Student protesters face severe penalties from UCI
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Marisa O’Neil
Students involved in a campus protest last month may be held
responsible for violating university policy, according to a letter
sent to them by a university official.
Nine of the students protesting were arrested last month when they
blocked work crews from entering Irvine Meadows West, a campus
trailer park slated for demolition this summer.
The April 7 letter from the office of student judicial affairs,
sent via e-mail, states that each recipient must contact the office
to discuss allegations that they obstructed university activities.
“I find these allegations very troubling and take them quite
seriously,” said graduate student Matthew Cardinale, who was not
arrested but received the letter.
About two dozen students have received the letter, he said,
including some at the protest who obeyed an official order to
disperse from university police. Police made the arrests after
attempts to negotiate with the protesters and giving them the
opportunity to leave without being arrested.
According to the letter, students may have been in violation of
two sections of the University of California Policies Applying to
Campus Activities, Organizations and Students.
One applies to “obstruction or disruption of teaching, research,
administration, disciplinary procedures, or other university
activities.” The second section is for failure to identify oneself to
an official or obstructing officials from performing their duties.
Work crews entered the park to do soil testing after the students
were arrested.
University officials could not be reached for comment Tuesday
evening, according to UCI spokesman Tom Vasich.
Students were given seven days to reply to the letter. And if they
don’t, they may have their transcripts withheld or be restricted from
using university facilities.
Such notice appears to be standard for violations of the code of
student conduct said UC Berkeley student Matt Murray, student regent
for the University of California. Murray contacted Manuel Gomez, UCI
vice chancellor of student affairs after some of the Irvine Meadows
West residents told him of the protest, arrests and letters.
“It’s my understanding and my hope that this is standard procedure
[in such cases] and can be resolved,” Murray said. “It’s critical to
preserve students’ rights.”
Cardinale said that he has contacted the American Civil Liberties
Union to look into their case.
The Irvine Meadows West trailer park is set to close July 31 to
make way for a parking lot and, eventually, a new building. Residents
at the park, who pay substantially less than those in other student
housing, have argued that it provides a much-needed niche of
affordable campus housing.
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