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Preview: Katja Heuzeroth in Concert May 13 in Santa Clara

James Roy MacBean
Thursday May 10, 2018 - 11:50:00 AM

In case you missed Island City Opera’s January 21 performance of Rimsky-Korsakov’s opera Kaschey, The Immortal, which featured German-born mezzo-soprano Katja Heuzeroth as a sensational Kascheyevna, the multi-dimensional daughter of the evil sorcerer Kaschey, you have a new opportunity to hear Katja Heuzeroth sing excerpts from this opera on May 13, 3:00-5:00, at the Triton Art Museum in Santa Clara. Katja Heuzeroth, who made her professional debut at the Bayreuth Festival at the age of 21, has recently relocated to the Bay Area. For more information on Katja Heuzeroth, see my review of Kaschey, The Immortal in these pages on January 21, 2018, as well as my Profile of Katja Heuzeroth in the February 4, 2018 issue. On May 13, not only will Katja Heuzeroth sing excerpts from this opera but she’ll also sing the mezzo-soprano role in Mozart’s Requiem conducted by Tamami Honma. In addition, the program offers a new work by Luis Andre Cobo, who was chosen along with Tamami Honma as Best of the Bay by San Francisco Classical Voice. This concert is well worth a trip to Santa Clara!


Senator Harris Cancels U.C. Berkeley Commencement Speech

Bay City News
Tuesday May 08, 2018 - 09:37:00 AM

United States Senator Kamala Harris, D-California, has canceled her scheduled appearance as the commencement speaker at this weekend's graduation at the University of California at Berkeley due to the ongoing statewide-University of California system employee's strike, the university announced on Monday.  

The university said Harris' cancellation comes while the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Service Unit Local 3299 has called for a speaker boycott during the 3-day strike that started Monday. The commencement is scheduled for Saturday.  

"Due to the ongoing labor dispute, Sen. Harris regretfully cannot attend and speak at this year's commencement ceremony at UC Berkeley," Harris' office said in a statement to the university. "She wishes the graduates and their families a joyous commencement weekend and success for the future. They are bright young leaders, and our country is counting on them."  

The university said Carol T. Christ, the first female chancellor in UC Berkeley history, will replace Harris.


Five-time Felon Charged in Berkeley Sexual Assault

Jeff Shuttleworth (BCN)
Tuesday May 08, 2018 - 09:39:00 AM

A five-time felon who was previously convicted of unlawful sexual intercourse was charged today with six felony counts for allegedly sexually assaulting a 15-year-old girl in Berkeley last month. Alphonzo McInnis, 27, of Berkeley, was arraigned today for the alleged April 19 sexual assault and is scheduled to return to court on Tuesday.  

McInnis, who is being held without bail, is charged with two counts of forcible rape of a minor, forcible sexual penetration on a minor, oral copulation of a minor, two counts of attempted second-degree robbery and kidnapping enhancements for his alleged attack on the girl.  

Berkeley police Officer Darren Kacalek wrote in a probable cause statement that on April 15 the 15-year-old girl had overslept and as she walked to school in the 1500 block of Addison Street near Sacramento Street a male suspect grabbed her from behind, pressed a gun into her side and told her not to scream or look at him or he would shoot her.  

Kacalek said the suspect then led the girl to the backyard of a nearby residence, where he groped her and repeatedly sexually assaulted her.  

Kacalek wrote that when the assault was finally over the suspect "wiped down the victim, seemingly in an attempt to remove evidence," and then told her to walk away east on Addison Street and not to look back at him.  

The girl then walked several blocks to Berkeley High School, where she told school staff what happened to her and got assistance, Kacalek said.  

DNA evidence later connected McInnis to the sexual assault and he was arrested in the 1900 block of University Avenue in Berkeley at about 2:15 p.m. last Thursday, according to Kacalek.  

McInnis also was arrested for an alleged attempted sexual assault on an 18-year-old University of California at Berkeley student near a dormitory in the 2400 block of College Avenue at about 4:30 a.m. on April 28 but the Alameda County District Attorney's Office didn't charge him for that incident.  

Kacalek wrote that after the second incident, "due to the rarity of these types of attacks, I believed them to be related, as the method of operation was very similar."  

Prosecutors say that McInnis was convicted of unlawful sexual intercourse in Contra Costa County in 2008. They also say McInnis' most recent conviction was in Alameda County on Jan. 28, 2015, for second-degree robbery for robbing six gas stations on University Avenue in Berkeley.  

In addition, prosecutors say McInnis has three other prior convictions in Contra Costa County: for second-degree burglary in 2011, possession of a firearm by a felon in 2013 and grand theft of a firearm in 2012.


Four Men Arrested for Three Unrelated Berkeley Robberies

Jeff Shuttleworth (BCN)
Tuesday May 08, 2018 - 09:37:00 AM

Four suspects have been arrested for a string of three unrelated robberies in Berkeley in a four-hour period on Sunday afternoon and evening but a fifth suspect is still at large, police said. The first robbery occurred at the Kathmandu Market and Deli in the 2500 block of Telegraph Avenue at about 3:30 p.m. on Sunday when a suspect entered the business, stole a can of soda and punched an employee in the face when the employee confronted him, according to Berkeley police.  

The suspect, later identified as 48-year-old homeless man Kenyatta Massey, was stopped by police nearby at Telegraph Avenue and Haste Street and was arrested on suspicion of robbery and resisting arrest, police said. In the second incident, which occurred at about 7:11 p.m., a male victim was sitting at a bus top in front of the Bank of America at 2129 Shattuck Ave. when two suspects approached him, according to police.  

One of the suspects asked the victim about his phone and then both suspects suddenly attacked him and took his computer bag and phone, police said.  

A male witness tried to intervene but he was punched in the face by one of the suspects, according to police.  

The witness's girlfriend then pepper-sprayed the suspect and both suspects fled ran westbound on Center Street while two good Samaritans chased them, police said.  

Police arrested one of the suspects, later identified as 28-year-old Stanley Trotter, nearby in the 2000 block of Center Street, but the second suspect, who hasn't yet been notified, fled northbound on Center Street and remains at large, according to police.  

Trotter was arrested on suspicion of robbery, giving false identification and on a warrant for another case, police said.  

