Hundreds gathered at the University of California Santa Cruz’s administration building on the afternoon of May 4, quiet with anticipation. While some waited at the entrance, many others stood on the roof.
The crowd began to stir when someone spotted a group of students half-jogging from the hill, trailed by a few administrators. As Imari Reynolds, fourth-year student and chair of UCSC’s Afrikan/Black Student Alliance (A/BSA), reached the building, she clicked on the megaphone and tilted it up to the crowd of nearly 300.
“Now we have someone—the university spokesperson—who is going to read off a little letter from George,” Reynolds announced, referring to the university’s chancellor. “Signed and sealed—I have it right here, and on videotape.” She smiled. “Multiple copies. We don’t play.”
The other administrators hung back as the news and media-relations director stepped forward. Uncomfortably fiddling with the megaphone, he read from a written statement as hundreds of students watched.
“We recognize that we have more work to do in supporting Afrikan Black Caribbean (ABC) identified students at UCSC,” he read. “We are committed to build capacity to fully integrate ABC-identified students so that they have a sense of belonging and connectedness here on campus.” He proceeded to list the students’ four demands and then agree to each, one by one. These would be met, he said, by fall, 2017.
It was the verdict they had been waiting for after three days in the administration building, which the crowd of hundreds had refused to leave until their demands had been addressed. As the good news reached the students, they broke into a collective cheer, chanting “A/BSA” and “Black Lives Matter,” before falling to a hush as one A/BSA member took the megaphone.
“It is our duty to fight for our freedom,” she said, reciting a quote by Assata Shakur. The crowd began to join along. “It is our duty to win.” More joined in as the chant got louder. “We must love and protect one another. We have nothing to lose but our chains.”
On May 2, following a campus-wide march and after more than two years of rejected demands, members of A/BSA, joined by hundreds of other students, entered Clark Kerr Hall and demanded that the employees leave the building. They banged on walls and knocked on doors. At first, some stayed, ignoring the students or putting on headphones. Others grew angry, making snide or hostile remarks as they left.
The building eventually emptied, and over the course of three days 150 students set up camp across the four floors of the building. Some slept on the ground; others stayed only during the day. Door alarms went off every so often, signaling that they had been open too long. Students plastered the windows with black and red paper signs and piled chairs high around entryways.
In a statement, A/BSA students wrote that what they were doing was not an occupation: It was a reclamation. Occupations, they said, are associated with colonial violence and oppression; a reclamation refers to taking back resources that originally belonged to students. “We know that language does matter, as do intentions,” A/BSA wrote.
UCSC has a student body of over 17,300, but only 2 percent identify as black. Likewise, in the Rosa Parks African American Theme House (R.PAATH), specifically designated as a space for ABC students, only 12 of the 78 residents identify as black. Integral to A/BSA’s demands is that UCSC administrators reserve priority housing in R.PAATH for ABC students. Second, they demanded that the building be painted Pan-Afrikan colors to increase black visibility within the majority-white college. “Throughout western history, ABC folks have been pushed into the margins of western society,” A/BSA wrote in their list of demands. “Currently, ABC students are being pushed into the margins of UCSC housing.”
“People think that because there is a forest and people take part in recreational drugs that Santa Cruz is the most liberal—the most free and accepting,” A/BSA member and fourth-year UCSC student Destinee Barnes told me. “This is a conservative school. The way this is handled, it’s very conservative.”
“You feel like you are invisible; you feel silenced all the time; you feel watched by students, professors, administration,” Barnes told me. “It’s not welcoming here at UCSC. It is not a welcoming environment for black students.”
Santa Cruz County is ranked as the fifth-most expensive metro area in the United States, according to the National Low Income Housing coalition. Students frequently live in garages, deal with annual increases in rent, or settle for substandard living conditions as rental prices soar. With the limited space, and the overflow of Silicon Valley workers into Santa Cruz, housing prices continue to increase with income levels. Making up to a $80,650 salary is considered low income in Santa Cruz, according to the Santa Cruz County planning department.
In its demand for guaranteed housing, A/BSA wrote that it hopes the Santa Cruz housing crisis will be one less concern for the ABC community at UCSC. “R.PAATH was fought for to give ABC students visibility, pride and a safe haven within this predominantly white institution,” A/BSA explained in their demands. “Over the few years, these values of R.PAATH have been diminished by UCSC’s apparent policy and lack of concern.”
In his March letter rejecting A/BSA demands, Blumenthal cited the housing crisis, a primary force behind the students’ demands for housing guarantees, as a justification. “Unfortunately,” he wrote, “limited capacity, financial and/or space resources (some of which are connected to regents’ decisions) currently impede the institution from pursuing all of the listed requests in an immediate fashion.”
