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The Clarendon Chamber of Commerce will hold its next Business After Hours and its second Totally Locally $500 drawing at A Fine Feathered Nest Thursday, June 13.
The come-and-go event will be held from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. and will provide Chamber members and prospective members an opportunity to learn more about what’s happening in the local business community. Refreshments will be served.
In addition to learning more about A Fine Feathered Nest, one of the highlights of the June After Hours will be the Chamber’s second Totally Locally drawing. Shoppers can sign up for the drawing at eleven local stores, and one will win $500 in Clarendon Cash at the After Hours.
Totally Locally participating businesses include A Fine Feathered Nest, Floyd’s Automotive Supply, Clarendon Outpost, Henson’s, Cornell’s Country Store, J&W Lumber, Country Bloomers Flowers & Gifts, Mike’s Pharmacy, Every Nook & Cranny, Saye’s Tack Store, and Turquoise & Rust.
Two people lost their lives in a two-vehicle collision at the east city limits in Clarendon last Friday afternoon, May 31.
Sandra Gray, 57, of Amarillo and Karen Chan, 37, of Palo Alto, Calif., were both pronounced dead on the scene by Donley County Judge John Howard.
Department of Public Safety Sgt. Cindy Barkley reported that Chan was driving a 2016 Honda Odyssey southeast bound on US 287 when veered over into the northbound lane and collided head-on with a 2015 Chevrolet Traverse driven by Gray about 200 feet outside the city limit at approximately 4:07 p.m.
Chan’s passengers, an eight-year-old female and a one-year-old male, were transported to North West Texas Hospital in Amarillo with non-life-threatening injuries.
DPS says the posted speed limit at the location is 55 mph, and the roadway was clear and dry. All the occupants and drivers were wearing seat belts.
The accident remains under investigation by Texas Highway Patrol Troopers, Barkley said.
Billie Nell Sharp Shaffer, 92, of Clarendon died on Wednesday, May 29, 2019, in Amarillo.
Services were held on Monday, June 3, 2019, in the Robertson Saints’ Roost Chapel in Clarendon. Burial followed in Citizens Cemetery in Clarendon.
Arrangements are under the direction of Robertson Funeral Directors of Clarendon.
Billie was born August 18, 1926, in Clarendon to Carl and Clara Risley Harris. She grew up in Clarendon and had lived in Florida for 19 years prior to moving back to Clarendon in 1983. She enjoyed doing a lot of genealogy work.
She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband, Jack H. Shaffer; and a daughter, Debra Dupry.
She is survived by her son, David Sharp of Clarendon; a daughter Jennifer Wing of Florida; 8 grandchildren; and several extended family.
Memorials can be made to a favorite charity.
Sign our online guest book at www.RobertsonFuneral.com
The daughter of Clarendon College’s longest serving regent and the president of CC’s regional accrediting body addressed the Board of Regents during its May 16 meeting following an April decision not to extend President Robert Riza’s contract.
Debbie Thompson, the daughter of the late Delbert Robertson, spoke to the board during public comment about what she called the discord of recent meetings.
“I’m here today in the name of my father,” Thompson said. “He served on this board for more than 50 years and was proud of this college. I stood on this land and watched my Daddy dig dirt with a gold shovel. He was so happy and proud of this college.”
Thompson said her father often spoken to her after board meetings to brag on the good things that were happening and how proud he was of the college. But she said before he died in 2017, “he saw discord starting, and he worried about it.” After a motion in April to extend Riza’s contract failed by a vote of 4-5, Thompson said she had to speak out.
“As I read the paper, my heart was breaking, and I wondered what my Daddy would think about what was said and written and the discord,” Thompson said. “My Daddy thought Dr. Riza was the best thing to happen in a long time. My grandson is graduating [high school] with 47 [college] credit hours. He wouldn’t have that.”
Thompson, who is a nurse at the public school, also praised the president’s wife, who is a third grade teacher. Although Riza still has a year left on his contract, Thompson said the prospect of losing the him as college president “is a big heartache” for her and said Clarendon would be losing “an amazing teacher” if Mrs. Riza leaves.
“Our kids are learning from us,” Thompson said. “It was discord that caused this. I beg you not to destroy what’s been built.”
Later in the meeting, Dr. Belle Wheelan, the president and CEO of the Southern Association of Colleges & Schools – Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC), addressed the board.
The vote not to extend Riza’s contract apparently prompted the SACSOC president’s visit to the college board as she opened her remarks by saying, “I thought it would be good to review what SACSCOC does since you’ll obviously be going through a change in leadership.”
Wheelan presented a PowerPoint presentation of more than 30 slides, defining the role of the accrediting body and the necessity of accreditation and then focusing on the SACSCOC Principles of Accreditation.
Under the Principle of Integrity, Wheelan said that it’s not what colleges do but what they don’t do that calls attention to whether they have integrity.
