarks and an intimidating attitude to achieve her goals.

    Another of Gonzales' opponents is Dawn Crawford, president of Students Against Corruption, who alleged that the supervisor wants to help developers at the expense of residents.

    "Josie is out of touch with the people in her district. On top of that, she lacks respect and looks down on people as if she is God's gift to the world. We elected her into office and we can take her and others like her out of office," said Crawford. "Josie is out to please some developers and those who supported her campaign. Josie could care less for the people in her district. The way she talks to them and belittles them is proof of that."

    Gonzales, however, disagrees with her opponents, stating that growth in the area is eminent and that residents and county officials should work together to improve the quality of life in the zone.  

    "Caltrans' construction of the Route 210 Freeway establishes State Street as the main thoroughfare through Muscoy and Interstate 15 and to Cal State University San Bernardino. The new freeway will create drastic impacts that must be addressed to better serve the community," said Gonzales. "I will always encourage the citizens ofthe Fifth District to participate in the important planning efforts. Planned development makes for better communities, especially when we unite our efforts."

    Controversy over Gonzales' viewpoints started last December when she addressed unhappy Muscoy residents about redeveloping the zone. The opposition increased earlier this year when she removed from office 12 advisory board members, seven from Bloomington and five from Muscoy, including Thacker.

    Gonzales said at that time that if change brings positive outcomes to the area, it should be welcomed instead of pushed away.

    "People are afraid of change; I understand why, but most of the time change is good," said Gonzales. "I want to bring prosperity to the zone, and in order to do that, some changes are necessary. The district is changing demographically, and we have to deal with those changes."

    IN ORDER to start the recall process, a letter of intent of recall has to reach Gonzales' hands, via certified mail or in person. Then she will have seven days to deliver a response to the allegations. Her response will be available on the ballot, if enough signatures are collected within the 160 days allowed by law.

    More than 11,000 signatures are needed to force the county to place the recall on the ballot -- 10 percent of the total registered voters in the Fifth District.

    Despite the several steps to take and the high number of signatures needed, proponents think they will succeed in removing Gonzales from office.

    "I have been in contact with Linda and other proponents. I have encouraged them every step of the way," said Crawford. "My organization will help them collect signatures and Josie will be recalled."

    Gonzales, on the other hand, sees the interest raised in these issues as something that could ultimately be beneficial for everyone.

    "I see this as a unique opportunity to better inform the community about the county's efforts to help residents and business owners improve their lives," Gonzales said.

Tuesday, April 01, 2008

  • SAN BERNARDINO
    Hotel fire evacuee files $ 50,000 claim
    A former resident of the fire-damaged Sunset Hotel has filed a
    claim against the city of San Bernardino, saying city officials
    should have given evacuees more time in city-paid hotel rooms
    before requiring them to find their own housing.
    In a claim filed Monday, Dawn Crawford, 33, says she has
    experienced emotional distress and financial hardship after a
    mid-June fire at the Sunset Hotel in downtown on G Street closed
    the hotel and forced her and her neighbors to move.

    Crawford is seeking $ 50,000 in damages. She says city officials
    and charitable groups helping with the fire's aftermath did not
    help her find housing as promised and gave her false hope that
    she would have a month of free shelter.
    Crawford said she was forced to use money she had set aside for
    educational expenses.
    City Attorney James Penman said the city paid for hotel rooms
    for many evacuees for about two weeks, using money earmarked by
    law for moderate and low-income housing.
    Penman said the city paid through July 2 to help those who
    already had paid for a full month's rent at the Sunset. Many
    were due to receive monthly federal assistance checks on July 1
    that would cover rent from then on, he said.

     


    Hotel's relocated residents worried

    FIRE: They fear city help will end. The Sunset's owner is eager to reopen.

    01:05 AM PDT on Wednesday, June 30, 2004

    By KAREN GAUDETTE / The Press-Enterprise

    SAN BERNARDINO - It could be a matter of days or several weeks before the fire-damaged Sunset Hotel in downtown San Bernardino is able to reopen its doors to the dozens of low-income men, women and families who called it home.

    A June 16 fire at the residential hotel on G Street badly damaged one room and critically burned the room's tenant, 36-year-old Sarah Clymer. She was in fair condition Tuesday at Arrowhead Regional Medical Center, said Jorge Valencia, a hospital spokesman.

