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A U.S. Air Force plane sits at the March
Field Air Museum near March Air Reserve Base in Riverside on Jan. 29, 2020. Photo by Ringo H.W. Chiu, AP Photo
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Two senior staff members at the March Field Air Museum have resigned following the termination of three museum employees on Oct. 9. The 46-year-old museum at the March Air Reserve Base carries 122 aircraft and 60,000 artifacts.
Jeff Houlihan, the director of collections, curation and restoration for 16 years, and security supervisor Mikey Diaz both resigned in protest this week after the nonprofit’s president Jamil Dada fired collections manager Sherry Ziegler, archivist Karla Conte and restoration assistant Tryston O’Toole.
Dada, who did not respond to requests for comment, cited financial difficulty as the reason for the terminations. Numerous attempts to reach representatives from the museum also were unanswered.
Houlihan said the museum has been financially successful for years. Board member and volunteer James Roever said he sees regular financial statements, and that any claim of financial difficulty is a lie. Public documents from the 2023 fiscal year show all expenses paid for, with a net profit of $140,000.
“I got up to resign. I said, ‘that’s it. I’m done.’ I’ve worked with Sherry for forty years, we worked in the government before, and here now, and she is an exemplary person. She just does an incredible amount of work, and there is no way she should have had to deal with this,” Houlihan said.
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Roever and Houlihan both said that the foundation’s bylaws do not allow Dada to fire people without a vote from the board of directors, and that the board was not informed about the terminations before they occurred.
“The board—I’m on the board. The board had no knowledge of it whatsoever. It was never brought up in the meetings I’m in. It just came in on a Thursday morning,” said Roever.
Roever is concerned that the terminations may jeopardize the foundation’s nonprofit status.
Before the staff was fired or quit, they were preparing for an accreditation visit in November by the American Alliance of Museums.
Houlihan said Dada wants to move the museum's focus toward events, and away from archives.
“He wants to get rid of the archives entirely, which are thousands of photographs dating back to 1970, and personal logbooks of military members,” Houlihan said.
The museum has not had an executive director since February.
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Primary care services for 3,700 to shut down due to Medi-Cal reimbursement blocked
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The corporate headquarters of Planned
Parenthood of Orange & San Bernardino Counties in Anaheim on May 3, 2022. Photo by Leonard Ortiz, MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty Images
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Planned Parenthood’s primary care service centers in Upland and San Bernardino are closing, causing thousands of patients to look for other options for their medical needs.
The centers offered care for 3,700 patients in San Bernardino County dealing with diabetes, mental health, vaccines, cold and wellness programs. The organization’s abortion care services will not be affected.
The closure is due to HR 1, also known as the Big Beautiful Bill, said Nichole Ramirez, chief communications officer of Planned Parenthood of Orange and San Bernardino Counties.
HR 1 instructed the federal government to not pay for Medicaid care at any nonprofit that provides abortions. At the same time, it did not remove the requirement for those nonprofits to provide care for people insured through Medicaid.
“So you can’t tell people that you can’t provide for them, but you won’t be paid for it,” Ramirez said.
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Planned Parenthood of Orange and San Bernardino Counties is the only Planned Parenthood branch in the state to offer primary care services to people, Ramirez said. The organization has been providing the services for twelve years.
“It’s heartbreaking. It’s a terrible day. There were a lot of terrible decisions to make,” Ramirez said.
Planned Parenthood sued HR 1’s restriction on July 7. An emergency injunction granted on July 21 paused the policy. On September 11, due to an appeal, the policy was reinstated.
Seventy-seven staff members across San Bernardino and Riverside have lost their jobs. The program will be completely closed by December 10th.
Alexandra Olmedo Flores, a former community engagement coordinator who was laid off due to the program’s closure, said the federal governments’ attack on Planned Parenthood for providing abortions missed a bigger picture.
“It’s such a shame because 13,000 patients come to our health centers for primary health, and those 13,000 patients are now going to seek their primary health elsewhere,” she said.
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Aidan McGloin
Inland Empire Reporter
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