Berkeley robbery detectives ask anyone who has information about the robbery or the suspect who's still at large to call police at (510) 981-5742.  

In the third robbery, which was reported to police at 7:32 p.m. on Sunday, a male victim told police that he met a woman through a social media website but when he went to meet her in the 1900 block of Haste Street, he was confronted by two men.  

The victim tried to run away but he was tackled by one of the suspects, who physically assaulted him until he gave up his property, police said.  

The victim eventually managed to escape and responding officers were able to arrest a suspect who was later identified as Christian Wallace 22, of Berkeley, according to police.  

While officers were speaking with the victim, a police dispatcher got a call about a suspicious person who was hiding in a silver car in a parking lot on the 1900 block of Haste Street, police said.  

Responding officers then found the second suspect, later identified as Darrell Finney 27, of Berkeley, hiding in a parked car, according to police.  

Both Finney and Wallace were found in possession of some of the victim's property, police said.  

The two men are being held on suspicion of robbery and receiving stolen property. 

 

 

 

### JeffShuttleworth0644p05/07/18 

CONTACT: Berkeley police spokesman Sgt. Andrew Frankel (510) 981-5780 or (510) 812-4082 cellphone 

Copyright � 2018 by Bay City News, Inc. -- Republication, Rebroadcast or any other Reuse without the express written consent of Bay City News, Inc. is prohibited. 

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People's Park as Seen by a Neighbor (PUBLIC COMMENT)

Marcia Poole
Sunday May 06, 2018 - 10:51:00 PM

Thank you for this week's column. I live a stone's throw from People's Park and never have had a problem with the people there. I know who stands on the southwest corner. I also know that drug dealers come in from all around and the students walk or drive by, get their product and move on. I get to see it all and so do the police from UC and Berkeley. Since they do nothing about it and consider it a day's work, so do the neighbors. It is condoned by the police. The neighbors know that, because we have been told by the police that nothing is happening. We live and let live and violence is rarely a component of that park, yet it does erupt now and then on the people that hang out in it and do business there. I do not know of any neighbor who has had anything happen to them in my 28 years of residency near the park. 

I just wanted to send you a youtube video put out by Robin from the Here/There First They Came For the Homeless encampment...It is very dark visually in the beginning, but you can hear Jesse and Mike Zint quite well on it. It becomes much lighter and brighter as Robin shows the real star, Ani, the 82 year-old nun who lives at the encampment. She is great and is taken care of by Stacy and the fellow campers. They really care for and love her and she is helped with almost everything by these saints. She still lives in misery, as you will hear, bu/t it is eased by those around her. 


Early Voting in State Races Starts Monday

Supriya Yelimeli (BCN)
Sunday May 06, 2018 - 10:49:00 PM

Monday is the first day California residents can vote in the June 5 statewide primary election, San Mateo County election officials announced. 

Every registered voter will receive a vote-by-mail ballot this year due to the California Voter's Choice Act, according to election officials.  

Ballots returned by mail must be postmarked on or before Election Day on June 5 and received by June 8 to be accepted. 

"Vote Centers" will replace traditional polling centers to offer voter registration, multilingual assistance and disabled access voting options, election officials said. 

To vote in the June 5 primary, voters must be registered by May 21, according to California Secretary of State election information.


Opinion

Editorials

It's Not the Park, It's the People in It

Becky O'Malley
Friday May 04, 2018 - 01:30:00 PM

No need to bother with a whole new editorial this week, because it’s Groundhog Day All Over Again, merging clichés to save space.

This week, the target of opportunity is People’s Park—no, that’s wrong. It’s not People’s Park, it’s the Park’s People.

Self-righteous Berkeleyans have been falling all over themselves in available comment venues to tell the world how thrilled they are that Town and Gown plan to join forces to evict those sotted and smelly rogues from the prime piece of real estate just there for the taking to the south of the institution formerly known as Cal. That’s the school which has in recently years expropriated even the name of the town it’s in: Berkeley. 

Here, first, it’s time for the disclaimer. As a Berkeley town citizen, I serve on the city’s Landmark Preservation Commission, appointed by Mayor Jesse Arreguin and serving at his sole discretion. The tract in question happens to be a Berkeley City Landmark based on its history, but here I’m deliberately silent on how that could or should affect the announced development project. This is because my appointer and his city attorney suggested that I should not be able to vote on landmarking U.C.’s Campanile Way and its significant viewshed because I’d previously expressed an opinion on an earlier landmark application on a similar topic. 

I disagree, but that one I ducked by getting a substitute. I don’t need to do that on this topic according to legal advice I’ve received. 

My comments today are not on the site’s history, but on its current demographics and the politics which flow from them. Landmark status is beside the point. 

One more time: It’s not People’s Park, it’s the Park’s People.  

Simply put, there are usually a whole lotta funky dudes hanging out on the block bounded by Bowditch, Haste and Dwight. They drink alcohol, they sell, buy and consume other drugs both legal and illegal, some of them have surly dogs for whom they don’t always clean up, sometimes they sleep there, sometimes they punch or even stab each other. 

Gross, right? 

Many activities on the site are illegal from time to time. Many denizens stay within legal boundaries, but are obviously out of money or of their minds or both. 

Let’s just assume, arguendo, that the property was owned by someone other than the Big U. Would the City of Berkeley allow a private property owner to continue to tolerate illegal behavior? Especially if the private owner had a private army with the scope and power of the U.C. Police. Don’t think so. 

It’s well within the English-speaking tradition, at least dating back to the 17th century and probably before, that every town had its skid row. Online Free Dictionary: “skid row. A squalid district inhabited by derelicts and vagrants.” 

In San Francisco, that would be the Tenderloin. In downtown Oakland when I worked there it was 12th Street, but now that’s been largely Urban Renewed away. And in Berkeley, in the 40-some years I’ve been a South Side homeowner, our Skid Row has been People’s Park. 

This was not true in my first iteration here, in the late fifties. Then, the area in question was semi-seedy student rooming houses—my junior year room was in the attic of a brown shingle a block away on the corner of Channing and Telegraph. 

What changed? Primarily, while I was away in Ann Arbor in the 60s, my alma mater took a whole block away from private owners by eminent domain and tore down the houses. 

