News

AC Transit Directors Ponder 5 Ways to Increase Bus Fares By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday May 17, 2005

With continued budget shortfalls looming, the AC Transit Board of Directors has scheduled public hearings this week on proposed fare increases or fare restructuring, as well as a proposed new $24 parcel tax on the 2005 or 2006 ballot. -more-


City Council Considers UC Deal Behind Closed Doors By MATTHEW ARTZ

Tuesday May 17, 2005

The Berkeley City Council will meet in closed session today (Tuesday) to discuss its lawsuit against UC Berkeley. There will be a 20-minute public comment session at 9 p.m. before the council goes behind closed doors. Councilmember Dona Spring said that the council could take a vote at the meeting on a city deal to drop its lawsuit against the university. -more-


NeighborsPropose OwnDesign forWest Campus By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Neighbors of West Campus, the school district’s property on University Avenue, got their first glimpse of the conceptual plan for the site Thursday night and most didn’t like it. -more-


Fate of Controversial Sculpture May Be Decided in Council Chambers By MATTHEW ARTZ

Tuesday May 17, 2005

A $50,000 public art project to delineate the border between South Berkeley and North Oakland has created a rift among Berkeley officials and appears headed for a City Council vote. -more-


Agency Finds a Better Way for Foster Children By MATTHEW ARTZ

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Shamean Trucks spent most of her youth as a foster kid, feeling like an unloved outsider in her own home. But thanks to a placement made three years ago by Berkeley’s only foster care and adoption agency, she is entering adulthood as a member of a tight-knit family. -more-


‘Flying Cottage’ Hits Turbulence Over Parking Lot By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday May 17, 2005

What was thought to have been a soft landing for South Shattuck Avenue’s long-disputed “flying cottage” may end up being a head-first crash into the hard asphalt of a backyard parking lot. -more-


ZAB Subcommittee Tackles Density Bonus By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Members of a Zoning Adjustments Board (ZAB) panel took their first crack at a tough and complicated nut Thursday afternoon: the density bonus. -more-


Film Depicts Struggle at Alternative School By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Earlier this year, students at Berkeley Alternative and Berkeley High schools joined together to challenge a decision by Berkeley High administrators to exclude BAHS students from several after-school Berkeley High activities. -more-


Paul Farmer to Graduates: Healthcare is a Human Right By JUDITH SCHERR Special to the Planet

Tuesday May 17, 2005

In the rich world, public health workers battle fat; where people are poor, they fight starvation. -more-


Tuk Tuk Thai & Asian Market Opens on University Ave. By LYDIA GANS Special to the Planet

Tuesday May 17, 2005

The shelves are lined with cans of jackfruit, mango, coconut, lychee, palm, pineapple, aloe vera, bananas; with sealed packages of dried radishes, turnips, fish, squid and anchovies; with jars of pickled gooseberries, cucumbers, salted prunes, garlic. There are dried spices, chilis of all degrees of hotness, nine different flavors of curry paste and dozens of varieties of bottled sauces. Except for some cans of Dole pineapple chunks and a bottle of Heinz ketchup everything else comes from Thailand. -more-



Letters to the Editor

Tuesday May 17, 2005

PRESERVATION -more-


Column:The Public Eye: It’s Time to Demand a Common-Sense Energy Policy By Bob Burnett

Tuesday May 17, 2005

In response to rapidly rising gasoline prices, President Bush called for Congress to pass his energy plan even while admitting that such an action wouldn’t reduce costs. “I wish I could simply wave a magic wand and lower gas prices tomorrow … [my bill won’t] change the price at the pump today.” -more-


Column: Early Morning Earthquake Brings Thoughts of an Old Friend By Susan Parker

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Did you feel the earthquake two weeks ago at 4 a.m.? At our house there was pandemonium. Andrea ran into my room and threatened to jump into bed with me. Willie woke up and asked what was going on. Downstairs, Ralph and Whiskers slept through it, but upstairs was ablaze with light and activity. It was like a hysterical pajama party. -more-


Police Blotter By MATTHEW ARTZ

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Police Nab Fleeing Passengers -more-


Commentary: Citizens Have Right to Know How City is Run

Tuesday May 17, 2005

EDITOR’S NOTE: -more-


Commentary: Fay Stender, Good Samaritan By BRIAN GLUSS

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Fay Abrahams Stender, a world-renowned liberal lawyer and pacifist, died May 19, 1980, as a direct result of six gunshot wounds suffered in 1979, in her home in Berkeley. A city resident for most of her good life, she was born of a long line of Berkeley-born family. -more-


Commentary: Slaving for the Progressives By THOMAS GANGALE

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Remember the old progressive values: better working conditions, shorter work weeks, higher wages? These issues hark back to the capital “P” Progressive Era, when workers struggled to win decent wages and working conditions from the Robber Barons. The movement made great gains in the early and middle 20th century, and fell victim to its own success as its core values became less important, nearly forgotten altogether. These issues ought to be front and center on the progressive stage once again. American middle class incomes have been stagnant for 30 years, and income inequality is the highest it’s been since the Gilded Age of laissez faire capitalism. -more-


