Ponderable

Ads are getting weird. Especially since I am on my phone. First NRA ad. Then electronic testing equipment. Then mature women porn and finally met men in Ontario. What has my phone been doing?
Sounds like you are a gay closeted gun nut.
 
Regents throw parties at UC’s expense
By Melody Gutierrez and Nanette Asimov
May 28, 2017

The night before the University of California Board of Regents voted to raise student tuition to help cash-strapped campuses, they threw themselves a party at the luxury Intercontinental Hotel in San Francisco and billed the university. The tab for the Jan. 25 banquet: $17,600 for 65 people, or $270 a head.

It wasn’t the only pricey dinner UC’s volunteer governing board put on for themselves at the university’s expense.

Two weeks ago, on May 17, the regents threw a $15,199 party at San Francisco’s elegant Palace Hotel for 59 people — a $258-a-head event also billed to the university. Hours earlier, angry students shut down the regents meeting, shouting “greedy” in protest of the tuition increase and revelations by State Auditor Elaine Howle that the university president’s office kept $175 million in secret funds. The day after the party, regents defended UC President Janet Napolitano after Howle presented her audit — but agreed to her recommendations.

Documents obtained by The Chronicle show that Napolitano’s office reimbursed the regents for more than $225,000 in dinner parties since 2012. During that period, the regents held four to six dinner parties a year for themselves, their spouses and other guests. Those dinners included:

January 2016: A $13,600 retirement party for regents Fred Ruiz and Paul Wachter at the Palace Hotel. The regents office initially said 86 people attended the dinner, which The Chronicle reported earlier this month. Last week, the office acknowledged that had been the number of people invited to the party, and that 60 attended. The cost per person was $227.

November 2014: An $8,800 dinner party thrown as the regents considered raising tuition by up to 28 percent over five years. The regents approved the tuition increase, which was later rescinded following negotiations between Napolitano and Gov. Jerry Brown.

March 2013: The regents hosted a $15,600 dinner even as former UC President Mark Yudof said at that month’s meeting that UC was “working to weather the financial crisis.”

Regents’ dinners are a tradition going back decades using private funds bequeathed to the university, said UC spokeswoman Dianne Klein. But even some regents say the cost should be borne by those attending, not by a university system that demands more money from students and the state.

“These things are unnecessary,” said Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, a regent who did not attend the January or May dinners. When told the January dinner cost $17,600, Newsom said it was “inappropriate.”

“We should do better,” he said. “It’s jaw-dropping.”

The governor, also a regent, did not attend the January or May dinners, according to his office, which said he was unavailable for comment.

One government watchdog said the Jan. 25 party on the eve of the tuition increase creates the impression of a conflict of interest.

“These types of dinner events look really, really bad, and they give the appearance that (Napolitano) is buying the support of the regents,” said Jamie Court, president of the good-government advocacy group Consumer Watchdog. He called the dinner parties “outrageous.”

The parties shed light on the close relationship between Napolitano’s office and the board that oversees it: Napolitano’s office reimburses the regents’ expenses, and the regents approve the budget for Napolitano’s office.

These parties also raise questions about the effectiveness of the regents’ spending policy. UC policy prohibits reimbursements for “entertainment expenses that are lavish or extravagant” and limits dinners to $81 a person.

The Chronicle first identified the high-priced regents dinners in documents obtained from the state auditor after Napolitano’s office came under fire last month for keeping secret funds and paying executives salaries much higher than similar positions at other universities or in government work.

That audit questioned how well the 22 regents were doing their job overseeing Napolitano’s $686 million office, headquarters for the university system. Howle recommended that the Legislature take over the job, suggesting that would increase accountability.

Such an action would be unprecedented because, under the California Constitution, UC is an autonomous branch of government that the state has determined is “equal and coordinate” with the others.

Assemblyman Phil Ting, D-San Francisco, who called for the audit and wants to bring Napolitano’s budget under legislative control, said the dinner parties help make his case.

“I’m concerned they haven’t scaled these back,” Ting said.

entire article:
http://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/
 
Regents throw parties at UC’s expense
By Melody Gutierrez and Nanette Asimov
May 28, 2017

The night before the University of California Board of Regents voted to raise student tuition to help cash-strapped campuses, they threw themselves a party at the luxury Intercontinental Hotel in San Francisco and billed the university. The tab for the Jan. 25 banquet: $17,600 for 65 people, or $270 a head.

