The Week

Former Councilmember Carole Kennerly speaks outside the Marine Recruiting Center at 64 Shattuck Square in a rally kicking off an initiative to make future military recruiter offices go through a zoning process that will include public comment. Photograph by Judith Scherr.
Former Councilmember Carole Kennerly speaks outside the Marine Recruiting Center at 64 Shattuck Square in a rally kicking off an initiative to make future military recruiter offices go through a zoning process that will include public comment. Photograph by Judith Scherr.
 

News

Council to Evaluate Kamlarz, Discuss ‘Wright’s Garage Project’ at Closed Session Tonight

By Judith Scherr
Friday February 01, 2008

Posted Mon., Feb. 4—Berkeley city manager for five years, Phil Kamlarz will get his first City Council evaluation tonight (Monday) in a special closed-door council session. -more-


Trees Show Their Bones and History in Winter

By Ron Sullivan
Friday February 01, 2008

Posted Sun., Feb. 3—Most of the public and literary appreciation for bare trees seems to come from wintry places like New England, but bonsai artists and fans and the landscape pruners who think along similar lines make a big deal of the “winter silhouette.” It’s one of the most refined criteria for judging a deciduous tree. -more-


Richmond Design Board GivesQualified ‘Yes’ to Chevron Plans

By Richard Brenneman
Friday February 01, 2008

Posted Sat., Feb. 2—Richmond’s Design Review Board (DRB) voted Thursday to approve Chevron’s plans to upgrade its refinery, but before the vote was taken, few folks had anything nice to say about the world’s seventh largest corporation. -more-


Three Chain Themselves to Marine Recruiting Center Doors

By Judith Scherr
Friday February 01, 2008

Posted Fri., Feb. 1—The World Can’t Wait ratcheted up the protests at the downtown Berkeley Marine Recruiting Center today (Friday), when three members, dressed in orange jump suits to symbolize the garb worn by the prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, chained themselves to the recruiting center doors at 64 Shattuck Ave. -more-


Council Addresses Police Theft Case

By Judith Scherr
Friday February 01, 2008

It took more than two years for questions surrounding criminal activities in the Berkeley Police Department to reach the City Council, but when the Police Review Commission report on Evidence Theft was before them Tuesday evening, councilmember reactions were heated. -more-


Police Launch Pedestrian Safety Decoy Operation

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday February 01, 2008

Berkeley’s Traffic Bureau came across a few snarls on the city’s streets this week. Not all were caused by clogged lanes and reckless driving. -more-


City Lets Protesters Have Their Own (Parking) Space

By Judith Scherr
Friday February 01, 2008

The question of dedicating space—a parking space—for Code Pink’s weekly demonstrations in front of the downtown Berkeley Marine Recruiting Center (MRC) raised hackles at Tuesday night’s City Council meeting, when Councilmember Gordon Wozniak likened the demonstrations there to protests at abortion clinics. -more-


Rally Launches Petition to Limit Military Recruiters

By Judith Scherr
Friday February 01, 2008

At a rally that attracted some 50 supporters outside the Marine Recruiting Center in downtown Berkeley on Wednesday, the Regulating Military Recruiting Coalition launched a drive to collect 5,000 signatures for a ballot initiative aimed at regulating where public and private military recruiters can locate offices in Berkeley. -more-


News Analysis: Bush Sub-Prime Collapse Echoes Reagan Disaster

By Richard Brenneman
Friday February 01, 2008

When 60 Minutes tackled the FBI investigation of the mortgage implosion Sunday night, producers looked to Stockton, “ground zero for the current financial crisis and a microcosm of everything that went wrong.” -more-


Demolished Preschool Awaits New Building

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday February 01, 2008

The remnants of a red and yellow toy train mark the spot where the redwood building housing the King Child Development Center at 1939 Ward St. used to be. -more-


Clinton, Lee, Kerry, Craig Newmark, Ted Kennedy Here Friday and Saturday

By Judith Scherr
Friday February 01, 2008

Superstars and locals are gearing up for “super-duper” Tuesday, Feb. 5. -more-


Legal Threat, Ignorance Cloud City Council Liaison Law

By Richard Brenneman
Friday February 01, 2008

Of 20 commissions listed in Title 3 of the Berkeley city code, stipulations that declare the “City Council shall appoint one of its members to act as a liaison representative to the commission” are found in the statutes creating only three commissions: Aging, Planning and Zero Waste. -more-


OUSD Contract Talks Begin on Tense Note

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday February 01, 2008

The potentially volatile Oakland Unified School District teacher contract negotiations—in the midst of a state budget crisis and as the district transitions from state takeover to local control—bubbled to the surface Wednesday night when shouting Oakland teachers forced a brief but tense administrator-board meeting recess while demanding that their contract proposal presentation not be bumped down lower on the agenda. -more-


