The Week

Puppies await adoption at the Milo Foundation adoption store on Solano Avenue last week. The foundation is currently awaiting a use permit approval from ZAB that will allow it to continue operations at its 1575 Solano Ave. location. Photograph by Riya Bhattacharjee.
Puppies await adoption at the Milo Foundation adoption store on Solano Avenue last week. The foundation is currently awaiting a use permit approval from ZAB that will allow it to continue operations at its 1575 Solano Ave. location. Photograph by Riya Bhattacharjee.
 

News

Flash: Man Shot at Oregon Street House

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday October 17, 2006

Flash: Compromise Reached for Harrison/San Pablo Project

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday October 17, 2006

It took a week of intense negotiations, with Councilmember Laurie Capitelli moving back and forth between developer Jim Hart and neighbors of his proposed five-story mixed-use project at Harrison Street and San Pablo Avenue, for the two sides to come to what appears will be a compromise agreement. -more-


No Deal Yet in Milo Foundation Uproar

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday October 17, 2006

The Milo Foundation returned to the Zoning Adjustments Board on Thursday with a set of proposed use permit conditions for approval which included: a maximum number of four dogs overnight, no boarding or kennel use and changes in its driveway usage. -more-


Spring vs. Wilson: Two Views of District 4

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday October 17, 2006

A steady stream of latte drinkers and Internet users moved in and out of the Royal Ground Café on Shattuck Avenue and Channing Way last week, creating a backdrop hum for a lunch-hour interview with Raudel Wilson, the District 4 City Council candidate, challenging 14-year incumbent Councilmember Dona Spring. -more-


District 4 Candidates Take in Modest Contributions

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday October 17, 2006

With incumbent Councilmember Dona Spring raising $13,000 and challenger Raudel Wilson raising just under $12,000 as of Sept. 30, the District 4 candidates have more modest and more equal campaign war chests than candidates in the Districts 7 and 8 races, where funds raised by challenger George Beier mount to $44,000 and funds raised by Councilmember George Wozniak are at $34,000. Their challengers Kriss Worthington and Jason Overman, according to the Oct. 5 reporting, raised about $19,00 and $14,000 respectively. -more-


New Cleanup Orders Issued for UC Field Station, Campus Bay

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday October 17, 2006

State officials have ordered UC Regents and two chemical manufacturing multinationals to clean up toxic wastes at UC Berkeley’s Richmond Field Station (RFS). -more-


Richmond Soil Radiation Levels Debated at Advisory Meeting

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday October 17, 2006

Just how much radiation is there in southern Richmond, and how dangerous is it to residents and folks who work there? -more-


Supervisors Accept Voting System Assessment

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday October 17, 2006

What is the definition of a “test”? -more-


Impeachment, Greenhouse Gas Decisions Face Berkeley Voters

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday October 17, 2006

While condo conversions and the Landmarks Preservation Ordinance represent the bread and butter issues of municipal politics, Berkeley voters will also get to weigh in on matters of national and global significance when they cast votes on two ballot measures. -more-


Candidate Events

Tuesday October 17, 2006

6:45 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 17: -more-


University Approves People’s Park ‘Concept Planning’ Study Finding

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday October 17, 2006

UC Berkeley officials have issued a call for a consultant to lead the process that could end with major changes for the most hotly contested piece of real estate in Berkeley history, People’s Park. -more-


DAPAC, Design Review Meetings Focus on Housing, Projects

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday October 17, 2006

A five-person panel will present their views Wednesday night about the role of social services, homelessness and new housing in a new plan for downtown Berkeley. -more-


Outside Students Become School Board Issue

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday October 17, 2006

The question of how to deal with out-of-district students in the Berkeley public schools has become a major issue for school board candidates in this election. -more-


Police Blotter

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday October 17, 2006

Butter knife bandits -more-


El Cerrito City Council Candidate Statements: David Boisvert

By David Boisvert
Tuesday October 17, 2006

Fourteen former El Cerrito mayors have endorsed me, since I will bring fresh ideas to the city council and I understand to prioritize how we spend our city’s limited funds. -more-


El Cerrito City Council Candidate Statements: Janet Abelson

By Janet Abelson
Tuesday October 17, 2006

My name is Janet Abelson. I’m the mayor of El Cerrito and I appreciate this opportunity to tell you about my background, my accomplishments on the El Cerrito City Council and my plans for the future. -more-


