Inland Edition, March 22, 2019

Page 1

The Coast News INLAND EDITION

VISTA, SAN MARCOS, ESCONDIDO

VOL. 5, N0. 7

Admissions scandal hits North County

By Steve Horn

By Steve Puterski

TURN TO SCANDAL ON 7

MARCH 22, 2019

Nearly half of Palomar students ‘disadvantaged’

2 residents indicted in FBI college sting REGION — Two San Diego County residents have been indicted in the massive FBI investigation into parents securing their children admission to some of the best universities in the nation. Named “Operation Varsity Blues,” the scandal has implicated at least 50 people including Elisabeth Kimmel, 54, of La Jolla (who also owns a home in Las Vegas) and Toby MacFarlane, 56, of Del Mar. Early headlines described how actresses Lori Laughlin (“Full House”) and Felicity Huffman (“Desperate Housewives”) were also charged in the scheme. Kimmel owned KMFB News8 in San Diego before selling the station in 2018. She was arrested March 12 at her La Jolla home and is accused of a conspiracy to get her daughter into Georgetown and son into the USC. According to reports, Kimmel’s daughter’s application said she was a tennis recruit, although no there is no record of her daughter’s participation with the U.S. Tennis Association. Her daughter never played at Georgetown and graduated in 2017, according to NBC 7 in San Diego. Kimmel allegedly bribed officials at both schools through a fixer, William Rick Singer, who operated the Key World-

.com

JIM PEATTIE, General Manager of Decommissioning Oversight at SCE, describes how the cask transporter loads canisters into long-term storage. Photo by Jordan P. Ingram

Edison: ‘We could have done a better job’ By Jordan P. Ingram

REGION — Nearly eight months after a “nearmiss” canister incident delayed storage operations at San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, the message from Southern California Edison’s management team was clear: The company is committed to regaining the public’s trust. Edison officials spoke

directly to several local reporters about the company’s new safety and oversight program during a March 18 walking tour of the facility. “Quite frankly, we didn’t do our job here,” said Ron Pontes, Edison’s environmental decommissioning manager. “Believe me, we’ve taken a lot of heat, not only from the community, but from senior exec-

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utives in this company, that are not happy with what happened here. We could have done a better job.” Dry storage efforts were interrupted on Aug. 3 after a stainless steel canister containing 50 tons of spent nuclear fuel rods became wedged on a shield ring as it was being lowered

SAN MARCOS — For San Marcos’ Palomar College, it’s a tale of two cities. At the top of its new $67 million library on the fourth floor, the community college with an enrollment of roughly 25,000 students has a proposal in the works to build a $1 million, over 2,200-square-foot office suite for its president, Joi Lin Blake. But from the windows of the proposed suite — more sizeable than many San Marcos homes — Blake would overlook a student body not only struggling to pay tuition bills, but a large percentage of whom live in poverty. According to Palomar College’s demographic data collected by its Institutional Research and Planning wing, 45 percent of its student base is classified as economically disadvantaged. Under federal law, that is defined as “individuals (other than individuals with disabilities) who have economic or academic disadvantages and who require special services and assistance in order to enable these individuals to succeed.” Further, some 69.8 percent of enrolled students at Palomar College applied for financial aid for the 2016-

HOME & GARDEN T TO THE COAST

NEWS GROUP

| MARCH 2019

In this issue...

Dwelling Units • Plants • Accessory Antiques Landscaping nt • Flooring • Home Improveme Remodeling • • Real Estate • Gamerooms Art • Furniture

Coast News Grou

p

TURN TO SAN ONOFRE ON 10

The Coast News

| The Rancho

Santa Fe News

Ellen Neufeldt has been named the fourth president of Cal State San Marcos. She will take over in July. Story on Page 3. Courtesy photo

2017 school year, according to data collected by the college published in its annual 2016-2017 FaceBook. Out of that pool, 60.9 percent ended up receiving financial aid, or 14,711 students. One of those students is Michelle (real name protected in response to a request for anonymity), a 54-year-old student who has returned to college late in life as a commuter stuTURN TO PALOMAR ON 3

Check out our

2019 Spring

A SPECIAL SUPPLEMEN

NEW PREZ

Home & Garden Magazine inserted in today’s paper

| Inland Edition

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