Students vow to fight for UCI trailer park
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Marisa O’Neil
Supporters of a campus trailer park slated for demolition this summer
will continue their fight to keep it open, even after a university
official said he would not entertain negotiations to preserve it.
At a forum on Friday, Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Manuel
Gomez told university officials, students and faculty that the park’s
fate is sealed and denied a request by the residents to discuss
keeping the Irvine Meadows West trailer park.
William Zeller, assistant vice chancellor for student housing,
stopped short of saying he would enter into talks to preserve the
park but said he would take part in a committee to discuss a
“spectrum of housing,” to possibly include a different trailer park
in the future.
“That’s close, but not exactly what we’re talking about,” said
graduate student Matthew Cardinale, an outspoken supporter of the
park. “We didn’t think it was [asking] so much to join an exploratory
committee. We were not saying on the spot ‘Save it today.’ We just
want them to discuss it.”
The closure of the park, which is home to about 100 students, is part of the university’s long range development plan to increase
enrollment, student housing and parking. A parking structure is
planned for the space where Irvine Meadows West now sits and new
housing under construction will supply about 4,000 new beds on
campus.
Trailer park residents argued, however, that they and other
students are being priced out of the market and an education. Spaces
rent for $130 a month at Irvine Meadows West, while the new housing
on east campus will cost between $550 and $1,512, depending on occupancy.
That far exceeds affordable housing standards for graduate
students who receive $12,500 annually in financial aid, Cardinale
said.
“The $950 single apartments have gone the quickest for grad
students,” Zeller said. “That says to me that there are a spectrum of
needs in the graduate student population because, clearly, other
students need rental rates in the Irvine Meadows West range.”
Some of the new housing, Zeller said, is part of a public-private
partnership, but still remains 10% below the cost of off-campus
housing. But Irvine has some of the highest rents in the nation, the
students argued.
Cardinale read a letter from Irvine Mayor Larry Agran applauding
the forum. Agran said he hoped it would “elevate public discourse on
the importance of affordable housing in Irvine.”
The university already is struggling with a 40% proposed increase
in graduate tuition and a state-mandated 10% reduction in freshman
enrollment for next year, Gomez said. While he negotiated in 1999 to
keep the park open for five years longer than originally proposed,
Gomez said it was “crystal clear” in students’ lease agreements that
it would close July 31 of this year.
“I fought in 1999 to extend the life of Irvine Meadows West and I
did so in good faith,” Gomez said. “I hope you live up to your end of
the deal.”
Residents and supporters described the eclectic enclave of
trailers surrounded by gardens and a hodge-podge of add-on fixed
structures as “funky,” “distinct” and “quaint.” Professor of
psychiatry Gary Lynch said that he uses its uniqueness to attract
graduate students from the East Coast.
“In paving over Irvine Meadows West, you are also paving over a
little more of the soul of Southern California,” history professor
Mike Davis said.
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