People’s Park is currently barricaded by stacked shipping containers topped with razor wire and guarded round-the-clock, following a midnight raid in early January by combined police forces from UC, CSU, Alameda County, San Francisco City and County and the California State Highway Patrol, organized by the UC Berkeley administration. Why? “The existing legal issues will inevitably be resolved, so we are taking this necessary step now to minimize the possibilities of conflict and confrontation, and of disruption for the public and our students, when we are cleared to resume construction,” said Chancellor Carol Christ (The Berkeleyan, January 16, 2024). Like others in the flood of official campus public relations communications with which students, faculty and staff have been inundated since the Chancellor’s 2017 announcement of plans to build student housing on the park, this response falls short of explaining why there is such fear of “conflict and confrontation” and such strong opposition to these plans, even from students whose interests the plans are supposed to serve.
For a broader range of perspectives on what was and is going on at People’s Park, Teach-Ins have been organized by UC Berkeley students (January 24) and by community groups (February 4). Please join us for the next one. There will be ample time for Q and A. Fiat Lux!
Presenters:
Harvey Smith, organizer of the People’s Park Historic District Advocacy Group and project advisor for The Living New Deal, UC Berkeley Department of Geography
Tom Dalzell, labor lawyer and author of The Battle for People’s Park, Berkeley 1969
Tony Platt, author of The Scandal of Cal: Land Grabs, White Supremacy and Miseducation at UC Berkeley and affiliated scholar at Berkeley’s Center for the Study of Law and Society
Steve Wasserman, publisher of Heyday Books and park activist since 1969
Sylvia T, recent UC Berkeley graduate, independent archival researcher and People’s Park defender
Sara Pech, Historic Preservation Club, a UC Berkeley student group
Representatives from the Suitcase Clinic, a UC Berkeley student group
Moderator:
Kristin Hanson, Professor of English, UC Berkeley
Please note that although masking is no longer required on campus it is much appreciated.
On January 12, 2023 the Court of Appeal heard Oral Arguments on the CEQA case of Make UC a Good Neighbor and People’s Park Historic District Advocacy Group VS the Regents of the University of California. There were not any points in the arguments of either side that were different than the briefs and supporting letters that had previously been submitted by the parties. The attorney/justices interaction was very interesting. The entire 82 minute hearing is at:
For us interested in preserving People’s Park as an open space in perpetuity the hearing is very reassuring. The UC lawyer tried to gain traction for their contention that the “revitalization” (read destruction) of the park was always the core goal of Housing Project #2 and therefore the Environmental Impact Report had no obligation to analyze other alternate sites for that housing because only by building on People’s Park could the project revitalize the park. Justice Burns was especially unaccepting of this claim and interrupted and contradicted their lawyer continuously. In short, it would be very surprising if we don’t win on the alternative site issue, which would mean the EIR has to be redone.
The other meaningful exchange was about the issue of noise. Our contention that Housing Project #2 would have a significant negative impact on noise levels in the neighborhood because of the common occurrence of student parties is being critiqued as a “social” impact as opposed to an environmental impact. UC claims that the burden of predicting, analyzing and mitigating for these kinds of social noise is discriminatory and that it will delay or stop new building projects. Even the Chief Justice Terri Jackson asked about the possibility of a new building for a church being made to analyze the effect of tambourine shaking.
Our lawyer made the point that noise is noise. He also made the point that the fair argument standard should be applied. Finally he noted that anti-discrimination law is an established means by which any environmental impact can be evaluated.
This question of whether social impacts should be included in CEQA suits is complex and can be looked at from many angles. It seem to be the way developers and their political allies are going to attempt to weaken or throw out CEQA.
Note: This post will have ongoing updates. Last updated 1:52 PM August 3, 2022
August 3, 2022, 1:45 AM
UC is moving on the park NOW! Please go to the park if you’re able, and let others know! Word from the park (as of 12:15am) is that surveillance light towers, fences are going up
They’re closing off Dwight. Towing cars. They’ve got Hillegass and Regent blocked off at Dwight with low portable fencing. The surrounding cars are being towed to another lot ‘to prevent possible damage from protesters’. This is it.
