Education protests on March 4 lead to freeway takeover, 150 arrests in Oakland

Protestors take over the 880 freeway in Oakland in both directions as part of the March 4 Day of Action. Photo by Reginald James

Protestors take over the 880 freeway in Oakland in both directions as part of the March 4 Day of Action. Photo by Reginald James

Enraged by budget cuts to higher education, students through California walked out, held sit-ins and took to the streets Thursday. In Oakland, some protestors went further.

More than 150 protestors were arrested March 4 after walking onto a downtown freeway. Traffic came to a standstill as they marched onto the Market Street exit, weaving between cars near the Interstate 880 to 980 interchange.

Some motorists honked their horns in support and smiled. Others were visibly upset with their commute being stalled.

The protests were part of a statewide "Day of Action to Defend Education" in which students held sit-ins, rallies and teach-ins. Students marched from Oakland high schools, Laney College and UC Berkeley to downtown Oakland for the rally. Another regional rally was highly attended at Civic Center in San Francisco.

Oakland Police and California Highway Patrol officers chased protestors on the freeway, catching some after they crossed I-880 northbound to the I-880 southbound lanes. Police stormed protestors, dropping them to the ground and clubbing the fallen in the legs, backs and buttocks.

One minor was injured after he fell off the freeway. He had jumped onto a tree to avoid being arrested by officers who were closing in on protestors, police said. The branches broke and, along with the leaves and branches, he came crashing down onto 5th Street below. He was transported by ambulance to Highland Hospital.

There were 150 people arrested, including 10 minors who were mostly cited and released to their parents’ custody, according to officer Jeff Thomason, Oakland Police spokesman, in an e-mail to the press.

Police blocked off northbound I-880 traffic near the Broadway entrance, before a frenzy of police cars zipped up and down the freeway.

The protestors, who left from a peaceful rally at Frank Ogawa Plaza in front of Oakland City Hall, shut down the intersection of 14th Street and Broadway. Police cordoned off the intersection to prevent pedestrians from walking on 14th. The protestors, made up of anarchists, punk rockers, black and brown youth and others, headed north to 15th Street.

Protestors walked to Franklin and began to walk against traffic. At 11th and Franklin streets, in front of the office of the University of California President, protestors converged, dancing to music, holding up signs and showcasing the “Occupy Everything” banner to university police who guarded the building's entrance.

Marchers walked west on 11th toward Broadway. They shut down that intersection for several minutes, they continued to Martin Luther King Jr. Way as police ran after them.

Protestors turned left on Martin Luther King, but police formed a barricade line at 10th. Unable to move forward or turn left toward downtown Oakland, they went west toward Castro Street.

At Castro, some protestors walked onto the freeway while others, unwilling to risk arrest, walked off the shoulder.

After being arrested, booked and photographed on the Jackson Street offramp, many were transported to Glen Dyer Jail, near Oakland Police headquarters, and to Santa Rita Jail on misdemeanor charges. Some charges include unlawful assembly and obstructing public places.

Reginald James is a UC Berkeley student and a contributing editor at Oakland Local. He hosts the internet radio show, The Black Hour.
Ken O's picture

Reginald,

Question about this part of your otherwise good photos and on the ground reporting:

“The protestors, made up of anarchists, punk rockers, black and brown youth and others, headed north to 15th Street.”

Whoa! Are there no brown / black punk rockers? Are all protesting white and asian folks anarchists and punks? Although I appreciate the attempt to spice up your writing with some color, literally in this case, you could have simply written that students of all races attended the protest, for that is what readers see in your photos.

In all your flickr.com photos of the students' freeway occupation, I see as many black police officers as black student protestors. This clearly isn't a color-vs-white protest. 

That aside, curious what you may have seen or heard the students saying or doing that caused the police to hit them with billy clubs?

Bottom line: good reporting overall, A-. Would like to see more reporting, less labeling. The issues at root of the budget cut symptoms are mostly class related and generational (debts, pensions and Prop13). There's also a growing human population to consider.

More mouths to feed + shrinking pie = shrinking slices of pie. Remember that Jeffersons song Movin' On Up that goes “we fi-na-lly got a piece of the pie-ie-ie”? Thanks to our growing numbers, our future is that song in reverse. Back to our respective roots of ordinary human poverty. The US “middle class” falling into the lower class base of the US social pyramid means a shrinking middle class “buffer” between upper and lower classes.

Welcome to the favela. That's the real story here.

Kwan Booth's picture

Hi Ken,

Thanks for your reply. Sorry the response took so long. Your critique makes some good points about the accuracy of the labels. And I agree that there's more at play than race issues. 

But don't totally discount the part race plays in issues of class issues. The fact that a large percentage of people of color are are effected by these situations isn't exactly an accident.

And dude, are you seriously singing the Jeffersons theme song and asking a black man if he remembers the show?  Come on now, that theme song is permanently engraved  in our collective psyche! :)

Matty G's picture

Also a delayed response, but I'm guessing Reginalds point is that it was a mix of people, not just anarchists, just punk rockers or just black and brown youth.  They marched together and then faced the police together.  Here is a video made by 2 journalists who were jailed after filming the whole thing from up on the freeway.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NsjadfLYnD4

Salamlan's picture

Whoa! Are there no brown / black punk rockers? Are all protesting white and asian folks anarchists and punks? Although I appreciate the attempt to spice up your writing with some color, literally in this case, you could have simply written that students of all races attended the protest, for that is what readers see in your photos.