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Police arrest 9 at Sodexo protest

Student group leads anti-Sodexo protest outside Gee's office in Bricker Hall

gantt.26@osu.edu

Published: Monday, May 23, 2011

Updated: Saturday, June 16, 2012 00:06

sodexo photo

Kayla Byler / Lantern photographer

Vicko Alvaraz of Columbus, joins students and community members protesting Sodexo outside Sullivant Hall Monday afternoon.


What started as a peaceful rally to pressure Ohio State to end its contract with Sodexo Inc., ended with nine protesters being taken away from President E. Gordon Gee's office in handcuffs.

Nine people were arrested and charged with criminal trespassing and one man was also charged with resisting arrest during a protest when the group refused to leave the lobby just outside Gee's office on Monday afternoon.

About 100 people gathered for the rally just after 2 p.m. between Sullivant Hall and the Wexner Center for the Arts. The crowd held banners, chanted, banged drums and used homemade noisemakers to raise awareness about alleged workers' rights abuses by OSU contractor Sodexo.

The student group United Students Against Sweatshops organized the rally to protest OSU's contract with Sodexo Inc., an international food and facilities management company.

At about 2:30 p.m. protesters began to march and chant down High Street before cutting back toward Bricker Hall, where Gee's office is located. The crowd marched across the Oval, drumming and chanting "Hey hey, ho ho, Sodexo has got to go."

About 40 of the protesters entered Bricker and staged a sit-in outside of Gee's office. The group shouted and banged on drums and buckets in an effort to bring Gee out of his office to discuss the contract. Two OSU police officers blocked the entrance.

Gee never emerged.

About six uniformed OSU police officers surrounded the group shortly after its arrival. The protest remained peaceful, but at about 3:15 p.m. police told the group it could only stay if it kept quiet. The group complied and began to quietly share stories about Sodexo's alleged abuses.

Just a few minutes later, police informed the protesters through a USAS member that they were trespassing and would be arrested if they did not leave the premises.

At that point, all but a few of the protesters left the building and continued chanting outside. Nine students refused to leave. The small contingent began to shout, "This is what democracy looks like" as police handcuffed them.

Seven of those arrested were OSU students: Ryan Marchese, a fourth-year in international studies and USAS president at OSU; Natalie Yoon, a second-year in international studies and USAS secretary; Carolynne Grace Jones, a student in public affairs; Casey Ellen Slive, a student in geography and international studies and student assistant for the office of energy and sustainability; Terasia Bradford, a student in French and globalization studies; Isaac Paul Miller, a student in exploration; Hutchinson Srisoontorn Persons, a student in philosophy and employee for OSU academic affairs.

Two other protesters were arrested, but OSU police said they were not OSU students: Adrian Evangelos Bradley Jusdanis, 21, of Columbus and Christopher Ian Wells, 28, of Stone Mountain, Ga.

Wells was also charged with resisting arrest because he refused to walk with police. Wells lay flat on the sidewalk outside Bricker on 17th Avenue and was finally carried by his arms and legs to a waiting cruiser.

Nick Pasquarello, a third-year in psychology and sociology and USAS member, said the group of USAS hoped to have a conversation with Gee about Sodexo that would end with OSU canceling its contract with the company.

"We were prepared in terms of planning to, if it comes to that point, to have people arrested," Pasquarello said. "We were willing to come to that point, but we didn't want to go to that point. We just wanted to have a civil conversation about this, but was denied."

As of Monday at about 9:30 p.m., all nine arrested people were still in custody.

Benjamin Hood, a first-year in psychology, said he thinks the arrests were appropriate.

"I mean, they warned them, ‘Hey you're trespassing, and they don't want you in this building and you can protest outside,'" Hood said.

Pasquarello said USAS has made previous efforts to reach Gee with their message, including hosting a national USAS conference at OSU in February, which included a similar protest outside Gee's office. No arrests were made during that event.