August 3, 2022, 3:13 AM
Light towers were about to be unloaded. Looks like UC is about to fence off the park. If you can make it down, please do. Text SAVETHEPARK to 74121to get notifications.
Sorry to share yuck news but it’s all about our resistance to it at this point.
August 3, 2022, 6:22 AM
In a deeply courageous moves of non-violent civil disobedience to stop the destruction of People’s Park, Berkeley community members are sitting and moving beneath heavy equipment suspended from cranes trying to install surveillance lighting.
Construction industry with police aid destroys People’s Park, August 3, 2022, an act of profound and long lasting damage to the Berkeley community. This opportunistic profiteering for the few, despite several other sites where housing could be built.
August 3, 2022, 7:32 AM
People’s Park Protectors Needed! The police are in the park with bulldozers and they have blocked off Haste and Dwight.
“If Roesch did not sign the order, then UC is in clear violation of the stay, which is actually really bad for them. The other part of this is the return of the students. I expect that they are slowly filtering back into town. Keep up the resistance! The more students there are around, the better it is for us.” — A long-time People’s Park contributor
August 3, 2022,9:54 AM
The National Lawyers Guild is on site at People’s Park and was aware of 7 arrests, 3 released, and no information on the other 4. If anyone has info, please call them: 415-285-1011.
August 3, 2022, 11:19 AM
“Lawyer Phil Bokovoy says that UC has no legal authority or right to close off city streets. At any blockade of a city street you can demand that those stopping your passage show or cite their authority to stop you. If they have none you are entitled to use that street. That may be true for sidewalks also, which is where the fence is bolted down so that may be illegal also.” — A long-time People’s Park contributor
August 3, 2022, 12:38 PM
Protesters shaking the fence during destruction of People’s Park by UC Berkeley, August 3, 2022Trees destroyed and fencing going up around People’s Park, August 3, 2022Trees destroyed in Northeast corner of People’s Park, August 3, 2022
August 3, 2022, 1:13 PM to 1:22 PM
West side trees destroyed by UC Berkeley in People’s Park, August 3, 2022
Westward view of People’s Park destruction, August 3, 2022
Park destruction equipment on basketball court of People’s Park, August 3, 2022
The great palm tree destroyed by UC Berkeley in People’s Park, August 3, 2022
UC Berkeley’s fencing torn down by People’s Park defenders, August 3, 2022
UC Berkeley’s fencing torn down by People’s Park defenders, August 3, 2022
West side People’s Park trees destroyed by UC Berkeley, August 3, 2022
Trees destroyed by UC Berkeley in East side of People’s Park, August 3, 2022
Redwoods and other trees in Northwest corner of People’s Park destroyed by UC Berkeley, August 3, 2022
Trees destroyed by UC Berkeley in Northeast corner of People’s Park, August 3, 2022
Media workers reporting on UC Berkeley’s destruction of People’s Park, August 3, 2022
Berkeley community and students witnessing UC Berkeley’s destruction of People’s Park, August 3, 2022
Note: This post will have ongoing updates. Last updated 1:52 PM August 3, 2022
Video and photos note: Please document the activities in the park, police, fencing, etc. This is a historically significant event. When documenting activities in the park with cell phone video cameras, please turn the camera horizontallybefore recording for better video and photos.
We wish to inform you of an important upcoming event this Sunday, April 28, at the start of the 50th Anniversary Concert for People’s Park at 12pm noon.
The People’s Park Committee and the People’s Park Community are pleased to announce a new, improved People’s Park FreeBox. The FreeBox is a dedicated facility for accepting and distributing donations of clothing, bedding, and other items, freely available to those in need.
A longtime People’s Park tradition, the FreeBox has been replaced and rebuilt many times, but, unfortunately, there has been no such accomodation for donations in the Park for several years now. The new FreeBox, created and donated by UC Berkeley students involved in organizing to save the Park, will be the largest yet.
Please join us on Sunday, April 28, 2019 at 12 noon for a short ceremony and ribbon cutting, inaugurating the new, improved FreeBox at the beginning of the People’s Park 50th Anniversary concert event. We invite you, or anyone else who may be available, to come and report on this historic dedication and event.
