Tag: University of California

  • Students Challenge Regents on Arms Lab

    UCSB A group of students upset that the University of California continues to allow the development of nuclear weapons at UC-run laboratories confronted the UC Regents via teleconference Thursday.

    The students, including several from UCSB, say they oppose the regents’ management of the Lawrence Livermore lab in Northern California and Los Alamos National Laboratories in New Mexico.

    “When people are looking at the university and trying to learn from them, to have the university involved in something like this, it doesn’t set a good example,” said UCSB student Jacqueline Binger, a senior peace and security major. Ms. Binger is a member of the Coalition to Demilitarize the University of California, a student-led effort that collaborates with the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation of Santa Barbara.

    The group has asked that the regents stop developing weapons technology at the labs. They submitted a letter to them with that request March 20, but have not received a response. Because Thursday’s remarks were made in the public comment section of the meeting, there was no response from the regents.

  • Student Coalition Demands Weapons Disarmament of Labs

    Coalition members stage press conference in protest of weapons of mass destruction research at the University of California

    Students from five UC campuses spoke out by the UC Office of the President building in Oakland on March 20 to demand an end to weapons of mass destruction research at the Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore laboratories.

    Denied a face-to-face meeting with the UC Regents, students from the Coalition to Demilitarize the University of California held a press conference outside the Office of the President building in Oakland, California on March 20, demanding that the UC Regents discuss the UC’s involvement with weapons of mass destruction, or WMDs.

    Michael Coffey, representative from the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, explained that since the Regents meeting was cancelled, they hand delivered the letter to the Office of the President.

    “We had our own press conference. We went to the Office of the President building in downtown Oakland on 9 a.m. Thursday, March 21, the morning after the war broke out,” Coffey said.

    Michael Cox, coalition representative from UCLA, stated that the students want the UC relationship with the nuclear weapons lab changed.

    “We’re not seeking the termination of the long-held contract to run the Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories-this is a last resort,” Cox said. “If the UC Regents don’t take steps to negotiate our demands, then we will call on the termination of the contract.”

    Under the leadership of the Department of Energy, the University of California manages three national laboratories: Los Alamos in New Mexico, Lawrence Livermore in California and the Lawrence Berkeley laboratory, also in California.

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation states that these laboratories “modify and monitor nuclear weapons.”

    Cox declared that the coalition is against the continual research and development of nuclear weapons.

    “We’re calling on any new research and development to stop completely,” Cox said. “[We’re] asking that the labs change functions from the efforts of proliferation to the international campaign of arms reduction and verification.”

    According to Tara Dorabji, a Tri-Valley CAREs spokeswoman, student leaders presented a letter requesting to “disarm and democratize the weapons labs” to the Regents secretary from four UC campuses.

    They requested a response to the letter by April 21.

    The coalition’s original plan was to meet directly with the UC Regents during their meeting.

    The UCOP office did not state a specific reason as to why the meeting was cancelled, but the Regent secretary stated that it was probably attributed to the outbreak of the war.

    “The students were promised a meeting, but despite being persistent [UCSC Chancellor MRC Greenwood] now will not meet with them,” Dorabji said.

    The coalition student group has partnered with local community organizations including Tri-Valley CAREs in Livermore, the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation in Santa Barbara and Western States Legal Foundation in Oakland.

    A press statement from the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation states the main belief of the Coalition to Demilitarize the UC, in that “no institution in the U.S. or abroad should continue to design and develop nuclear weapons.”

    Coffey attributes the coalition entirely to student efforts.

    “This campaign is student-led. Students let us know what type of support they need and we do our best to provide it,” Coffey said.

    According to Coffey, the coalition gives students a forum to discuss the role of nuclear weapons’ management by the UC. There are currently five UC schools involved: UCLA, UC Berkeley, UCSB, UCSD and UC Davis.

    “We had someone at UC Irvine, but she didn’t gain very much support there. I think administration didn’t give her a great response either,” Cox said.

    The main declaration from the coalition is the Unity Statement, outlining the “steps the UC Regents need to take, like disarming and democratizing the weapons labs, if they are to continue managing the National Labs.”

    “The abolition of all nuclear weapons is a core value uniting the group,” Dorabji said.

    UC Spokesman Jeff Garberson stated that there is much history behind UC’s involvement with the laboratories.

    “There’s a historical reason,” Garberson said. “The United States government has always asked the [University of California] to operate the labs.”

    According to Garberson, UC manages these national laboratories for historical reasons as well as for service to the public.