    San Bernardino fire officials confirmed that the blaze began in Clymer's second-floor room and are investigating whether arson was the cause.

    The fire displaced about 70 residents. Most have been staying in local motels with financial help from the city and charities such as the Red Cross.

    Veno Nathraj, who runs the Sunset Hotel for owner Protea Hotel Inc. of Anaheim Hills, said he has met with electricians, fire-alarm companies and other subcontractors in the nearly two weeks since the fire to assess damage.

    Many workers have told him that it could take at least a week each to replace doors, drywall and fire alarms and fix the roof, which firefighters cut open to release heat and smoke, he said.

    In the meantime, Nathraj said he is asking city fire officials to allow him to board up the hotel's second floor and reroute elevators to avoid it during construction. He hopes to reopen first- and third-floor rooms to residents, many of whom worry about being able to find affordable housing until the Sunset reopens, he said.

    "Our main concern isthe safety ofanybody staying in the hotel," he said. "It'snot just putting heads to beds, to make sure when they put their heads on the beds, that they are safe."

    Doug Dupree, the city's fire marshal, said safety concerns likely make Nathraj's proposal unfeasible. However, he plans to meet with Nathraj today to gauge the damage and discuss his options, he added.

    "There may be something we can do, but I'm not sure," Dupree said. "I need to see what he has finished and what still needs to be done."

    Dawn Crawford, a Riverside Community College student who lived at the Sunset for the $500 monthly rent that helped make ends meet, said many fellow residents are in limbo. Some are worried that the city would end its financial help this week because a large number of the residents receive their checks on the first of the month.

    Many survive on monthly aid checks of about $700, Crawfordsaid. The Sunset is one of their few options because most other places require that tenants earn two or three times the monthly rent, she added.

    City Attorney James Penman said the city, as it has during past disasters, has temporarily housed evacuees using money required by law for low- and moderate-income housing.

    Penman said the Salvation Army and the San Bernardino County Department of Behavioral Health are working with evacuees to find housing. The city will fund emergency housing for as long as a month on a case-by-case basis, he added. The city began paying the residents' motel bills on June 19.

    This month's fire was the latest incident to befall the 111-unit hotel, which sits among senior housing, residential motels and a Greyhound bus station in a neighborhood where transients are a common sight. In late 2002, a fire at the Sunset left four dead and injured about 18 people.

    Under its previous ownership, the hotel was cited for nonfunctioning smoke detectors and fire alarms and flimsy doors that were not self-closing.

    The hotel's alarms worked properly in the latest fire, officials said.

    Built in 1968, the hotel is not required to have fire sprinklers, but Nathraj said he is considering installing them in the future.

    *************************************************


    Fire again strikes residential hotel

    SAN BERNARDINO: One woman is burned, and the building is evacuated. In 2002, four people died.

    12:57 AM PDT on Thursday,June 17, 2004

    By RICHARD BROOKSAND ELENA ARNOLD / The Press-Enterprise

    SAN BERNARDINO - For the second time in 18 months fireravaged a downtown hotel Wednesday, this time forcing the evacuation of about 55 residents andcritically burning a woman who police said may have been smoking in bed.

    Fire officials said the burned woman, 36-year-old Sarah Clymer, is a smoker who was alone in her room at the Sunset Hotel.

    "She was burned from the waist up. She's very critical," said San Bernardino police Detective Dave Dillon. "It looks like she was possibly smoking in bed. There's no evidence of foul play at this point."

    CheckWidthImage(1,850,300); Stan Lim / The Press-Enterprise Members of the San Bernardino City Fire Department responded to a fire at Sunset Hotel in which a woman was critically burned.

    The blaze at 8:18 a.m. drew every firefighter, fire engine and ladder truck in San Bernardino to North G Street, just north of the Carousel Mall. Fire crews contained the flames to Clymer's second-floor room.

    Two other hotel residents were overcome by smoke. A 50-year-old woman was taken to Community Hospital of San Bernardino for treatment, fire officials said. A 57-year-old woman refused medical attention. Their names were not available.