"We've basically done all you can think of up to this point, in terms of bringing this to his attention, and we've been ignored," Pasquarello said.

Sodexo has a $10 million contract with OSU to provide food and facility services for OSU athletic facilities. USAS, which is a national organization, has alleged Sodexo has blocked employee efforts to unionize and has allowed racist and sexist practices.

Sodexo did not return repeated calls for comment on the protests.

OSU spokesman Jim Lynch said the university values diversity of thought and opinion, but the arrests were necessary to ensure safety.

"The university has been working cooperatively with this student group for some time and another meeting had been scheduled for later this week," Lynch said in an email to The Lantern Monday.

OSU has consistently stated the matter is between Sodexo and the Service Employees International Union.

"We believe that every employer is entitled to vote on representation and we should not infringe on the rights of either party," Lynch said in an email. "We hope that both sides will come to a satisfactory solution."

An increased police presence was noticeable at the Ohio Union shortly after the arrests were made and the protest ended.

Katie Walker, a first-year in psychology, was in the Union Monday night and said she was wondering why there was so many police there.

"I usually don't see many of them," Walker said. "It's good to know they're here just in case something did happen."

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47 comments

TsUsas
Tue May 24 2011 11:46
I said that I was a working class person of color in USAS. And only in response to accusations that USAS was only privileged white kids. Race wouldn't have to be brought up if people didn't criticize a movement for something it is not. The bottom line is that Sodexo employees work hard and OSU has the power to bring in a company that respects them. It's our campus, our contract, we need to ask that corporations take a stand for human rights if they want to profit in our community. Gee refuses to hear any of this.
Anonymous
Tue May 24 2011 11:42
Sodexo workers are not slackers. An employee named Marsha was scheduled to work over 40 hours a weak and made to do all normal tasks despite just returning from heart attack-caused hospitalization and being advised not to lift over 10 pounds! Working hard is not too much to ask, being intimidated and unappreciated is.
TsUsas
Tue May 24 2011 11:40
No trash was left. Only things people could not carry when they were unwarranted-ly herded out of the building like criminals. And anytime profanity slipped in heated speeches, it was apologized for. There's video proof! And no one could have written graffiti because police were surrounding the whole time! Not to mention people were in a circle discussing issues like adults. How dare Gee send his cronies to try and il-legitimatize our struggle with baseless allegations.
Mr. King
Tue May 24 2011 11:34
What ever happened to working hard? If the job sucks, then find another. If it doesn't pay enough, get a second job. This country was built on hard work and it is dying because of lazy, self-entitled individuals that have twisted the American Dream to fit their slacker agenda. The American dream is about pursuing your goals and working hard to get where you want in life. It's not about having an easy job that pays you a lot so you can work 9-5 and then go home to your nice house and cars. It's not about insurance, or scheduled breaks, or regular wage increases. If you want these things take the initiative and work your a$$ off for it. I graduated in 2004 with two degrees and a 3.7. My first job sucked. My second job sucked. Finally, my third job in less than seven years is great and pays me well with amazing benefits. Do you know how I got here? I worked hard in school and at my job. How many of you are willing to make less than 30K a year after you graduate? How many of you are willing to work 2nd or 3rd shift? Unless we change our attitudes and fix our industries (and work ethic) in this country, we will fall further behind the rest of the world. If things keep happening the way they are, the economy is going to get much worse. You're complaining about a handful of people who have a tough job...just wait until companies like Sodexho fold and you can't find a job with a college degree. Don't think the econmy is getting better, because you are wrong.

BTW: To the idiot who said "as a working class person of color, one of five in United Students Against Sweatshops group of twelve, this is not some fun protect this is people's livelihoods." Why do you have to bring race into this? It's people like you that hold back African-Americans (and other races) in our society and it pisses me off because my ancestors fought hard for equality. Every time you point out that you are a "person of color" just to get attention, you are labeling others of your race in a negative way because that is what the public is focusing on. Not the topic of poor work conditions, but the fact that you are saying "look at my skin color!" Ignorant.

