Opinion: Why everyone in L.A. should care about USCâs scandals
Good morning. Iâm Paul Thornton, and it is Saturday, Nov. 13, 2021. My three kids got their first COVID-19 shots this week, because children ages 5-11 were finally authorized to receive the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. Letâs take a look back at the week in Opinion.
Before reading any further, know that I have a brother, an aunt and an uncle who graduated from UCLA; have a nephew who will soon graduate from UCLA; and as a UC Berkeley undergraduate would shake the keys for my work and apartment (I didnât have enough money for a car) at the USC student section while the Trojan Marching Band played on the field during football games, a taunt those of us in public universities like UCLA and UC Berkeley reserved for private schools like USC and Stanford. So consider yourself informed of my personal bias â or just the chip on my shoulder.
But you donât have to be a creature of college rivalries to worry over the never-ending scandals at USC. This is a university that throws its weight around in Los Angeles â it effectively helps operate the largest public hospital in the county, is one of the largest private employers in the area, and its influence extends to the regionâs most important institutions. When Rep. Karen Bass announced she was running for mayor of Los Angeles, the universityâs journalism school posted a report heralding an alumniâs candidacy; she may be joined in that race by Rick Caruso, the billionaire developer and chairman of USCâs Board of Trustees.
So it might concern more than just USC football fans and alumni that the universityâs School of Social Work entered into a business partnership with a private company that made it operate more like an expensive for-profit diploma mill than an academic institution. As The Times Editorial Board noted, the partnership created an online social work masterâs program than left graduates deeply in debt while working in jobs that paid far less than they needed. The financial pressure caused by the revenue-sharing arrangement may have also contributed to yet another scandal â the federal indictment of Los Angeles City Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas and the schoolâs former dean.
More disturbing is USCâs handling of allegations of sexual assault and druggings at the Sigma Nu fraternity. Columnist Jean Guerrero, an alumnus, chillingly mentions that she is not at all surprised by allegations, nor is anyone who recalls the âparties on Greek row [that have] long been incubators of rape and other violence.â She says all Greek life at USC should be banned: âUSC has suspended Sigma Nu and is enforcing a pause to fraternity parties, but itâs not about a few bad apples. Itâs about organizations structured to dehumanize and endanger women at university-sanctioned events.â
Mind you, this is an institution that has dramatically expanded its reach into Los Angeles and improved its reputation since the 1990s. If USC chooses not to make serious reforms, everyone in the region could be worse off.
This isnât to say the UC system is currently skating by. At UC Santa Barbara, they want to build a prison-like dorm to house 4,500 students, a testament to the university systemâs overcrowding crisis, says the editorial board: âThe bottom line: The UC system is over-enrolled and at a tipping point, in danger of no longer being the internationally admired gem of public higher education.â For UC lecturers, the situation is especially dire: About one-quarter of them leave after teaching for a year, and the median salary is $25,000 â part-time pay for full-time work, writes former UC Irvine lecturer Diane Mendoza NevĂĄrez.
You heard right. Aaron Rodgers played the Martin Luther King Jr. card. Columnist LZ Granderson writes: âThe rub is the Green Bay Packers quarterback presented his King paraphrase as if he was on the front lines challenging an unjust law, when in reality he was just sitting on the couch trying to find ways to avoid being held accountable for his words. ... Now Iâm not suggesting Rodgers, or anyone else for that matter, canât quote King. But contexts matter.â L.A. Times
If youâre poor, nonwhite and live in California, you have a good chance of residing in an area thatâs unsafe for cycling. Ostensibly, California encourages a form of transportation that emits essentially zero greenhouse gases and promotes health, but infrastructure upgrades that make cycling safer are moving slowly, perpetuating inequities in low-income areas where police are more likely to use bike infractions as a pretext for a stop. Plus, if you bike in an area patrolled by the Los Angeles County Sheriffâs Department, youâre much more likely to be stopped and searched if youâre Latino, according to a Times investigation. The editorial board says this is yet more proof that the sheriff needs greater oversight.
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Can the Republican Party win without Trump? Maybe, says columnist Jonah Goldberg: âOne of the lessons of last weekâs elections is that Republicans can win back suburban and independent voters by talking about real issues, exploiting Bidenâs weaknesses, and highlighting the Democratsâ excesses. If Trump is in the race, he has made it clear what heâll talk about. âIf we donât solve the Presidential Election Fraud of 2020,â Trump said last month, âRepublicans will not be voting in â22 or â24. Itâs the single most important thing for Republicans to do.ââ L.A. Times
This is a spectacularly bad idea: A City Councilman wants to arm park rangers in Los Angeles. Yes, rangers have law enforcement training, but theyâre different from big-city police officers: They conduct nature hikes, enforce park ordinances, participate in search-and-rescue missions (some L.A. parks are large and rugged) and occasionally answer public safety calls, for which they can ask the LAPD for backup. Allowing rangers to carry guns would run counter to the cityâs effort to reimagine public safety, says the editorial board. L.A. Times
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