    Although burned wiring and heat and water damage are likely to keep the hotel closed for several days until repairs can be made, officials said a working smoke alarm system helped prevent a catastrophe like the one that killed four people and injured about 18 others at the same hotel in December 2002.

    "The fire alarm system was completely upgraded," said Fire Marshal Doug Dupree. "It was going off - horns and strobes - when our guys first got here."

    Residents react

    The fire was eerily similar to the 2002 disaster, said Norma Adair, who occupied the same second-floor room during both blazes. Among the differences: The way she reacted.

    Adair recalledrunning from door to door to make sure her neighbors got out safely during the first fire. This time, she didn't see a reason to even roll out of bed.

    "No smoke came in my room," she reasoned. "I have a window to jump out of if I have to."

    But ground-floor resident Alles Lund, 78, wasn't as stoic.

    "Ijust moved in yesterday," she said after escaping with only her red housecoat and a pack of Liggett cigarettes. "I was getting ready to take my shower and (the fire alarms) went off ... and the firemencame flying through my door!"

    Others weren't sure whether to stay or flee.

    "Certain (residents) will pull the alarms, so you get a lot of falsealarms," said first-floor resident Dawn Crawford, 33. "This (alarm) is maybe the third one in the last few months."

    When she noticed the horns and flashing lights, Crawford got dressed, ambled outdoors - and saw the smoke, she said.

    She also saw the burn victim.

    "As I was leaving, I saw her sitting on a brick wall in front of the hotel," said Crawford.

    "Her hair was singed. You could see burns on her arms."

    Despite the two fires, Crawford said she wants city officials to recognize that significant improvements have been made at the hotel by new owners.

    "So I hope the city doesn't come down hard on them. Not everyone here is mentally ill," said Crawford, who said she is a college student and knows of many residents who are retirees.

    "People come here because it's very low rent."

    CheckWidthImage(2,850,216);

    Signs around the building warn that alcohol, drugs, coffee makers, hot plates - and lit cigarettes - are not allowed in the rooms, residents said.

    Some residents ignore the rules, said Lillie Miranda, 57, who moved into her third-floor room two weeks ago, undeterred by stories of the 2002 fire.

    "It doesn't matter where people live - in an apartment (or) in a house. They're still going to be faced with the same danger," she said. "Look at all those people in the mountains who lost their homes last year."

    Support for hotel

    Even before firefighters rolled up their hoses Wednesday, some Fire Department and city officials were expressing cautious support for the renovated hotel.

    "Obviously, itwill get a good inspection again," said City Attorney James Penman.

    "But since everybody got out (alive), I think that's a good sign."

    Since the hotel's renovation after the last fire, the Sunset has been one of the safer places in the city, especially for the mentally ill and other people with limited money and housing options, said Penman.

    "And nobody wants to see 55 families, many with mental challenges, sleeping on the street and in the parks," he said.

    City officials still would like the hotel to be retrofitted with fire sprinklers, said Penman.

    State law does not require retrofitting for the 86-unit hotel that was built in 1968. Under more stringent city codes, sprinklers would have been required if it had remained closed for more than a year after the previous fire. Instead, it reopened last November - just short of a year.

    But there are plans to install sprinklers, said Veno Natraj, who said he and his wife bought the building in January.

    "At all our (five) hotels, we try to have fire sprinklers," he said. "That's a must."

    There also are plans to install a pool and spa, said Natraj, and to reopen the hotel's restaurant so a continental breakfast can be served several times a week.

    "If guests feel they are respected, they take care of things better," he said.

    If he reopens the restaurant, some churches and the Salvation Army are likely to be willing to provide and serve the food, he said.

    Some Sunset Hotel residents already eat meals at the nearby Salvation Army kitchen, officials there said.

    Salvation Army Maj. Russell Fritz said he visited the Sunset about a month ago and agrees that such hotels fill an important niche for people on limited incomes.

    "It's no Hilton, but obviously it's safe," said Fritz, who also is a police chaplain.

    "All the people got out of there. And the fire was contained to one room."

     


  • Signature problems sink recall effort


    Date: March 19, 2003
    Publication: Sun, The (San Bernardino, CA)

    SAN BERNARDINO - An effort to recall all seven trustees of the San Bernardino Community College District is on hold after problems surfaced with a form proponents had filed.

