CHP Removes Willits Bypass Protester from Tower

3 July 2013 An envi­ron­men­tal pro­test­er who had been perched 50 feet up a piece of con­struc­tion equip­ment out­side Willits for more than a week has been removed a

3 July 2013 An envi­ron­men­tal pro­test­er who had been perched 50 feet up a piece of con­struc­tion equip­ment out­side Willits for more than a week has been removed and arrest­ed by the CHP.

Will Par­rish, 31, of Uki­ah was arrest­ed Mon­day after being cut loose from a lock­ing device he had con­nect­ed to one of two 100-foot wick-drain installers being used on the High­way 101 bypass project out­side Willits.

The $210 mil­lion bypass is being built to skirt the city of Willits, where traf­fic reg­u­lar­ly slows to a crawl as High­way 101 nar­rows to two lanes through down­town. Pro­po­nents say it’s nec­es­sary to reduce traf­fic con­ges­tion and restore the city’s small-town feel. Oppo­nents say it is a cost­ly and ugly mis­take that will hurt streams and fish­eries and increase flood­ing.

Parrish’s protest had pre­vent­ed the wick-drain installers from oper­at­ing since June 20. Work resumed on Tues­day, Cal­trans said.

More than 30 arrests have been made among pro­test­ers since April.

On Mon­day, CHP offi­cers, act­ing on a request from Cal­trans, which owns the prop­er­ty, used cher­ry-pick­er-type lifts to reach Par­rish.

“We had a team go up and first made sure he was OK and didn’t need med­ical atten­tion,” said CHP Capt. Jim Epper­son. “After we were sure he was OK, we hydrat­ed him — gave him some Gatorade.”

Offi­cers then cut his lock­ing device and brought Par­rish down.

He and anoth­er pro­test­er, Aman­da “War­bler” Sense­man, were arrest­ed on tres­pass­ing charges, Epper­son said. Sense­man sat in a tree for two months ear­li­er this year as a protest against the bypass.

Cal­trans spokesman Phil Fris­bie said Par­rish was “putting him­self and oth­ers at risk and delay­ing con­struc­tion by tres­pass­ing.”

“And with the ongo­ing hot weath­er fore­cast­ed, we are also con­cerned about his health and safe­ty,” he said.

Protest leader Fred­die Long said one tree-sit­ter remains in an ash grove north of where Par­rish was perched. So far, that per­son hasn’t been con­front­ed, Long said.

The 5.9‑mile bypass is expect­ed to be com­plet­ed in the fall of 2016.