Mary Jo Gabel has taught sewing classes at Allan Hancock College for 35 years and never had issues until 2021, she said, when she saw a series of age discriminatory actions against her retired, noncredit students.Ā
āWe were made aware back in October that the office has been referring to usābecause we were seniorsāas āthe blue haired mafia,ā… I filed a complaint in October and let my class know about it on the first of November,ā she said.Ā

Students were offended by the name, and 14 of them filed additional complaints against Dean of Academic Affairs Sofia Ramirez Gelpiāwho initially used the term in an email between administration staff. At the same time, Gabel said, the college had been moving Gabelās noncredit classes out of the designated on-campus sewing lab and sent them to a community center in Guadalupe, and later to Atkinson Community Center.Ā
āIāve filed a grievance, had mediation, and interviewed with the lawyer the college secured. They said thereās no discrimination. But Iām sorry, thereās discrimination,ā she said.
Gabel and her noncredit students planned to approach the Hancock board of trustees during its May 10 meetingāafter the Sunās deadlineāto discuss their grievances and advocate to get back in a campus classroom, she said.Ā
āWe are planning on wearing blue ribbons in our hair and showing up as a group, and a few people will speak. They need to see weāre out there and not done. Itās a sad situation with everything theyāve looked the other way on,ā Gabel said.Ā
Allan Hancock College Director of Public Affairs Lauren Milbourne told the Sun via email that the college thoroughly investigated the claims with an independent third party and ensured that students would continue to have access to the sewing program.Ā
āThe district conducted an investigation and followed all its policies and procedures related to processing complaints of unlawful discrimination related to the sewing program,ā Milbourne said. āUpon completing a thorough investigation, all complainants were provided with a determination that the complaints were not sustained.ā Ā
The students appealed that determination, and the board of trustees unanimously denied the appeal on April 19, she said.Ā
Sewing student Rose Marie Clyatt said sheās upset with the boardās decisions and that keeping them off-campus disconnects them from the community and the proper equipment.
āItās very frustrating. As you get older, you always assume youād have a little respect from people. We are taxpaying people and people whoāve been in the community for many years,ā the Santa Maria native said.Ā
The Atkinson Park classroom is smaller with less equipment, electrical cord issues, and broken chairs, which make it difficult for the senior students to sew comfortably. Having classes off-campus also makes it challenging for them to get to their courses, Clyatt said.
āWeāve been here for a while, but unless youāre coming out of high school they [wonāt] help you,ā she said. āI donāt think they realize weāre all busy working and theyād be totally surprised to see whatās accomplished in that class.āĀ
Instructor Gabel said she wants to ensure these classes continue altogether and donāt get pushed out of the curriculum.Ā
āThey are taking these noncredit classes for enrichment. People need to realize thatās what keeps people a part of the community and learning something new. The sad thing is they are being discriminated against, and itās not endearing at all,ā Gabel said. Ā
This article appears in May 12-19, 2022.