    County registrar's officials said two of the 10 signatures on the recall proponents' notice of intention did not represent registered voters living in the district. Also, a third signature listed a post office box when it should have listed a street address, they said.

    The main proponent of the recall, San


    Ex-SBVC senator begins recall effort Author:    MATT BENDER, Staff Writer
    Date: March 3, 2003
    Publication: Sun, The (San Bernardino, CA)

    San Bernardino Valley College student Dawn Crawford is leading an effort to recall all seven trustees of the San Bernardino Community College District, charging that the district violated her civil rights.

    Crawford, 32, who already has complained officially and sued the district, said she is launching the recall to get the district to change the way it treats minorities.

    On Monday she sent a notice to each trustee, saying she plans to organize a recall campaign. The notices were sent by



  • Dawn Crawford takes another route to oust DA

    COREY A. WASHINGTON
    Staff Writer

    Monday, February 23, 2004
    - REDLANDS - It's not quite over.

    After terminating her recall effort against District Attorney Mike Ramos, Dawn Crawford now plans to take another route to oust the DA.

    Crawford said she will ask the County Board of Supervisors to take action against Ramos for allegedly violating the state conflict of interest law, the same law under which former supervisor Jerry Eaves was prosecuted.

    Last year, the 32-year-old San Bernardino Valley College student filed a complaint with the District Attorney's office alleging she was a victim of racial discrimination.

    She later discovered Frank Vanella, the assistant District Attorney investigating her case and head of the Public Integrity Unit, is a part-time instructor at San Bernardino Valley College.

    Crawford drafted a petition to recall Ramos earlier this month, alleging his department engaged in corrupt activity. A week later she dropped the petition effort via e-mail to the county registrar of voters office.

    Ramos sees no issue with his department's actions or method of operation in the matter, adding, "I see absolutely no conflict of interest here."

    According to Ramos, Vanella does not participate in any policy-making decisions at San Bernardino Valley College, exempting him from such allegations.

    Ramos' office also forwarded Crawford's case to two separate attorneys following her complaint about Vanella's role with San Bernardino Valley College.

    "We bent over backwards giving her the benefit of a doubt," said Ramos.

    Crawford feels it's not enough.

    "I still want him thrown out of office," she said. "His office lacks integrity, the same thing their department was supposed investigate."

    Crawford says she also plans to file a lawsuit against Ramos under government code USC 42 1985, conspiring with others to interfere with a person's civil rights.

    "I feel like he is trying to blame me as if I did something wrong. His department is at fault," she said.

    The situation began in 2000 when Crawford said her complaint about being the victim of racial slurs was ignored by the community college district board of trustees. Crawford, who is black, was kicked off the Associated Student Body Senate for "non-performance" shortly after she was elected by her peers.

    "I had refused to perform my duties because of the degrading comments a fellow senator had made toward me," said Crawford in response to being removed from her student government position.

    Crawford has nine civil lawsuits pending against administrators at San Bernardino Valley College. These suits also name three students.

    But Ramos says the latest efforts to remove him from office will not steer him off course from his duties. Moving forward is Ramos' primary focus.

    "My department is investigating about 6,000 cases right now. I can't take any more time away from the people in this county who deserve justice."

    Crawford said she will attend the regular March 2 meeting of the County Board of Supervisors.



     

  • 7 vying for college district board



     7 vying for college district board

    DAVID JAMES HEISS
    Staff Writer

    Friday, October 31, 2003 -

    REDLANDS Four incumbents and three challengers are vying for four seats on the San Bernardino Community College District board.

    Carleton Lockwood Jr., Charles H. Beeman, Mary Sampson and Allen Gresham are all looking forward to another four years on the board, while two students and a businessman are looking for an opporunity to make a difference.

    The board guides policy-making at San Bernardino Valley College and Crafton Hills College.

    Dawn Crawford, of San Bernardino, a student currently enrolled at Valley Callege, hopes to continue her campaign for justice and equality.

    She has lawsuits pending against various administrators at the college alleging racial bias at the school.

    Crawford says her concerns have gone unrecognized on the campus and feels that minorities both students and employees have had a difficult time adjusting to life at Valley.

