Laserfiche WebLink
Zachary Vishanoff, Patterson Street, circulated copies of a resolution the West University Neighbors <br />Association adopted that requested the City's involvement in any plan the University of Oregon had to build <br />a basketball arena. He noted that since the neighborhood association had passed it, the resolution had also <br />been approved by two student cooperatives, the Associated Students of the University of Oregon (ASUO), <br />and the Whiteaker Neighborhood Executive Board. He hoped to gain more endorsements. He wanted to <br />slow the process down and allow for more public input. <br /> <br />Mr. Vishanoff expressed concern that the University of Oregon campus might be a possible site for future <br />Olympic trials. He called this a "really big decision," important to have a "real discussion about." He <br />thought communities became overbuilt and %ver-surveilled" as a result of being Olympic sites. <br /> <br />Mr. Vishanoff reiterated his opposition to the University's movement of older housing that it owned from the <br />East Campus area. He called it "ongoing discrimination" and asserted that it was "illegal and racist." <br /> <br />Ed Singer, 4160 Eddystone Place, favored a large community park in the Santa Clara site currently under <br />consideration for a land swap. He recalled that area residents were promised such a park prior to voting on <br />the 1998 Parks Bond Measure. He felt a land swap to be a "win-win situation." He recognized concerns <br />some residents had regarding a large increase in population in that area, but averred the land would <br />ultimately be developed regardless of whether the City undertook the land swap at this time. He suggested <br />the City purchase the property in order to mitigate those concerns. <br /> <br />Hope Marston, 3110 University Street, spoke in support of Resolution 4830, urging the federal government <br />to uphold international treaties against torture and inhuman treatment. She thanked councilors Bettman and <br />Taylor for bringing the resolution to the attention of the City Council. She recognized that some people <br />would question whether this was a local government issue. She averred that not only Congress, but each <br />and every citizen should honor the principles of the Constitution and the treaties made by the government. <br />She pointed out that councilors had promised in their oath of office to defend the United States Constitution. <br />She cited the 5th Amendment which bans self-incrimination, the 8th Amendment, which bans cruel and <br />unusual punishment, and the 14th Amendment, which guarantees equal protection under the law. She stated <br />that torture destroyed constitutional guarantees that apply to all human beings regardless of race, color, or <br />citizenship. She stressed that the United States principles must be upheld for the entire world to see. She <br />urged support of the resolution because it was for the benefit of the United States' soldiers who also should <br />be treated in a humane way in accordance with the Geneva Convention. She asserted that torture made <br />everyone less safe from terrorism. She pointed out that in 2002 the Eugene City Council became the 16th <br />city nationwide to remind the US Congress that the citizens of Eugene still valued their Bill of Rights, <br />threatened by the Patriot Act. <br /> <br />Gordie Albi, 1690 Adkins Street, #2, averred that the City of Eugene should be leading the country in its <br />opposition to torture because it had been the location of the first residential psychological, medical, and <br />social rehabilitation project. She explained that it had begun over ten years ago for the purpose of aiding <br />survivors of torture from Latin America and had been an all-volunteer project. She listed some of the <br />contributors, including the Easter Seal Society, Sacred Heart Hospital, and Whitebird Medical Clinic. She <br />stated that the University of Oregon law students had won the first case of political asylum in the state of <br />Oregon for someone from Guatemala. She provided pictures and an article from The Register-Guard <br />regarding the program. She also read from the brochure, underscoring that people needed to stand together <br />to end torture. <br /> <br />MINUTES--Eugene City Council April 11, 2005 Page 2 <br /> Regular Session <br /> <br /> <br />