Thursday, October 14, 2010

Ricasa is Being Investigated by California Fair Political Practices Commission FPPC





Sweetwater school trustee being investigated

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2010 AT 6 A.M.

— State officials are investigating a complaint filed against Sweetwater school board President Arlie Ricasa that alleges she is using new campaign funds to retire old debts.

A former school board member Jaime Mercado filed the complaint with the California Fair Political Practices Commission last month. Mercado alleges Ricasa - who is seeking re-election to the Sweetwater Union High School District board - is violating state law by using funds for that campaign to pay off debts incurred from a previous run for the state Assembly.

Ricasa denied the allegation.

“I’m raising money right now for my school board campaign,” Ricasa said. “No monies are being intermingled with debt from my 2008 Assembly campaign.”

Ricasa referred further questions about her expenses to her campaign treasurer, Kinde Durkee, who did not return several calls for comment.

Violations can carry a maximum penalty of up to $5,000, Commission spokesperson Tara Stock said.

Mercado, who is running for a seat on the Southwestern Community College governing board, said he filed the complaint because he was angry about a Sweetwater school board decision that doubled the amount it costs to file a candidate's statement.

“The intent is to minimize competition for them because not everybody has $2,000 to pay for a statement,” Mercado said. “That infuriated me.”

Mercado, a former principal, lost a 2008 re-election bid to the school district board.

Andrew Valencia is running against Ricasa for Seat 5 on the school board.

wendy.fry@uniontrib.com • (619) 293-1743 • On Twitter @WendyFry

Also in this section

SUSHD Critiqued for Timing/Cost of Full Page Tribune Adverts

The district has twice placed full page paid advertisements in the Union Tribune, in the last few weeks. The timing of it, during election season, is suspect. Read on for the Rostra blog opinion.
(A center-right blog, sdrostra focus is accountability to taxpayers. )


BREAKING: SWEETWATER SCHOOLS USING PUBLIC FUNDS TO PROMOTE RICASA DURING RE-ELECTION?

Thursday, October 14, 2010
posted by Barry Jantz

In the midst of a re-election challenge, Sweetwater Union High School District (SUHSD) President Arlie Ricasa is receiving significant positive name recognition from a taxpayer-funded public relations effort, paid by Sweetwater schools.

Ironically, the Fair Political Practices Commission (FPPC) confirmed yesterday it would investigate a complaint filed on September 20, 2010, against Ricasa for alleged improprieties associated with using funds raised for her current campaign to retire debt from a prior election. Ricasa was a candidate for the 78th State Assembly District two years ago, losing to eventual general election winner Marty Block in the 2008 Democratic primary contest.

The Union-Tribune ran a story about the FPPC complaint today. Attachedis the full complaint.

Yet, what the FPPC complaint and UT story do not address may be even more significant, while equal cause for an investigation by the appropriate authorities. In recent weeks, the Sweetwater School District has facilitated a full-fledged marketing campaign – at public expense – proclaiming its achievements, while hi-lighting the name of Board President Ricasa.

On September 29, 2010, Sweetwater Superintendent Jesus Gandaramailed a letter to district parents, celebrating increasing test scores. The letter, addressed “Dear Sweetwater family member” included enclosures of recent news clippings about the student academics, complete with a quote from Board President Arlie Ricasa.

How many parents were sent the packet of information? SUHSD should answer that question, but there is nothing in the letter to suggest that it didn’t go to every family. On its website, the district notes it has 42,000 students. Potentially, that’s a lot of mail, also very likely exceeding the state prohibition on publicly-funded mass mailings that tout the name of an elected official.

The district also ran at least one newspaper ad, of the full-page variety, on page five of last Thursday’s South County edition of the Union-Tribune, also proclaiming its positives and again giving recognition to Ricasa as the board president.

The chronology of events seems a bit coincidental. The complaint against Ricasa was filed with the FPPC on September 20. Nine days later, September 29, several thousand letters were mailed to district residents, quoting Ricasa. Sample ballots, then absentee ballots started getting mailed to voters from the County Registrar about that time, a month from the November 2 election. Then, October 7, a full page ad appeared in the newspaper, again mentioning Ricasa.

Anyone check the price to run a full-page Union-Trib ad lately, or the costs associated with printing and mailing thousands of letters? My guess is that the school district didn’t report the amounts as an in-kind contribution to Ricasa’s campaign. After all, that would be illegal.

The timing of the school district PR campaign, polishing the name of Arlie Ricasa with public monies during her re-election, all conveniently timed with sample and absentee ballots being in the hands of voters, couldn’t be more suspicious.

Ricasa faces a challenge from Andrew Valencia. The race seems to be a hodgepodge of unconventional alignments and philosophies, with the Sweetwater Education Association — the teachers union — endorsing against incumbent Democrat Ricasa, opting instead to support Republican Valencia. The local Labor Council is apparently even staying out of the race as a result of the union’s non-support of Ricasa. That’s all for another story, perhaps.

The immediate issue of interest is the mysterious timing of the school district’s marketing campaign. It must be strange politics – or internal influences – that a school board superintendent would be so ethically tone deaf as to approve pro-Ricasa letters, ads, artwork and related expenditures during his board president’s re-election, and think no one would take note. Especially given all the government “watch-dogging” taking place in the county and around the state in recent years.

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This article also appears at the FlashReport.



2 Responses to “Breaking: Sweetwater Schools using public funds to promote Ricasa during re-election?”

  1. Barry Jantz Barry Jantz says:

    As a result of this piece, I have been contacted by parents indicating that the Sweetwater district is also funding numerous official robocalls “from Ricasa” as well, touting various district events and such, throughout the election season.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Local elections: Recommendations from neighboring teacher associations

If you did not receive your CTA flyer and you want to support our fellow teachers county-wide here are the recommendations for the November 2 General Election. These are made by CTA members at the local level just as we endorsed: Janney, Rivera and Valencia.

In red: our "feeder" elementary schools and our local community college.


1. Cajon Valley Union School District: Tamara Otero, Jane Alfano, Jill Barto

2. Chula Vista Elementary School District: Larry Cunningham, Doug Luffborough

3. Del Mar Union Elementary School District: Scott Wooden, Douglas Rafner, Kristin Gibson

4. Escondido Union School District: Jose Fragozo, Marty Hranek

5. Grossmont Union High School District: Richard "Dick" Hoy, Robert Shield

6. National Elementary School District: Brian Clapper, Ted Godshalk, Liz Vasquez

7. Oceanside Unified School District: Lillian V. Adams, Janet Bledsoe Lacy

8. San Diego Unified School District: Kevin Beiser and YES ON MEASURE J

9. San Dieguito Union High School District: Barbara Groth, Amy Herman, Rick Shea

10. South Bay Union School District: Julian Cook-Ly, Josie Dorado, Mealanie Ellsworth

11. Southwestern Community College District: Norma Hernandez, Tim Nader, Jesseca Saenz-Gonzalez

12. Sweetwater Union High School District: Karen Janney, Hector Rivera, Andrew Valencia

13. Palomar Community College District: Paul McNamara

14. Grossmont-Cuyamaca Community College District: Seat #1 Edwin Hiel & Seat #2 Debbie Jusleson