    "The college has a practice of terminating and demoting minorities," she claims. "I want to ensure that what happened to me and others doesn't happen again."

    When asked if people should be concerned about her litigious past, she declared: "I feel people should be honored to have someone on the board who stands up for what's right. I'm the type of person who will fight against anything that isn't right."

    Arthur Anderson, past student body president at Valley College, where he attended for two years until enrolling at Riverside Community College this fall, is running to make a difference. He says he was not empowered enough as a student.

    "I've seen a lot of policy problems and curriculum problems at San Bernardino Valley College, and I just want to make some simple changes," Anderson said. "I decided to run after seeing all the problems students run into and decided to get involved at the community level," citing that in the past student concerns were not given much notice when addressed to college administrators.

    For instance, he notes that Crafton and Valley are two of the few remaining schools running on an 18-week semester, whereas most other colleges Anderson has looked into have a 13- or 15-week semester.

    "It saves money and it provides more flexibility in class scheduling," according to Anderson.

    Mark Sheppard, of Redlands, vice president of the Building Industry Association out of Rancho Cucamonga, wants community colleges to do more for students who aren't geared to continue on to four-year schools, which he says is what the community college district is designed to foster.

    "I went through community colleges up north, and I find them to be underappreciated but critical to the educational system," said Sheppard, who eventually received his bachelor's degree in political science from Humbolt State University.

    "I hope to use my position to help others get more bang for their buck," he said. "While continuing to provide quality education for those going on to a four-year university, we should do more to help those not cut out for that by working with more partnerships in the private sector.

    "I'm a strong believer in accountability," said Sheppard, "and with the state budget being the way it is, we need people with experience working with the Legislature, which I have: I worked for Sen. Jim Brulte in the past; and I would fight for the district's fair share of state money."

    The budget is one of the top priorities for the incumbents, as well.

    "We're in a critical financial situation," said Allen Gresham, of San Bernardino, who has served on the board for nearly 32 years.

    Gresham is an attorney for Gresham, Savage, Nolan and Tilden a firm with offices in San Bernardino and Riverside.

    "I think my experience will be of help in seeing us through the situation with the least adverse impact on our overall programs," Gresham said. "We have an outstanding board right now. I enjoy and admire my fellow members and their commitment to education and the board."

    Chuck Beeman, of Highland, a pharmacist who has served 20 years with the board, stressed the importance of stability.

    "We want to be able to continue working with teachers and employees and keeping everyone happy," he said, stating that the San Bernardino Community College District is one of the largest employers in the area.

    "We're one of the few districts financially sound because the board are mostly business people who know how to manage things wisely, which is why it's important to keep incumbents on this board so we can continue to operate on a constant basis," Beeman said.

    Board member Mary Sampson, of Colton, is a 1988 graduate of Crafton Hills College.

    She is currently the director of human resources for the Riverside Transit Authority. In the past, she has worked as a classified employee and an adjunct faculty member teaching human resource marketing at Valley College.

    "The state budget is what we're constantly being apprised of," Sampson said. "We're heavily involved with construction projects at Valley due to a seismic fault, and we're addressing growth at Crafton. We need continuity on the board in order to address these critical issues."

    Board member Carleton Lockwood Jr., of Redlands, owner of Lockwood Engineering in Rialto, has served since 1991, and also served a year as a student representative in 1985 while he was attending Valley College.

    "My civil engineering and land surveying experience has been invaluable to the board during construction projects at Crafton, Valley and the San Bernardino International Airport where our professional development facility and district office is located," Lockwood said. "I would like to see the major imporvements through to fruition while serving for another four years."

     

  • Michael Ramos had corruption in his office

     Student continuing effort against DA

     

    COREY A. WASHINGTON
    Staff Writer

    Monday, February 23, 2004 - REDLANDS - It's not quite over.

    After terminating her recall effort against District Attorney Mike Ramos, Dawn Crawford now plans to take another route to oust the DA.

    Crawford said she will ask the County Board of Supervisors to take action against Ramos for allegedly violating the state conflict of interest law, the same law under which former supervisor Jerry Eaves was prosecuted.

    Last year, the 32-year-old San Bernardino Valley College student filed a complaint with the District Attorney's office alleging she was a victim of racial discrimination.