El Cerrito City Council Candidate Statements: Sandi Potter

By Sandi Potter
Tuesday October 17, 2006

I was elected to the City Council in El Cerrito in 2002 and I’m now running for my second term. I have been serving my community for 10 years, first as a member of the Redevelopment Advisory Committee, than as a Planning Commissioner, and for four years on the City Council. I proudly served as Mayor in 2004-2005, representing our City on the West County Mayors and Supervisors board; on the Contra Costa Conference of Mayors; and on regional boards, such as the Association of Bay Area Governments. I also have extensive experience volunteering in our public schools. I have lived in El Cerrito with my husband—Phil Martien— raising our two daughters who have attended Madera Elementary, Portola Middle School and El Cerrito High School. I served on school site councils at Madera and Portola and currently represent El Cerrito on the West Contra Costa Unified School District Citizen Bond Oversight Committee. -more-


El Cerrito City Council Candidate Statements: Andrew Ting

By Andrew Ting
Tuesday October 17, 2006

I, Andrew W. Ting, have lived in El Cerrito since 1987. I graduated from El Cerrito High in 1991. I earned my bachelor degrees in Music and Economics from U.C. Berkeley in 1995. Go Bears!!! From 1995–1997, I went to University of Minnesota to pursue my masters of music with an emphasis in Orchestral Conducting. After coming back to El Cerrito, I realized that my passion has always been in education. I began teaching in the public schools under West Contra Unified School District in 2000 while attending California State University, Hayward to obtain my teaching credential. -more-


Firefighters Rescue Woman From Blaze

By Richard Brenneman
Friday October 13, 2006

After Berkeley firefighters rescued her from her burning home Monday night, a Berkeley woman took out a cigarette lighter and tried to set herself ablaze. -more-


Chamber PAC Amassing War Chest for Berkeley Race

By Richard Brenneman and Judith Scherr
Friday October 13, 2006

While the Berkeley Chamber of Commerce is raking in thousands of dollars to battle for candidates and oppose ballot measures, there’s no record on file anywhere to show who’s giving or getting the money—and there probably won’t be until right before or after the Nov. 7 election. -more-


A Closer Look At State Bond Measures

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday October 13, 2006

During the past legislative session, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Democratic legislative leaders (primarily Sen. Don Perata and Assembly Speaker Fabian Nuñez) reached an agreement to put four bond measures on the ballot to fund various projects in California. -more-


Council Postpones Decision on San Pablo/Harrison Project

By Judith Scherr
Friday October 13, 2006

A law intended to increase construction of affordable housing units was invoked at Tuesday’s Berkeley City Council meeting by attorney Rena Rickles, in an attempt to push the council to approve a controversial mixed-use housing and commercial development at San Pablo Avenue and Harrison Street. -more-


Oakland Auditor Faces Stiff Challenge in Run-Off

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday October 13, 2006

In this internet-dependent age, when less than a month before a runoff election an incumbent officeholder’s website [www.roland4auditor.com/] has no photo, no qualifications, no campaign platform, no endorsement information, no contact number, and reads only “Site under construction—check back for more information”—well, then, you know that incumbent is in some political trouble. -more-


Planners Decide to Wait on Creeks Ordinance Decision

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday October 13, 2006

What started off as a discussion differentiating creeks and culverts at the Planning Commission meeting on Wednesday went on to become a heated debate about the ambiguities and inaccuracies of the proposed amendments to the Creeks Ordinance. -more-


Playing Field Construction Begins at East Campus

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday October 13, 2006

After years of grappling, construction on the long-awaited multi-use playing field at Derby Street and Martin Luther King finally started on Oct. 1. -more-


Berkeley High Beat: A Fond Farewell to BHS Student Activities Director

By Rio Bauce
Friday October 13, 2006

Last Friday, Ivery McKnight-Johnson left behind her legacy as Berkeley High School’s (BHS) Student Activities Director to go work as a middle school counselor in the Central Valley. -more-


City to Go Forward with Challenge to Berkeley Police Union Lawsuit

By Judith Scherr
Friday October 13, 2006

A hearing on a four-year-old police union suit against the city is slated for Nov. 14 at 9 a.m. in Alameda County Superior Court Dept. 31. -more-