Peace. Love. Hope.

AJFalcon
Tue May 24 2011 11:05
I work in Bricker and the students were not polite. They threw trash on the ground everywhere, they used a lot of profanities, and there were a lot of profanities wirtten on the walls and benches once they left. It wasn't there before they barged in, so where did it come from if it wasn't them? Feel free to ask our housekeeper who was forced to clean up after these hoodlums. The poor lady is not paid enough to do her regular job and then clean up after a bunch of self-entitled vandals.
I understand being passionate about something like war or SB5, which hurts a community or country, but something like this is only the business of the employees and employer. If you don't work for Sodexho, then you have no reason to butt in. People act like it is a sweatshop, but it is simply the hospitality industry. People expect food and catering to be affordable and the entire industry is based upon cheap labor. If these people can't make enough money to survive off of these jobs then maybe they should find another one or even work two jobs. Only in the past few generations have individuals lived off of income from only one job. In the past, families were dependent on multiple income streams including income from second (and third) jobs and jobs children worked. Now that we have child labor laws and minimum wage laws (which are good and necessary) it is harder for employers to stay afloat. As so, industries that bring in less profit have to pay their employees less. THAT'S LIFE. Take a few business classes and you'll have a better understanding of the way the world works and maybe not label a legitimate employer who takes care of thousands of employees something it is not. FYI, if you get your way and Sodexho loses OSU as a client then they will go out of business. That means that all of its employees will lose their jobs and be a lot worse than when they started...
Anonymous
Tue May 24 2011 11:04
'Can't they just get another job?'
So another group of workers can be subjected to Sodexo's mistreatment?
No corporation should be held accountable to its practices?
Idiotic victim blaming.
And as a working class person of color, one of five in United Students Against Sweatshops group of twelve, this is not some fun protect this is people's livelihoods.
Clearly Gordon Gee is unconcerned with that and will lie his way out of it however he needs to.
Anonymous
Tue May 24 2011 10:48
so what I'm confused about is, if it's sodexo employees being upset at sodexo, why do they not protest? Why don't they just resign from the company and go work somewhere else. If conditions are so bad, working for McDonald's can't be that bad, can it? Especially if they are claiming their wages are so low, McDonald's would pay better. Also, this just goes to show that a bunch of rich kids need something, anything, to fight for because they don't have enough problems in their lives. A man seeing his friend being stung by a bee should not smack his friend, rather he should inform him and let his friend kill the bee.
Anonymous
Tue May 24 2011 10:16
I don't see why President Gee couldn't give the students 10 minutes to organize what they wanted to say and 10 minutes to talk to him. I don't believe anyone agreed to be arrested for 500 dollars- the fines, legal fees, and attorney add up to way more than that, and arrest record in these technological times affects a person's ability to get a job for the rest of his life.
Anonymous
Tue May 24 2011 09:50
@A1

So since sweatshops aren't in the US, there should be no actions to improve labor conditions in the United States? In Ohio? In our very own community? On our very own campus? Honestly, listen to yourself. You may not have the same ideals as the students who protested, but why the hell are you putting young people down for being passionate about a cause to IMPROVE WORKING CONDITIONS FOR COMMUNITY MEMBERS WHO LIVE IN POVERTY.

Anonymous
Tue May 24 2011 09:49
@A1

So since sweatshots aren't in the US, there should be no actions to improve labor conditions in the United States? In Ohio? In our very own community? On our very own campus. Honestly, listen to yourself. You may not have the same ideals as the students who protested, but why the hell are you putting young people down for being passionate about a cause to IMPROVE WORKING CONDITIONS FOR COMMUNITY MEMBERS WHO LIVE IN POVERTY.

