Why 3 small “replacement” trees can’t replace
an ecosystem
 
The cornerstone of UC Berkeley’s PR spin on the oaks is to talk about replacing each destroyed tree with  three small saplings. But the Memorial Oak Grove is a complex Coast Live Oak ecosystem. Killing the existing trees would decimate that established ecosystem.  
 
Furthermore, careful analysis of the “3 for 1” replacement scheme reveals how totally in-effective the replacement proposal is.  For instance,  large Oak trees can have tens of thousands of leaves in their canopy habitat area, while UC’s small replacement saplings would typically only have 50 to 100 leaves. These native oaks can provide habitat for hundreds of animal and insect species. So just in terms of the Biomass of a tree that provides habitat, three small trees is nowhere near as valuable as one mature oak.
 
3 to1 UPDATE -
UC recently revealed, that  in fact, they do not even intend to replace the oaks 3 to 1.  At a UC regents meeting, chancellor Ed Denton disclosed that UC would only replant with 25% native oaks.  This is yet another  example of the university saying one thing in public and then doing another.
 
It is also important to remember that many of the “replacement” saplings will not survive.  It is typical for a third of the “replacement” trees to die within a year or two of being planted.
 
Native California Oak woodlands are a crucial component of our natural environment, supporting higher levels of bio-diversity than any other terrestrial ecosystem in California. Over 300 vertebrates and thousands of other plant and insect species depend on California Oak woodland ecosystems for their survival.
 
 Save the Memorial Oak Grove
Current
Support:
Berkeley City Council Passes resolution to Save THE OAKS Listen to Save Oaks Coverage on KPFA
Memorial Stadium and it’s surrounding landscape, which includes the Memorial Oak Grove were recently listed on the National Register of Historic Places by the federal government. read more.. http://berkeleyheritage.com/weblog/2006/11/memorial-stadium-now-on-national.htmlhttp://berkeleyheritage.com/weblog/2006/11/memorial-stadium-now-on-national.htmlshapeimage_13_link_0shapeimage_13_link_1
Stadium & Oak Grove Landscape Are Named National Historic Site
4 Lawsuits Challenge UC Berkeley Expansion Plans
 
Four lawsuits have been filed in Alameda Superior Court challenging the Environmental Impact Report for the University’s Southeast Campus Integrated Projects.  The lawsuits are based on the California Environmental Quality Act and the Alquist-Priolo Earthquake Fault Zoning Act.  
 
Plaintiffs are - an Oaks coalition led by the California Oak Foundation - the City of Berkeley - the Panoramic Hill Association - and the Save Tightwad Hill group.
Saving the Memorial Oak Grove is supported by the Sierra Club, the California Native Plant Society, the California Oak Foundation, and activist Julia Butterfly Hill.
Oak Grove Support
Sign up for Oaks Emergency 
Action Alerts
Civic Leaders Join Oaks Protest!
Three of the most respected and enduring civic leaders in the city of Berkeley took to the trees on Monday morning in support of the ongoing Memorial Oak Grove protest.
 
Former Mayor Shirley Dean,71.
City Council member Betty Olds, 86.
&
Legendary Bay Area Conservationist  Sylvia McLaughlin, 90, spoke to supporters and press from a tree-sit platform high in Memorial Grove.
 
In 1961 Sylvia McLaughlin joined forces with Kay Kerr (wife of UC Chancellor Clark Kerr) and Ester Gullick to form Save The Bay.  Save the Bay stopped the devastating process of landfill around the bay and is universally recognized as the pioneering grass-roots environmental movement of the 1960s in California.  
 
McLaughlin’s own history is deeply connected with UC Berkeley.  Her late husband Donald McLaughlin was the Dean of the College of Engineering, a long time UC Regent and close friend of Chancellor Clark Kerr.  In 1955 the UC regents created the first oversight committee on Campus Planning for Berkeley, chaired by Donald McLaughlin.  Other members of that committee were Clark Kerr and William Wurster, Dean of the College of Architecture. It was under Donald McLaughlin’s leadership that the very first Long Range Development Plan for the Berkeley campus was drafted in 1956.
 