Commentary: Mexicans Want Not Just Choice, But Change By DAVID BACON Pacific News Service

Tuesday May 17, 2005

MEXICO CITY—On May Day 1.2 million people filled the streets of Mexico City, the largest protest demonstration in Mexican history. This great, peaceful outpouring cried out for formal democracy at the ballot box, true choice in the country’s coming national elections and a basic change in its direction. -more-


TheatreFIRST Stages Three Acts of War By KEN BULLOCK Special to the Planet

Tuesday May 17, 2005

With Making Noise Quietly, TheatreFIRST has something of an oxymoron: a low-key tour de force. Maybe a double oxymoron, considering the title. So many shows try in good faith to make statements about war, or about the social or simply human situation that leads up to it, taking on the subject either directly, or with a great deal of irony. In Making Noise Quietly, British playwright Robert Holman shows what comes out of it, with no big displays of violence, brutality or overwrought emotionalism, and only the driest, most transparent irony. -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday May 17, 2005

TUESDAY, MAY 17 -more-


Fighting the Bay Area Invasion of Signal Crayfish By JOE EATON Special to the Planet

Tuesday May 17, 2005

A couple of weeks ago, over Tuscan roast pork and some good wine, I asked a fellow dinner guest who works on the UC campus if there were still three-spined sticklebacks in Strawberry Creek. He wasn’t sure about the sticklebacks, but he said the crayfish were still around. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday May 17, 2005

TUESDAY, MAY 17 -more-


Redevelopment Proposed for North Oakland By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday May 13, 2005

Forget the F-word. For most of those standing-room-only crowd in the North Oakland Senior Center Monday, the real verbal bombshell was the R-word. -more-


Activists Win New Oversight At Campus Bay, UC Field Station By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday May 13, 2005

In a stunning victory for community activists, the California Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Thursday agreed to hand jurisdiction over two adjoining contaminated Richmond sites to the state Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC). -more-


Bomb Scare Evacuates Downtown Building By JAKOB SCHILLER

Friday May 13, 2005

Employees in the building at 1947 Center St. which houses the City of Berkeley’s Office of Transportation were temporarily evacuated Thursday afternoon after a man walked into the building around 3 p.m. claiming to have a bomb in his backpack. -more-


Compromise Reached on Landmarks Ordinance By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday May 13, 2005

In a surprise turn, Berkeley’s Planning Commission Wednesday appeared to agree that the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) should have the power to stop demolitions of city landmarks. -more-


Council Looks to Curtail City Commissions By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday May 13, 2005

A battle is brewing over a plan to scale back Berkeley’s 44 citizen commissions. -more-


Popular Elmwood Soda Fountain To Close at End of Month By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday May 13, 2005

After four years of trying, Mike Hogan is giving up on his effort to save Ozzie’s, the popular soda fountain at 2900 College Ave. in the Elmwood district. -more-


BUSD-Teachers’ Union Talks Suddenly Pick up Steam By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday May 13, 2005

After several months of once-every-two-week mediation sessions, talks between the Berkeley Unified School District and the Berkeley Federation of Teachers took a dramatic turn this week, with a Monday session convening at 9 a.m. and running until 3 a.m., and then reconvening Wednesday afternoon. Two more sessions are scheduled next week, for Monday and Wednesday. -more-


East Bay Media Market Grows with ‘Daily News’ By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday May 13, 2005

The East Bay media market became a little bit more crowded Tuesday with the roll-out of the East Bay Daily News. -more-


Thousand Oaks School Receives Achievement Award By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday May 13, 2005

Thousand Oaks Elementary School in Berkeley has been selected as one of 248 California schools to receive a 2004-05 Title I Academic Achievement Award. -more-


Do-It-Yourself Electrical Repairs May Get a Lot More Expensive By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday May 13, 2005

At least when it comes to electrical things, do-it-your-selfers may find their craft considerably more expensive. -more-


Remembering John A. Vincent By STEPHEN VINCENT Special to the Planet

Friday May 13, 2005

John A. (“Jay”) Vincent, a well-known yachtsman, engineer, environmentalist, family man and Richmond civic leader passed away Wednesday, May 4. He was 93. -more-


John Patton, Lyric Tenor 1930-2005 By FRIENDS OF NEGRO SPIRITUALS

Friday May 13, 2005

Bay Area lyric tenor John Patton, Jr. passed away on April 18 in his Richmond home. The oldest of eight children, he was born on Feb. 18, 1930 in Garland City, Ark., on a sharecrop farm to sharecropping parents. At the age of 6, he knew he wanted to be a singer and pursued his dream and love of music when he moved to Richmond with his parents in 1944. -more-


