Reader Commentaries from The Berkeley Daily Planet

When the last tree-sit protester descended from his oak at the U.C.
Memorial Stadium oak grove in 2008 after the longest urban tree-sit in
America, the university had spent nearly a half million dollars for
security, extra policing, and incidentals.

And those were fat economic times.

But in the wake of $637.1 million dollars worth of U.C. budget cuts, and
an additional proposed 500 million cut for 2011, cancelled sports
programs, cancelled classes, and massive layoffs, the university can ill
afford unnecessary bills.

Yet Oak Grove 2, a low-key tree-sit presently accelerating in People's
Park, could be the straw that breaks the camel's purse.

While presently a small action (by design, says its organizer), there
are signs of expansion. Supporting funds, which fell off in the worst of
winter, have resumed. More support people have come forward. Wider
leafletting has begun.

False spring or not, spring-like weather may heat the passions of
protesters.

After breaking the 10 P.M. park curfew for four months --if sleeping
atop a 40-foot cedar can be counted--the protesters last week demanded
an end to the park curfew. That's not all they're demanding.

Re-naming the park Muwekma (western people's) Park and calling for
recognition of the Ohlone Indian tribe's "rightful" claim to ownership
of the park, Zachary Running

Wolf Brown, 47, founder of the Oak Grove protest is progressing towards
another record-setting protest. Oak Grove 1 lasted more than two years.

The strategies from Oak Grove 1 seem to be repeating in People's Park.
If only someone would come forward with proof that Native American
remains lie beneath the park, the Oak Grove comparison would be
complete.

Oak Grove 2, began as a protest against George Beier's district 7 city
council campaign calls to change People's Park. If Beier's rhetoric
seemed to echo the "findings" of a 2008 university commissioned planning
study, it might be because he was on the university committee that
commissioned it.

Less than a week before the city council elections, Midnight Matt, 53, a
veteran of Oak Grove 1, went up a cedar tree to protest Beier's
proposals.

Beier lost, but the protest grows. Nor has the university changed the
park, as protestors feared.

A university people's park spokesman has ignored this reporters'
repeated questions on the university's plans for the park except to
repeat the mantra of its planning study: "we want the park to be a clean
and welcoming place."

Tree sitting is unwelcome. But other than to bust one sitter on an
outstanding court warrant when he descended his tree while under
surveillance, police are taking a hands off attitude. Running Wolf says
they harass tree-sitters and rip off the sitter's property.

Although the university liberally funded a marketing firm's planning
study, it clearly cannot now afford the changes the study recommended.
Funding for the park

has been reduced, according to park workers.

In perhaps a bitter aftermath to Beier's failed campaign, the park is
neither clean nor welcoming--to use the planning study's words. All the
"problems" listed in the study persist, and may have worsened.

What can the university do as it finds itself on the verge of yet
another bureaucratic blunder? Cede the park to the Ohlones--to Running
Wolf? Running Wolf, an elder in the Blackfeet tribe, a graduate of
Berkeley High School and former mayoral candidate, modestly declines to
take possession of the park. He also declines to negotiate with the
university.

"I'll negotiate with them, when they hand over the park," he vows.

Action on District 7 councilman's Kriss Worthington's campaign proposal
to return the park to the city, the park's former overseer, to be
administered by the East Bay Regional Park District is at least a long
way off, if not languishing. Perhaps responsibility for the park has
become a liability.

The Berkeley-East Bay Regional Park idea is not popular with Running
Wolf, who favors a governing park council composed of park activists,
founders, and regular park users.

According to the university's nine month planning study based on
"interviews, workshops, and public forums," active park users--the
study's term--believe the park "belongs to the people, and will resist
attempts at change."

Perhaps. But could not all sides accept some version of the following
speculative proposal:

End the 10p park curfew immediately. This avoids a costly showdown with
protesters as well as insuring that park users do not sleep on nearby
neighborhood walks.

Appoint a coalition of park activists, park users, and park founders
along with the university (advisory) to administer the park. There would
be budget savings, and perhaps "the people" are best equipped to address
problem peers in the park. A possible theme: "Respect the Park to Keep
it Ours."

As a prelude to community-based management, restore the free clothes
box. Everyone wants to look their best. The university's continuing
removal of clothes boxes has been a sore point with park users since
2006. This would restore goodwill.

Install acacia trees to replace those removed. Removal of the trees
spawned protests in 2008. This good-will gesture might signal an end to
pointless feuding between town and gown.

Cede plant and tree maintenance to community gardeners. Such gardeners
created an oasis (complete with a magnificent palm tree) from a field of
mud. Besides, every time university gardeners tend plants and trees in
the park, activists complain. Ceding such maintenance to an already
active core of volunteer community gardeners would end the hassles.

Sponsor an academic conference to explore the role of Native Americans
in and around campus, including People's Park, and, if warranted,
install a monument (financed by private donations) to Native Americans
in the park after an open competition for its design. This would redress
decades of Cal native american student grievances going back to the
sixties.

These are merely my own ideas, based on my previous reports in the
Planet, my reading of the university planning study, and interviewing
activists and some U.C. park workers.

Are these proposals fanciful? Not according to the university's own
planning study which muses, "…the park can, however, form an identity
around humanistic values, responsible citizenship, environmental
stewardship, and open dialogue so that at risk populations are not
excluded from the park."
Ted Friedman lives a half block from People's Park. This is his fourth
piece on the park.

--
http://berkeleydailyplanet.com/issue/2011-01-26/article/37179?headline=What-the-University-Must-Do-Now-br-To-Stop-the-People-s-Park-Tree-Sit-br-From-Busting-U.C.-s-Budget
Via InstaFetch

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Sixties-L" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/sixties-l?hl=en.

Reply via email to