Cuts abandoned in victory for long-running student occupation
The following is a statement from the student occupation of the Hetherington Research Club at Glasgow University, which has been running continuously for six and a half months. In an extraordinary development, the University appears to have accepted all of the occupiers’ demands (except, we hear, that of a plaque commemorating the occupation).
Students at the University of Glasgow sit-in are celebrating this week after Principal Anton Muscatelli conceded defeat in his attempt to impose swingeing cuts on the University.
The u-turn comes after six months of pressure exerted by students occupying the Free Hetherington led to concessions ensuring a new postgraduate club, no further cuts to courses and no compulsory redundancies at the University.
As part of the deal secured by the Free Hetherington occupation, students will be able to quiz Principal Muscatelli directly in a mass open meeting in October over the lack of perceived transparency of management decisions at the University.
In exchange the students will end their six-month sit-in at 13 University Gardens to allow management to convert the former postgraduate club into lecturing space.
Students say they are enthusiastic about the outcome:
“Six months after management refused to engage with us, we’ve finally won these demands. Peaceful direct action and direct democracy work – we’ve proved that and management have accepted it, which in itself is a huge achievement.” – James Humphries, 24, postgraduate student in Philosophy.
They were keen to emphasise that the end of the occupation does not spell the end for activism on campus:
“While we’ve achieved a lot on campus this year the fight absolutely does not end here. We will continue our campaign against tuition fees and ensure management keep their end of the bargain. We will be back” – Laura Jones, 24, student in History of Art.
On 1st February 2011, a group of students entered the disused former Hetherington Research Club on campus and pledged to remain in the building until their demands, which included no course cuts and the reopening the postgraduate club, were met. In the past six months, a large body of students and staff have continually kept up pressure.
For almost two-hundred days the students have been sleeping, studying and campaigning in the former postgraduate club. Their efforts have received international acclaim and attracted visits from celebrities including director Ken Loach, singer-songwriter Billy Bragg and Scottish Makar Liz Lochhead. A packed schedule of events, lectures and workshops has made the Free Hetherington a focal point on campus for thousands of students and members of the local community.
As the longest-running student occupation in UK history, the Free Hetherington has become a lasting symbol of the wave of anti-tuition fees protests and occupations that swept the country in December 2010.
Students will bring the occupation to a conclusion around the end of August. A spokesperson for the occupation said the date would be announced in due course.
Interested media should contact glasgowoccupation@gmail.com.
A bullet point version of the agreement is available. A finalized version is being confirmed with management. In short:
The Agreement
1. No more course cuts.
2. No compulsory redundancies.
3. A new postgraduate club, to be opened in the next year.
4. No cuts for student services, a guarantee of transparency with the SRC (Student Representative Council).
5. A public meeting with the principal Anton Muscatelli, where students and staff may address their worries.
6. No repercussions from the University for staff or students involved in the occupation.
7. An assurance that no information will be volunteered to the police about people involved.
the key bit is perhaps no ‘more’ course cuts – although the SMG did roll back on many of their proposed cuts after massive public pressure (which the occupation played a key role in), Slavonic Studies and Libera Arts at Crichton Campus are still being cut, as is all public funding for the Department of Adult and Continuing Education.