Anonymous
Tue May 24 2011 09:46
@ Dr. X and Anonymous (the last two to post)
Okay now people are just straight up lying. No one vandalized anything and no one was getting paid to protest. Honestly, you have some nerve to make things up like that
Anonymous
Tue May 24 2011 09:46
@ Dr. X and Anonymous (the last two to post)

Okay now people are just straight up lying. No one vandalized anything and no one was getting paid to protest. Honestly, you have some nerve to things up like that.

Anonymous
Tue May 24 2011 09:37
My roommate was approached by Ryan Marchese and Natalie Yoon (she knows them from class). Both of them were excited because they were paid $500 a piece to stage these protests and they promised her $250 to show up and $500 if she was arrested. I was shocked to hear that USAS was taking money from Sodexo's competition. To me it feels like they are trying to replace one evil with another...
Dr. X
Tue May 24 2011 09:33
I was there and the students were OUT OF CONTROL. They were screaming and using foul language. One student took a giant felt tip marker and wrote profanities about Gee all over the wall in Bricker. Another student kept chanting mean things about Gee's wife and her problems with marijuana abuse (which is true). When I walked through I was ashamed to be an alumni. The students in that lobby were acting like animals and were worse behaved than the students were during the riots these past two weekends. SHOW SOME CLASS OSU. We are supposed to represent an alite community of educated and socially moral individuals. Instead, you get a bunch of dirtballs swearing, vandalizing public property, and breaking other laws in the guise of helping those less fortunate. In truth, the majority of the students involved were paid by Sodexo's competitor to stage these protests. They don't care about the workers, they just want to make money and help another company take over. Sad...
A1
Tue May 24 2011 09:26
@Neal Hicks: Seriously? So you think you should be allowed to stand in the middle of High Street and block traffic without getting in trouble because it is public property and you contributed tax money? You are not guaranteed access to any public building or office regardless of your taxpaying status. That is a less intelligent comment than the one about sweatshops and A/C.
The police told them to leave (both in Gees office and on the field with the cows) and they did not listen. Just because the grounds are maintained by some tax dollars and a tiny bit of each student's tuition, doesn't mean you have open access to it whenver you want. Being on campus is a privilige, not a right, and you can be banned from it or removed from it like any private business. Contributing taxes or tuition doesn't mean you have an open pass, it means you have a temporary pass that can be revoked when you are acting like a dumb ass.
Also, sweatshops are a part of the world. We don't allow them in the US. so maybe you and the rest of your student cronies should go to China or Cambodia and protest there...
BigDickSuperman
Tue May 24 2011 09:15
Student United Against Sweatshops???? I never understood why sweatshops still exist. It's really easy and inexpensive nowadays to buy Air Conditioning. Problem solved.
Neal Hicks
Tue May 24 2011 09:14
This is no different than the guy arrested for photographing escaped cows on the playing fields....again I ask, how do students criminally trespass on their own taxpayer funded campus?
Al H
Tue May 24 2011 09:13
Kids playing games...
Gee has met with students about this several times and each time the students have no constructive ideas or solutions. It's great to want everyone to be equal (receive equal pay, treatment, benefits, etc.) but that is impossible. If Sodexo employees want to be treated better then they should find better jobs. If they can't there is most likely a reason and I doubt it's the poor eceonomy everyone is crying about.
"The world needs ditch diggers too." --JS--
Anonymous
Tue May 24 2011 09:07
The protesters were quiet when asked to be.
Nor was ANY business interrupted. They stayed in the LOBBY of this PUBLIC FACILITY.

And why can't students 'interrupt university business' if it involves interrupting the fininancial gain of a company that stole money from Columbus City Schools and runs racially segregated cafeterias in Western Africa??
The only one who looks like a fool is Gee. Receives millions from his students but can't take any time to listen to them.

Anonymous
Tue May 24 2011 08:44
Being a public building doesn't give you the right to make a commotion and interrupt university business. Why don't you walk into a chemistry lecture, or a board of trustees meeting, or the OSUMC emergency room, and try the same thing? You'd probably end up being arrested. Go protest outside on the Oval if you want to act like fools and make a big scene.




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