Volume 46, Issue 13
January 14, 2011
President sees greener pastures in Pennsylvania By Jen Ashenberner The Advocate This is not the best time to be searching for either an interim or permanent college president, according to MHCC Faculty Association President Jack Schommer. “Searching for a college president is probably the hardest process we will have to go through,” Schommer said Wednesday. “It will be tough to find someone.” MHCC President John Sygielski announced Wednesday in an email to college staff he had accepted a position as president at Harrisburg Area Community College in Pennsylvania and will leave MHCC June 30. In an email Thursday morning, Sygielski said, “I am thrilled to have an opportunity to represent another successful teaching and learning community that is highly responsive to its communities’ education and training needs and which is strongly valued and supported by its constituents. “I have friends, family and colleagues on the East Coast who are very happy and excited for me, so this very much has a ‘coming home’ feel to it,” said Sygielski.
Sygielski was born in Ohio, earned his doctoral degree in Illinois and served as a community college president in Virginia before coming to MHCC in July 2008. When Sygielski leaves MHCC, he said he will miss, among other things, the spirit of the students and the perseverance of the employees who have sacrificed for the benefit of the college. “My decision to leave MHCC does not mean I am unhappy here,” he said Thursday. “It simply means that, like many of us, I embrace change, choices, options and opportunities.” He will begin his new job in Harrisburg July 5. Schommer said it will be hard to find an interim president by the time Sygielski leaves. “Our administration is so new that I don’t know they have the skill set to be a college president,” he said. The process begins with looking at the college administration for qualified candidates and considering whether they want the position.
See Sygielski on page 8
Photo by Devin Courtright/The Advocate
From right, President John Sygielski and board members Rod Monroe and Bev Russell listen in on a board meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m.to a guest speaker about building up the City of Troutdale. Sygielski announced Wednesday that he would leave MHCC at the end of June to become president of a community college in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
Electrical mishap forces evening evacuation of main campus By Jen Ashenberner The Advocate Plumes of steam from an electrical box prompted an evacuation Wednesday night at the Gresham campus, according to MHCC Director of Communications Maggie Huffman. “What we think happened is the electrical box filled with water and created steam,” she said in an interview Thursday. The fire alarm and PA evacuation request were signaled at 8:10 p.m. after someone detected smoke. A member of the custodial staff said the entire courtyard surrounding the stairway in the 1600 area was filled with smoke coming from the box in the ground beneath a boulder. The steam could be seen coming from under the outdoor concrete stairway. “We don’t know the extent of the repairs,” said Huffman. “We may know tomorrow or we may know next week.” According to Huffman, the situation also created an electrical outage in parking lots W and X. “There was never any danger,” said Huffman. “The evacuation did not last long.” Emergency responders arrived on campus at 8:15 p.m. and gave the “all clear” at 8:17 p.m., according to Huffman. However, people did not re-enter the buildings until 8:30 p.m. A public safety officer on the scene reported it took an extra five
5
Photo by Devin Courtright/The Advocate
Emergency responders wait for maintenance technicians to cut the power to the electrical system after steam was detected in the stairwell of the 1600’s area of the Gresham campus Wednesday night.
to 10 minutes for the Gresham Fire Department to get onto campus because of the backup of cars exiting the parking lots when the evacuation began. “We request that people do not leave in their vehicles during
Concordia transfer sparks women's basketball team
an emergency evacuation unless requested by emergency responders to do so because it hinders the emergency vehicles’ ability to get onto campus,” said Wayne Feagle, lead public safety officer. A question arose whether
Wednesday’s electrical issue had any connection to the electrical issues experienced in April 2010 which could have resulted in a “major catastrophic event” according to Richard Byers, director of facilities management in
There will be no school on Monday, Jan. 17, in observance of
MarTin luTher King Jr. day
7
an April 2, 2010 Advocate article. Huffman said there is no connection between the two emergencies.
-Additional Information contributed by Kylie Rogers
Jazz ensemble takes a taste of the Big Easy