We will cast a legal veil over what happened after that, but let’s just say that today’s Skid Row occupancy here, though still known as People’s Park, is a wasteland of U.C.’s own devising, despite the best efforts of many volunteers in the intervening years to turn it into a green and pleasant land. 

Allowing the block to become Berkeley’s very own skid row is a well-known technique called Demolition by Neglect. The way this works, if property owners would like to re-develop a site but are prohibited from destroying what’s already there by tenant’s rights, historic preservation, zoning or other legal impediments, they just let existing improvements fall apart over time. Case closed. 

This is not to say that all the people currently hanging out at the Park are bad actors. Some of them are just the traditional down-and-out, now also findable in a park near you. What’s been unique about People’s Park is the tolerance by UC of easily observed lawbreaking of a type not allowed either by the City of Berkeley or by self-policed residents in other encampments of the unhoused which have sprung around town,  

You could call it land banking, I suppose. Fifty or so years down the road, U.C. still hopes to get the buildable site they so coveted back when. They’re crying poor—no place to build dorms, despite a series of costly construction boondoggles like the Memorial Stadium extravaganza (don’t say we didn’t warn you about that one!) and the fancy new swimming complex.  

Now, as then, the odor of civic collusion is in the air. Local officials “enthusiastically” support evicting the unsightly unwashed from their designated domain in favor of clean and cheerful students. In preparation for this, new laws are being contemplated for preventing vagrants from popping up elsewhere around Berkeley, but this just in—it won’t work.  

People’s Park might be gone, but the People will still be here, somewhere. Check out Willard (formerly Ho Chi Minh) Park as a likely new destination, or perhaps Civic Center (Provo) Park.  

Right now I’m opening the betting pool on whether or not the proposed housing development (sorry, “public-private partnership”) will actually make room for the undeserving poor as backers claim. I’ll take the hedge position myself.  

As I said last week, People have to Be somewhere, even those annoying People that Berkeley (in both senses of the name) wants to banish from the Park. 


The Editor's Back Fence

Don't miss this

Friday May 04, 2018 - 04:29:00 PM

More to Come Tomorrow

Friday May 04, 2018 - 04:27:00 PM

Too many submissions, too little time. Thanks, everyone. Bob Burnett is off this week.


Public Comment

Speech by Lord Singh of Wimbledon (Cross Bench), in the U.K. House of Lords Debate on the ‘National Security Situation’ on 19 April 2018

Lord Singh of Wimbledon
Saturday May 12, 2018 - 10:55:00 AM

My Lords, it is a pleasure to follow the noble Earl, Lord Attlee. I speak from a Sikh perspective and I offer my apologies if what I say is out of sync with today’s 19th and 20th-century power-bloc politics.

Sikh teachings on the prevention of conflict almost parallel the preamble to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, formulated after the horror of the ​Second World War, and they stress the dignity and equality of all members of our one human family. They also legitimise the use of military force only as a last recourse when all other means have failed. I believe that we and other great powers have pushed the declaration—the key to true peace and security—to one side in our pursuit of supposed “national interest”, using smaller countries as pawns in power-bloc politics. The conflict in Syria is a case study of the futility and cruel effect of such policies on innocent lives.

Following his election, US President Donald Trump made clear his desire to withdraw from international conflicts. Anxious to preserve our special relationship with the USA, our Prime Minister dutifully echoed him, saying that we will have to stop being the world’s policeman. A few weeks back, President Trump made clear his desire to extricate the US from the conflict in Syria and was expected to do so with an impressive military flourish. 

We are then expected to believe that President Assad, having secured control of much of the country, suddenly decides to launch a chemical attack on a children’s hospital. It could be true, although it sounds implausible, but it gave the US President an opportunity to withdraw from the conflict flourishing his military might. France and Britain dutifully backed him in a combined military strike against Assad. President Trump predictably tweeted “Mission accomplished”. It is sad that our PM should feel duty-bound to back military action prior to any investigation. I thought that it was only in Alice in Wonderland that we had the saying, “Sentence first—verdict afterwards”. 

I find the propaganda in government statements and in the media to justify the military action morally questionable and sometimes hypocritical. We have grown used to the convention of calling countries we do not like “regimes”. Now, to justify action and our intervention, President Assad is widely referred to as a monster. Our PM rightly says that the conflict in Syria can be ended only through negotiations, but it does not help negotiations to call someone a monster. I agree that Assad is no angel and is, like many leaders we have propped up in the Middle East, a brutal dictator. But we should always also remember that his troubles began when, on “humanitarian grounds”, he let in nearly a million Sunni Muslims from the earlier conflict in Iraq. Now, we are being told that the strike against him was on humanitarian grounds. 

Are we really saying that it is morally okay to kill and maim the people of Syria with bullets, bombs and missiles, but somehow morally wrong to do so with chemical weapons? I think that our Prime Minister was more honest—but wrong—when, as justification, she said that the action was “in Britain’s national interest”. The conflict in Syria is also in Iran’s national strategic interest and that of the USA, Russia, Israel, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and other global players, including ISIS, anxious to have a so-called strategic presence in the Middle East regardless of the horrendous consequences, suffered by innocents. In the quagmire of the Middle East, and in trying to punish Assad, we have also helped ISIS in its beheadings and amputations, not only of the people of Syria but of innocent aid workers. ​ 

I am saddened by the hypocrisy of our Government and the Governments of the USA and France. While wringing their hands about the monster Assad’s supposed chemical weapon attack on little children, they have all in the last two or three of weeks signed billion-dollar deals with Saudi Arabia to export arms for use in Yemen, so that Saudi Arabia can strut its military might in the Middle East with the continued bombing of men, women and little children in Yemen. Such displays of machismo were the norm in the 19th and 20th centuries, leading to two world wars and countless other conflicts in the pursuit of national or strategic interest and to the continuing death and suffering of millions. An important aspect of strategic action is trade: it is important, but trade should never trump human rights. I was appalled when a Minister openly said that when we talk trade with China we should not raise issues of human rights. The same sentiments have been raised by government officials in the sale of weapons to Saudi Arabia to destroy lives in Yemen. 