OUSD Outlines Possible Harm of Proposed State Budget Cuts

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday February 01, 2008

Saying that “the governor dropped a bombshell on the education community,” Oakland Unified School District interim Chief Financial Officer Leon Glaster painted a gloomy picture Wednesday night of the potential financial effects on OUSD of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s proposed 10 percent across-the-board budget cuts. -more-


UC Haas Planner Sought, Law School Bidders Announced

By Richard Brenneman
Friday February 01, 2008

UC Berkeley this week revealed the companies picked to bid on a new $56 million law school building and called for an architect to plan major changes to Haas School of Business. -more-


Demonstrators Get Space to Protest

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday January 29, 2008

Posted Wed., Jan. 30—The question of dedicating space—a parking space—for Code Pink’s weekly demonstrations in front of the downtown Berkeley Marine Recruiting Center (MRC) raised hackles at Tuesday night’s Berkeley City Council meeting, when Councilmember Gordon Wozniak likened the demonstrations there to protests at abortion clinics. -more-


City Council Addresses Homeless, Police Behavior

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday January 29, 2008

The Berkeley City Council will be addressing the issue of people lying on sidewalks and will have its first opportunity tonight (Tuesday) to address criminal behavior in its police department following the 2006 conviction of former Sgt. Cary Kent for stealing drugs from the evidence room he supervised and the alleged theft of cash and property belonging to suspects by another officer. -more-


Richmond Refinery Plans Face Strong Opposition

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday January 29, 2008

Richmond’s Design Review Board this week will take up major renovation plans for the city’s Chevron Refinery, using an environmental impact report (EIR) one city councilmember calls “really pathetic” and “a piece of shit.” -more-


Feds Say Teece Must Pay $12 Mil for Tax Dodges

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday January 29, 2008

David J. Teece, the UC Berkeley professor and until recently perhaps Berkeley’s richest private landlord, used illegal tax dodges and owes Uncle Sam millions, says the IRS. -more-


Berkeley Commission Urges Chevron Boycott

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday January 29, 2008

Berkeley’s Peace and Justice Commission is asking the city tonight (Tuesday) to approve a resolution to “cease all purchases from Chevron, to the extent allowable by law.” -more-


St. Mark’s Provides Shelter in Bad Weather

By Lydia Gans
Tuesday January 29, 2008

When heavy winter rains and cold weather are predicted, even the hardiest of homeless people find themselves desperate for shelter. Thanks to funding from the city of Berkeley, the generosity of the congregation of St. Mark’s Episcopal Church—and some luck and community support—there is a haven from the storms. -more-


BCA, Progressive Democrats Weigh In on Election Issues

Tuesday January 29, 2008

At its Jan. 13, 2008 meeting, Berkeley Citizens Action members considered the presidential primary candidates and the propositions and measures on the upcoming Feb. 5, 2008 ballot. -more-


Skinner Joins Crowded East Bay Assembly Race

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday January 29, 2008

It had been commonly believed—at least by Assembly District 14 candidates Richmond Councilmember Tony Thurmond, Berkeley Councilmember Kriss Worthington, and Berkeley resident Dr. Phil Polakoff—that East Bay Parks District member and former Berkeley City Councilmember Nancy Skinner had decided not to run for the Assembly seat now occupied by Loni Hancock. -more-


Bates Unveils Climate Action Plan to Reduce City Emissions

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday January 29, 2008

In a made-for-TV moment, under blue skies and beside a sparkling bay at Shorebird Park, Mayor Tom Bates rolled out the draft Climate Action Plan aimed at reducing greenhouse gases 80 percent by 2050—fulfilling the goals of Measure G, approved by Berkeley voters in 2004. -more-


Several Challengers Crowd Oakland City Council Races

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday January 29, 2008

Three more challengers, including one in the district of powerful Oakland City Council President Ignacio De La Fuente, have announced for the Oakland City Council in what already was one of the most crowded election years in the city in recent memory. -more-


Pre-Trial Set for Berkeley Rent Board Member Accused of Living in Oakland

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday January 29, 2008

Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board Member Chris Kavanagh, facing seven felony counts stemming from allegations that his real home is in Oakland and not Berkeley as he has claimed, was back in court on Thursday. -more-


Residents to Release Report on Pacific Steel

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday January 29, 2008

The West Berkeley Community Monitoring Project will release test results today (Tuesday) for air samples taken near the Second Street-based Pacific Steel Casting to check for toxics. -more-


