The Week

Erik Olson: 
          City Manager Phil Kamlarz fields questions about the city’s proposed parcel tax.
Erik Olson: City Manager Phil Kamlarz fields questions about the city’s proposed parcel tax.
 

News

Foes Attack Parcel Tax

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday November 21, 2003

Berkeley City Council asked citizens to come out to the regular meeting last Tuesday to air their opinions on the proposed March, 2004, parcel tax increase ballot measure. A large number of Berkeley citizens complied, packing Council chambers Tuesday night, and pretty much telling Council to take their tax and shove it. -more-


Friday November 21, 2003

FRIDAY, NOV. 21


Public Demands Accountability for Tax Payments

By John Koenigshofer
Friday November 21, 2003

There are two ways to balance a budget, earn more or spend less. Berkeley’s mayor and city Council have decided to “earn more.” For you or I, “earn more” means work more; for city government it means charge higher fees and create new taxes. -more-


Mayor, University Set Downtown Hotel Plan

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday November 21, 2003

UC Berkeley plans to develop a downtown hotel and convention center which Mayor Tom Bates hopes will capture both millions in tax revenue in the near future and the imagination of residents by restoring Strawberry Creek sometime later. -more-


City Policies Reduce Revenues, Add to Homeowner Tax Bite

By GEORGE ORAM
Friday November 21, 2003

To Berkeley City Council: -more-


Neighbors Slam LBNL Expansion

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday November 21, 2003

Critics of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) gave lab officials an earful Monday, arguing that planned expansion at the lab threatens to pollute their lungs, clog their streets and devour their tax dollars. -more-


Berkeley Public Schools Need A Fair Share of Tax Dollars

By John Selawsky
Friday November 21, 2003

It is time to start thinking about and discussing the renewal of our Berkeley Schools Educational Excellence Project (BSEP). For almost 18 years, in two different measures, Berkeley voters have authorized an additional special tax (a rate per square footage, both residential and commercial, with different rates assigned to each). The current BSEP measure sunsets in 2006; it is likely that the measure will be brought back to the voters much sooner than that 2006 sunset date. -more-


Shattuck Developer Violates Order, Council to Take Action

By Matthew Artz
Friday November 21, 2003

Oop, she did it again. Berkeley developer Christina Sun violated a stop work order issued by the Planning Department when under the guise of weatherizing the roof at her 3045 Shattuck Ave. building, she had construction workers proceed towards finalizing the project. -more-


Lab Growth Threatens Strawberry Canyon Site

By JANICE THOMAS
Friday November 21, 2003

Strawberry Canyon is in the city’s backyard, and for many of us, it’s as if it isn’t even there. How else to explain that in the span of less than a year, a six-story nanotechnology research facility was approved without the benefit of a public hearing, the Alquist-Priolo Earthquake Fault Zone was selected as the preferred location for six-story Building 49, and a water distribution upgrade project was deemed exempt from the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) despite significantly denuding the landscape? -more-


Dean Rules on ‘Berkeley 3,’ Students to Appeal

By Jakob Schiller
Friday November 21, 2003

UC Berkeley’s Dean of Students Karen Kenney this week issued her ruling on the fates of three students charged with violating the student code of conduct during an anti-war sit-in at Sproul Hall last March. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday November 21, 2003

BOWL BOYCOTT -more-


UnderCurrents: FCMAT: Cure or Cookie-cutter Bureaucracy?

J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday November 21, 2003

One of y’all out there has got to help me out with this one—you really do—cause I’m a little bit puzzled here. -more-


Ousted Daily Cal Photographers Threaten Suit

By Matthew Artz
Friday November 21, 2003

Six UC Berkeley student photographers say they may sue the Daily Californian for copyright infringement after the independent student-run paper severed ties with them for refusing to sign away all future rights to their pictures. -more-


City Reduces ‘Escaped Tax’ Totals

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday November 21, 2003

Berkeley officials say the city is owed less than originally estimated from property fees and assessments they say were inadvertently not billed to several buildings in the city. -more-


Vital Vittles Bakes Up Sweet Organic Treats

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday November 21, 2003

For those who believe that if something is good for you it has to taste bad, Vital Vittles bakery might be the cure. -more-


Cancer Claims HUAC Foe, Activist Anne Dierup

By CAMERON WHITE Special to the Planet
Friday November 21, 2003

EDITOR’S NOTE: The author of this tribute to a veteran Berkeley activist is her daughter-in-law. -more-