Kamlarz’s Budget Cuts Fewer Services, Opens One Pool By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday May 13, 2005

City Manager Phil Kamlarz announced this week that Berkeley services won’t shut down one day a month this year as he had threatened they might have to, and one city swimming pool will be spared closure this winter. -more-


Peralta Board Still Awaits Dones Contract Issue By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday May 13, 2005

The man who wasn’t there continues to be the subject of the most interest at the Peralta Community College District Trustees meetings. -more-



Letters to the Editor

Staff
Friday May 13, 2005

CONTEMPT FOR THE PUBLIC -more-



COMMENTARY: Celebrate World Fair Trade Day on Saturday By HUNTER JACKSON

Friday May 13, 2005

A few days ago I was talking to a friend about shoes: I’d recently read that Nike owns Converse, which shocked my friend, an oblivious Converse-wearer. She had thought that by buying Converses she was withdrawing her support of the big shoemakers who are notorious for utilizing sweatshop labor. Our conversation turned to how these days it seems everything for sale comes from somewhere problematic, so much in fact that sometimes it feels like you have to either buy nothing or just ignore ethics altogether. -more-


BART Must Put Public Safety First By HAROLD BROWN

Friday May 13, 2005

When the BART Board of Directors met April 28 to discuss next year’s proposed budget, BART station agents, train operators, transit advocates, and advocates for the blind, disabled, seniors and students turned out in force to protest proposed reductions that we feel put rider safety at risk. -more-


It’s Time to Re-Think Taxation By GAR SMITH

Friday May 13, 2005

In the afterglow of April 15, it may be timely to consider adopting the Willy Sutton approach to tax-collection. As the wily bank-robber once observed: If you want to prosper in your chosen career, you have to go “where the money is.” -more-


COMMENTARY Teachers Need to Hear Views of All Parents By JULIE HOLCOMB

Friday May 13, 2005

I’ve been the recipient of responses to a “Letter to BUSD Teachers” written by me in collaboration with other concerned Berkeley parents. The letter has been widely circulated among parents and teachers, and has been sometimes forwarded with an attachment on teacher compensation not authorized or endorsed by the parents originally involved. In all cases it has provoked discussion. Following an event organized by the Berkeley Federation of Teachers (BFT) and billed as an Informational Meeting, which many parents found to be intimidating, and where they were thanked for coming out to show support when many came with questions and comments and were not prepared to offer support for the BFT positions, we felt it was necessary to offer an opportunity for parents to express dissenting views. -more-


COMMENTARY Deal Fairly With Those Who Teach Your Children By PAM DREW

Friday May 13, 2005

Berkeley has always been a town which valued education at all levels. We show our support in myriad ways. With the possibility of a teacher strike in this community within the next six months, now is the time to support those whose everyday job is to teach our children. Whether we have school-age children currently or not, we recognize that the entire community has a stake in fostering literacy, numeracy, creativity, and citizenship among other good things in our young. Teachers who are valued by the community are teachers who project positive values in every word and gesture. Teachers pour their love into their teaching. They give the community their working lives and expect respect for their labors and reasonable compensation in return. -more-


COMMENTARY BUSD Employees Have No Confidence in District’s Fiscal DataBy GEN KOGURE

Friday May 13, 2005

I’m not going to get into a popularity debate with recent letter writers to the Daily Planet. I’m sure that the parents who take time to talk to me support the teacher actions while parents who are frustrated with work-to-rule will talk to each other. At first, I was taken aback by their claims of fiscal realities, but I shouldn’t have been surprised since the district has a full time public relations officer who has repeatedly used public funds to misinform parents about the budget. There’s a historic reason why teachers, clerical, and plant workers have no confidence in the district’s fiscal data: -more-


Column: Undercurrents By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday May 13, 2005

For the last two years, there has been mounting anger in Oakland over the rule of Oakland School Administrator Randy Ward, who was appointed by State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O’Connell after the California legislature seized the Oakland Unified School District from Oakland residents and taxpayers. -more-


Police Blotter By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday May 13, 2005

Major Crime Spree -more-


Fire Department Log By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday May 13, 2005

Bedroom Blaze -more-


‘Kimberly Akimbo’ Showcases Joy Carlin By KEN BULLOCK Special to the Planet

Friday May 13, 2005

Joy Carlin, a Berkeley woman of the theater, has found a solution to the age-old complaint that there’s a shortage of roles for mature actresses. She’s playing a 16-year-old, the title role of Kimberly Akimbo, a play by David Lindsay-Abaire, at the San Francisco Playhouse near Union Square through May 21. -more-


Apfelbaum Comes Home for ‘Jazz on Fourth Street’By IRA STEINGROOT Special to the Planet

Friday May 13, 2005

This weekend’s ninth annual Jazz on Fourth Street Festival marks a musical homecoming for multi-instrumentalist Peter Apfelbaum. -more-