Friday, March 27, 2015
Statement of Occupation from the Che Cafe at UC San Diego
The Che Cafe has been occupied. The 35 year old cultural center, social space, DIY music venue, student/worker co-operative and affordable eatery has come under the complete control of students, faculty, alumni and community members who have refused to leave its premises, despite a UC sanctioned eviction notice that became active on March 24 at 6:00 a.m. For over one year, the administration of UCSD has attempted to shut the Che Cafe Collective out of its historic home using a variety of secretive bureaucratic maneuvers, manipulations and blatant lies. This most recent battle between the Che Cafe Collective and UCSD administrators can be contextualized within the larger history of struggle that informs the identity and praxis of the Che Cafe. By our count, this is the 5th time that university administration has attempted to eliminate the Che Cafe Collective since it became operational in 1980. All prior eviction attempts carried out by the university have resulted in abject failure. Each subsequent eviction attempt has inspired wider community and student solidarity with the Che Cafe Collective and this occasion is no different. Students, community members, faculty and alumni from disparate backgrounds have become determined to demonstrate their power and willingness to engage in collective direct action to preserve the Che Cafe.
The Che Cafe Collective and its supporters are not so nearsighted that we ignore the obvious parallels between the fight that UC students have brought against the continuous fee and tuition hikes enacted by the Regents and the fight to prevent the closures of integral student facilities which would no doubt result in an erasure of culture and student self organization that is preserved by spaces like the Che Cafe. Our fight is one and the same.
When we act as we are now, by occupying a space that rightly belongs to the students and community members who utilize it, we act in solidarity with the 6 UC Santa Cruz students who are being criminalized by the UC after having taken direct action to preserve the accessibility of higher education. When we act as we are now, we are acting also in solidarity with the students of Quebec, who have once again taken to the streets with calls for a general strike in order to ensure their access to public universities. When we act as we are now, we invoke the knowledge, practice and ferocity that UC students across California acted with in 2009. When we act as we are now, we hope to inspire action on your part.
Our occupation is ongoing - we invite you to join our fight.
forward until victory,
some occupiers and collective members of the Che Cafe Collective
Wednesday, March 4, 2015
Please take action: Students seeking to redesignate restrooms as “all gender” face harassment and police detention at UC Berkeley
Yesterday, March 3, an anonymous group known as the Bathroom
Brigade posted “all gender” signs on bathroom doors across UC Berkeley. The
signs include the following text:
Please excuse our dust! The approval and planning process for a bathroom redesignation is surprisingly time-consuming, but in the interim the University’s priority is making sure everyone has safe access to a bathroom. As a temporary measure, we encourage everyone, of all genders, to use this bathroom. We’ll put up a permanent sign as soon as we can.
In a tongue-in-cheek way, the signs seek to pass as being officially authorized.
They also highlight the reality that trans and gender nonconforming people on
campus do not have adequate access to safe bathrooms. University administrators
appeared to have recognized this unmet safety need: months ago, President
Napolitano promised to redesignate every single-user bathroom as “all gender,”
while UC labor relations agreed to provide reasonable access to all gender
restrooms for student workers. Since then though, UC Berkeley administrators
have not redesignated a single bathroom.
Yesterday, when members of the Bathroom Brigade sought to
expedite the process of redesignation, administrators and UC police officers
responded in ways that threw into question the UC’s stated commitment to the
safety of trans and gender nonconforming students and workers. First,
administrators sent out emails disavowing the signs, as in the following:
Dear Stanley Hall Faculty, Researchers, Students, and Staff,
Signs have appeared on the building’s restroom doors that indicate that restrooms are available to all genders. Please disregard the signs; they will be taken down as soon as possible.
It seems that these efforts to take down the signs have
already overstepped, as previously authorized “all gender” signs in Stephens
Hall were torn down yesterday. Additionally, members of the Bathroom Brigade
and supportive students have reported facing harassment or violence in
connection with the signs. Some members of the Bathroom Brigade were followed
down the hallways of a building by a campus administrator. And a supportive student
who attempted to discourage an administrator from tearing down the signs faced
aggression. As she writes:
Still trying to collect my memories from the heat of the moment, but moments ago I stood in front of this sign to stop a man from aggressively tearing it down as we went to the bathroom after class. He had torn down 3 of 4 signs despite repeated requests to stop, and was so determined to get the last one that he attempted to pull it from behind my head. My friends and a passerby were shocked by how he went so far as to almost touch/hit me to get to that sign (which he may have, but I was too focused on protecting the sign to notice). There is a photo of me pointing my camera phone to get him to back off, since he stood incredibly close. All of this occurred even after I explained that the folks behind this campaign are trying to force the UC to take issues of gender and trans safety seriously. He and his friend are both older white men who likely work in the electrical engineering and computer science admin office, so we were surprised that they felt so comfortable proceeding aggressively in a confrontational dispute with students. But their behavior is a perfect example for why the UC needs to stop dragging their heels in implementing accessible gender neutral bathrooms.
Then, early yesterday
afternoon, two students were detained by the UC Police in connection with the
bathroom redesignations. A white trans woman and a black cis man, both members
of the Bathroom Brigade, were initially confronted by two building
administrators in the hallway of the Li Ka Shing Center – a building that
currently contains no all gender restrooms. One of the administrators demanded
that “all gender” signs be removed, which the students attempted to do. When
the administrator continued harassing the students, they left the building and
walked three blocks to a bus stop. He followed them the entire way, talking on
his phone as he walked. The students then boarded a bus and rode on it for a
block, at which point the bus was stopped by two UC Police officers. The
officers came onto the bus and detained the students. After detaining them on
the sidewalk, the officers said that they were planning to report the students
to the Office of Student Conduct, and that, if there had been any damage to
paint surfaces in the Li Ka Shing Center, they would consider pursuing a
warrant for the students’ arrest.
That two students
attempting to expand trans peoples’ access to safe bathrooms were harassed,
followed, and detained by the UC Police highlights some of the connections
between interrelated forms of sanctioned violence: the harassment trans people
face in public spaces, including at our universities; the securitization of
partially-privatized UC buildings, such as the Li Ka Shing Center; and the
militarization of UC and Berkeley City police departments. A coalition of
student and community groups has recently been pushing back against police violence
in Berkeley. On February 10, the UCB Black Student Union helped organize a
march to city council, where students and community members called on the
council to take action against racial profiling and against militarized
policing throughout Berkeley. The coalition also continued to press for justice
for Kayla Moore, a black trans woman who was killed in her home by Berkeley
City Police on February 13, 2013.
Please take a moment
to call or email Chancellor Dirks and share with him your thoughts about what
happened today. You might consider demanding: 1) that UC Berkeley expedite the
process of redesignating bathrooms as “all gender” in order to address the
safety needs of trans and gender nonconforming people; and 2) that no student
conduct or legal charges be brought against students for posting “all gender”
restroom signs.