Police Blotter

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday November 21, 2003

Road Rage Victim Dies -more-


Berkeley Briefs

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday November 21, 2003

Honoring UN Convention -more-


Bowl Workers Keep Up Fight

By Jakob Schiller
Friday November 21, 2003

With business booming at the Berkeley Bowl, the battle to unionize store employees that ended with a vote of rejection a few short weeks ago already seems a distant memory to most customers. -more-


Murdered Soldiers Prompt Questions, Resolve in Italy

By MICHAEL HOWERTON
Friday November 21, 2003

ROME—The Vittoriano monument in central Rome, towering over the bustling Piazza Venezia, is usually one of the city’s most chaotic traffic areas and foremost tourist destinations. -more-


Modern Malaise: Feeling That Cold War Nostalgia

By ZAC UNGER Special to the Planet
Friday November 21, 2003

Lately I’ve been feeling warmly nostalgic for that comfy old Cold War. -more-


Health Care Key Issue Facing Grocery Strikers

By JOHN EARL Pacific News Service
Friday November 21, 2003

ORANGE COUNTY—Rachel Walters is among 71,000 Southern California grocery workers who are either on strike or locked out at Albertson’s, Ralphs and Vons supermarkets as they fight to keep company-paid health care, the best and often only reason for putting up with erratic part-time hours and low wages. -more-


El Cerrito High’s Radio Offers Training Service

By C. Suprynowicz Special to the Planet
Friday November 21, 2003

If you tuned into radio-station KECG recently, you may have caught an interview with the woman who runs the cafeteria at El Cerrito High. Some students at the school were complaining that food quality had fallen off, so they had “The Cafeteria Lady” in to give her side of the story. -more-


Corrections

Friday November 21, 2003

The Jul. 22 story “Waterfront Artwork: An East Bay Tradition” mistakenly reported that statues of Snoopy and his nemesis the Red Baron built last year by local youth had fallen into San Francisco Bay. The statues remain nailed to posts in the waters by the Berkeley Marina. -more-


Neighborhoods Oppose City Parcel Tax Measure

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Tuesday November 18, 2003

On the eve of the first (and only) scheduled City Council hearing on the proposed March parcel tax increase, a loose federation of Berkeley neighborhood associations declared their opposition to the tax. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday November 18, 2003

TUESDAY, NOV. 18 -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday November 18, 2003

MISREPRESENTATION -more-


Rep’s Latest Offering Proves a Double Delight

By BETSY HUNTON Special to the Planet
Tuesday November 18, 2003

The Berkeley Repertory Theater has pulled out all the stops (discretely, of course) as well they should, in publicizing its new production “Continental Divide.” -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday November 18, 2003

TUESDAY, NOV. 18 -more-


Foes Attack Parcel Tax

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Tuesday November 18, 2003

Berkeley City Council asked citizens to come out to the regular meeting last Tuesday to air their opinions on the proposed March, 2004, parcel tax increase ballot measure. A large number of Berkeley citizens complied, packing Council chambers Tuesday night, and pretty much telling Council to take their tax and shove it. -more-


Schools Chief Blasts Bush Education Law

By Matthew Artz
Tuesday November 18, 2003

Berkeley Schools Superintendent Michele Lawrence doesn’t pull punches when expressing her disdain for President George W. Bush’s landmark No Child Left Behind law. -more-


LETTER TO THE CHANCELLOR

Marc-Tizoc González
Tuesday November 18, 2003

-more-


Mayor, University Set Downtown Hotel Plan

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday November 18, 2003

UC Berkeley plans to develop a downtown hotel and convention center which Mayor Tom Bates hopes will capture both millions in tax revenue in the near future and the imagination of residents by restoring Strawberry Creek sometime later. -more-


Election Law Changes Carry Major Impacts

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Tuesday November 18, 2003

While a proposed parcel tax increase has dominated news accounts of Berkeley City Council in recent weeks, it is three proposed election-altering charter amendments that might actually have most significant long-term affects on the city. -more-


Neighborhood Associations Say No to Tax Hike

Marie Bowman
Tuesday November 18, 2003

To Mayor Bates, City Councilmembers, City Manager: -more-


Neighbors Slam LBNL Expansion

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday November 18, 2003

Critics of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) gave lab officials an earful Monday, arguing that planned expansion at the lab threatens to pollute their lungs, clog their streets and devour their tax dollars. -more-