    “[The] first reason—historical precedence that the university has always managed the labs. The university has seen it’s operation of the labs as a public service. They do important national work, some for national defense, some of it not,” Garberson said.

    Garberson also stated that both the Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore laboratories deal with national security. While the labs are involved in the design, research and maintenance of nuclear weapons, the weapons themselves are constructed elsewhere.

    Garberson said the UC Regents stand behind the laboratories and all of its work.

    “The university has always been willing and proud to manage the national labs,” Garberson said.

    In response to the UC involvement with nuclear weapons, UC President Richard Atkinson supported the UC in a July 2002 letter to Armin Tenner, a former UC professor and member of the International Network of Engineers and Scientists Against Proliferation. “Ensuring these remaining weapons are safe and effective without nuclear testing is a challenging scientific problem—one that requires the efforts of outstanding technical experts such as those at the Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore national laboratories,” Atkinson said. “The University of California takes this responsibility very seriously.”

    Atkinson continued to say that the role of the UC with nuclear weapons is a significant one.

    “The University of California takes this responsibility very seriously. If the university did not manage these laboratories, the weapons would not, of course, go away,” Atkinson said. “But we would then worry more about the future of the planet.”

    Cox hopes that the coalition will soon be able to voice their opinions directly to the UC Regents.

    According to Cox, the March UC Regents meeting was rescheduled for later on this week through a teleconference meeting.

    “If they do allow time for public comment, then we will definitely be participating in that,” Cox said.

  • Students tell UC to disarm labs

    A group of University of California students and their supporters on Thurs-day called on the university to get out of the weapons business at its three national laboratories.

    The students, members of the Coalition to Demilitarize the University of California, simultaneously decried the start of the war in Iraq and the university’s role in research and development of nuclear weapons at Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore labs, as well as unclassified beam science at Lawrence Berkeley lab distantly tied to weapons research.

    “We will change the University of California from an institution of war to an institution of peace,” UCLA student Michael Cox vowed during a news conference outside UC headquarters on Franklin Street. “Last night, I could feel my stomach churn and simultaneously feel the people of Baghdad burn.”

    Cox and students from four other UC campuses, including Berkeley, spoke in front of about a dozen supporters.

    Signs reading “Stop the UC war machine” and “No hate, no war” were propped against a nearby mailbox. One observer scrawled a message on a sheet of white copy paper: “This site is in the business of weapons of mass destruction.”

    Students hand-delivered a letter demanding UC “begin the process for immediate disarmament of the national labs, as required by Article IV of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.”

    UC’s involvement in the weapons labs is “an issue over which there has been honest disagreement almost since the inception of the partnership between the university and the federal government,” UC spokes-man Michael Reese said.

    Most recently, the management of Los Alamos has been the subject of a congressional investigation into charges of fraud, cover-up and theft.

    1The university is paid $17 million for a lab management office, staff and other costs. It also receives a $17.5 million “performance fee” that, if not expended on fines, penalties or legal fees, the university typically returns to the labs as discretionary research money.

    But Reese said the laboratories contribute important research in the areas of homeland security and health care, in addition to their role in weapons research and development.

    “It’s a complex subject,” Reese said, “and there are many sides to this issue, not the least of which is, if not the University of California, then who?”
    * Staff writer Ian Hoffman contributed to this report.

  • Letter to the Governor of California about UC Nuclear Free

    The Honorable Gray Davis
    Governor of California
    State Capitol Building
    Sacramento, CA 95814

    Dear Governor Davis,

    We are initiating a campaign to educate students on the University of California campuses about the UC’s management of the nuclear weapons laboratories. Our basic position is that it is unworthy of a great university to be involved in the creation of weapons of mass destruction, and therefore the Regents of the University of California should terminate their contracts with the Department of Energy (DoE) related to oversight and management of these laboratories.

    By continuing to manage the nuclear weapons laboratories, the University of California is compromising its integrity as a responsible institution of higher learning and setting a poor example for the students it educates.

    While money should certainly not be the critical issue in this matter, we understand that the DoE contract provides UC with little more than enough resources to manage the labs. Given this, ending the contractual relationship will have very little financial impact on UC, and will only serve to promote the best interests of the students and the University.

    I would encourage you, as Chairman of the UC Board of Regents, to take a leadership role in ending the University of California’s relationship with the nuclear weapons laboratories. I would appreciate your response to this request.

    Sincerely,
    David Krieger
    President