Occupy Movement Slowly Growing on California Campuses

Occupy Movement Slowly Growing on California Campuses

Occupy Movement Slowly Growing on California Campuses

A survey of the Occupy Colleges movement in California.

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This article was originally published in Cal State, Northridge’s award-winning student newspaper, The Daily Sundial. Follow the paper on Twitter to keep up with its excellent coverage of the Occupy movement.

 

College students have risen in solidarity across Southern California and joined the Occupy movement, albeit in small numbers.

“It’s my life right now,” said USC student Alexandra Howland. Howland lives on campus, but has taken up a temporary home outside City Hall at the Occupy LA encampment. She sleeps in a tent on the lawn, wakes up every morning at 6:30 a.m. to drive to school, and comes back in the early evening to protest with fellow Occupiers. She starts homework around 11 p.m., goes to sleep and repeats the routine.

“It’s the most exciting thing I’ve ever been a part of,” she said. “To have the youth and the American public finally waking up and rejecting the system that’s been forced on us, it’s amazing.”

Ankur Patel, a CSUN graduate student, said this is a time for students to be more aware of their world. “We want people to start paying attention. We want people to know who their city councilman is, who their state assemblyman is, all of their elected officials,” said Patel, a committee member of Students Occupy Los Angeles. “Most people know more about American Idol and the Dodgers than they do about elected officials.”

Occupy CSUN has gathered an average of about 50 students to its weekly rallies, according to student organizer James Ackerman. Those numbers are more than what USC or UCLA have had for their movements.

Howland said 40 students showed up for USC’s first campus rally in late October, but the numbers decreased to about a handful the second week. There aren’t any more currently scheduled. “People got sidetracked with school and with their lives, I guess,” she said.

The Daily Bruin reported UCLA’s Occupy movement has been slow to take off as well.  Still, students part of Occupy UCLA participated in a rally that included 200 protesters against tuition  hikes on Wilshire Boulevard last Wednesday, resulting in 11 arrests.

Authorities have had to act up north as well.

On November 9 At UC Berkeley, police in riot gear moved in when protesters refused to leave the encampment they had set up on campus. According to the school’s student paper, 39 people were arrested in a demonstration that was reportedly in the hundreds.

At Occidental College, in Eagle Rock, student Guido Girgenti represents his campus in Occupy Colleges, a virtual network working in solidarity with Occupy Wall Street. According to Girgenti, about 100 participants showed at Occidental up for the Nov. 2 National Solidarity Teach-in — a protest for campuses nationwide that brought students and professors together in an open-ended discussion about their school’s issues. Girgenti called Occidental’s teach-in attendance “very surprising,” considering its student population hovers around 2,000 and the school generally brings in higher-income students. The website occupycolleges.org had 87 schools registered in the US for the teach-in, including 12 in California, and had helpful guidelines on how to handle to event.

Girgenti cited the financial crisis of 2008 as a reason for any student to take notice. “(That crisis) has made tons of students’ middle-class living standards very precarious,” he said.

At UC Irvine, recent graduate Brendan Rosen attended the campus teach-in and said about 40 students showed up. “Indirectly, we’re protesting tuition increases,” said Rosen, who cited unfair government spending as another problem he and Irvine students have voiced.

The question now is where to go from here. USC and UCLA are not fully mobilized for the time being, and the main hub for students still seems to be downtown LA.

“It’s easier for us to organize off-campus,” Girgenti said.

Patel said different factors play a role in whether certain rallies or marches can be successful for students. “In some places they’re not going to run into police oppression, in some places they’re not going to get their permits,” Patel said. “In some places they’re not going to have enough people.”

A Los Angeles Times article last month quoted Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa as saying the protest at City Hall “cannot continue indefinitely,” and he has told city officials to draft a plan to find a new place for the demonstration.

Rosen said he feared the long-term status of Occupy LA could be up in the air, so his goal is to further strengthen the campus protests. “There’s a lot of risk that they’re going to get shut down,” Rosen said. “There are a lot of weekly meetings on all the campuses. It might take the movement in a different direction.”

At Northridge, Patel said Occupy CSUN is taking “baby steps.” “No one ever knows how movements are going to end up,” he said.

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