Now’s the Time for Thinking About Those Spring Vegetables

By Shirley Barker
Tuesday January 29, 2008

Snow, rain, wind. It’s that time of year when snuggling under an eiderdown, preferably with furry four-pawed friends, seems the only way to keep warm. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Hurry Up, Please, It’s Time to Vote

By Becky O’Malley
Friday February 01, 2008

It’s down-to-the-wire time now. On Wednesday a substantial number of my California relatives and friends told me that they’d finally filled out their absentee ballots and sent them in. What were they waiting for? Well, like all the rest of us, they were still trying to decide who to vote for in the Democratic presidential primary. Here’s the refrain: “I’d like to vote for Edwards, but if Obama and Clinton are very close I’ll probably have to choose Obama instead.” Some—a few—mentioned Kucinich instead of Edwards. -more-


Let’s Not Get Triumphant Just Yet

By Becky O’Malley
Tuesday January 29, 2008

In 1968, General Westmoreland announced that we could finally see “the light at the end of the tunnel” in Vietnam. That announcement has come to define a paradigm: the tendency of leaders, military and political, to declare victory long before a conflict has actually been resolved. An editorial in the influential international scientific journal Nature in February of 2007 was in fact entitled “Light at the End of the Tunnel.” It was part of Nature’s Climate Change special edition, and it warned that the world-wide acceptance of the reality of climate change brought with it new perils: business and political leaders were starting to announce what steps they were taking to combat the problems of global warning as if the problem were solved, when in fact the solutions offered were not nearly enough to solve the problem. -more-


Public Comment

Letters to the Editor

Friday February 01, 2008

ADIOS, BERKELEY! -more-


Commentary: Yes on Prop. 92, the Community College Initiative

By Cy Gulassa
Friday February 01, 2008

The Peralta Board of Trustees, faculty and staff urge voters to support Prop. 92, the Community College Initiative, which will appear on the Feb. 5 statewide ballot. Its passage is vital to our Peralta colleges—Alameda, Berkeley City, Laney, and Merritt—as well as to the 109 California community colleges and 2.5 million students. -more-


Commentary: Community Priorities Require No Vote on Measures A and B

By Katina Ancar
Friday February 01, 2008

In her Children’s Hospital’s Expansion Tax Measure commentary, Joyce Roy concluded with a question: What are our community’s priorities? As an Oakland resident and child advocate, I am compelled to list a few: -more-


Commentary: Don’t Forget the Casino Workers

By David Brody
Friday February 01, 2008

As Super Tuesday looms, mail boxes across California have been stuffed with slick fliers, plus a thick Voter Information Guide, about Propositions 94-97, which ask voters whether or not they approve new gaming compacts that would triple the slot machines—by 17,000—at the casinos of four Southern California tribes. I can imagine the head-scratching over the claims and counterclaims: Is so much gambling capacity healthy for the state? How big a tax windfall? How adequate the accounting safeguards? What kind of impact on poorer tribes? On the environment? Then my eye spied a paragraph by the legislative analyst about labor relations at the casinos. And on that, fellow citizens, I can shed some light. -more-


Commentary: The New Political Divide

By John F. Davies
Friday February 01, 2008

A great change is now happening, one that’s only now beginning to bubble up in the national consciousness, and this change is shaking our established institutions to their very roots. Yet this fact is barely registering among the so-called mainstream media, or for that matter, even the progressive one. Put simply, the old political definitions of left and right, liberal and conservative, Democrat and Republican, are eroding away. They are indeed becoming irrelevant as the new concerns of this new Century trump the politics of the past. It’s now no longer the right against the left, but rather: “Wall Street against Main Street.” -more-


Commentary: UC: The Wal-Mart of Higher Education?

By Hank Chapot
Friday February 01, 2008

If you love the University of California, you may be interested in a study released Jan. 15 by the Center for Labor and Community Research, titled, “Failing California’s Communities: how UC’s low wages affect surrounding communities.” -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday January 29, 2008

MONEY WISELY SPENT OR WASTED? -more-


Commentary: Progressives Must Reject Proposition 93

By Randy Shaw
Tuesday January 29, 2008

Recent weeks have seen television ads and mailers from a broad list of progressive groups and politicians urging a yes vote on Prop. 93, which revises the state’s term limits law. Progressive groups who work at the state level have little choice but to back a measure designed to keep the current Democratic leadership in place, and Prop. 93’s passage will enable some progressive legislators to extend their careers. But Prop. 93 is a disaster for progressive interests. -more-


