Flags, solidarity and sleeping bags

August 14, 2002
Issue 

BY TAMARA PEARSON Picture

BATHURST — Charles Sturt University's (CSU) solution to federal funding cuts is to axe courses and fire staff. The students' response has been to organise.

The students have been camping outside CSU management's office since June to demand a reversal of funding cuts to the school of communications. The students, who have named their campaign “CSU: Out of Order”, are receiving support from the local community and trade unions.

The protest site is a collection of tents and rooms made of boards and tarpaulins (filled with blankets, sleeping bags, makeshift seats, posters and supplies of coffee). There are flags, banners and signs.

The campaign has included festivals, protests and sit-ins, daily stalls, petitioning of the campus and local community, and the establishment of an informative web site.

Kate Clugston, one of the activists, told Green Left Weekly that students “are not getting the education they are paying for at this university”. She said “subjects are being run outside the school of communications, which is leaking funds from the school. There's been cuts to technical and general support staff, which means that the practical component of the course is not being as strongly managed as it used to be”.

Jess Beange, another activist, described the university's management as being “blatantly corrupt”. In a media release, management claimed that students had continually refused to participate in mediation and were disrupting the “normal life” of the university. Clugston said that these claims were untrue. She pointed out that the mediator offered by management works for them.

Management cut power to the protest site (where temperatures at night get below zero) after 43 days of occupation claiming it was for “safety” reasons. Students were being refused permission to light a fire on the basis that it is a potential environmental hazard.

Beange explained how the campaign started in June. Immediately after the cuts to the school of communications were announced, a crisis meeting was held.

“We organised a protest in 24 hours. We found some blankets and ran around the dorms and the dining hall. We told everyone and got people involved straight away. We made a little toilet-like contraption out of cardboard boxes and got people to sit on it. As they sat, they told people on the open mic why they gave a shit. It turned out a lot people really did give a shit!”

The Out of Order campaign has received support from students, staff unions, local shop owners and the local media. “We go down the to the pubs with petitions. You should see how many drinks get bought for us”, Beange quipped.

The students' parents have also been very supportive. One father stood on the library lawn in the rain for half an hour holding up a sign which said “Give my son back his education”.

“We all very determined. We're not going to leave this camp until we get what we want”, Beange assured GLW.

Visit the Out of Order campaign web site at <http://proddieplanet.cjb.net>.

From Green Left Weekly, August 14, 2002.
Visit the Green Left Weekly home page. 

You need Green Left, and we need you!

Green Left is funded by contributions from readers and supporters. Help us reach our funding target.

Make a One-off Donation or choose from one of our Monthly Donation options.

Become a supporter to get the digital edition for $5 per month or the print edition for $10 per month. One-time payment options are available.

You can also call 1800 634 206 to make a donation or to become a supporter. Thank you.