Best regards, The People’s Park Committee and the People’s Park Community
Gardening can function as a way to reprogram the mind and activity patterns away from the patterns imposed by exploitative architecture, transportation, and urban design paradigms. Food production is the basis of our life, yet the city’s design dysfunction is the denial of that basis, replacing it with capitalist enterprising based on selling transportation gear and construction projects, a “boxing in” of the human mind and imagination.
Some people have “Long Range Development Plans”. Do these people have real estate business interests? Construction industry interests? Academia business interests? Student loan business interests? Other interests? Undisclosed interests?
Long Range Development Plan – Thoughts, context, and questions:
Who’s development plan? On whose behalf? Corrupted by what special interests, industries, competing corporations, dystopian paradigms? More pathological air and noise pollution from predatory auto industry prowlers and ‘status symbol’ cruising, and everyone else trapped in automobile dependent urban transport and architecture paradigms? More space wasted on parking? More real estate robots and construction industry interests replicating vanity architecture disguised as necessity and authority? More destruction of green space by academic profiteering and rent exploitation? Is there ever any new green space reclaimed from the insane delusions of urban ‘human’ robots? How can money be seen as power when it seems to only be used to perpetuate and create more dystopia? The externalized costs of fossil fuel usage (climate breakdown, pollution, direct and indirect health damages and cleanup costs not paid for by the industry) are gravely damaging our present and future. People have become puppets of the designs of industrialists, constantly moving their metal boxes from parking space to parking space. The dependency is now becoming a terminal global ‘disease’. When will this pathological behavior and design be shutdown for the collective crime that it is? Who inside and outside of any entity, be it a university, a government, a neighborhood, a business, a church, or any kind of organization or group, is perpetuating this pathological design and activity?
People’s Park is at a point in time and part of a huge collection of other physical elements in an urban transformation. How will all the elements transform, and why?
Bonobo : Cirrus — This animation depicts the insane propagation of human industrialist construction and materialism across the landscape.
Books:
EcoCities: Rebuilding Cities in Balance with Nature book – Richard Register
Ecocity Builders https://ecocitybuilders.org
How to Grow More Vegetables book – John Jeavons
Natural Capitalism book – Paul Hawkin, Amory Lovins, L. Hunter Lovins
People’s Park Still Blooming book – Terri Compost
Seed to Seed book – Suzanne Ashworth
Permaculture: A Designer’s Manual book – Bill Mollison
Natural Capitalism book excerpt:
2. Reinventing the Wheels: Hypercars and Neighborhoods – Natural Capitalism
http://www.natcap.org
The largest industry in the world, automotive transportation, is already well along the way to a Factor Four or greater breakthrough in resource productivity. It is also beginning to close its materials loops by adopting durable materials that can be continuously reused to make new cars, and to reduce dramatically its pressure on air, climate, and other key elements of natural capital by completely rethinking how to make a car move. This restructuring of so well established a segment of the economy is gaining its momentum not from regulatory mandates, taxes, or subsidies but rather from newly unleashed forces of advanced technology, customer demands, competition, and entrepreneurship.
Imagine a conversation taking place at the end of the nineteenth century. A group of powerful and farseeing businessmen announce that they want to create a giant new industry in the United States, one that will employ millions of people, sell a copy of its product every two seconds, and provide undreamed-of levels of personal mobility for those who use its products. However, this innovation will also have other consequences so that at the end of one hundred years, it will have done or be doing the following:
• paved an area equal to all the arable land in the states of Ohio, Indiana, and Pennsylvania, requiring maintenance costing more than $200 million per day;
• reshaped American communities and lives so as to restrict the mobility of most citizens who do not choose or are not able to own and operate the new product;
• maimed or injured 250 million people, and killed more Americans than have died in all wars in the country’s history;
• be combusting 8 million barrels of oil every day (450 gallons per person annually);
• made the United States increasingly dependent on foreign oil at a cost of $60 billion a year;
• relied for an increasing percentage of that oil on an unstable and largely hostile region armed partly by American oil payments, requiring the United States to make large military expenditures there and maintain continual war-readiness;
• be killing a million wild animals per week, from deer and elk to birds, frogs, and opossums, plus tens of thousands of domestic pets;
• be creating a din of noise and a cloud of pollution in all metropolitan areas, affecting sleep, concentration, and intelligence, making the air in some cities so unbreathable that children and the elderly cannot venture outside on certain days;
• caused spectacular increases in asthma, emphysema, heart disease, and bronchial infections;
• be emitting one-fourth of U.S. greenhouse gases so as to threaten global climatic stability and agriculture;
• and be creating 7 billion pounds of unrecycled scrap and waste every year.