It is not only the West that has lost its moral direction. The same immoral policies are being pursued by Russia, China and others: 80% of the weaponry flooding the world today and fuelling countless conflicts is supplied by members of the so-called Security Council. The whole concept of supposed strategic interest has, over the centuries, been shown to be deeply flawed and a recipe for continuing conflict. A Christian hymn reminds us: 

“They enslave their children’s children who make compromise with sin”. 

It is a truth echoed in Sikh teachings and in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The only strategic interest worth pursuing is respect for human rights and social justice for all and for future generations in our highly interdependent world. 


Lord Indarjit Singh, Lord Singh of Wimbledon (Cross Bench), is the brother of frequent Planet commenter Jagjit Singh.


Vote NO on Deceptive Regional Measure 3

Zelda Bronstein
Friday May 04, 2018 - 03:12:00 PM

On the June 5 ballot, Regional Measure 3 asks voters in nine Bay Area counties to approve a $3 increase in tolls on all the region’s bridges but the Golden Gate “to reduce auto and truck traffic, relieve crowding on BART, unclog freeway bottlenecks and improve bus, ferry, BART and commuter rail service.” Its supporters, who include the Bay Area Council, the Silicon Valley Leadership Group, SPUR, Facebook, and YIMBY Action, call it “a bold, coordinated, region-wide traffic relief plan.”

RM3 is bold all right: it’s an audacious con that dedicates $4.5 billion to a hodgepodge of disconnected projects that will bring the Bay Area little traffic relief.

Its critics include Rep. Mark DeSaulnier (D-Concord). In a stinging op-ed, DeSaulnier calls RM3 “a highly flawed initiative born out of dysfunctional policy-making.” To be sure, the Bay Area “urgently needs new investment in transportation,” but RM3, he says, “is not the answer.”

For one thing, the measure discriminates against people living in Alameda and Contra Costa Counties. “East Bay residents make up half of the affected bridge commuters,” DeSaulnier writes, but the money allocated by RM3 constitutes a “transfer of wealth from the East Bay to Silicon Valley.” 

The irony is that RM3 has also garnered strong objections from Silicon Valley public officials. “’I think it’s fundamentally unfair,’” Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors President Joe Simitian told the Daily Post. Simitian notes that in 2016, Santa Clara County voters raised their sales tax by a half-cent for transportation projects, and that in 2017, the state Legislature raised the gas tax by 12 cents a gallon—increases that he favored. 

“’An inside deal’” is how Mountain View Mayor Lenny Siegel describes RM3. “’[O]ur cities were not given an opportunity to suggest have the money might be spent.” The result, Siegel told the Post, is that “’once again, money is going to projects that don’t address our commute problem in North County.’” 

One of those ineffectual projects is “express lanes,” aka toll lanes. RM3 allocates $300 million for new toll lanes on Highway 101 in San Francisco and San Mateo Counties, and on I-80, I-680, and SR 84. As Siegel observes, toll lanes “discriminate against drivers who can’t afford an extra toll, and [they] don’t adequately discourage driving alone.” Indeed, if anything, toll lanes encourage people to drive

Even if you avoid the toll lanes, by 2025, DeSaulnier points out, typical commuters would be paying about $700 more each year but “see little to no improvement” in their commutes. 

Actually, it could be worse than $700. RM3 authorizes the Bay Area Toll Authority to raise bridge tolls more than $3, if the region’s cost of living goes up, or if BATA’s debt service requires higher tolls. As of last December, the agency’s portfolio included variable rate bonds worth $2.1 billion. In 2010, BATA paid a “wolf pack of banks” $104 million in bridge tolls after some of its credit swaps went bad. 

Which raises another dubious aspect of RM3: what its supporters call the measure’s “robust public accountability and oversight provisions.” We may assume that those provisions are intended to assuage well-founded voter skepticism about the ability of BATA/MTC and BART—which RM3 slates for nearly a billion dollars of the new tolls—to administer public monies. As DeSaulnier writes, 

The Bay Bridge, the Metropolitan Transportation Commission headquarters acquisition and renovation, and the Transbay Terminal are projects that have involved billions of cost-overruns and undermined confidence in governments’ ability to plan and prioritize. 

RM3’s oversight provisions include the creation of an “Independent Office of the BART Inspector General.” This is the Legislature’s idea of independence: BART would nominate three persons to the Governor, who would then appoint one of them to a four-year term. In its first year of operation, the office would get $1 million of bridge tolls and, if BATA wishes, more in subsequent years. So much for “robust public accountability and oversight.” 

It’s time—actually, well past time—we demanded real accountability from MTC. 

Please vote NO on Regional Measure 3. 

 

 


U.C. Berkeley's Imperfect Housing Proposal

Harry Brill
Friday May 04, 2018 - 03:17:00 PM

I hope you read last week's Planet about the advocate citizen organization, Save Berkeley's Neighborhood, filing a law suit against UC Berkeley for its decision to admitting a substantial numbers of students despite budget cuts without providing the required housing. Among the major concerns is that student homelessness will increase and the already high rents will skyrocket even more. And the budget cuts will adversely affect the student body.

U.C. Berkeley's disinterest in providing student housing has a long history. According to a housing task force report, UC Berkeley offers the fewest beds to students in the nine campus UC Berkeley system. Only 22 percent of undergraduate student and 9 percent of graduate students enjoy campus housing. In contrast, the system wide average is 38.1 percent for undergraduates and 19.6 percent for graduate students.

Just announced is the University decision to pay attention to student housing concerns. Acknowledging its many years of its hand-off policy, UC plans to build housing on People's Park. The plan is to build housing for 1000 students and some additional units for the homeless. The more housing, the better. However, this development is nowhere near as glowing as the University administrators would like you to believe.

Here is the catch. According to one university spokesperson, although UC will provide the land, it will not fund, operate or manage the facility. In other words, the housing will be completely privatized, and accordingly, rents will be very high and the rules for operating the new housing will be determined by the private sector. So the private owners more than the students will owe a big thanks to UC Berkeley's Board of Regents and the University's administrators. 

The progressive approach, which would best serve the interests of the students and the community, is housing that is funded, operated, and managed with student input by the University and including consultation with the community. Although the Administration claims that it intends to consult with the community, don't believe it. The reason that the university is being sued is because of Cal's current refusal to sit down with local residents to discuss issues that concern students and the community. 

