Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: The Bates Mayoralty: A Tale of Opportunities Missed

By Becky O’Malley
Friday October 06, 2006

Many readers seem to assume that the Planet will automatically endorse former Planning Commission Chair Zelda Bronstein, who is on leave from her job as one of the Planet’s Public Eye columnists, in her campaign for mayor of Berkeley. But it’s not that simple. We do have enormous respect for Bronstein’s experience and expertise in all matters related to the current and future state of the city fabric, and for her keen intelligence and quick mastery of new ideas. Since she’s been contributing to the paper, she’s become a friend as well as a colleague. But that shouldn’t be the whole story. Following the “if it’s not broke, don’t fix it” theory of management, it is appropriate to see what Tom Bates has done with his opportunities before deciding whether to support a change. He’s generally conceded to be personable and friendly, but is that enough? Under our charter, the mayor of Berkeley is able to establish a tone and a direction for the efforts of the City Council, but he or she must lead by example and exhortation rather than by exerting power. -more-


Act I & II Landmark Bid Tops Commission’s Agenda

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday October 03, 2006

As members of a Downtown Area Plan Advisory Committee (DAPAC) discuss the future of Center Street in a meeting room upstairs, Berkeley Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) members will meet Thursday downstairs to consider a proposed new Center Street Landmark. -more-


Public Comment

Letters to the Editor

Friday October 06, 2006

THANKS -more-


Commentary: Those Who Forget the Past are Condemned to Repeat It

By Shirley Dean
Friday October 06, 2006

By Shirley Dean -more-


Commentary: Ten Reasons We’re Supporting Kriss Worthington

By Nancy Carleton and Susan Hunter
Friday October 06, 2006

By NANCY CARLETON and -more-


Commentary: Déjà vu All Over Again: Downtown ‘Planning’

By Carol Denney
Friday October 06, 2006

By Carol Denney -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday October 03, 2006

FOR MCNERNEY -more-


Commentary:Casino Would Meet Albany’s Long-Term Needs

By Tony Caine
Tuesday October 03, 2006

Robert Cheasty’s recent Daily Planet commentary correctly points out Magna’s strong desire to obtain a casino. He portrays this a negative in that it would be used to subsidize the continuation of the racetrack. But there is also a flip-side to all this: Magna’s desire for a casino can be used as leverage to convince Magna to quickly close the track and create a very large park in its place. -more-


Commentary: Another View of Golden Gate Fields

By Trevor Grayling
Tuesday October 03, 2006

I must protest the entire page given over to Mr. Cheasty’s Sept. 26 commentary on Golden Gate Fields. The CAS/CESP/Sierra Club group are at it again with their by-now-familiar list of scare tactics and misstatements. I think you owe it to your readers to correct the record. Let’s look at just a few of those scare tactics and misstatements: -more-


Commentary: Instant Runoff Voting Gone Bad

By John Curl
Tuesday October 03, 2006

Tom Bates’ mayoral campaign sent out an e-mail this week boasting that Berkeley Citizens Action (BCA) members endorsed Bates’ re-election by “an overwhelming 69 percent vote.” What wasn’t mentioned in the e-mail was that the crucial five votes that appeared to put Bates over the endorsement threshold were cast by BCA members who actually preferred his opponent, Zelda Bronstein. Those votes should never have been reallocated to Bates. Without those votes BCA would have voted no endorsement. -more-


Commentary: Helping Vulnerable Youth of Color

By Sally Hindman
Tuesday October 03, 2006

Some years back, the San Francisco Chronicle published a graphic photograph of a young African American man hanging from the guard railing of the Golden Gate Bridge, his arms stretched out so that, remarkably, he appeared to be dangling in a crucifix position. The youth had attempted to commit suicide. As a Caucasian Quaker chaplain and someone involved in the interfaith religious community for most of the last 20 years, and also as a mother and longtime Berkeley resident, that photo has haunted me. I have not been able to erase the image of that anguished young man from my mind, and have continued to ponder the questions: What can we do to empower and offer needed support to vulnerable older youth of color in our community? Aren’t we all his parents? How are we “crucifying” or by neglect leading our older young men of color to suicidal despair and a sense of hopelessness? -more-


Commentary: Albany Shoreline: Private vs. Public Interests

By Michael Marchant
Tuesday October 03, 2006

In the United States, consumerism is becoming a social disease. Billions of dollars is spent annually on advertising campaigns designed to delude people into spending huge sums of money on things they don’t need, many of which are harmful. From cosmetics, to “fashion” products, to household cleaners, to SUVs, people are consuming more and more, and at every turn, ingenious advertisers are coaxing us along. And the never-ending search for the wider TV screen, the bigger car, the most effective anti-aging cream, and the best household disinfectant, has left us distracted from those things that truly matter to us, and less able to affect meaningful change in our lives. -more-