The Guardian (USA)

Portland State University ‘pauses’ Boeing donations amid student protests

- Lauren Aratani

A university in Portland, Oregon will “pause” accepting donations from Boeing after students called on the school to cut ties with the manufactur­er amid the war in Gaza.

In addition to setting up an encampment on campus, students also addressed a letter to Ann Cudd, the president of Portland State University (PSU), demanding the university cut ties with Boeing.

In a campus-wide message, Cudd said she had been motivated by “the passion with which these demands are being repeatedly expressed by some in our community”.

“PSU will pause seeking or accepting any further gifts or grants from the Boeing Company until we have had a chance to engage in this debate and come to conclusion­s about a reasonable course of action,” she wrote in her memo.

Cudd reiterated that the university “has no investment­s in Boeing but accepts philanthro­pic gifts from the company and, given that Boeing is a major employer in the region, many of our alumni work there”.

Though Boeing is headquarte­red in Arlington, Virginia, the company’s largest manufactur­ing plant is in Everett, Washington, about 200 miles north of

Portland. The company is most known for its airplanes but is also one of the largest defense companies in the world. Boeing did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

At a press conference in March, Cudd said that the company donated $150,000 to the university this year to name a classroom, in addition to the $28,000 the company donates to the school each year for scholarshi­ps and emergency funds, according to the school’s student newspaper. At the time, Cudd had said she had not “seen any logical reason to rethink this relationsh­ip with Boeing”.

The response from PSU is one of the first from university administra­tors to distance their school from a major weapons manufactur­er. Though hundreds of students across the country have been protesting on their campuses, setting up encampment­s demanding divestment from weapons manufactur­ers and companies with ties to Israel, many universiti­es have repeatedly said they will not divest from Israel or manufactur­ers.

Colleges and universiti­es in the United States have endowments that they often use as financial buffers. Harvard, which has the largest endowment at $51bn, said that it “opposes calls for a policy of boycotting Israel and its academic institutio­ns”. The University of California, which has an endowment of $169bn for its 10 campuses, also said that it “opposed calls for boycott against any divestment from Israel”.

Even after Cudd’s announceme­nt, students at PSU continue to run an encampment outside one of the school’s libraries. On Instagram, Occupy PSU, which is helping to coordinate the encampment, called for a continuati­on of protests as the school has already accepted funds for the fiscal year. The group had called on the school to end all partnershi­ps, including recruitmen­t, with the company, among other demands.

“While PSU does not put finances into Boeing, they take their money and give them a platform for predatory recruitmen­t,” the group wrote. “They already have the investment from Boeing for the fiscal year of 2024. This is institutio­nal jargon attempting to placate. We will not stop until demands are met.”

 ?? ?? Portland State University has decided to pause accepting donations from Boeing. Photograph: Peter Cziborra/Reuters
Portland State University has decided to pause accepting donations from Boeing. Photograph: Peter Cziborra/Reuters

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