Wednesday, February 27, 2013

THAT'S THE WAY IT'S SUPPOSED TO WORK, AIN'T IT?

By Juan Montoya
It is taking them nigh on to 23 years, but the brainiacs at the state capitol think they just about got it right.
By state capitol I don't mean just the legislators at the state house, but also our own intrepid pair of solons Sen Eddie Lucio Jr. and State Rep. Rene Oliveira. Both are now pushing for the merger of Pan American University at Edinburg with the University of Texas at Brownsville and the creation of a new South Texas university including a medical school to be situated somewhere in the Rio Grande Valley.
In a sense, we've come full circle.
At one time there used to be a satellite PanAm university on the Texas Southmost College campus. Students at TSC who had fulfilled their academic requirements there could then take their classes with PanAm faculty in Brownsville and then continue their studies in Edinburg for the upper-level courses required to get their degree.
If what you were interested was to get a certificate in auto mechanics, auto body work, air conditioning, electric work, etc., you attended the classes at TSC. It worked out fine for decades.
The medical school has come (a la Jeffrey Dahmer, the Milwaukee homicidal cannibal) in bits and pieces. Still, even, as a critic pointed out, the $10 million in annual allotments that Lucio has received for the Regional Academic Health Center in Harlingen since its opening in 2002 equals to what the Valley Regional Hospital in Brownsville spends in one month in operations.
Still, algo es algo dijo un calvo cuando le salio un pelo.
The trick now, say Lucio and Olivieira, is to get the required legislative majority in both the Texas House of Representatives and the Texas Senate to approve the inclusion of funds from the fabulously oil-and-gas royalty wealthy UT system's Permanent University Fund. These PUF monies had been denied both the Rio Grande Valley institutions as a condition of them being part of the system. It was kind of like paying your suitor to take you to the dance instead of the other way around. Others likened it to consensual rape.
When these same gentlemen struck the deal with the UT System to bring the burnished orange cow skull to affix to the TSC taxing-district funded buildings on the college campus, it was with the understanding that the UTB-TSC "partnership" would continue to milk the community tax base though the taxing district and "transfer" millions annually to UTB to afford it the means of opulence that any self-respecting world-class university should.
Over time, this "partnership" evolved into what can only be charitably characterized as an abusive relationship between the taxing district and it's milkmaid. The mission of the community college was lost in the shuffle of tax dollars and the Juliet Garcia's administration quest to establish an academic empire on the backs of the poorest residents in the country.
Tuition rates for students of both the university and the community college were on par, with even remedial students paying the same rates as a freshman at UTB. The TSC faculty and administration was reduced to a handful of caretakers and clerks who kept the records for the district. Students on remedial soon exhausted their Pell grants and other federal assistance paying for the first or second year of tuition and more than half dropped out after the first year.
If you were seeking a vocation like Air Conditioning, Auto Mechanics, Welding, entry-level nursing, Radiology, etc., why pay premium rates at UTB-TSC when you could just jump on a Valley Regional bus and attend TSTC in Harlingen for a fraction of the cost?
Over the 22-year existence of the "partnership," UTB siphoned more than $1 billion in "transfers" from TSC and the taxpayers of the community college taxing district. The academic returns were dismal, with a 17 percent graduation over six years, less than a 50 percent retention rate for freshmen, etc.
Unimpressed with the pomp and glitter, the exorbitant cost to their kids, and the pomp and circumstance of keeping a bloated academic nobility living in the lap of luxury, the voters of the district ousted Garcia's lapdogs on the TSC board and opted for a peaceful separation.
But just as they were about to pull the plug, Garcia and her cadre of overpaid underachievers had one more trick up their sleeves. They tried to ram a proposal down the throats of the TSC board to hand over all the assets of the community college - real estate, bank deposits, buildings, dreams, you name it -   over to UTB. The college taxpayers could keep the bond debt and the "partnership" would solicitously wait until they paid it before the "partnership" was dissolved. Neat, uh?
In other words, there would be no more community college. Everything - except the debt and the $12 million in rent arrears that UTB owed TSC - would belong to the UT System.
The TSC - with the almost full support of the community - said nyet.
Now we see where the Brownsville Independent School District and TSC have reached an agreement to teach dual-degree school district students interested in getting an Air Conditioning Certificate for free as a quid pro quo for the $400,000 from the district in equipment to teach the course.
The college, we're pleased to see, has rediscovered its community mission under President Lily Tercero and the majority on the board who withstood the withering firestorm from Garcia's minions, namely Adela Garza, Kiko Rendon, Rene Torres, and Trey Mendez now joined by Ray Hinojosa and Drs. Reynaldo Garcia and Robert Lozano.  
As Carly Simon used to say: "Well, that's the way I've always heard it should be..."
Now, if we can only free ourselves from the clutches and schemes of Juliet Garcia, Oliveira, and Lucio,  who are at this very moment planning to ensnare us again to be taxed for the money it will take to run the medical school, we might be able to breathe a sigh of relief.
But don't hold your breath.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