Photo: Daniella Thompson
Photo: Daniella Thompson
Check Out the 24  Hour Community Tree-Sit
@ Flickr.com
For more info on The TreeSpirit Project check out  their website at www.TreeSpiritProject.org
 
 
Listen to coverage on KCBS Radio
 
Native Burial Site
At Stadium and Grove
Documents Revealed
 
In a dramatic turn of events, documents have been uncovered which show that human remains, likely Native American, were discovered around the Memorial Oak Grove in 1923. After the below article was written it was further discovered that 18 burials were found during the Memorial Stadium excavation.
 
TreeSpirit Photo Coverage by Bcitizen on YouTube Memorial Oak Grove TreeSpirit 
Poster Now Available Click on the image above
 for more information
Watch YouTube
Oak Grove Coverage
by BerkeleyCitizen Video
UC Police arrest supporters attempting to supply food to tree-sitters
Memorial Oak Grove Facts:
 
Why is the Memorial Oak Grove important?
 
The Memorial Grove is a native Coast Live Oak ecosystem. Native oaks support the most complex terrestrial ecosystems in California.  The California Native Plant Society CNPS has stated that the Memorial Oak Grove is “an important gene bank for the Coast Live Oak.”  
 
Every one of the 38 oaks in the grove should be protect by law - the Berkeley Coast Live Oak moratorium forbids cutting mature Coast Live Oaks in Berkeley, but UC refuses to recognize the law.
 
The grove is part of a National Historic Site. The Stadium and landscape are a memorial to Californians who died in World War I.   It was also recently revealed that   18 Native American burials were discovered under the stadium in 1923.
 
Saving the Memorial Grove is supported by The Sierra Club, The California Native Plant Society, The California Oak Foundation and Julia Butterfly Hill.
 
 
How many oaks does UC want to cut down?
 
UC’s wants to cut down 38 mature Coast Live Oaks - the university keeps on saying they will cut 26 oaks but a simple count in the grove adds up to 38.  Additionally a number of other specimen trees including California Bay Laurel, Redwood and Sequoia.
 
UC says they will replace the trees 3 to 1, won’t we end up with more trees at the grove?
 
No.  There simply would not be enough room to plant the oak trees UC claims they would plant in what little space would be left at the grove.  The University wants to dig out 2/3 of the grove for a massive cement building.  It would be physically impossible for them to cram 3 to 1 oak trees into one third the space.  Oak trees need space to grow for their canopy and the small space that would be left could never support all those extra trees long term.  UC might plant trees in other parts of campus, but they would destroy the existing grove.
 
But doesn’t UC say it’s OK to cut the trees down because they say they planted them?
 
That is a PR spin.  First and foremost the Oak Grove is ecologically and historically important no matter who “planted” the trees.
 
The main problem with UCs argument is that many of the oak trees in the grove planted themselves after the stadium was built!  Because the grove is a thriving ecosystem that is replanting itself.  The California Native Plant Society says,
 
“The Oaks are well established and signs of recruitment (naturally re-seeded oak trees) are present at this site.”b
 
bAt least 5 Coast Live Oaks and a native Bay Laurel predate the stadium.  The image below is a historic oak from the 1800s that predates the University itself.
This historic oak from the 1800s would be destroyed
When the University built the stadium in the 1920s they planted many additional oaks in the Memorial Grove.  But even more important many of the oaks in the grove planted themselves as the grove continues to reseed itself to this day!  Thats what makes it an ecosystem NOT a “landscaping project”.
 
Do they need to cut down the oaks because the stadium is unsafe?
 
UC is claiming that they must build a training facility at the oak grove to move people out of Memorial Stadium.  But that is simply not true, in fact UC already has the ability to move people out of the stadium before building a new facility.  Lets look at the facts.
 
• The Stadium is directly on top of the Hayward Fault, it is VERY dangerous.
 
• UC has a campus program called SURGE which is dedicated to transferring people out of dangerous buildings during earthquake retrofits and new construction.  The SURGE program utilizes tens of thousands of square feet of space and also routinely uses portable temporary buildings.  UC could begin moving people into safer conditions next week, if safety was the real priority.
 
• Meanwhile even if they began building the training facility tomorrow  it would still take at least two years to build. All that time students and staff would still be inside the stadium. UC should stop messing around and move the people who are inside the stadium to safety, right now.
 
