News

Watchdog Group Will Sue Pacific Steel By Suzanne La Barre Special to the Planet

Friday February 03, 2006

A clean-air watchdog group is threatening to sue Pacific Steel Casting, if the West Berkeley foundry fails to permanently eradicate foul odor emissions within 30 days. -more-


Berkeley Loses Appeal On Telecom Regulation By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday February 03, 2006

In the wake of a U.S. Court of Appeals rejection of the City of Berkeley’s bid to regulate telecommunications companies inside the city’s borders, one of the leading proponents of that regulation says that the issue should be dropped for now. -more-


Peralta Spends Bond Funds on Bleachers By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor

Friday February 03, 2006

After a relatively quiet period at the end of 2005, the Peralta Community College District Board of Trustees returned last week to the type of open-ended fiscal battles that marked the first of last year. If that continues, it would seem to dim the prospects of the passage of a new construction bond measure in the near future, which district leaders have repeatedly said is needed to repair and rebuild the district’s aging facilities. -more-


Football Player Testifies at Willis-Starbuck Hearing By Jeff Shuttleworth Bay City News

Friday February 03, 2006

OAKLAND (BCN)—A University of California, Berkeley football player testified today that Dartmouth College student Meleia Willis-Starbuck was arguing with a group of men in Berkeley just before she was shot to death last July 17. -more-


Stew Albert, Activist 1939-2006 By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday February 03, 2006

Stew Albert, one of the creators of People’s Park, a former editor of the Berkeley Barb and a founder of the Youth International Party—the Yippies—died Monday at his home in Portland, Ore. -more-


Downtown Plan Panel Tackles UC Committee Representation By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday February 03, 2006

The elephant before them was the groom in a shotgun wedding. -more-


The Best Money Can Buy: Medical Tourism in the U.S. By HILARY ABRAMSON Pacific News Service

Friday February 03, 2006

SAN FRANCISCO—Turn a quiet corner of the U.S. health care system and bump into a medical niche unknown — and unavailable — to most patients. -more-


The Children’s Library: Starting from the Beginning By Phila Rogers Special to the Planet

Friday February 03, 2006

From where I sit on Thursdays in the Friends’ bookstore at the Central Library, I can watch parents and their children streaming into the elevator for the ride up to the Children’s Room on the fourth floor. I remember 50 years ago when my own children and I climbed the endless staircase up to what was then the library’s top floor. They loved hearing their voices and footsteps echoing in the tall space and the exhilarating—and scary—glimpses down the stairwell. -more-


Event to Collect San Pablo Park Memories By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor

Friday February 03, 2006

Residents of Berkeley and surrounding communities with a connection to San Pablo Park during the years from the Depression through the 1960s have been invited by the city to come to the park this Saturday to share their memories. -more-


Small Businesses Thrive in Berkeley’s Downtown Niches By Al Winslow Special to the Planet

Tuesday January 31, 2006

Small-business niches are scattered through downtown Berkeley, occupied by people who know things the rest of us don’t. -more-


Black & White Liquor Not a Nuisance, Says City Zoning Board By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday January 31, 2006

The Zoning Adjustments Board handed a reprieve to Black & White Liquors Thursday night, declining to declare the 3027 Adeline St. store a public nuisance. -more-


New Witness To Testify in Willis-Starbuck Hearing By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday January 31, 2006

Testimony is expected to continue on Tuesday in Alameda County Superior Court in Oakland in a hearing to determine whether two friends of 19-year-old Dartmouth College student Meleia Willis-Starbuck should be bound over to trial for her murder on a Berkeley street. -more-


Anderson Seeks to Allay Ashby BART Anxieties By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday January 31, 2006

Spurred by neighborhood concerns, Max Anderson is asking his fellow city councilmembers to agree to limit the statutory powers to be used in building a proposed housing project at the Ashby BART station while re-affirming their support for a planning grant application for the site. -more-


Residents, Environmentalists Debate Albany Mall By MARK SCHNEIDER Special to the Planet

Tuesday January 31, 2006

Albany residents and other environmentalists packed the multi-purpose room of Albany High School Thursday to voice their opposition to Los Angeles developer Rick Caruso’s proposal for a massive shopping plaza on what is now the parking lot for Golden Gate Fields racetrack. Proponents introduced an initiative calling for a community planning process to guide development of commercial and park areas on the Albany shore. -more-


Ethics Issues Raised in Oakland School District Hiring of Reporter By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday January 31, 2006

Alex Katz, the longtime education reporter for the Oakland Tribune, has been hired as the new press secretary for the Oakland Unified School District, continuing to report for the newspaper on school district matters while he was being recruited for his new job. -more-


Hancock’s Clean Money Bill Vulnerable to Veto By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday January 31, 2006

California State Assemblymember Loni Hancock’s (D-Berkeley) public campaign finance bill passed the Assembly Appropriations Committee last week on a straight-line party vote, leaving it vulnerable to a possible veto by Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. -more-


Backyard Bird Count to Be Held Presidents’ Day Weekend By JOE EATON Special to the Planet

Tuesday January 31, 2006

The Audubon Society’s Christmas Bird Count is a hallowed tradition and a valuable exercise in citizen science—but it’s not for everyone. Counts take place as scheduled, rain or shine, and shine is never guaranteed. As often as not, you wind up standing in a downpour, feeling the cold rain run down your neck, as you try to sort out very small, very active birds way up in a Douglas fir, or slogging through an alder swamp in search of whatever’s hiding in there, or bracing yourself against the winds off the ocean as you scope for seabirds. -more-


Jean Siri: Wild Woman of the West County By SUSAN PRATHER Special to the Planet

Tuesday January 31, 2006

Jean Siri told it like it is and had a vision of how it should be. Former El Cerrito City Manager Pokorny said that Siri “had the courage to tell those who elected her and those who served with her, what they needed to hear, not what they wanted to hear.” Unfortunately, those abilities are so rare these days they are described as “refreshing.” -more-


News Analysis: U.S. Instigated Iran’s Nuclear Program 30 Years Ago By WILLIAM O. BEEMAN Pacific News Service

Tuesday January 31, 2006

White House staff members, who are trying to prevent Iran from developing its own nuclear energy capacity and who refuse to take military action against Iran “off the table,” have conveniently forgotten that the United States was the midwife to the Iranian nuclear program 30 years ago. -more-


Police Blotter By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday January 31, 2006

Firefighter porn bust -more-