The agreement between BISD and TSC to teach the trades as a part of a dual enrollment program is long coming. Juliet failed to promote or support TSC job training and the trades....thus the partnership failed. Juliet's high tuition forced students to go to TSTC in Harlingen or to STC in McAllen for an affordable education. The big question that now looms...and was a point in Letter to Editor in today's Herald....is will there be a new "Taxing District" created to fund the new UT promises for the Valley. Have Juliet, the Lucios, and Olviera promised a tax district to get UT Systems action and that of the Legislature. We have a taxing district for the Port of Brownsville which should have been terminated years ago. How much more can the people of Cameron County be taxed so that people like Juliet can earn hundreds of thousand of dollars each year???

Anonymous said...

I am new to this but the original idea of the partnership seems like it was a good one. It just got spoiled by terrible leadership. Too bad. Where was the board all that time?

Anonymous said...

If julieta la vieja garcia was a private sector employee she would have been fired YEARS AGO for the pathetic 17% graduation which takes 6 yrs to achieve instead the normal 4 yrs,. and 50% retention rate for freshmen. This women is a total failure and only in the liberal camp failure is rewarded. PRORESO ESTAMOS COMO ESTAMOS!

Anonymous said...

I don't understand why we have to "merge" campuses (lose our campus) in order to be included in the puf! These legislators should be fighting to have UTB and UTPA as standalones in the PUF! This whole thing is going to be UT-McAllen when all is said and done. We have already lost our administrative jobs to McAllen. McAllen leaders met with Hidalgo County legislators last month to strategize on the medical school without any Cameron County representation present. What are our guys doing? McAllen's stance is that won't advocate for the med school to be located there. Instead, they will wait on a study by the Board of Regents and see where the study recommends the medical school be located. Hmmm. And then shortly thereafter, the Governor appoints a McAllen resident to the Board of Regents. So, say good bye to the Harlingen med school. I hate to sound like an us versus them type, but they (Hidalgo Co. and McAllen) are muscling away all of the UT assets toward their community. Their Mayor, at the state of the City address accused valley leaders of a "Friday night football mentality" and said that it will prevent progress. Why doesn't McAllen advocate leave these campuses alone and advocate for inclusion into the puf...and instead of robbing from their brethren, why don't they fight to bring something new to the valley...like a law school, or a pharmacy school. i guess it's simply easier to steal from us Cameron County country bumpkins.

Anonymous said...

In all the discussions about a merger, why isn't anyone talking or bringing up the subject of accreditation. Accreditation was all it was heard when TSC went as a stand alone school. Wouldn't this new school require a revisit for accreditation?

chief cool arrow said...

yes their is talk about a new tax district hurray for brownsville stick it to them once again or will the tax disrtict be for th ehold valley? anyway chingado when will all these mamadas stop?

Anonymous said...

Puro chile

Anonymous said...

Previously asked: "I don't understand why we have to "merge" campuses (lose our campus) in order to be included in the puf! These legislators should be fighting to have UTB and UTPA as standalones in the PUF!"

The answer is, because this would requier an ammendment to the TX State constitution. Nearly impossible to achieve for this purpose.

Anonymous said...

Why is enrique escobedo like Ernie Hernandez getting their security company, Printing company, Landscaping contracts, Vending Machine CONTRACTS AWARDED from their friends at the Port, County, BISD, City?

Is this a conflict of interest?

rita