Commentary: Good for Students, Good for California

By Nicky González Yuen
Tuesday January 29, 2008

Berkeley’s Elected Officials Unanimously Say Yes to Propostion 92 -more-


Commentary: You May Have Your Ballot, But You May Not Be Able to Vote

By Constance M. Piesinger
Tuesday January 29, 2008

Thousands of absentee voters registered as independents are in for a shock when they open their ballot envelopes for the upcoming primary election and discover there are no presidential candidates’ names on their ballot. If you’ve already opened your envelope and discovered this, then you’re probably one of over 10,000 California voters who have already called their county Registrar of Voters to find out how to fix the problem. You learned that the Registrar would mail you a partisan (e.g., Democratic or American Independent) ballot, which you could then fill in and mail back. (Republicans have excluded independents in this election.) -more-


Commentary: A Look at Indian Gaming

By Ralph Stone
Tuesday January 29, 2008

The arguments for and against the California Indian Gaming agreement propositions, Propositions 94, 95, 96 and 97, has prompted me to re-examine an underlying assumption about Indian gaming. That is, does California’s $7 billion Indian gaming industry substantially benefit California Indians economically and socially? There are 105 tribal entities in California with approximately 56,158 tribal members. There are 31 gaming tribal casinos. Yes, Indian gaming revenue has been used to build houses, schools, roads and sewer and water systems and to fund health care and education for California’s gaming tribes and to a lesser extent, its non-gaming tribes. However, there remains a large economic and social disparity between California Indians and those of other Americans. -more-


Commentary: Support Children’s Hospital Expansion

By Joyce Roy
Tuesday January 29, 2008

Children’s Hospital and Research Center Oakland is a hospital for very sick children and serves all of Northern California. Alameda County has the good fortune of having this hospital, located in its jurisdiction and has placed two measures on the ballot to support its construction program, Measure A and Measure B. -more-


Commentary: A Cancer Risk in West Berkeley

By L A WOOD
Tuesday January 29, 2008

For decades, the stench from airborne chemicals emitted by Pacific Steel Casting has been allowed to pollute the air downwind from its foundries with virtual impunity. Environmental changes have come slowly to this part of the city. While other industrial polluters are much smaller, or have moved away in response to the growing residential population in this district, PSC’s operations have been allowed to expand. Until recently, it appeared that nothing would ever change. -more-


Readers Take on Pedestrian Safety

Tuesday January 29, 2008

FOCUS ON AREA-WIDE -more-


Commentary: Crossing at Corners Might Be Dangerous

By Marc Sapir
Tuesday January 29, 2008

To treat the spate of pedestrian traffic deaths and accidents as a uniquely Berkeley problem is blind provincialism at its worst as the problem is widespread throughout the country. There have been system change efforts to make Berkeley streets safer including lowering of speed limits, protruding peninsulas to shorten the crossing time and distance, trials of flags and flashing ground lights, the change to one lane of traffic each way on Marin, the bicycle boulevards and so forth. Many people have expressed their opinions as to whether these and other changes contribute to or alleviate the risk to pedestrians. Like one letter writer I have no doubt that talking on cell phones while driving contributes to many accidents and there is ample data from the transportation safety people to back that up. Cell phone driving has to be stopped by state laws that are highly promoted and enforced. But, beyond that hazard (and drunk driving) do we understand the major causes of such accidents? -more-


Columns

Column: Homes For Sale — Maybe

By Susan Parker
Friday February 01, 2008

Fighting Measures A and B on next Tuesday’s ballot has pushed me over the edge. I’ve lost weight, acquired more wrinkles and lost my sense of humor. Sometimes I don’t even speak in coherent sentences. I’ve put my clothes on inside out, forgotten to zip my fly, backed out of the driveway without looking left or right for oncoming traffic. -more-


Column: Undercurrents: The Nexus Between Van Hools, Bus Rapid Transit

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday February 01, 2008

I am a longtime supporter of public transportation, and have been so since my youth when I used to ride around Oakland on AC Transit, often getting off and walking the last 10 blocks home along East 14th only because I thought it extravagant to pay the extra 10 cents it used to cost to go past 73rd Avenue. I was born too late to ride on the old Key System, but I fell in love with light rail when I worked, for a time, in San Jose, and thereafter thought that its reintroduction into Oakland would help ease the city’s traffic and parking problems in our city, and might also help to reinvigorate the downtrodden parts of International Boulevard east of High Street as well as West Oakland’s floundering business and commercial districts. -more-


The Rasputin of the Plant World

By Jane Powell
Friday February 01, 2008

Some 10 years ago I was out in my backyard pulling up ivy. My next door neighbor was doing the same. As we both neared the fence he muttered, “Gardening in California—it’s all about killing things.” He was right. -more-


