A N AT I O N A L PA C E M A K E R AWA R D N E W S PA P E R
Volume 60, Issue 4
theswcsun.com
Winter Edition 2016 - 17
Board names Dr. Kindred Murillo new president By Cristofer Garcia-Saldivar and Alejandro Muñoz Anguiano Staff Writers
Murillo
SWC students struggle with homelessness
Dr. Kindred Murillo, the president of Lake Tahoe Community College, was selected as superintendent/president of Southwestern College by a 5-0 vote of the governing board. Board members are scheduled to discuss her contract and conduct a final vote to officially appoint her to the position at their Dec. 14 meeting. Murillo earned a doctorate in
Organizational Leadership from Pepperdine University in 2010 and has 20 years experience in community colleges. She became the first female president of Lake Tahoe Community College in 2011. Her biography says that during her five years there she advocated for transparent budgeting and financial stability, and led the college when the community approved a $55 million general obligation bond. Murillo said she was ready to leave Lake Tahoe because she built a capable and ethical team that would lead the college into a sustainable future.
Southwestern’s Governing Board chose Murillo over Vice President of Student Affairs Dr. Angelica Suarez and Dr. Reagan Romali, president of Harry S. Truman College in Chicago. Board President Nora Vargas said Murillo’s record at LTCC influenced the board’s decision. “The board was impressed with Dr. Murillo’s steady leadership at Lake Tahoe, her passion for improving educational opportunity for all students, and her commitment to equity and equality,” she said.
‘Love has no borders’
please see Homeless pg. A3
A former Southwestern College student pleaded guilty to three counts of battery and was placed on three years probation after a six-month stint in county jail.
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Deal extends DE training deadlines
“I put my headphones in and that’s when he started brushing on me,” she said. “I began to feel really uncomfortable and it was very scary.” She moved to a different chair to get away from Balancar, but he followed her
Problems with distance education have hit close to home. When Southwestern College was tagged with 15 sanctions by its accreditation agency, one that stood out was the college’s non-compliant distance education program, more commonly known to students as online classes. Professor Angelina Stuart, cochair of the college’s Accreditation Oversight Committee, was Academic Senate President in 2011 when she and former Interim President Denise Whittaker helped SWC off probation and back into good standing with the college’s accreditation agency, ACCJC. Stuart said she has some “grave concerns” about the current accreditation situation, but said distance education is going in a better direction thanks to DE Faculty Coordinator Tracy Schaelen. Some DE concerns have been partially resolved by faculty. Distance Education Faculty Training (DEFT) launched in June 2016 and is led by Schaelen. It is a five-week, 40-hour online course that provides training, resources, guided application and evaluation of course concepts. Faculty were originally supposed to complete distance education training in December when about 140 faculty would have been DEFT certified. Faculty leaders complained that the deadline was unrealistic. Faculty leaders were able to negotiate on a deadline extension. Three 2017 tentative dates for DEFT are being offered in Feb. 12 to Mar. 18, April 3 to May 6 and July 3 to Aug. 5. Schaelen said that was a wise decision. “Due to faculty requests, we are offering one and possibly two sections of DEFT in the winter intersection,” she said. “By the time the spring 2017 semester begins, (more than) 150 instructors will be DEFT certified. Our facilitation team for DEFT is committed to running multiple sections of DEFT throughout the academic year to accommodate the needs and schedules of our colleagues.” Academic Senate President Andrew Rempt said it would have been difficult for faculty to balance teaching classes with taking 40 hours of distance education training. “There was sort of an unspoken agreement that we would have two years to accomplish this,” he said. “I
please see Balancar pg. A3
please see D.E.F.T. pg. A2
Natalie Mosqueda/Staff
Six lucky families had a three-minute reunion when the U.S. Border Patrol opened the massive gate at Friendship Park at the U.S.-Mexico border. Story on page 20
Former student receives parole after sexual battery case By Alejandro Muñoz Anguiano and Josh Navarro Staff Writers
please see President pg. A2
By Josh Navarro Assistant News Editor
By Cristofer Garcia-Saldivar News Editor
Georgia really wanted to earn a good grade in a class she loved. So she turned on the overhead light and spread her books across the dashboard of her car. It was cold, her mother was asleep and they were parked near the Chula Vista Marina. Georgia was homeless, but loved being a college student. Georgia (a pseudonym) is a 19-yearold nursing student and one of the 32 percent of California college students experiencing housing insecurity. A recent study by the College Equity Assessment Lab (CCEAL), a research lab under the Interwork Institute at San Diego State University, found that homeless students across California are silently facing a grim struggle to survive. Southwestern College is no stranger to the problem. Georgia recalled the brutal year she spent as a hungry homeless student with her family of six sleeping in two cars. “It wasn’t easy for me,” she said. “Every morning I was waking up at six and going to the park and rinsing off in the sink water. It was the coldest time of the year.” When she was 17 her family moved to Southern California and she started at SWC. They were living with a relative until problems arose and the family suddenly found itself with nowhere to go. “We were just like, ‘This happened, what do we do now?’” she said. Fearing custody loss of Georgia’s baby cousin, her mother reached out to government resources that helped the family find a safe parking zone in Chula Vista. They spent most of their time there before it was closed down. Georgia and her family started parking in a lot between J Street and
Newly-elected trustee Roberto Alcantar was sworn in shortly before the presidential vote. He said Murillo’s experience with accreditation was key reason for her selection. “She is someone who has helped colleges turn around from situations much worse than the one Southwestern College is in,” he said. “(She) talks a lot about not just fixing the accreditation problem we have now, but also setting up systems and procedures that are followed every
Glenn Balancar was charged with 10 misdemeanor counts, including sexual battery, at SWC and SDSU in September 2015. Balancar is required to undergo psychological evaluation and has a restraining order for all 10 victims as well as the SDSU and SWC campuses. Details
CAMPUS A12
of his mental health treatment were not disclosed. Last fall Balancar allegedly harassed three SWC coeds and was sent to the South Bay Detention Facility. A student harassed by Balancar last September said he inappropriately touched her inner thigh at the library.
ARTS A18 Murdered Americans honored during a moving Trans Day of Remembrance.
VIEWPOINTS A5 Provocative narrative dance concert moves in the right direction.
SPORTS A8 Our diverse borderlands college needs to reboot MexicanAmerican studies.
Berkeleyeducated SODA recepient is an international wrestling queen.