To understand why the University favors the private business sector just take a look at who sits on the UC's system's ruling body, the Board of Regents. The members of the Board, who are appointed by the Governor for a 12 year term include investors who feel closest to developers and the financial and banking industry. Among its members is Senator Feinstein's husband, Richard Blum. His investment firm has an exclusive contract to sell United States Postal Service Property. Faculty members who are on the Regent board are allowed to participate in discussions of the Board, but they cannot vote. A student can vote, but serves for only one year. Significantly, those who are most directly affected by Regent decisions, faculty and students, have only a marginal status. It is axiomatic that democracy mainly for the wealthy and well connected are at the expense of the students and the community. Accordingly, attempting to make substantive gains on behalf of those who will be adversely impacted serves also the task of extending democracy to all.


Oh Hypocrisies, Oh City Government

Steve Martinot
Saturday May 05, 2018 - 10:23:00 PM

City Council had “yet another” special meeting on the "issue" of the homeless. It happened on Thursday, April 26, 2018. Unfortunately, the council had neither the courage nor the wisdom to make it a truly special meeting in any sense other than its timing. If ever there was a need for the city to step out of its “Iron Shoes” and its tunnel vision, it was this meeting. 

About 150 people showed up to speak on renewed ordinances that would provide ways for the police to harass and attack the homeless by "regulating" sidewalks and encampments. Several speakers mentioned that we had gone through this two years ago when Linda Maio proposed her set of rules – Linda’s Laws. They were never implemented because, over a two year period, the city could never get it together to provide storage space for homeless people’s possessions. 

This new set of regulations (Sophie’s codes) would be less stringent with respect to sidewalks, but not less hypocritical. Indeed, the council’s compulsion to pat itself on the back was so pronounced that, about 20 minutes after public comment ended, only a few people were left in the audience. 

When you take the hypocrisies of two years ago, let them fester without acting positively and forthrightly with respect to the human rights violations that homelessness itself constitutes, and put more hypocrisies on top of that, it piles up, like a garbage dump. 

 

Hypocrisy #1

The proposed code on “sidewalk” life says “sidewalks … [are] for the use of of the entire community.” These codes are to “ensure the entire community can access sidewalks and public spaces.” These statements are in bad faith because they do not say what they really mean. The entire community already has access. What the code really wants to say is that “the entire community must always have access to all public space,” and can’t if there are homeless people living and sleeping on it. Bad faith is a form of hypocrisy. 

To reserve the right, as a political organization, to kick certain people off a parcel of public space is to make a political decision about who can use that parcel, which means to reserve it for people other than those using it to live and sleep on. No law gives government the power to divide public space that way. No law gives government the power to give priority to the use of that parcel of public space to anyone other than the person using it. To claim that power is to belie and abuse the term “the entire community.” 

 

Hypocrisy #2

In Boise, Idaho, in 2015, some homeless people sued the city to stop it from raiding their encampments (Bell vs. Boise). The city had an ordinance that said it was illegal to sleep on public land. The US Dept. of Justice filed a brief supporting the homeless suit. (Cf. my article, “Housing is a Human Right,” in Berkeley Planet.

The DOJ argued that under the 8th Amendment, if the city cannot provide shelter for all, then those left unsheltered must have access to public land. To abridge this access by law constitutes “cruel and unusual punishment.” Because a human being must live somewhere, and sleep somewhere, their doing so can not be punished. That would be to outlaw what is beyond their control. The need to sleep refers to existence rather than conduct. It cannot be outlawed. It would mean to criminalize a person’s status as homeless, rather than any conduct of theirs. Poverty is a status, and cannot be punished."To criminalize" a biological status means to send police to stop people from existing, and arrest them if they resist. 

In short, the 8th Amendment “limits what can be made criminal and punished as such.” If the city cannot provide shelter for all homeless people in the city, then it cannot bar them from sleeping or living on public land. 

The government’s brief in the Boise case actually waxes humanitarian, affirming a broad government interest in ensuring that justice is applied fairly, regardless of wealth or status. It refers to government "interest" in breaking the cycle of poverty and criminalization wherever it exists. If there are no constructive alternatives to criminalizing encampment communities of the homeless on public land, then those homeless people have to be left alone. 

Yet the council considers this rehearsal of Linda’s Laws to be humanitarian. The council says "humanitarian" while doing the opposite. 

 

Hypocrisy #3

This council meeting on 4/26/18 was a special meeting called to discuss Sophie’s codes. (Sophie’s Choice?) It was held in a middle school auditorium, where there is more room than in the dinky council chamber at city hall. Yet it proceeded as if still in the dinky council chamber, as if nothing was special. 

It could have been a special meeting. The Mayor expected over a hundred people to show up, as evinced by the choice of venue. He could have adopted a special format, one that would have been more democratic – as opposed to the "normal" autocratic nature of council meetings. In "normal" council meetings, the people line up and speak monologues into the air, given only a minute to give "input" to the policy-makers. Without dialogue, there is no opportunity to enter into the policy making process. Dialogue, which is at the core of policy-making in a democratic ethos, is reserved for the councilmembers, who engage in it as an elite. 

When they line up, each person is limited to one minute, which is insufficient to make an intelligent presentation on an issue. One can round up other "minutes" or from other people, which means those others are then barred from speaking. To restrict what people say to a minute it to abandon the possibility of “free expression.” In other words, the people are excluded and disenfranchised by the structure of these meetings. 

This meeting would have been the perfect time to try some creative transformation of procedure. With so people having come to participate, a form of organization allowing dialogue between constituencies and councilmembers would have represented some real progress toward including the public. Extending speaker time, creating a way in which to engage individual councilmembers in dialogue, providing the possibility of changing a delegate’s mind through discussion would have been earthshaking. It would have concretized the humanism and compassion and equality and equity for which the City Council is always patting itself on the back. 

Instead, we got the usual elitist autocracy. The council sat up on a platform, looking down on the people, separated by height from any possible equitable exchange. 

 

Hypocrisy #4

Speaking of autocracy, it actually came to pass that the mayor squelched the “free expression” of one speaker. 