    She later discovered Frank Vanella, the assistant District Attorney investigating her case and head of the Public Integrity Unit, is a part-time instructor at San Bernardino Valley College.

    Crawford drafted a petition to recall Ramos earlier this month, alleging his department engaged in corrupt activity. A week later she dropped the petition effort via e-mail to the county registrar of voters office.

    Ramos sees no issue with his department's actions or method of operation in the matter, adding, "I see absolutely no conflict of interest here."

    According to Ramos, Vanella does not participate in any policy-making decisions at San Bernardino Valley College, exempting him from such allegations.

    Ramos' office also forwarded Crawford's case to two separate attorneys following her complaint about Vanella's role with San Bernardino Valley College.

    "We bent over backwards giving her the benefit of a doubt," said Ramos.

    Crawford feels it's not enough.

    "I still want him thrown out of office," she said. "His office lacks integrity, the same thing their department was supposed investigate."

    Crawford says she also plans to file a lawsuit against Ramos under government code USC 42 1985, conspiring with others to interfere with a person's civil rights.

    "I feel like he is trying to blame me as if I did something wrong. His department is at fault," she said.

    The situation began in 2000 when Crawford said her complaint about being the victim of racial slurs was ignored by the community college district board of trustees. Crawford, who is black, was kicked off the Associated Student Body Senate for "non-performance" shortly after she was elected by her peers.

    "I had refused to perform my duties because of the degrading comments a fellow senator had made toward me," said Crawford in response to being removed from her student government position.

    Crawford has nine civil lawsuits pending against administrators at San Bernardino Valley College. These suits also name three students.

    But Ramos says the latest efforts to remove him from office will not steer him off course from his duties. Moving forward is Ramos' primary focus.

    "My department is investigating about 6,000 cases right now. I can't take any more time away from the people in this county who deserve justice."

    Crawford said she will attend the regular March 2 meeting of the County Board of Supervisors.


     

Saturday, January 28, 2006

  • My name is Dawn Crawford not gadfly

     

     


    Gadflies swarm over Inland politics

    INTERNET: High-tech muckrakers dish opinion while their targets debate blogs' legitimacy.

    12:01 AM PST on Friday, April 1, 2005

    By NATHAN MAX / The Press-Enterprise

    Inland Political Blogs

    Journalists and politicians debate whether bloggers qualify for protection under the shield law.

    Lake Elsinore: www.elsinoremagazine.com

    Grand Terrace: www.grandterracenews.blogspot

    .com

    Jurupa: www.stupidschoolboardmembers

    .com

    Murrieta: www.murrietablog.blogspot

    .com

    San Bernardino: http://journals.aol.com/dawncrawford71/DawnCrawford/

    Corona: www.coronacablog.blogspot.com

    Bill Reimbold considers himself a journalist trying to stamp out corruption. Lake Elsinore officials say he is a nuisance whose one-sided coverage has no value.

    Reimbold's Web log, or blog, about Lake Elsinore politics has targeted everyone from city council and school board members to ordinary city employees and local newspaper reporters.

    Several people have threatened to sue Reimbold for libel and defamation over the past fiveyears for what he has written at ElsinoreMagazine.com. Nobody has followed through.

    But Reimbold and other Inland area political bloggers could be forced to reveal their unnamed sources if a judge's decision last month in Northern Californiastands and becomes precedent.

    A Santa Clara County Superior Court judge ruled three bloggers must release the names of confidential informants that provided the writers with information about Apple Computer products, but the bloggers appealed the ruling March 22.

    The bloggers unsuccessfully argued they were journalists protected under California's Shield Law, which prevents courts from forcing reporters to reveal unnamed sources.

    CheckWidthImage(1,850,300); Caitlin M. Kelly / The Press-Enterprise Blogger Bill Reimbold, shown peering through a magnifying glass that he uses to read faxes, says he deserves more protection than members of the mainstream media.

    "I actually deserve more protection, because I don't have the financial resources, the attorneys, the support staff, and I don't have the city of Lake Elsinore handing me press releases and using me the way they'll use the mainstream media," said Reimbold, 54, an insurance claims adjuster.