Fire Department Log

By Richard Brenneman
Friday October 13, 2006

Gas fire -more-


Every Would-Be Crosser Is a Terror Threat On the Texas Border

By Mary Jo McConahay, New America Media
Friday October 13, 2006

This is part one of a two-part series -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Deconstructing the Campaign Mailers

By Becky O’Malley
Tuesday October 17, 2006

In the mail this week, a flood of glossy brochures, soliciting votes for the upcoming election. If you’re confused by them, you’re not alone. -more-


Editorial: Voting Sensibly on Ballot Measures

By Becky O’Malley
Friday October 13, 2006

THE DAILY PLANET ENDORSES: -more-


Public Comment

Letters to the Editor

Tuesday October 17, 2006

IN SUPPORT OF MAYOR BATES -more-


Commentary: What’s the Matter With Berkeley?

By Sharon Hudson
Tuesday October 17, 2006

Over the summer I read What’s the Matter with Kansas? by Thomas Frank. Kansas voters regularly vote to humiliate and destroy their state, enriching and empowering the privileged class, and weakening and impoverishing regular folk. We Berkeleyans are too smart to fall into that trap. Or are we? -more-


Commentary: NEBA President Explains Stand on Measure A

By Eleanor Pepples
Tuesday October 17, 2006

Lately there has been much discussion about how to help the Berkeley public schools thrive. -more-


Commentary: Not a NIMBY

By Robert Clear
Tuesday October 17, 2006

The administration is in denial. The “dumb” growth advocates are into defeatism: “... nothing we do in Berkeley’s land use will have any noticeable impact on climate change.” (Sharon Hudson, Daily Planet, Aug. 8). It is an easy type of excuse that is too sweeping in its scope. Why protest the war, when nothing you personally can do will stop it? Why not cheat on your taxes? Lots of people do it and your taxes are probably insignificant in the total budget. -more-


Commentary: Do Benefits of Drug War Outweigh the Costs?

By Travis C. Ash
Tuesday October 17, 2006

Since the war on drugs began some $47 billion a year is reserved from federal, state, and local treasuries to combat the so-called menace that encompasses the trafficking, sales, and use of drugs directly affecting the citizens of the United States of America. This obviously reflects the government’s view on the subject of drug abuse and related activities as very grave indeed. It is apparently serious enough to lawmakers who deem it necessary to spend that insane amount of tax money, and commit entire agencies of human resources annually in an attempt to try and bring the problem to a halt. The trouble is that through all the searches and seizures, television campaign ads, and mandatory minimum sentencing there is no end in sight and it seems to have fueled a kind of evolution in the world of mind altering substances. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday October 13, 2006

FAILING OUR STUDENTS -more-


City Council Candidate Statements: George Beier

By George Beier
Friday October 13, 2006

My name is George Beier and I am running for City Council for Berkeley’s District 7, the district that includes Telegraph Avenue. I am grateful to the Planet for this opportunity to tell you about myself, why I am running and what I hope to do for this city. -more-


City Council Candidate Statements: Kriss Worthington

By Kriss Worthington
Friday October 13, 2006

Diversity, creativity, and a commitment to promoting new ideas are what make Berkeley such a wonderful place to live and work. For the past ten years on the City Council I’ve been a progressive leader on a wide range of issues. I’ve had to walk a thin line between maintaining my sense of where Berkeley should be going while pragmatically getting things done in the here and now. Here are the areas I’ve focused on: -more-


City Council Candidate Statements: Dona Spring

By Dona Spring
Friday October 13, 2006

The name of my campaign committee is Dona Spring for City Council. Residing in Berkeley for the past 34 years, I graduated from UC Berkeley with honors with a B.A. in Anthropology and Psychology. -more-


City Council Candidate Statements: Raudel Wilson

By Raudel Wilson
Friday October 13, 2006

My name is Raudel Wilson and I am running for City Council in District 4. I am proud to say I have been married to my wife, Grace, for the past nine years and I am the proud father of two young boys. My oldest son “Little” Raudel started Kindergarten this month at Washington Elementary School. My youngest son, Albert, is 2-years-old. He spends his day with my wife enjoying Habitot Children’s Museum and a wealth of local parks. My family and I live in the neighborhood just west of the Downtown. Each morning I have the privilege of walking my son to school on my way to work. -more-


