Leonard Higgins
After graduation from Springfield High School in 1970, Leonard Higgins
worked in local lumber mills, studied at Lane Community College and the
University of Oregon, and briefly engaged in antiwar activism. He spent
four years as a union carpenter in Eastern Oregon, then put in 31 years
of suit-and-tie work for the State of Oregon, beginning as a tax
auditor and later specializing in IT project management, moving state
services onto the internet. He retired in 2010 at age 58. Already a
student of Joanna Macy and The Work That Reconnects (aka Deep Ecology),
he studied systems theory at Portland State for a year, with a focus on
climate change, and co-founded the climate-awareness group 350
Corvallis in 2012. "I had lived there from 1980 to 2009," he notes,
"and vanpooled to Salem." In 2013, he and fellow Act On Climate
activist Arnold Schroder locked themselves onto trucks hauling
megaloads of tar sands oil extraction equipment to Canada. "It took
Umatilla County deputies hours to get us unhooked," he says. "I became
a teacher of non-violent direct action and testified at federal and
state hearings." On October 11, 2016, Higgins was one of five "valve
turners" who shut down all of the tar sands oil flowing into the U.S.
from Canada. "I spent a lot of time studying maps and safety
protocols," he says. "I scouted all of the emergency block valve
locations." Convicted of felony criminal mischief in Montana, his case
is under appeal in the Montana Supreme Court. Now living in Eugene and
a member of 350 Eugene and Extinction Rebellion, among other groups, he
is taking part in planning for the upcoming September Global Climate
Strike, beginning with a Kickoff Rally at the Wayne Morse Free Speech
Plaza on Friday, September 20, 12-4 pm.
happening people
photograph and story by Paul Neevel
Eugene Weekly / 12 September 2019
|
|