That was before the reclamation.
As night fell on the first day, students clustered in groups and took turns guarding the doors. While someone played Kendrick Lamar’s 2015 album To Pimp a Butterfly on their speakers, the usual campus announcements that light up the lobby television screen were replaced with a running slideshow flashing images of Rosa Parks, Huey P. Newton, and Malcolm X.
The following day temperatures climbed to over 90 degrees in the poorly ventilated, airless central building. Students constructed a makeshift shower from blue tarps and a garden hose, passed around water bottles, and shed layers of clothing to fight the heat. Some would later use the clothing for face masks: Because UCSC is a public school, being in Kerr Hall after 5 pm is considered trespassing and grounds for arrest. With this in mind, many students wrote phone numbers of friends, family, and legal representation on their arms. However, no arrests were made, and no officers entered the building during the reclamation.
“We support students exercising their First Amendment rights, but we do not endorse taking over buildings, which displaces university employees doing important work in support of the very students who entered the building,” Blumenthal wrote in an emailed statement.
A/BSA members said they were met with around 20 death threats and an additional 50 threats of violence on social media during the three-day reclamation. Many of their peers expressed frustration over their organizing, complaining over social media that “protests don’t do anything.”
The reclamation itself was the result of six weeks of meetings and logistical planning. The plan was to begin with a march across campus, which A/BSA members were prepared to do alone, if necessary. But hundreds of other students across campus joined them in marching and taking the administration building.
Many ABC students said that the reclamation was the first time they felt truly safe at the university, seeing that so many other students—specifically those who aren’t ABC-identifying—were looking out for them during their reclamation and joining in solidarity. “It was an ‘I got your back’ kind of thing,” said Barnes. “Everyone was helpful and made sure everyone felt comfortable. It was very inclusive of our trans, queer, and undocumented communities, too. Nobody was left alone.”
“The energy we have accumulated is amazing,” Barnes added. “It’s the best energy I have ever experienced in my four years at UCSC.”
By day three, Blumenthal agreed to meet with representatives from A/BSA but declined to meet them at Kerr Hall, citing safety concerns. He instead requested A/BSA leaders meet him at another campus location, and if not, suggested they speak to his secretary about setting up a meeting over the phone.
“Could it be that George is afraid of the very students he represents?” A/BSA chair Reynolds had asked the crowd before leaving to speak with him. She had followed this by asking how many students in the crowd had ever seen the chancellor in person. Less than half of the crowd raised their hands.
In the wake of their success, students cleaned Kerr Hall, removing the door blockades and donated leftover food and blankets to community members and to local nonprofits aiding the current water crisis in Flint, Michigan. There was no damage to the building or university property, and Kerr Hall has returned to its normal daily operations. A/BSA also received notice that the university would not pursue disciplinary or criminal action. The administration promises to meet their demands by the fall quarter, and the housing administration said that plans to fulfill them are “already underway.” A/BSA members say they’ll believe it when they see it.
“We don’t want to accept anything off of a white man’s promise,” Means said, summarizing points made by A/BSA advisor Tommi D. Hayes in the meeting with Blumenthal.
Not only that, A/BSA has two more demands that have not been met, one calling for the creation of a co-op off-campus for low-income and underrepresented students and the other for the allocation of $100,000 toward the hiring of a Black advisor in SOAR/Student Media/Cultural Arts and Diversity (SOMeCA)—an office that supports A/BSA and other campus-wide student organizations.
“Our work is not done,” A/BSA co-chair Reynolds said. “Our people are still struggling. They are still struggling on this campus, and they are still struggling in America. Our work will never be done until our people are liberated.”
Reynolds said that they will revisit the final two demands once they see that the others are in place.
“The implementation is one of those things to work out now,” said UCSC’s News and Media Relations Director Scott Hernandez-Jason. “We are committed to it because we know we can do it, but step one is getting to this point.” The majority of the demands are scheduled to be complete by the beginning of next year. Though the mandatory online diversity training will not be completed until the following year, in fall 2018, UCSC will require incoming fall 2017 freshmen to complete in-person diversity competency training until the online module can be established.
“A lot of people have been complaining and trying to make it seem that what we were doing wasn’t effective, or it’s not big enough,” Barnes said in what was left of her voice, gone hoarse after days of shouting and cheering. “But people fail to understand that if this basic shit could barely get met, imagine how much of a larger scale would it have to be to get done? See what we have to do to get a house painted?”
Georgia JohnsonGeorgia Johnson is a student at the University of California Santa Cruz and co-editor-in-chief of its student paper, City On a Hill Press.