It wasn’t the only pricey dinner UC’s volunteer governing board put on for themselves at the university’s expense.

Two weeks ago, on May 17, the regents threw a $15,199 party at San Francisco’s elegant Palace Hotel for 59 people — a $258-a-head event also billed to the university. Hours earlier, angry students shut down the regents meeting, shouting “greedy” in protest of the tuition increase and revelations by State Auditor Elaine Howle that the university president’s office kept $175 million in secret funds. The day after the party, regents defended UC President Janet Napolitano after Howle presented her audit — but agreed to her recommendations.

Documents obtained by The Chronicle show that Napolitano’s office reimbursed the regents for more than $225,000 in dinner parties since 2012. During that period, the regents held four to six dinner parties a year for themselves, their spouses and other guests. Those dinners included:

January 2016: A $13,600 retirement party for regents Fred Ruiz and Paul Wachter at the Palace Hotel. The regents office initially said 86 people attended the dinner, which The Chronicle reported earlier this month. Last week, the office acknowledged that had been the number of people invited to the party, and that 60 attended. The cost per person was $227.

November 2014: An $8,800 dinner party thrown as the regents considered raising tuition by up to 28 percent over five years. The regents approved the tuition increase, which was later rescinded following negotiations between Napolitano and Gov. Jerry Brown.

March 2013: The regents hosted a $15,600 dinner even as former UC President Mark Yudof said at that month’s meeting that UC was “working to weather the financial crisis.”

Regents’ dinners are a tradition going back decades using private funds bequeathed to the university, said UC spokeswoman Dianne Klein. But even some regents say the cost should be borne by those attending, not by a university system that demands more money from students and the state.

“These things are unnecessary,” said Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, a regent who did not attend the January or May dinners. When told the January dinner cost $17,600, Newsom said it was “inappropriate.”

“We should do better,” he said. “It’s jaw-dropping.”

The governor, also a regent, did not attend the January or May dinners, according to his office, which said he was unavailable for comment.

One government watchdog said the Jan. 25 party on the eve of the tuition increase creates the impression of a conflict of interest.

“These types of dinner events look really, really bad, and they give the appearance that (Napolitano) is buying the support of the regents,” said Jamie Court, president of the good-government advocacy group Consumer Watchdog. He called the dinner parties “outrageous.”

The parties shed light on the close relationship between Napolitano’s office and the board that oversees it: Napolitano’s office reimburses the regents’ expenses, and the regents approve the budget for Napolitano’s office.

These parties also raise questions about the effectiveness of the regents’ spending policy. UC policy prohibits reimbursements for “entertainment expenses that are lavish or extravagant” and limits dinners to $81 a person.

The Chronicle first identified the high-priced regents dinners in documents obtained from the state auditor after Napolitano’s office came under fire last month for keeping secret funds and paying executives salaries much higher than similar positions at other universities or in government work.

That audit questioned how well the 22 regents were doing their job overseeing Napolitano’s $686 million office, headquarters for the university system. Howle recommended that the Legislature take over the job, suggesting that would increase accountability.

Such an action would be unprecedented because, under the California Constitution, UC is an autonomous branch of government that the state has determined is “equal and coordinate” with the others.

Assemblyman Phil Ting, D-San Francisco, who called for the audit and wants to bring Napolitano’s budget under legislative control, said the dinner parties help make his case.

“I’m concerned they haven’t scaled these back,” Ting said.

entire article:
http://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/

The ruling class.
 
I can't believe the Dems are this barbaric,

GOP rep says he was assaulted by Democratic reps on floor of TX House of Representatives
Sarah Taylor 1 hour
http://www.theblaze.com/news/2017/0...reps-on-floor-of-tx-house-of-representatives/



Their " Supremacist " attitude is present with every post, article or TV/Cable presentation lately...

If you turn on CNN, MSNBC or various Liberal News shows the vehement hatred is present through out the entire broadcast.
One blatant/disgusting example is the " Joy Reid " AM Joy on MSNBC on weekends.
She takes the cake....
 
Looks like the old folks home,
Where is his drool bib?
DBCASDoVoAAz91M.jpg


2020 VISION: HILLARY WEARS SEIZURE GLASSES AT PARADE...
 
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