Now imagine they succeeded.
This is the automobile industry—a sector of commerce so massive that in 1998, five of the seven largest U.S. industrial firms produced either cars or their fuel. If this industry can fundamentally change, every industry can. And change it will. This chapter describes how the world’s dominant business is transforming itself to become profoundly less harmful to the biosphere.
That transformation reflects, today partially and soon fully, the latest in a long string of automotive innovations. In 1991, a Rocky Mountain Institute design called the Hypercar synthesized many of the emerging automobile technologies. To maximize competition and adoption, the design was put in the public domain (making it unpatentable), hoping this would trigger the biggest shift in the world’s industrial structure since microchips. As revolutions go, it started quietly, with simple observations and heretical ideas.
The automobile industry of the late twentieth century is arguably the highest expression of the Iron Age. Complicated assemblages of some fifteen thousand parts, reliable across a vast range of conditions, and greatly improved in safety and cleanliness, cars now cost less per pound than a McDonald’s Quarter Pounder. Yet the industry that makes them is overmature, and its central design concept is about to be overtaken. Its look-alike products fight for small niches in saturated core markets; they’re now bought on price via the Internet like file cabinets, and most dealers sell new cars at a loss. Until the mid-1990s, the industry had become essentially moribund in introducing innovation. As author James Womack has remarked, “You know you are in a stagnant industry when the big product innovation of the past decade is more cup holders.” Virtually all its gains in efficiency, cleanliness, and safety have been incremental and responded to regulations sought by social activists. Its design process has made cars ever heavier, more complex, and usually costlier. These are all unmistakable signs that automaking had become ripe for change. By the 1990s, revolutions in electronics, software, materials, manufacturing, computing, and other techniques had made it possible to design an automobile that would leapfrog far beyond ordinary cars’ limitations.
The contemporary automobile, after a century of engineering, is embarrassingly inefficient: Of the energy in the fuel it consumes, at least 80 percent is lost, mainly in the engine’s heat and exhaust, so that at most only 20 percent is actually used to turn the wheels. Of the resulting force, 95 percent moves the car, while only 5 percent moves the driver, in proportion to their respective weights. Five percent of 20 per-cent is one percent—not a gratifying result from American cars that burn their own weight in gasoline every year.
peoplespark.org has a huge photo collection in various categories, gardens, music, art, style, history, and numerous event announcements and articles about the park and contemporary issues.
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20th Annual Bay Area Seed Swap
Friday, March 15, 2019, 7:00 pm — 9:00 pm
Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94702
https://ecologycenter.org/events/20th-annual-bay-area-seed-swap/
Join us for the 20th Anniversary of the Annual Seed Exchange hosted by the Bay Area Seed Interchange Library (BASIL). In its 20th year, this swap features speakers, a potluck dinner, and hundreds of seeds to share. Seeds from all around the Bay Area will be available to swap– take home a whole new garden! Come experience one of our most popular, fun, and knowledge- filled events! All are welcome.
Bring seeds and a potluck dish and get in free! Or a suggested donation of $5-$20. No one turned away for lack of funds.
Interested in volunteering at the swap, or helping us sort seeds on March 16? We would love to have your help! Email minna@ecologycenter.org.
Co-sponsored by Indigenous Permaculture Project, Richmond Grows, Sustainable Economies Law Center, and Transition Berkeley.
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People’s Park gardens photo collection – Greg Jalbert — To be added to peoplespark.org site.