“If you don’t follow policies and you cover things up, that shows a lack of integrity,” she said.
She also drew attention to two separate principles – “Governing Board” and “Administration and Organization.”
“Please recognize these are two different functions and never the two shall meet,” Wheelan said. “When they do, that’s when we come in.”
SACSCOC has also adopted new principles in the last couple of years addressing board responsibilities.
“We found that many boards didn’t remember their roles,” Wheelan said. “Board members as individuals have no power.”
Wheelan said SACSCOC oversight requires that an institution not be controlled by a minority of its board members.
“When you have a handful running the board, then the board is not running the college,” she said.
SACSCOC rules also require that the board’s presiding officer and a majority of other board members are free from any contractual, employment, personal, or familial financial interest in the institution.
This requirement led to SACSCOC requiring Jerry Woodard to step down as chairman of the board of regents over a year ago due to his position as president of Herring Bank, which is the college’s depository.
“You have to keep the college free from that crap,” Wheelan said. “You all had a problem with this, and thanks for letting me in the room today because I know you were pissed about that.”
Wheelan also said it is important that the board keeps a distinction between policy-making and the responsibility of the administration to implement policy.
“This is the challenge,” Wheelan said. “Remember: ‘Eyes in; Hands off.’ Ask questions but don’t tell him [the president] how to do it.”
The college also needs to have a fair and appropriate process for the dismissal of a board member, Wheelan said.
“The state may have guidelines. Otherwise you need to have a policy to address this,” she said, noting that is important to keep undue political influences out of the college’s business and to prevent outside influence “by persons or bodies” on the president’s office.
Following her presentation, Wheelan offered to answer any questions the board might have. They had none.
SACSCOC is CC’s regional accrediting agency, assuring the quality and integrity of the college and its programs. Accreditation by SACSCOC ensures that credits earned by Clarendon College students transfer to other colleges and universities and it also ensures CC can receive federal financial aid funds.
CC had previously drawn SACSCOC’s attention a few months ago after a complaint filed by former CC Vice President of External Affairs Ashlee Estlack raised questions regarding compliance with four SACSCOC accreditation standards. The complaint followed almost two years of rising tensions between Regents Jerry Woodard and Darlene Spier and members of the college administration.
The SACSCOC Board of Trustees is expected to address that complaint next week.
A program piloted by Clarendon College three years ago has been renewed and expanded by the US Department of Education.
CC is one of 64 colleges nationwide and one of only seven in Texas in 2016 to host the Second Chance Pell program, which allows incarcerated Americans to access Pell Grants to pursue post-secondary education.
CC President Robert Riza says the program has proven its effectiveness and CC’s funding for the program has gone up from $101,000 in 2018 to $140,000 this year and has helped 151 students in Pampa and Childress.
“If you can spend $10,000 to get these students and education, it’s better than spending $40,000 per year to incarcerate them,” Riza said. “That’s not liberal or conservative; that’s just math. The recidivism rate of someone who earns an education credential drops to single digits.”
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos announced recently that the government will expand the Second Chance Pell experiment by allowing new cohorts of colleges and universities to participate. This important experiment has already provided a number of students with new educational opportunities that prepare them for college and workplace success.
“We are eager to expand the Second Chance Pell experiment, which has shown significant promise,” said Secretary DeVos.
“We hope that through this expansion, we can reach more students and utilize the information gathered to better inform Congress about future updates to the Higher Education Act.”
Clarendon is the only community college is West Texas to be included in the program, Riza said. It is funded through the federal government, and the money is handled through the college’s financial aid office.
“President Trump supports this, and the state supports it,” Riza said. “They know the program is successful.”
The program started with the Obama Administration’s commitment to creating a fairer and more effective criminal justice system, reduce recidivism, and combat the impact of mass incarceration on families and communities through educational opportunity.
The US has the highest incarceration rate in the world with approximately 2.2 million people incarcerated in American prisons and jails. Hundreds of thousands of individuals are released annually from these facilities. A Department of Justice-funded 2013 study found that individuals who participated in correctional education were 43 percent less likely to return to prison within three years than those who did not participate in any correctional education programs.
Through the Second Chance Pell pilot program, institutions may provide Federal Pell Grants to qualified students who are incarcerated and are likely to be released within five years of enrolling in coursework.
In addition to traditional classes, Clarendon College is trying to expand career and technical training opportunities to local prisons as well, Riza said.
Activities and raffle items are lining up for the Howardwick Hoe-Down to be held on Saturday, June 8, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. in Howardwick.
The benefit to raise money for street repairs in that community will feature a wide range of activities for the folks of all ages.
Live music is scheduled in the park from 1:00 to 6:00 p.m., and a bounce house will be available for the kids.
Donations are still being accepted for the raffle, and local arts and crafts will also be featured at the Hoe-Down as well as a car and motorcycle show.
For more information, contact Debra Hubbard at 806-277-0625 or call City Hall at 874-2222.
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