Garden Variety: The Edifice Complex Strikes Again

By Ron Sullivan
Friday February 01, 2008

Speaking truth to power is all very well. Sometimes, though, I just lose my temper and feel the need to speak truth to cockamamie. -more-


About the House: Contracts and Contractors

By Matt Cantor
Friday February 01, 2008

Murphy must be in the contracting business. You know, the one who wrote that famous law: Whatever can go wrong, will go wrong. He (or she, we’ve never met in the flesh, although I’ve fallen victim to his/her epistemology a time or two) was either a contractor or the client of one for enough time to codify the law and its corollaries. -more-


Column: If You Mean It, Don’t Exploit Children

By Susan Parker
Tuesday January 29, 2008

A friend asks me to check out the website www.idealist.org. I click on their URL and up pops a paid plea from Children’s Hospital Oakland, (CHO). It asks for help distributing 50,000 “Vote Yes on Measure A” yard signs. That’s one helluva lot of soon-to-be-thrown-away plastic signs. -more-


Wild Neighbors: Running on Honeydew: Diet Secrets of the Argentine Ant

By Joe Eaton
Tuesday January 29, 2008

Not that I miss them, but I haven’t found any Argentine ants in the house this winter. I hesitate to consider this a permanent victory, though. They’re out there somewhere, biding their time. -more-


Arts & Events

Arts Calendar

Friday February 01, 2008

FRIDAY, FEB. 1 -more-


Magic Circle Hosts Annual Banquet

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Friday February 01, 2008

The Oakland Magic Circle, the oldest independent magic club in the United States west of the Mississippi, is hosting its annual Installation Banquet and Show this coming Tuesday at the Bjornson Hall at 2258 MacArthur Blvd. -more-


The Rasputin of the Plant World

By Jane Powell
Friday February 01, 2008

Some 10 years ago I was out in my backyard pulling up ivy. My next door neighbor was doing the same. As we both neared the fence he muttered, “Gardening in California—it’s all about killing things.” He was right. -more-


Garden Variety: The Edifice Complex Strikes Again

By Ron Sullivan
Friday February 01, 2008

Speaking truth to power is all very well. Sometimes, though, I just lose my temper and feel the need to speak truth to cockamamie. -more-


About the House: Contracts and Contractors

By Matt Cantor
Friday February 01, 2008

Murphy must be in the contracting business. You know, the one who wrote that famous law: Whatever can go wrong, will go wrong. He (or she, we’ve never met in the flesh, although I’ve fallen victim to his/her epistemology a time or two) was either a contractor or the client of one for enough time to codify the law and its corollaries. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday February 01, 2008

FRIDAY, FEB. 1 -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday January 29, 2008

TUESDAY, JAN. 29 -more-


‘Angel Street’ at the Masquers Playhouse

By Ken Bullock
Tuesday January 29, 2008

In a Victorian parlor, a querulous wife (Michelle Pond as Bella Manningham) feels things are slipping away from her grasp, though she’s unable to explain how or why, while her prepossessing husband (David Shirk as Jack Manningham), in quiet, gentle tones or with impatience, treats her as a child, whether a naughty one or a child unaware of the import of what she’s doing. -more-


Around the East Bay: McSweeny’s at Moe’s

Tuesday January 29, 2008

McSweeney’s, the San Francisco Mission District publishing concern founded by author Dave Eggers, is coming to Berkeley with a pizza party (they will provide the pizza) at Moe’s Books at 2476 Telegraph Ave. to celebrate the 50th issue of their monthly magazine, The Believer, on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Moe’s is one of 20 stores nationally where McSweeney’s is planning a celebration this week. “Any magazine today producing 50 issues is remarkable,” said Owen Hill of Moe’s. “McSweeney’s has a list of young, clever writers. The Believer is a good, open-ended interview/review magazine. We’ve hosted a pizza party before for their video magazine, and they're good at getting enough veggies for the vegetarians, enough meat for the carnivores!” -more-


Books: Oakland Duo Seek Breakthrough in Environmental Policy

By Michael Howerton
Tuesday January 29, 2008

A pair of Oakland writers have offered a compelling blueprint for the world’s energy ministers as they debate how best to address global warming and replace the Kyoto Protocol when it expires in 2012. -more-


Wild Neighbors: Running on Honeydew: Diet Secrets of the Argentine Ant

By Joe Eaton
Tuesday January 29, 2008

Not that I miss them, but I haven’t found any Argentine ants in the house this winter. I hesitate to consider this a permanent victory, though. They’re out there somewhere, biding their time. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday January 29, 2008

TUESDAY, JAN. 29 -more-