The council’s "sidewalk" proposal states that these new regulations will “protect Constitutional rights, including freedom of expression.” Indeed, it repeats the expression, “freedom of expression,” 3 times, as something that will be upheld and guaranteed in this “sidewalk screed.” 

Yet during this City Council meeting, one man went to the podium and spoke about some irregularities in the way these rules and regulations were being conceived, written, and proposed. And the mayor would not let him finish. His accusation to the council was that these new rules for using sidewalks were written by people who had never been homeless, and did not understand what it was like to be homeless, while nevertheless telling the homeless who to be. He still had a half a minute on the clock, and the mayor cut him off, silencing his accusation. It is atrocious that people can only speak from that little cell of time called a "minute." But to then prevent someone from saying what they have to say about the issues and about the irresponsibility of the politicians who present it is to add insult to injury. That is the utmost hypocrisy. 

In other words, there will be nice rhetoric about “freedom of expression,” but it will be empty, and spoken in bad faith. And as the Mayor sought to silence this man, the councilmembers just sat there. None had the courage or forthrightness to say, “hey, let him speak, he still has time.” 

 

Hypocrisy #5

Well, the council pretends that it is composed of adults. Yet it acts like a child who, when faced with a misbehaving toy, hits it or throws it against the wall. Sometimes the child will scream, while hitting the toy, as if to say, “be something else, I want you to be something else.” 

Homelessness is an objective, existential condition imposed on people by a confluence of economic process and a priority of property rights. The former is beyond their control, but the latter is used to throw human rights in the garbage. 

The City Council doesn’t like the fact that the homeless exist. So it hits out at them.with these little systems of rules to hurt them, maybe thinking that by hurting them, they will become different. These “sidewalk screeds” are simply a way to hit at something for its existence. 

Perhaps out of impotence, or perhaps out of disdain, or perhaps because these councilmembers are really just spoiled brats, they hit at the homeless without changing the situation (like giving them homes). With these rules, they hit at the existence of the homeless, and say, like the child, “be something else.” 

Faced with somethng in the world that they don’t like, they throw a tantrum, a quiet rhetorical, but militarized tantrum. 

 

Hypocrisy #6

The city’s “sidewalk screed” states that living in one place on a sidewalk for three days will be considered an encampment, and dealt with as such. That means the cops will come and remove the person and confiscate their possessions, those things that they need to survive in their unprotected state under the elements. And the council has the audacity to call this possibility "humanitarian." 

The section of the codes they did not discuss at this session had to do with procedures for removing encampments. Encampments are the element of community that constitute the social dimension of homeless survival. It is their way of defending themselves against city regulations that would throw them in the garbage. And this is where the council gets politically autocratic. There is nothing in its “endampment screed” that even vaguely pays attention to democracy. Nothing mentions “due process,” that Constitutional right that sits at the very center of democracy. 

Before an encampment is closed, there should be meetings involving the city, the members of the encampment, and people from the surrounding community, to talk to each other about the encampment, about the conditions of homelessness, and about what should be done by government that would be truly humanitarian. 

Sophie’s codes show no interest in that. That is Sophie’s Choice. 

********* 

The most egregious hypocrisy revealed by the City Council was its self-flattery, its ability to crow about this plan being humanitarian, and compassionate. The council thus lies to itself. It doesn’t deal with the homeless, nor try to put an end to the condition of homelessness, while at the same time making their situation worse – even against the US Constitution. It may be less strengent than Linda’s Laws, but its motivation and implementation are the same, a way of hitting at the existence of the homeless. It is a cop-oriented spoiled brat approach to what is a problem only for homeless people, which the city wishes only to make worse, rather than resolve positively for the real humans who reside there in their tents. It even resists providing portapotties and water, so it can then hold biological functions against these people. 

If the city has no positive solution, it should just get out of the way, and let those alone who have to form community as a basic dimension of survival. 


The Time is Ripe: Expand Public Housing

Harry Brill
Saturday May 05, 2018 - 10:38:00 PM

The Princeton professor, Matthew Desmond, in his detailed study of evictions, found that in a recent year (2016) at least 2,300,000 Americans - a rate of four every minute --were evicted. The reason for saying "at least" is that the estimate fails to include the many evictions that were not officially reported. Undoubtedly, many who were evicted became homeless as well as poorer as a result of a lack of affordable housing. 

Although several cities and states have been making a sincere effort to provide affordable housing for the homeless, their ability to do so is very limited. Only the federal government has the budget to provide substantially more affordable housing than even the most well intention communities. During the great depression of the 1930s the federal government enacted a massive public housing program despite the aggressive lobbying campaign by real estate interests. Currently there are about 1.3 million public housing units for low income individuals and families. 

But clearly the tide has turned against public housing since the election of Ronald Reagan as president. Reagan was committed to turning the clock backward. You might recall Reagan's most infamous comment - "Government is not a solution to our problem,. Government is the problem". Translated, he meant that government should not spend any of its resources on serving the poor or working people. To severely limit the ability of cities to address issues related to high levels of poverty, Reagan reduced federal aid to big cities, which accounted for 22 percent of their budgets, to only 6 percent. He also cut the budget for public housing and Section 8 rent subsidies in half.  

George Bush and his son, who are Republicans, both served as President. They followed the same footsteps as Ronald Reagan. And President Clinton, who is a Democrat, echoed a similar ideology. He cheerfully announced that "the era of big government is over". Among Clinton's unfortunate decisions was to sign the welfare reform law which slashed cash assistance to the poor. The number who are now receiving benefits declined from 13 million to 3 million, which has certainly increased the homeless population with children and their mothers. 

Generally speaking it has become public policy not only to resist increasing the supply of public housing. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), which is the agency responsible for public housing, has been committed to reducing the number of units. Because of the aging and neglect of many thousands of public housing units, making minor repairs is no longer adequate. Instead, many public housing units have been allowed to deteriorate. Since they have become virtually uninhabitable, demolishing rather than repairing them is a lot cheaper.  

Between 10,000 to 15,000 units are being demolished every year. So instead of providing those on the streets with low cost housing , the consequences of demolishing these units has increased the homeless population. That was certainly not among the motives for legislating the public housing program. 

