San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

BAJA GOVERNMENT DISMANTLES LIBRARY IN TIJUANA

State plans call for facility to be moved as some protest

- BY TANIA NAVARRO tania.navarro@sduniontri­bune.com

As a result of the pandemic, Tijuana’s libraries are closed to the public; however, employees have been working virtually, and they occasional­ly visit the sites. But on Feb. 19, employees at the Benito Juárez public library, in Zona Río, were startled when other government employees arrived to evict them. The order, they said, came from Baja California Gov. Jaime Bonilla, and they were told to haul everything away in cardboard boxes.

That same day, Bonilla told Tijuana media that the city’s central library would be moved to another currently unused building, the former post office in the downtown area.

The library workers were surprised, but last November Bonilla publicly expressed his plans after becoming concerned with what he perceived as a lack of medical personnel, who are dealing with the pandemic crisis.

In 2020, on several occasions, Bonilla publicly said he was going to donate the state government headquarte­rs in Tijuana — a three-story building next to the public library in Zona Río — to the Autonomous University of Baja California. He has said the building will be transforme­d into the university’s Center for Health Studies to expand the enrollment in health-related careers.

In mid-february, state government employees began to vacate the headquarte­rs. Those working in the building were told that the offices would be moved to a nearby building where the library, the offices of the State Education Secretary and the Baja California Institute of Culture are located.

The Autonomous University of Baja California rector’s office declined a request to comment on the proposed donation. Currently, there’s no public document to back up the donation Bonilla promised.

The eviction of the library and the Institute of Culture facilities was criticized by some community members.

Holding banners and shouting “Library, yes! Offices, no!” dozens gathered on Feb. 22 outside the Benito Juárez library. Several speakers expressed their discontent and the lack of official informatio­n about what will happen to what they consider to be the largest library in Baja California.

Eunice Contreras, a cultural promoter in Tijuana, said that beyond the safekeepin­g of books, the library has a role within the community. She said the library also hosts several classes, like

English language and adult education, children’s summer camps and literary events.

Contreras said that with the disappeara­nce of the Institute of Culture space, the city loses a multipurpo­se stage with a capacity for 220 people, an amphitheat­er, a gallery, and three exhibition halls for visual artwork.

Aída Méndez, one of the organizers of the demonstrat­ion, has been a resident of the Infonavit del Río housing complex since 2001. The complex, next to the library, has more than 70 multifamil­y buildings. Like other protesters, she said she supports the creation of new cultural spaces in Tijuana, but rejects the disappeara­nce of the library and that library users’ opinions were never considered.

Another Tijuana resident and music promoter, Guillermo García, said that a few years ago he was able to finish high school and begin his undergradu­ate studies for free at the Benito Juárez library.

On social networks, several personalit­ies from Tijuana’s cultural scene, from writers to artists in various discipline­s, have expressed their displeasur­e of the move.

The day after the protest, the Secretary of Culture of Baja California presented the project for the “Centro Cultural Correo,” a space that would accommodat­e the library and other cultural services.

Pedro Ochoa Palacio, head of the secretary office, said the project is led by architectu­re students from the Instituto Tecnológic­o de Tijuana and that it is still in the design stage, and officials don’t know how much money will be needed to adapt and equip the building.

Ochoa and Gov. Bonilla said that the post office building is federal property, but Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador agreed on an arrangemen­t that will allow them to use the site.

The Secretary of Culture said the post office building, inaugurate­d in 1957, will undergo structural revisions. The office did not offer a timeline or an estimated cost. Bonilla’s administra­tion ends on Oct. 31.

There are at least two legal appeals, known as “amparos” (protection­s), filed in Federal Court to stop the eviction operation of the state government headquarte­rs in Tijuana and the relocation of the library.

Bonilla said those opposing the move are against the creation of a new, modern cultural space. However, defenders of the Benito Juárez library and its building question whether the project will actually be completed in the remaining eight months of Bonilla’s administra­tion.

 ?? TANIA NAVARRO U-T ?? The Benito Juárez public library building in Zona Río may be used for government purposes.
TANIA NAVARRO U-T The Benito Juárez public library building in Zona Río may be used for government purposes.

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