    Other blogs critical of Inland civic institutions have sprouted in Jurupa, Grand Terrace, Murrieta and San Bernardino.

    Cook Barela, a retired LAPD officer and former Jurupa Unified School District board member, has started a blog called StupidSchoolBoardMembers.com that criticizes district officials.

    Barela, like Reimbold, uses information obtained from unnamed sources and says he should be protected as a journalist.

    "A lot of things have changed," said Barela, 55. "A lot more news is going through the Internet than through the press."

    Society of Professional Journalists national president Irwin Gratz said all bloggers merit the same rights and protections as journalists working for the mainstream media.

    "If you think about it in historical terms, the bloggers are probably closer to the pamphleteers of the Revolutionary era than modern newspapers," Gratz said. "You could say that bloggers would be even more worthy of First Amendment protections."

    Toby Miller, a professor of media and cultural studies at UC Riverside, argued that some political bloggers should receive shield law protection, while others should not.

    Miller said bloggers whose posts are mainly opinions deserve no protection. However, those who go to meetings, interview people and observe what is happening are doing the work of journalists.

    The Society of Professional Journalists should become the arbiter of which bloggers act in the public interest and register them, Miller said.

    "If bloggers want shield protection, we need a way of verifying that they are undertaking journalism," Miller said.

    The Society of Professional Journalists does not register reporters or editors in or outside the mainstream media.

    Gratz said it is dangerous when anybody, especially governments and courts, is allowed to decide who is a journalist.

    "What about industry newsletters? What about weekly newspapers? It's just not a good idea for the government to be in the business of licensing, regulating and determining who is a journalist," he said.

    Questions about the authenticity of Dan Rather's now discredited report on President Bush's National Guard service first were raised by bloggers.

    Reimbold, who said he was fired from his college newspaper more than three decades ago for writing a one-sided article, posts unedited material.

    Two recent headlines aimed at Lake Elsinore Mayor Bob Magee read: "Mayor Squanders First Year," and "Magee Asks Auditor to Break the Law."

    Neither of the ensuing posts included responses from Magee or any of Magee's supporters.

    Magee said the Web site has no journalistic value, and Reimbold -- who lives outside Lake Elsinore's city limits -- deserves no shield-law protection.

    "It lambastes politicians and tries to degrade our city and the people who are trying to do something for it," Magee said. "A journalist reports good and bad. Mr. Reimbold just muckrakes."









  • Black Hole Award



    BLACK HOLE AWARDS GIVEN FOR
    BLATANT DISREGARD OF FIRST AMENDMENT

    Claremont, Inglewood and officials in San Bernardino County were cited Saturday by the California First Amendment Coalition for their "blatant disregard" for open government and First Amendment laws.

    Each year, the coalition confers its Black Hole Award to government agencies or individuals whose actions stifle public participation in government and violate public records and public access laws.

    "This year's Black Hole winners are truly losers to the extreme. San Bernardino County has become a place where speaking your mind can land you in jail, and the cities of Inglewood and Claremont have aggressively attacked critics and steadfastly refused to release clearly public information to citizens and even to an elected Inglewood City Council member," said Kent Pollock, CFAC executive director.

    The Black Hole Award gets its name from a heavenly body that not only emits no light but tends to swallow nearby sources of illumination. The awards were announced Saturday at the Fifth Annual First Amendment Assembly held at California State University, Fullerton.

    San Bernardino County Supervisors, District Attorney Dennis Stout and Mayor Judith Valles were cited "For the county's extraordinary series of arrests, prosecutions and jail sentences targeting several citizens for exceeding speaking time limits and talking out of turn or 'off-topic' at public meetings."

    The Inglewood City Council was cited "For its extraordinary disregard for the informational needs of its residents, and for its aggressiveness in isolating one of its own members who tries to get financial and other accountability information to the public."

    And Claremont received a Black Hole Award "For its campaign of intimidation, disinformation and unlawful secrecy, often in response to criticism of official policy, designed to reduce the public's knowledge of and involvement in their local government."

    The actual awards will be presented to the agencies at upcoming council and supervisors' meetings by CFAC General Counsel Terry Francke. Here are the details of each award:

    SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY

    For the county's extraordinary series of arrests, prosecutions and jail sentences targeting several citizens for exceeding speaking time limits and talking out of turn or "off-topic" at public meetings.