It should be no surprise that President Trump's recent housing proposal would make a difficult situation for many tenants even worse. He has proposed increasing the percentage of income that tenants pay from 30 to 35 percent. Also, the president issued an executive order to encourage various agencies to require those who benefit from federal programs to work.  

Trump appointed the very conservative Ben Carson to head HUD. Carson's specific recommendation with regard to the work requirement is that public housing tenants as well as other beneficiaries of government programs be required to work up to 32 hours per week. He also proposed tripling the rent of the poorest public housing tenants, which would put nearly one million youngsters at the risk of homelessness. And although Carson got stuck in an elevator at a Miami housing project during a HUD sponsored tour, it still did not dissuade him from recommending a cut in the housing budget. Unquestionably, Trump had appointed a highly principle politician! 

Some social programs, including Medicare, Medicaid, and Food Stamps, have successfully captured the attention of progressives and many members of the public. However, that has not been the case for public housing even by those who are very much involved in homelessness issues. For public housing has been stigmatized as highly dangerous and undesirable by the real estate industry, their allies, and the mass media. It is immensely important that progressives overcome this hurdle and reeducate the public. Despite many obstacles, public housing currently houses over 2.6 million residents. The federal government could and should provide affordable housing to many millions more


Cops for Sale! - Equipment for Free! Black Lives Matter, but Yoga Pants Matter More

Carol Denney
Saturday May 05, 2018 - 10:34:00 PM

Lululemon paid more than $72,198.58 straight into Berkeley police officers' pockets over the fall of 2017. And they're still paying. It was up to $39,934.71 by March of this year for the sometimes two officers twiddling their thumbs right outside their 4th Street where doubling the average price of leggings turned out to be a bright idea worth over two billion dollars in annual revenue last year alone. 

Apple is in on the game, too; in addition to their own security guards, they spent over $33,908.75 through 2016's holiday season on 4th Street. They've had some spectacular thefts of laptops and high-end equipment, and although it might be hard to make the same case about the worth of sports bras and leggings, both companies measure their net worth in the billions. 

But it goes without saying that they can afford their own security without the sweet deal they're getting from the Berkeley Police Department, the brain child of new Police Chief Andrew Greenwood and presumably City Manager Dee Ridley-Williams, who have apparently no objection to bumping what used to be around $5,000 in holiday security costs under previous administrations up into the $100,000 range because, after all, it's Christmas. 

It must be the sweetest beat in town - voluntary overtime hovering at around $100 per hour in short or in eight-hour shifts watching the yoga crowd wander by. And the city's police equipment is free. No charge for the sparkling new police cars, the wear and tear on police uniforms and equipment. Apparently these city resources, according to department invoices, are free. 

Which leaves a neighborhood nearby that lost three young black men to gunfire within the last ten years wondering - could we just have the cop cars? And maybe the uniforms? Okay, the police radios, too. The police, well, we're not so sure they're all that useful in our neighborhood without some accountability, but until they boot the Copley decision could we just have the empty police cars sitting nearby? 

Paying eight hours of $100 overtime day after day won't really work for our budget. But we already paid for the city's equipment through our taxes so hey, if the police cars and other equipment are free, send us the sign-up sheet. The public records act request which asked if this new policy reflected an assessment regarding community-wide priorities and needs came up with zero, so this 4th Street prioritization hits us right in the Black Lives Matter. 


Experts Discover Plenty of Room to Build on Berkeley Campus!
[Satire]

Carol Denney
Friday May 04, 2018 - 03:21:00 PM

"We're so relieved," expressed one Southside resident upon hearing about on-campus opportunities for housing. Many neighbors had worried about the threat to People's Park's important provision of open space in one of the most dense neighborhoods in the Bay Area, not to mention its city landmark status. "We really didn't want to revisit the street battles of long ago." 

The Botanical Garden, for instance, has 34 acres of open space compared to People's Park's lonely 2.8, and could harbor more than one building, even several stories, of student, faculty, or general housing without disturbing the wonderful living museum comprising the gardens. 

And that's not all! The Chancellor's Esplanade is a green expanse between Tolman Hall and the chancellor's residence "shaded by towering Italian stone pine trees" which currently serves as a popular spot for ceremonies and could easily situate a small apartment building on its acreage without disturbing the surrounding landscape. 

But there's more! The Crescent or Springer Gateway area, built in 1964, has even more acreage than People's Park, and could easily situatelow-rise, convenient-to-BART student housing while preserving both the view and the pedestrian walkways. The Eucalyptus Grove is even bigger; just as Chancellor Christ is suggesting a portion of People's Park could remain open space, perhaps enough for a ping-pong table or two, a portion of the Eucalyptus Grove could be preserved in honor of the days when open space and nature mattered. 

The Faculty Glade, the Memorial Glade, and Observatory Hill add another five to six acres which, which careful construction, without disturbing the creek or natural elements could situate landscape-friendly, convenient housing for dozens of people, taking the pressure off the larger community's housing stock.  

And then there's the Wickson Natural Area which, with care, could situate more than one apartment building without disturbing the glorious stand of coast redwoods and the 1881 gingko tree.  

That's over 50 acres of building possibilities even leaving all of the sports fields undisturbed, while most architects recognize that at least some of those fields could be re-situated underground or on the rooftops of buildings which could contribute both housing and other types of spaces - without having to resort to threatening our parks. 

"It's a miracle," agreed several southside neighbors. "Thank heavens for the informative campus maps which revealed all of this available space." 

------------------- 

Open/Green Spaces  

Botanical Garden 34 (acres) 

Chancellor's Esplanade

Crescent / Springer Gateway

Edwards Track Stadium / Goldman Field 

Eucalyptus Grove

Evans Diamond 

Faculty Glade

Goldman Field 

Grinnell Natural Area 

Hearst Mining Circle 

Levine-Fricke Softball Field 

Lower Sproul Plaza 

Memorial Glade

North Field 

Observatory Hill

Redwood Grove (Botanical Garden) 

Strawberry Canyon Recreational Area 

West Circle 

Wickson Natural Area

Witter Rugby Field 


May Pepper Spray Times

By Grace Underpressure
Saturday May 05, 2018 - 11:03:00 PM

Editor's Note: The latest issue of the Pepper Spray Times is now available.

You can view it absolutely free of charge by clicking here . You can print it out to give to your friends.

