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California Faculty Association at CSU San Marcos |
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CFA and Supporters March on Trustees Meeting (11/16/06) Fed up with an administration whose actions are tearing down the California State University, more than 1000 CSU faculty members and 500 supporters (including CSU staff, students, and others) took the CSU Board of Trustees' meeting by storm on Wednesday, November 15. They called on the Trustees to sign a "Pledge for the Future of the CSU" (see below) to end executive perks, give the money to student instruction, roll back student fees, and negotiate fair contracts with the faculty and other CSU employees. The great majority of protestors engaged in a loud picket line and rally outside the Chancellor's building on Golden Shore in Long Beach while a smaller group entered the Trustees meeting chamber to deliver the Pledge. The climax of the day occurred just after noon when 22 faculty members entered the Trustees' "horseshoe," the forbidden center of several concentric circles of wood-paneled seats for top CSU executives, and handed each Trustee a copy of the Pledge which they were asked to sign.
When Romero finished speaking, the protestors silently sat in the horseshoe, and waited. Students and supporters in the public seating area inside, as well as protestors outside the meeting room windows cheered them and shouted at the Trustees to sign the pledge. For some 10 minutes a stand-off ensued. Tension grew. The crowd chanted, exhorting the Trustees to take a stand by signing the pledge, but not one moved to do so. Reed, Trustees' Chair Roberta Achtenberg and Trustee Debra Farar were heard conferring, asking each other what should they do. Other Trustees whispered among themselves not knowing what to do; no one moved. Finally, unable to do business and unwilling to engage the protestors on the issues at hand, the Trustees took a hasty vote to adopt all the motions before them today - which included the 2007/08 state budget proposal and a new executive transition perquisite - then adjourned and fled the room. The crowd cheered as they left. Even though power to the room had been shut down, the 22 faculty, who included CFA's president and vice president and faculty from all ranks, took the seats of the Trustees. The outraged students were invited to come to the table. CFA President John Travis proceeded to act on motions. The "real" Trustees voted to rollback student fees to 2001 levels, to bargain fair contracts with CSU unions, and to eliminate ALL executive perk programs and return the money to the university.
"We faculty can't keep allowing the Trustees give us a mere three minutes to present our case after which they forget about us," said Travis after the event. "We must act in equal measure to the seriousness of the problems facing the CSU." "It's not our nature as academics to disrupt meetings. But we have our responsibility to fight for our students, for the university and for ourselves and our families. That responsibility is what moved us today to send the Trustees running," Travis concluded. Earlier in the day, just after 10 am, between 1500 and 2000 marchers emerged en masse at the top of the Golden Shore Dr. bridge adjacent to the chancellor's office. There they unfurled a giant banner exhorting freeway drives to "Take a Stand for the California State University." This demonstration organized by CFA was the largest gathering ever to protest at a Trustees meeting. Marchers carried more than 600 picket signs. Twelve-foot tall delegation banners showcased representatives from each of the 23 campuses and 15-foot tall marionette's depicted Chancellor Reed. The San Bernardino Radical cheerleaders tossed pompoms made of CSI:CSU Crime Scene yellow tape. On arrival at the Chancellors glass-façade office building in view of the Queen Mary, the participants banged drums, chanted, blew whistles and made all manor of other noise in an effort to let the trustees inside know that their meeting would not be business as usual. Protestors called from outside on the executives to come out to talk with the crowd, to "hear our voice." San Diego Union Tribune writer Lisa Petrillo reported she was told by CSU spokesperson Clara Potes-Fellow, "They (the Trustees) didn't need to go outside. You could hear them inside very well."
Emcee Cecil Canton, a criminal justice professor from CSU Sacramento, and stage manager David Bradfield, a music professor from CSU Dominguez Hills, led the outside festivities, which included faculty testimonials, music by Indigenous Concrete and guest speakers including Assemblymember Judy Chu, newly elected State Senator Mark Ridley-Thomas, new CTA Secretary-Treasurer Dean Vogel, and Maria Elena Durazo, Executive Scretary of the L.A. County Federation of Labor, and other labor leaders, as well as Faculty Trustee Craig Smith and CSU Academic Senate Chair Marshelle Thobaben. Bradfield told the crowd, "Make more noise to support the valiant people inside who are trying to get the Trustees to listen to us." Throughout the outside entertainment program faculty and students took turns marching through the courtyard at the entrance to the Trustees' chamber. From inside, the executives and public observers could see zealous picketers holding signs, and effigies of Reed up to the windows. Skeletons in caps and gowns pressed signs reading "CSU skeleton crew: Worked to death." At one point a group burst into a side door with signs and chanting "Reed, Reed, Stop the Greed." Faculty and students in the room rose to clap with them in unison until the door was secured. At one point during the outside activities Canton abruptly stopped the music to announce, "it's a bird...it's a plane... it's a CFA banner," as a propeller plane flew by towing a 25-foot "Stop the Rip-Offs" banner. When it became apparent around noon that the
Trustees were stalling the meeting in an attempt to wait out those
on the outside, the crowd grew noticeably more intense and began
chanting, "let them speak," while making one final push into the
courtyard to let those inside know that while they may be returning
to campus for the day, this is certainly not over. "We want everyone to know," Travis said, "that whatever he or she did today was of great value. Our action inside and outside the meeting was entirely linked. Everyone should know that this was a successful action on both ends." The rally can perhaps be best summed up in the candid statement of one student as she walked back to her car at the end of the rally. "That was fricken awesome. If they don't get the message this time we will just have to come back and let them know one more time that this is our university and we won't take it." Click here for a North County Times article that focuses on the CSUSM contingent. Pledge for the Future of the CSU Our nation's largest four-year system of public higher education - the California State University - faces extraordinary challenges that threaten to undermine broad access for students to a quality public higher education. Every year 400,000 California students look to the CSU as their hope for a college education. The CSU provides opportunity to vast numbers of students who might otherwise not be able to pursue higher education. The CSU fuels not only California's economy, but also our quality of life and our democratic institutions. This understanding was enshrined in 1960 in California's Master Plan for Higher Education, a document that set out the creation of our state's public higher education in a new way not before attempted by other states. That goal means, among many other things, keeping the CSU affordable even for those with the least means, and guaranteeing a strong, stable teaching force with effective student services in an environment conducive to learning. We pledge to preserve this vision of public higher education by adopting policies and acting in ways that best serve this primary mission of the CSU - the instruction of our students. We refresh our commitment by joining in this pledge to rectify the system's inequities; we seek a new direction that will preserve the basic concept of public higher education in the 21st Century. We begin by committing to:
To accomplish these ends,
We will work hard to restore the trust placed in us by the students, faculty, staff, alumni and people of California to ensure a well-managed university system able to guarantee a vibrant, successful future for the CSU. |