Commentary: Horse Manure From A Management Perspective

By Peter Tunney
Friday October 13, 2006

I write regarding Robert Cheasty’s Sept. 26 commentary, which is so riddled with untrue statements and outright falsehoods that I feel compelled to respond. -more-


Commentary: A Better Way Than Measure A

By Yolanda Huang
Friday October 13, 2006

The Daily Planet recently published a commentary from Mary Hurlbert, an employee of the Berkeley Unified School District’s downtown staff, supporting the school district’s proposed parcel tax on the November ballot. However, what’s wrong with the new measure A are its very troubling consequences for our children’s’ future, namely no guarantees that the money will be spent to benefit children’s education, while giving administrators a free hand to spend the money for “all costs,” including hefty salary increases for administrators. -more-


Commentary: Preservation and Democracy: The Case Against Measure J

By Alan Tobey
Friday October 13, 2006

At a recent campaign appearance, mayoral candidate Zelda Bronstein said that the people of Berkeley should oppose “government by fiat” and instead encourage more “community-based decision-making.” That’s a great idea—and all who agree with it will vote against Measure J, the anti-democratic landmark preservation initiative. -more-


Commentaary: NEBA Newsletter Misrepresents Measure A

By Laurie Snowden
Friday October 13, 2006

Like many who read the just-mailed North East Berkeley Association newsletter, I had to check twice to see if this was really a mailing from the old and respected neighborhood organization, or just a Republican hit piece. -more-


Columns

Column: The Public Eye: Looking at ‘Savage America’ Through Foreign Eyes

By Bob Burnett
Tuesday October 17, 2006

Paris: We invite our French friend to visit us and he says, “I’m afraid to go to America.” It’s a common response: the French are curious about the United States, understand it’s a beautiful, complicated country, but are nervous about visiting. Of course, since 9/11, it’s a lot harder to get a visa. But underneath the security-related paperwork looms a more ominous reality: America is no longer seen as a welcoming place. It’s viewed as unpredictable. Savage. -more-


UC Plans to Raze Senior Oaks to Make Way for Stadium

By Ron Sullivan, Special to the Planet
Tuesday October 17, 2006

It will surprise no one, I’m sure, that the unofficial tree maven of the Berkeley Daily Planet is coming out against the clearcutting of a grove of senior live oaks in the city to make way for the construction of a yet another new University Sportspalast. I’ll even add that quite a few of the trees slated for destruction look sturdy enough to sit in. Oaks tend to be trustworthy to bear the weight of a human being. -more-


Column: Dispatches From the Edge: Thai Coup, Wolfowitz on the Ropes, Ecuador’s Election

By Conn Hallinan
Friday October 13, 2006

The coup in Thailand was treated by most of the U.S. media with profound confusion over what was at stake, coupled with a certain admiration at its bloodless efficiency. Photos of soldiers being handed roses and children posing in front of tanks were all the rage on front pages and the six o’clock news. But if the Sept. 19 putsch turns out to be the coup de grace for Thailand’s young democracy, a major culprit in the whole sordid business will be the International Monetary Fund (IMF). -more-


Column: Undercurrents: Oakland Wants to Win Back Control of its Schools

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday October 13, 2006

The recently-released Assessment and Recovery Plan Fourth Progress Report on the Oakland Unified School District by the Fiscal Crisis and Management Assessment Team (FCMAT) takes us into Alice-In-Wonderland/Bizarro world territory, friends. Concluding that the office of the State Superintendent’s office has messed up the Oakland schools for three years and counting without Oakland’s input, our friends at FCMAT continue to assert that this proves Oakland is not ready to run Oakland’s schools. The logic of that assertion escapes me, but it’s all perfectly legal and all built into SB39, the Don Perata-authored legislation that authorized the Oakland school takeover in 2003. -more-


East Bay Then and Now: Some East Bay Buildings Were Inspired by Precedent

By Daniella Thompson
Friday October 13, 2006

In Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead, the only architect worth his salt is the individualist who tosses all historic precedents onto the trash heap. Published in 1943, the novel was a battle cry for the revolution of modernism, which was expected to take hold from then to eternity. -more-


Garden Variety: New Native Plant Nursery Blooms in Cull Canyon

By Ron Sullivan
Friday October 13, 2006

Pete Veilleux wrote something to the California native-plant mavens’ mailing list the other day: “It’s October! Time for squirrel stomach pie—my memere’s specialty. She called it poor man’s toot cake.” -more-