Vista College Construction Begins

By Matthew Artz
Tuesday November 18, 2003

Vista College is ushering in a new era by bringing down the house—in this case, the old Berkeley City Services Center at 2020 Center St. -more-


Bates, Maio Urge Implementation Of University Avenue Plan

Mayor Tom Bates
Tuesday November 18, 2003

Editors, Daily Planet: -more-


Southland Strikers Pay Visit

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday November 18, 2003

Oakland shoppers were surprised to encounter what many thought was only a Southern California phenomenon when they tried to enter one local Safeway Friday and were met by a group of 30 striking workers. -more-


Nurses Challenge Staffing Ratios at Hospital Chains

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday November 18, 2003

California Nursing Association (CNA) organizers and member registered nurses (RNs) met outside Alta Bates and Summit Medical centers Friday to protest what they call a scheme to sidestep a new law that takes effect on Jan. 1 mandating patient-to-nurse staffing ratios. -more-


Software Glitches Frustrate Police Data Hunters

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday November 18, 2003

Not sure how many burglaries occurred on your block last month? Neither are the police. -more-


Berkeley Briefs

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday November 18, 2003

Doctor Regrets Fateful Words on a Sad Day in Dallas

By JIMMY BRESLIN Newsday
Tuesday November 18, 2003

The high wind country sends its strong gusts roaring through the 20 acres of loblolly pines that are up to 14 feet since their harvesting in 1990. Raising trees is a big business in this part of Texas. The pines grow a foot and a half a year, and the wind’s sound increases as they get higher. The trees are in rows as they grow. -more-


Latino Youth Prevail in Central Valley

By JUAN ESPARZA and DANIEL Rodríguez Pacific News Service
Tuesday November 18, 2003

FRESNO—The scene at the Rainbow Ballroom on a crisp fall evening three years ago wasn’t unlike that offered at other popular nightspots in Fresno. -more-


Global Warming Threatens Nuke Power

By PAUL SCHWARTZ Pacific News Service
Tuesday November 18, 2003

The security of nuclear power plants against terrorist attack has been hotly debated since 9/11. Less has been said about another threat that could compromise the viability of nuclear plants and seriously damage their surroundings. It is a menace largely ignored by power plant designers, utility companies and the U.S. government. -more-


A Departure Makes Me Glad to be Home

From Susan Parker
Tuesday November 18, 2003

Recently I attended a going away party for a friend. At the age of 52, Karen is heading for New York City. She’s given up her wonderful Potrero Hill apartment with its city and Bay views and is moving to a ground-floor, furnished sublet on the corner of 145th and St. Nicolas Avenue in the middle of Harlem. The company she writes for, Dance Magazine, is leaving Oakland and finally putting down roots in Manhattan. It makes sense, I suppose. Still, I’m going to miss her. -more-


The Students President Bush Is Leaving Behind

By Todd Oppenheimer Pacific News Service
Tuesday November 18, 2003

Now that the nation’s schools have had a year to adjust to President Bush’s much vaunted education law, the No Child Left Behind Act, its real consequences are beginning to surface—and it’s not looking good. Various governors and state officials, including those from Republican-leaning states such as Florida, West Virginia and Tennessee, are noticing that the president has treated them to the ultimate bait-and-switch: He has demanded more of their schools while cutting the money needed to do the job. -more-


When The Governator Meets The Sacramento Lily-Putters

By Peter Solomon
Tuesday November 18, 2003

As he awoke for the first time as chief executive of the largest state in the greatest country in the world, The Governator smiled his famous smile, lighting up the room. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Outcry Over Council’s Proposed Parcel Tax Threatens City Budget

By Becky O'Malley
Friday November 21, 2003

Vox populi is out in full throat after the proposed parcel tax, as anyone who reads the opinion pages of this paper will know by now. City Council’s hearing on Tuesday gave public voice to sentiments which have been circulating in small meetings and on the Internet for two months or more. -more-


Ecology Center Celebrates Thirty Years of Recycling

By RON SULLIVAN Special to the Planet
Tuesday November 18, 2003

In 1970, recycling was one of those odd things that granola heads did, schlepping their newspapers and maybe their bottles and tin cans to a site behind a co-op market and tossing it all into marked bins. -more-