Above Photo: From unicornriot.ninja
At a hot summer meeting on a mostly deserted campus, the “Differences Organized Coalition” of fifteen groups protested University of Minnesota Board of Regents’ proposed tuition hikes, as well as decreasing access for marginalized communities, numerous sports and research scandals, Dinkytown gentrification, and investments with abusive corporations.
The “Do! Coalition” has several primary demands: to treat education like a public good; immediate free tuition for American Indian students; President Kaler’s immediate resignation; divest from Blackrock Investment portfolios; and quit trying to crush protesters at the University. Note, Unicorn Riot does not currently have a list of all affiliated groups.
As protesters took hold of the meeting room, several Regents declined to comment (video here) to Unicorn Riot about the tuition hikes including former GOP legislatorLaura Brod, Richard Beeson of Sunrise Banks, and Peggy Lucas a developer at Brighton Development.
Unicorn Riot provided a livestream of the action and rally afterwards. Here is a 3 minute video from angles that were not streamed, including the arrests and following them down in the elevator:
University of Minnesota Occupy’s Regents Board Meeting in Protest Against Tuition Hikes from Unicorn Riot on Vimeo.
Six protesters, undergraduates and grad students at the U, were arrested, detained and ticketed.
The rest of the protesters walked out after the arrestees and talked to the corporate media about the demands and worsening access to higher education. Speakers linked the Regents’ increasing pressure on students leading to what they prefer to frame as ‘individual’ mental health problems. Security threatened the remaining protesters with arrest and they moved out of the building.
This is the video of protesters discussing their demands and related info with the media in the hallway:
Full video of the first part of the protest until people went downstairs:
Outside the McNamara Alumni Center, as the heat increased, students and retired and current educators talked about how this land grant university had extracted knowledge from many populations while now reducing broad access.
Full video of the rally outside the building:
The detained protesters were released after about half an hour and then talked about why they were fighting the Regents’ agenda, which some described as a neoliberal style plan to restrict access to academia and remold students into thoughtless “clones”.
Here are the demands of the coalition with outlined supporting facts:
Today’s Do! Coalition demands and summary of massive systemic problems at University of Minnesota. More video soon pic.twitter.com/TVyhiflxzx
— Unicorn Riot (@UR_Ninja) June 10, 2016
Students described to Unicorn Riot how the administration has not been open to discussion. Here are two students describing impacts of the Regents policies outside:
Similarly during the protest we twice asked Dean Johnson, former top legislator in both parties, and Chair of the Board of Regents about investments in private prisons and whether that is ethical for the university.
Johnson is a political veteran, a chaplain ranking as general, a Lutheran pastor for forty-plus years with a masters degree in strategic studies from the Army War College. Yet he was unable to share with Unicorn Riot any moral or logistical views on U of M money going into private prisons through Blackrock on his watch. Instead, using hand gestures, Johnson ordered third parties to force us to cease any inquiries about his policies.
The livestream wrapup by Dan of Unicorn Riot after the rally including a summary of the demands is here.
Financial background info:
As of 3/31/2016 Blackrock Fund Advisors owns $152 million dollars, 4.4 million shares of Corrections Corporation of America, while Blackrock Institutional Trust Company owns 3.9 million shares valued at $135 million.
According to the University of Minnesota Prison Divest website:
“The University of Minnesota perpetuates the system of mass incarceration through its financial investment in the prison industrial complex. The institution hires an investment firm called Blackrock to manage the institution’s funds, and student tuition dollars are being funneled into the private prison system. Blackrock is the second largest shareholder in the GEO group, the sixth largest holder in Corrections Corporation of America, and the second largest in G4S. An institution that claims to value diversity of community and ideas; integrity; discovery and search for the truth; and service to Minnesota, the nation, and the world, cannot also be invested in racist and classist systems of incarceration and detention.”
Blackrock also is a major player in other public investment and retirement systems in Minnesota, collecting millions in fees annually. For example in 2011 their entities collected $1.5 million in management fees from another publicly backed entity controlled by the State Board of Investment: Teachers Retirement Association of Minnesota.
Also Minnesota’s state 2015 Supplemental Investment Fund prospectus shows U.S. Stock Actively Managed Fund, U.S. Stock Index Fund, Balanced Fund and Bond Fund categories all have investments managed by Blackrock. There is no compelling reason that index funds need to be held with Blackrock, as they are set up to automatically follow the stock market indexes without any judicious management.