Zach Groff,
DxE Direct
Action Everywhere
April 2017
Today is a new day. DxE and the Berkeley animal rights community can continue on without fear, and Berkeley has lived up to its democratic values. The Berkeley City Council and city officials will respect the values of free speech and democracy. Animal Rights Center ARC and animal rights, will flourish.
Victory.
The Berkeley City Council recently voted resoundingly to keep the
Berkeley Animal Rights Center ARC open and turn back a mistaken eviction threat.
The vote caps off an effort in which animal rights groups and Berkeley
residents rallied, united, and took action to save the center in a city
famous for free speech.
The Berkeley Animal Rights Center opened in July 2016. The activists and
visitors enjoyed a conflict-free relationship with the Center’s landlord,
the City of Berkeley. That is, until one day last September, when the
Berkeley Animal Rights Center (ARC) received a strongly-worded letter from
an outside law firm containing a laundry list of lease violations.
The alleged violations were strange. The letter claimed that use of a
lockbox to hold keys invited theft. The letter ignored email conversations
about renovations. The letter quibbled over the definition of “office use
and supporting retail.”
Why such a desperate effort to evict a community center? Maybe it was a
protest at Berkeley’s famed sustainable purveyors of animal bodies, Chez
Panisse. Maybe it was a resolution condemning dog meat - and tacitly all
animal slaughter. Maybe it was the political activation of animal rights
activists. Whatever it was, the city ultimately rallied in support of ARC
and free speech.
ARC’s fellow tenants signed an open letter supporting us. Dozens of
animal rights and social justice groups signed another. Berkeley residents
flooded the city council with calls in support of ARC. We rallied on the
steps of City Hall and filled a City Council meeting in signs of unity.
At that meeting, the mayor made clear: ARC was to stay. The mayor and city
council stood up for free speech, democracy, and civil and animal rights.
Last night, the Berkeley City Council made good on that promise: they
amended ARC’s lease to make clear that we have a right to stay and keep
operating as usual.
Today is a new day. DxE and the Berkeley animal rights community can
continue on without fear, and Berkeley has lived up to its democratic
values. The Berkeley City Council and city officials will respect the values
of free speech and democracy. ARC, and animal rights, will flourish.
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