Another communiqué from Michael Fischl, this time regarding a message from an undergraduate here at UM.
Dear colleagues
I urge you to read the first-hand account of the “shoving” incident that appears below. In a nutshell, last night Alyssa Cundari (an undergraduate and a member of STAND, the student organization that has been leading the fight on campus for a living wage) was distributing STAND living-wage flyers at a University function taking place in the open courtyard of the Architecture school. She was uninvited, of course, and, when she was asked to leave by someone official-looking, she did so immediately.
A short distance from the function, she was confronted by UM public safety officers who asked if she was the individual who had been distributing flyers at the courtyard function, and the ensuing interaction quickly went south. They confiscated her remaining flyers, demanded her name and her I.D., and told her they were going to file a police report; in response she refused to cooperate; in response one of the officers ultimately grabbed her arm and shoved her; and then another officer accused her of battery on a police officer. (As a wise observer said during the police riot at 1968 Chicago Democratic Convention, “Id call the police, but theyre already here.”)
As it happens, last night I was next door at a strike-related event at Eaton Residential College, and I heard this account from Alyssa first-hand; moreover, it was confirmed in every respect by two students and Nina Baliga from the SEIU, all of whom witnessed the entire event (Nina filmed some of it). Alyssa was devastated, beside herself, and very scared, and she spoke with Donna Coker (who is one of the faculty masters at Eaton), me, and three student affairs/residence halls officials for about an hour after the program. (By the way, the latter handled the incident professionally and sympathetically, promising that there would be a most forceful communication to campus security officials about the inappropriateness of the officers’ actions first thing this morning from someone far higher in the food chain than any of us.)
I am sharing this with you because I think it raises several important issues beyond the grievous injustice done to one of UMs students: (1) tensions are very high on campus and are likely to increase, and folks need to be warned that there is reason to worry about the adequacy of the training and professionalism of the public safety officers who will no doubt be out in force (in this case, Deputy Dan is decidedly not your friend); (2) it confirms as if further confirmation were needed that the current capacity of University officials and staff to deal fairly and professionally with real and outspoken dissent on this campus is, well, not at all where it ought to be (a point, by the way, that President Shalala herself made in the Herald piece on STAND back in December); and (3) it also confirms that the rules are different when the word “union” is involved, because I cant imagine that University officials would have sent public safety after a student who was passing out flyers for any other cause at a party being conducted in an open public space on campus, where the student in question had already immediately complied with a request to leave.
In sadness and disappointment more than anything else,
Michael Fischl
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