Peralta Community College District's Only Student-Run Publication
Peralta Community College District's only student-run publication.

The Citizen

Peralta Community College District's only student-run publication.

The Citizen

Peralta Community College District's only student-run publication.

The Citizen

Plants grow in plastic pots next to Merritt Colleges Landscape Horticulture greenhouses. Merritt is set to launch a new Certificate of Achievement in Cannabis Horticulture this fall.
Merritt’s new Cannabis Horticulture Certificate is about ‘jobs, jobs, jobs’
Desmond Meagley, Staff Writer • April 20, 2024
Student Trustee Naomi Vasquez, who was sworn onto the Peralta Community College District Board of Trustees on Dec. 12, 2023, sees her role as an opportunity to uplift her fellow students and advocate for the value of a community college education.
Student Trustee Naomi Vasquez aims to lift voices and empower students at PCCD
Isabelly Sabô Barbosa, Social Media Editor • February 28, 2024
Archives

    ASLC meeting hits boiling point

    The ASLC got into “hot water” at its Sept. 18 meeting. The issue started to boil when Student Center cafeteria director Scott Strong asked the student government for $300 to purchase a hot water tower that would help those students who bring tea bags or noodles and need hot water.

    Council members were in support of the request until ASLC President Carl Oliver reminded Strong that the cafeteria has a budget of $210,000, funds derived from student customers. This riled Strong, who noted that he employed several students in the cafeteria.

    Strong and Oliver (and other council members) went at it for a while, sometimes heatedly, until ASLC Vice-President Rose Gelin stood and angrily declared that she wanted to express her feelings. Gelin felt that student council members’ questions had no relevance to the purchase of the water tower. (Members had asked where the money came from to pay the student workers in the cafeteria and about the profits from charging for hot water last year.) Gelin grabbed her belongings and stormed out of the meeting.

    Student government members then rescinded their vote and denied funds for the water tower, suggesting that Strong could easily afford it.

    In other business:

    >Art instructor Raymond Patlan, who teaches the mural class, asked for permission to paint a mural in the Student Center building along the second floor staircase, opposite the bookstore entrance. Patlan’s students brought a scale model of the mural, which is very colorful and “represents the spiritual journey Laney students take to understanding themselves.”

    The council approved the mural by nine yes votes and one abstention.

    >A representative of the Oakland Unified School District asked for Laney to hold a series of forums on campus to help stop a developer’s proposal to purchase Oakland’s Dewey High School. The land, just two blocks from Laney, would be used for a residential complex. The request was unanimously approved on the condition a room can be made available for the OUSD officials, and Laney personnel, to confer.

    About the Contributor
    In the fall of 2019, The Laney Tower rebranded as The Citizen and launched a new website. These stories were ported over from the old Laney Tower website, but byline metadata was lost in the port. However, many of these stories credit the authors in the text of the story. Some articles may also suffer from formatting issues. Future archival efforts may fix these issues.  
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