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Farm defenders halt construction over farmland in the East Bay

by Occupy the Farm (occupyfarmmedia [at] gmail.com)
Farm defenders chain themselves to an excavator that was removing the topsoil from a portion of the Gill Tract farm in Albany, CA. Protesters vow to continue disrupting construction until the UC and its corporate partners, especially Sprouts so-called "Farmers Market" #BoycottSprouts #TakeBackTheTract #Decolonize2Survive
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - January 28, 2016

Albany, CA—Farm defenders chain themselves to an excavator that was removing the topsoil from a portion of the Gill Tract farm in Albany, CA. This halted a day of construction over the contested farmland. Contractors began work on the southern portion of the Gill Tract last week, a historical farm sold to the University of California in 1928 under the condition it would be used for agricultural research and education. Contractors using a bulldozer, a backhoe, and an excavator began removing the valuable topsoil this week.

"We are putting our bodies on the line to halt construction and restart a public debate on the fate of this land," explained Jean Mortensen, one of the protesters locked down to the excavator.

The group Occupy the Farm vows to continue disrupting construction until the UC and its corporate partners, especially Sprouts supermarket, cancel their projects to pave over this valuable public asset. Protesters had already disrupted surveying work last Tuesday, and disrupted the first five days of the new Sprouts supermarket in Oakland with a campaign for the community to boycott Sprouts.

In answer to the UC administration's claim that they need to privatize this area for $1 million, we point out that the UC could raise over $3 million by embracing the operation of the whole Gill Tract as a farm, as Stanford is able to do with much fewer academic and institutional resources dedicated to urban agriculture and agroecology. In addition, the research on agroecology done at the Gill Tract has already generated over $2 billion in savings from reduction of pesticide use in California alone. The price the UC is receiving for this land is shamefully cheap compared to the wealth and benefits that this farmland can yield to the UC and the common good.

Community members, students, and UC faculty have put forth an alternative proposal to use all twenty acres of the historic Gill Tract for the establishment of a public Center for Indigenous Foodways to research, restore, and recreate indigenous food practices and cultures.This would serve much better the University of California’s mission of research and education for the public good, while also operating as a productive urban farm that provides students, workers, and community members with access to affordable local produce. This proposal better aligns with UC President Napolitano’s Global Food Initiative as well as the sustainability and climate mitigation policies of the state of California. But instead, the UC is privatizing this section of the Gill Tract for the construction of a high-end senior assisted living facility by the Belmont Village corporation, alongside construction of a Sprouts supermarket and a parking lot.

“We have tried every formal and institutional route for a more democratic decision on the fate of this land,” explains Gustavo Oliveira, a PhD student of geography at UC Berkeley and member of Occupy the Farm. “But the UC administration and their corporate partners only reconsider their plans for privatization when opposed by organized direct action.” All public hearings about the fate of the land at the UC as well as the City of Albany featured majority public opinion against construction over the farmland.


Background:

The privatization and construction launched on the site has been contested by students, faculty, and members of the community for almost two decades. In 2004, the UC Regents approved commercial development despite years of campaigning by students, faculty, and community members for the preservation of the land for urban agriculture and food justice, and proceeded bulldozing greenhouses in 2008 and contracting with Whole Foods for development of the site.

In April 2012, Occupy the Farm reenergized this struggle by camping on the land and planting a publicly-accessible farm on the Gill Tract. Under pressure, Whole Foods pulled out of the proposed development, and the UC administration granted protection for a portion of the land, some of which is now the vibrant Gill Tract Community Farm.

However, the 7 acres of the southern portion of the Gill Tract remains slated for development with a shopping center anchored by Sprouts supermarket, a high-end senior housing complex, and a parking lot. UC Capital Projects now seeks to implement this project despite another occupation in May 2013 and other mobilizations on the land in 2014 and 2015, two lawsuits, an Albany City referendum effort, broad based and constant community participation at the Albany City Council in favor of preserving the farmland for agricultural use, and an ongoing campaign for Sprouts to drop its proposed construction project over the Gill Tract.

Press Kit: http://bit.ly/otfpresskit [Contains map, FAQ, quotes, history, previous articles, film]


#BoycottSprouts #TakeBackTheTract #Decolonize2Survive


occupythefarm.org
boycottsprouts.com

###
§Lock down
by Occupy the Farm
800_lockdown_b.jpg
§Lock down
by Occupy the Farm
800_lockdown_c.jpg
§OTF halts construction on farmland (video)
by Occupy the Farm
Copy the code below to embed this movie into a web page:
Video of lockdown by OccupyFarmMedia (1:49)
§Lockdown at the Farm 28 Jan 2016 (video)
by Occupy the Farm
Copy the code below to embed this movie into a web page:
Video of lockdown by Peter Menchini (3:32)
Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
History is remembered vaguely by teams of lawyers and regents.
The purchase of Gill 109 acres was a swap sale of public tax dollar investments and philanthropy.
Novartis, Dow, Monsanto,Genentech et al were not the original donors.
The People of the State of California were and continue to be.

Another excerpt of how UC profits:

"In our letter of September 14, 1939, Code IT:P:T:1 CQ, it was held that you were entitled to exemption under the provisions of section 101(6) of the Revenue Act of 1938.

A determination or ruling letter issued to an organization granting exemption under the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 or under a prior or subsequent Revenue Act remains in effect until exempt status has been terminated, revoked or modified.

Our records indicate that you are the regularly constituted state university of the State of California originally created by a state legislature act of 1868; that you are engaged in educational activities; that your income is derived from investments, endowments, tuition, and miscellaneous sources; and that your income is used in furtherance of your educational activities."

http://www.ucop.edu/raohome/cgmemos/83-33.html
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