•  In 1979 UCs Seismic Committee told UC not to build offices inside the stadium until it was retrofitted - the University ignored that warning and has left the people inside the stadium in extremely dangerous conditions for almost 30 years.
 
RAYMOND L. SHEARMAN
CORNELIUS SULLIVAN
MILTON A. MCAULEY
JAMES L. WILSON
CORNELIUS SULLIVAN
JAMES H. MEAD
HOWARD F. LACY
THOMAS RICHARD GRIFFIN
ARTHUR H. SEARS
FRANCESCO LUCCHESSI
DONALD.B FRAZIER
HENRY F. PETERSON
ALFRED H. L’ECUYER
GEORGE D. JEWETT
JOHN C. PARTRIDEGE            
JOHN H. JORDAN            
ARNE K. B. HOISHOLT
DANIEL J. NARVES            
WILLIAM IRWIN
RALPH W.HILL                
JOHN V. COSGRAVE
ROSCOE C. OLDS            
RICHARD URIAH GRUBB
LORIN JASPER CHURCH        
VICTOR HUBERT HANDLEY
ABELIO ENOS                
ANTHONY CENTENI
JOSEPH F. TULLY            
CARL T. EDWARDS
OTTO JOHN CARLSON            
OTIS KANE NORTON
RALPH E. DINGMAN            
ALEX J. BOWMAN
GEORGE CALVERT AHERN        
WALTER CAMPBELL CURRAN
GEORGE C. WRENN            
LAURENCE S. LYNCH
HAROLD B. LONGFELLOW         
FRANK TURINO
CLARK KELLS                
D. A. KILDUFF
CHARLES L. SIGOURNEY        
FRANCIS M. KELLY
THOMAS L. WILLIAM            
WILFRED L. RILEY
FRANCIS. L JUDD            
HORACE E. WHITE    
MARIO MASCHIO            
FRANK JORDAN
HAROLD F. WAYNE            
ELWYNN H. MANNHART
GEORGE HEININGER            
GEORGE BROWN VARGUS
LLOYD P. MACDONALD        
FRANK R. HANSEN
BERT J. HABISHAW            
BIRT ADAMS
JOHN VAN MOURIK            
RUSSELL L. GARDNER    
FRANCIS R. SCOTT            
DANIEL K. IOPA
WILLIAM A. DODGE            
LIONEL H. HARRIS
WILLIAM G. HUNT            
WILLIAM P. DE CUNHA
JOHN W. CARROLL            
JAMES J. GIMBEL
ARCHIE H. CAMPBELL            
AMBROSE A. WASS
FRANK H.LATHRAPJR.            
CHARLES BENNETT    
HARRY H. SHONE            
ALBERT J. JENKIN
JOSEPH D. HOLMAN            
WILSON J. SMITH
CONRAD OSTERLOH            
WILLIAM S. WHITE
LOUIS SILVA                
EMANUEL A. MUNSON
WALTER J. THEUS            
FRANK SANGENITTO
TONEY MONIZE
SAMUEL G. TASULIS    
SAMUEL RUSSELL            
JOHN H. MCCLURG
GLENN V.SWAN
ARTHUR G. ROOD
HUNTER MCCLURE            
FLOYD A. STUDEBAKER
ZENO PEARCE                
ROBERT D. MASON
LESTER R. LUDINGHOUSE        
EDWARD H. KUHNLE
STANLEY I. JONES            
WILLIAM R. LOFTIS
THOMAS A.KING
HANS A. JENSEN
CLEMENS LINSTRUM            
PAUL M. KIDWELL
HOWARD JARRETT            
THOMAS V. LARSON
ROBERT E. KELLY            
CHARLES ERNEST IRWIN
PETER LARSON
PATRICK J. KEENAN
GEORGE HERRIER            
WALTER LAMP
JEROME KAPHAN            
RICHARD J. HARPER
LOUIS A. HANSEN            
HAROLD V. DODD
ALFRED D. CRITTENDEN        
CLARENCE H. HAMMELL
HOWARD HENRY DICKENSON    
SOL B. COHN
HYMAN J. GOLDSTEIN            
HAROLD A. DAVIE
COLOMBE A. CECCHI            
JOHN GAZANEGO
MARTIN E. DAHL
JOHN BOYCE
LEWIS L. FRYE                
WILLIAM H. CROWELL
GUISEPPI BOLLA