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Help Save People's Park
Please help save People's Park! Please sign the open letter below! (And if you'd like to read a short history of People's Park in the 1960s, please see: Unforgettable Change: 1960s: People’s Park Fights UC Land Use Policy; One Dead, Thousands Tear Gassed | Picture This (museumca.org) ).
So, if you're okay with signing, please let the People's Park Committee know by emailing them ASAP, at: peoplesparkhxdist@gmail.comPlease include your "affiliation" -- and if you're a Berkeley resident, UC alumnus, or hold an advanced degree, please include that too. Also, if you can forward this message to others who might consider signing, that will also be a great help! (Especially Berkeley residents, those who hold advanced degrees, and UC alumni or faculty).
Thank you so very much!,
Open Letter to: The Chancellor, Mayor, State Legislators, the Regents and the Governor
No northern city was more affected by the great social and cultural movements of the ‘60s than Berkeley and no event in Berkeley history brought together more of the diverse forces of that era than the conflict over People’s Park in 1969. That is why the park is designated as a landmark by the City of Berkeley and the State of California and is deemed eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places.
And that is why the People’s Park Historic District Advocacy Group and the undersigned call upon the University of California to work with the Berkeley community to protect and enhance People’s Park. Just as the nation preserves the great battlefields of the Civil War of the 1860s, so should it preserve places like People’s Park that commemorate the great social and cultural conflicts of the 1960s.
Instead, the university proposes to destroy the park in order to build a 17-story student housing structure. UC argues the destruction of the park is necessary to respond to its housing shortage, yet the university has identified several other possible sites for student residences. Of all the jurisdictions dealing with the Bay Area’s regional housing crisis, only UC Berkeley proposes to destroy a public park of national historic importance. UC’s development plan would also destroy the view from the park and overshadow the surrounding other distinguished local, state and national landmarks, e.g., Maybeck’s Christian Science First Church.
In destroying the park, the university is eliminating the only public open space in Berkeley’s most densely populated neighborhood. Over the past several years, UC has over-enrolled the number of students, violating its own plans and increasing the number of budget-padding out-of-state enrollees. This greatly increases the population density of the area. Doesn’t the university have a responsibility to maintain and enhance the one piece of restorative nature still open to the public in this over-crowded neighborhood?
The university argues the park is a place of great crime and violence, a claim vehemently denied by park users and their supporters. The university’s unacceptable “solution” is to displace the poor, the unhoused and other park users by paving over the park. UC has clearly allowed the park to deteriorate; however, maintaining it as well as other city parks could ensure that People’s Park could be a safe, well-used public space frequented by all.
Shouldn’t a great university, with a brilliant faculty and immensely talented students, use its resources to work with neighbors and park supporters to create an inclusive public open space welcome to all? Shouldn’t the university’s architecture faculty help design truly affordable low-income housing projects in other Berkeley locations? Such efforts would be consistent with UC’s mission of public education and service and consistent with the best values and ideals of the ‘60s.
Please join with us not just to preserve People’s Park, but to make it a place that respects and commemorates its history and celebrates and serves its diverse surrounding community.
For more background, go to www.peoplesparkhxdist.org. If you want to add your name to this statement, send name and affiliation to peoplesparkhxdist@gmail.com .
Signed:
David Axelrod, attorney
James Chanin, civil rights attorney
Carol Denney, writer, musician
Annie Esposito, retired Community News Director at KZYX
Emil de Guzman
Kristin Hanson, Berkeley resident and professor of English at UC
Berkeley
Sheila Jordan, Alameda County Superintendent of Schools Emerita,
Youth and Justice Advocate
Paul Kealoha Blake, activist
Joe Liesner, activist
Doug Minkler, printmaker
Martin Nicolaus, Berkeley Law alumnus, Berkeley parks advocate
Marty Schiffenbauer, Berkeley resident 54 years
Bob Schildgen, writer
Harvey Smith, public historian, educator
Zach Stewart, landscape architect for Berkeley Shorebird Park and
Willard Park
Lisa Teague - People's Park Committee and Berkeley Outreach Coalition
Maxina Ventura, mother, activist, musician
Richard Walker, former department chair UCB Geography, professor
Emeritus
Pat Welch, graphic designer
Charles Wollenberg, California historian, writer
Lope Yap, Jr., filmmaker
Becky O'Malley '61, editor and writer
As of March 26, 2021, 5:00 p.m.