About the House: The Truth About Seismic Gas Shut-Off Valves

By Matt Cantor
Friday October 13, 2006

The anniversary of the Loma Prieta is upon us once again and still so little has been done to prepare for our earthquake. That’s right. Loma Prieta wasn’t ours. It was in the mountains of Watsonville nearly 100 miles to the south. -more-


Arts & Events

Arts Calendar

Tuesday October 17, 2006

TUESDAY, OCT. 17 -more-


24rd Annual San Francisco Jazz Festival Starts Thursday

By Ira Steingroot, Special to the Planet
Tuesday October 17, 2006

The 24th annual SF Jazz Festival begins this Friday, Oct. 20 with tenor saxophone colossus Sonny Rollins and continues for another 31 events through the Nov. 12 concert of Latin percussion great John Santos and the Machete Ensemble. This will be the most concentrated amount of great jazz available in the Bay Area all year. -more-


One-Woman Show Explores Transracial Adoption

By Annie Kassof, Special to the Planet
Tuesday October 17, 2006

Playwright and producer Lisa Marie Rollins was adopted as an infant and grew up in a white community on a three-acre organic farm in Washington state. In her new one-woman show, Ungrateful Daughter, directed by W. Kamau Bell, she stands on a bare stage, then tells us her parents are not the “hippie, pot-smoking” type of an organic farmer. They are white church-going Republicans. While the agency that placed Rollins had indicated to her parents that they were getting an “Asian-mix” baby, it is doubtful that with her kinky hair and cinnamon skin her parents got what they were expecting. Rollins thinks the agency “packaged” her without acknowledging the African American blood that clearly runs through her veins. -more-


UC Plans to Raze Senior Oaks to Make Way for Stadium

By Ron Sullivan, Special to the Planet
Tuesday October 17, 2006

It will surprise no one, I’m sure, that the unofficial tree maven of the Berkeley Daily Planet is coming out against the clearcutting of a grove of senior live oaks in the city to make way for the construction of a yet another new University Sportspalast. I’ll even add that quite a few of the trees slated for destruction look sturdy enough to sit in. Oaks tend to be trustworthy to bear the weight of a human being. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday October 17, 2006

TUESDAY, OCT. 17 -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday October 13, 2006

FRIDAY, OCT. 13 -more-


Moving Pictures: ‘Schultze Gets the Blues’ Is an Overlooked Gem

By Justin DeFreitas
Friday October 13, 2006

Last year Schultze Gets the Blues, a German film, played in Berkeley theaters for just a week and to generally small audiences. After one matinee screening, a group of women walked out casting sideways glances at each other and rolling their eyes. “What did you think?” one asked another. “I don’t knowwwww…..” was the response. -more-


Arts: Johnson’s Voice Brings Together Classical, Jazz, Spiritual

By Sonia Narang, Special to the Planet
Friday October 13, 2006

Candace Johnson can belt out a Mozart opera aria with the soul of gospel singer Mahalia Jackson. A chancellor’s postdoctoral fellow at UC Berkeley’s music department, Johnson dazzled an audience at her debut vocal recital on campus in September. -more-


East Bay Then and Now: Some East Bay Buildings Were Inspired by Precedent

By Daniella Thompson
Friday October 13, 2006

In Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead, the only architect worth his salt is the individualist who tosses all historic precedents onto the trash heap. Published in 1943, the novel was a battle cry for the revolution of modernism, which was expected to take hold from then to eternity. -more-


Garden Variety: New Native Plant Nursery Blooms in Cull Canyon

By Ron Sullivan
Friday October 13, 2006

Pete Veilleux wrote something to the California native-plant mavens’ mailing list the other day: “It’s October! Time for squirrel stomach pie—my memere’s specialty. She called it poor man’s toot cake.” -more-


About the House: The Truth About Seismic Gas Shut-Off Valves

By Matt Cantor
Friday October 13, 2006

The anniversary of the Loma Prieta is upon us once again and still so little has been done to prepare for our earthquake. That’s right. Loma Prieta wasn’t ours. It was in the mountains of Watsonville nearly 100 miles to the south. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday October 13, 2006

FRIDAY, OCT. 13 -more-