Wednesday, September 3, 2008
EDUCATION / State senator named to run community colleges
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(05-08) 16:52 PDT Sacramento --
State Sen. Jack Scott, the influential president of the Senate Education Committee, will take complaint of the Golden State Community Colleges system in January after an 11-year career in the state Legislature, it was announced Thursday.
After a national search, the colleges' Board of Governors met in a closed session Tuesday and later announced the consentaneous ballot to choose Scott, D-Altadena (Los Angeles County), as the system's 14th chancellor, overseeing the state's 109 community colleges.
"The hereafter of our state economic system and even the Golden State dreaming are tied to increasing the figure of Californians who both come in and complete their college education," George C. Scott said in a statement. "That is why the community colleges are so important. They can supply Golden State a competitory border in the planetary economy."
Before taking political office, George C. Scott spent 23 old age working in the community colleges, including as president of Pasadena City College. In 2006, George C. Scott was given the Golden State Community Colleges lifespan accomplishment awarding and was described as the "patriarch" of the system by then Chancellor E. G. Marshall Drummond. "The Golden State Community Colleges are embedded in the very cloth of California, and I go on to be one of their greatest fans," George C. Scott said at the time.
Scott will have $198,500 annually, plus a state employee benefit bundle and state-owned vehicle.
Under term limits, he was not eligible to run for his Senate business office again.
E-mail Jill Benjamin Ricketson Tucker at .
Labels: altadena, board of governors, california community colleges, closed session, college education, los angeles county, national search, sacramento state, senate education committee, state legislature, unanimous vote