    The most extreme case involves Jeff Wright, currently facing recommitment to jail after serving two confinements totaling most of a year for a series of assertive but nonviolent exchanges with public bodies in the county. District Attorney Dennis Stout's office, arguing that Wright was released too early last month, began recommitment proceedings after the homeless man told the board of supervisors that one of its members, up for re-election next month, should be in jail himself. That supervisor has admitted accepting leisure trips paid for by a bond underwriting firm that landed lucrative work from the county in recent years, but has settled a civil action brought against him by paying $7,500 to the county.

    The nearly two year jail sentence the district attorney says is Wright's debt to society also contrasts with the year and a day to which another county official-the former investment officer-was recently sentenced in federal court for conspiring to accept bribes in return for contracting favors.

    Wright's most recent time in jail was ordered after he was found to have violated probation for earlier convictions concerning speech at public meetings. His "last straw" offense consisted in questioning San Bernardino Mayor Judith Valles about how limits on citizens' speaking time were being applied. At the meeting in question he had intended to speak for three minutes on each of three items on the city council's agenda, but was told after three minutes that his time was up because action on the three items had been combined under a single motion. He questioned the mayor for clarification of this ruling, she adjourned the meeting and explained it to him, and the matter ended there-except that weeks later he was taken back to court and found guilty of violating terms of his probation and ordered to jail. When he protested the sentence-"This is a ripoff of the taxpayers!"-SuperiorCourt Judge John Wade summarily added five days to his sentence.

    Wright's stringof offenses leading to his officially estimated cumulative sentence of almost two years includes one at a supervisors' meeting at which the agenda included a proposal to charge a fee for commercial filming or videotaping in the county. Wright asked if the fee would apply to a rock music group's videotaping of its own concert, and his comment was ruled out of order. Another incident supporting his jail time was a case of mistaken identity in which he was seized by four deputies in the county administration building after another man was reported to have uttered a threat. Wright spent 17 days in confinement awaiting his trial and conviction, not on the threat allegation, but on a charge of interfering with a peace officer.

    Earlier this year the city of San Bernardino attempted to get a permanent injunction keeping Wright away from Mayor Valles by distances that would have made it hazardous for him to navigate city hall. The permanent order was denied after the mayor admitted that its basis had been an isolated incident and did not cause her to fear him.

    That incident-Wright's angry confrontation with the mayor-had occurred when he learned that after ordering him removed from a meeting she had told a newspaper that he liked to be thrown in jail and wanted to be a martyr.

    Bob Nelson, another gadfly, is facing a reduced jail sentence for refusing to leave the speaker's podium at a supervisor's meeting, in protest over his perception that the citizen comment limitations were being unfairly and arbitrarily applied. An attempt to jail him for a full year was abandoned after the appellate panel of the superior court ruled that he had not, as charged by the district attorney, resisted arrest, but had exited the meeting quietly when taken into custody. His ongoing complaint is the supervisors' propensity to pack the consent agenda with scores of items-some of them quite controversial-and yet allow citizens only three minutes to comment on them all.

    Also this summer, activist Shirley Goodwin was removed from a supervisors' meeting and arrested after making three one-sentence comments from the audience, each challenging how limits on speakers' time and topic restrictions had been imposed on two other citizens and herself.

    Board of Supervisors Chairman Jon Mikels, as well as county prosecutors, say the punished speakers have only themselves to blame, and there is no doubt that these citizens are extraordinarily adamant and occasionally abrasive in pressing their issues before elected bodies. But we are aware of no other county where a citizen's insistence on getting official attention risks a greater loss of liberty than a public official's readiness to accept contractors' favors.


    Written by dawncrawford71 . Link to this entry | Blog about this entry | Notify AOL
    This entry has 1 comments: (Add your own)
      Kudos to you for your Black Hole award, and your fine choice of recipients.  
      If you think the incarceration of Jeff Wright was a travesty of democracy, you should investigate the way in which the open seat for the council was filled last year.

      However, as a resident of San Bernardino myself, I probably shouldn't say too much more. I'd like to avoid having my tongue cut out in prison.
      Comment from foramilee - 10/25/05 12:26 AM

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