Grace Underpressure has been producing it for many years now, even before the Berkeley Daily Planet started distributing it, most of the time without being paid, and now we'd like you to show your appreciation by using the button below to send her money.

This is a Very Good Deal. Go for it! 


Columns

ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Two Topics This Week:

Jack Bragen
Friday May 04, 2018 - 03:27:00 PM

Nonphysical Damage Actually Exists

You cannot see mental, psychological, emotional, and spiritual damage. You cannot measure them directly with medical or scientific equipment. To the world of science and the five senses, nonphysical forms of damage are invisible.  

Sometimes mental health professionals are able to assess some forms of what I am calling "nonphysical damage," by observing someone's behavior. However, far too often, those same mental health professionals are the ones responsible for some forms of this damage. I believe this is so, because therapists sometimes impose their set of assumptions on the consumer. This can include the belief that the consumer is incompetent, or that they have a permanent disability and cannot do things in life that most "normal" people do. 

Sometimes, nonphysical damage comes about through life conditions that are so overwhelming and demanding that damage occurs to the person's operating system. Yes, I am using the term "operating system" in reference to human beings. We have operating systems. They are astronomically more sophisticated than are those in microcomputers, and they allow us to make sense out of very complex and sometimes threatening environments. 

Microcomputers do not have to live in an environment, they do not have to survive, and they can't do very much other than the tasks that we design them to do. 

People's "operating systems," however, do exist, and they develop during childhood. When situations are too difficult or too traumatic, damage occurs. Also, repetition of detracting messages from a person or persons in the environment can cause long-lasting or perhaps permanent damage. 

If people call you a "dumb idiot" every day, it becomes incorporated into your operating system, and it becomes a basic assumption affecting everything else in your mind. If you grew up being mistreated, you could end up as an adult who believes you do not deserve love. 

Human beings aren't just machines, even though many people in the medical profession see us as machines. Science doesn't really understand life. Science doesn't understand the human condition. Science doesn't explain consciousness, nor does it explain existence. Thus, we need to use something other than science to address damage to the mind, heart and soul. 

**** 

One Key to Wellness Among Many: Lots of REM Sleep

In recent weeks, I have experienced an improvement in my sleep, and this includes a large increase in REM sleep. I have been diagnosed with severe sleep apnea, and I use a CPAP most nights, but this has only helped me to an extent. 

The impact on me from getting more REM sleep (I remember having dreamt upon waking) is that I feel a lot better. I believe that if people with schizophrenia are getting good REM sleep, it can only be a good thing. 

According to some studies, it is very common for people with schizophrenia to have sleep disturbances, often caused by sleep apnea. Lack of REM sleep can worsen symptoms. Lack of REM sleep can be one of a number of factors that trigger onset of a mental illness. 

In 1982, when I became ill, I had been working nights. I slept during the day and worked overnight. I wonder if this backward schedule was a contributing factor, among many, in the onset of my condition. 

If someone is sleep deprived for three days, the effects can be devastating. It can cause a person who is otherwise normal to go into psychosis. Sleep deprivation is unhealthy in general. It can affect a number of systems in the body, and it can lead to traffic accidents. For someone with mental illness, adequate sleep is even more vital than for those without a mental illness diagnosis. 

A question that my first psychiatrist (whom I met with in the 1980's) asked, every time I went to see him, was, "Are you eating and sleeping okay?" 

Clearly, adequate sleep is key to recovery. And, really good sleep can contribute to doing much better than we otherwise would. 


ECLECTIC RANT: U.S.-North Korea summit — who is in the driver’s seat?l

Ralph E. Stone
Friday May 04, 2018 - 03:33:00 PM

A summit between North Korea and the U.S. is scheduled for late May or early June.  

On one side is North Korean leader Kim Jung-un, one of the world’s most brutal leaders of a land of chronic deprivation, who allegedly ordered the murder of his brother and uncle. Kim faces off against President Donald Trump, who reneged on the Paris climate agreement and threatens to pull out of the Iran nuclear agreement, and is under investigation by the Special Prosecutor Robert Mueller for obstruction of justice and conspiracy with the Russians to interfere in the 2016 presidential election. 

South Korea’s president Moon Jae-in, a liberal, took the initiative away from Trump when Kim accepted his invitation to send a delegation to the Olympic Games in PyeongChang, South Korea, which led to talks between the two leaders and eventually led to an invitation to the U.S. to a summit meeting between Trump and Kim. 

Since that time, Kim has agreed to stop nuclear research and testing and missile launches and agreed to inspections. He has said he would agree to a peace treaty with South Korea; the two countries have technically been at war since 1950. The two leaders pledged to stop hostile acts toward each other. Kim may even open up the border between the two countries. Kim has also said he would not demand the U.S. remove its troops from South Korea.  

And reportedly, Kim Dong-cheol, Kim Sang-deok, and Kim Hak-seong — three US citizens detained in North Korea for years — have been released from a suspected labor camp and given health treatment and ideological education in Pyongyang, and will be released to the U.S. on the day of the summit. 

The two Koreas even pledged to create a future of “complete denuclearization” in the Peninsula. Although, I can’t imagine Kim giving up his nuclear arsenal after spending billions creating it. After all, his nuclear arsenal and his cozying up to Moon has put him in the catbird seat for the upcoming summit with the U.S. 

Kim now wants to concentrate on North Korea’s economic issues and a promise that the U.S. will not invade North Korea.  

Kim also wants an end to sanctions against his country. The UN Security Council has passed a number of resolutions since North Korea's first nuclear test in 2006 as have other countries including the U.S., China, South Korea, Japan, the European Union, and Australia. However, a report by the UN Panel of experts have concluded that North Korea was covertly trading in arms and minerals in defiance of the sanctions and the academic John Delury has described the sanctions as futile and counterproductive. The sanctions certainly did not stop North Korea from developing its nuclear program. 

Can we live with a North Korea with nuclear weapons? Consider that the U.S., Russia, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, and China, India, and Pakistan already have nuclear weapons, and Israel is generally thought to have them. The U.S. has provided nuclear weapons for Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Turkey to deploy and store. 

Of course, all this talk of peace by Kim and Moon is just that, talk. However, if a peace treaty is signed between the two Koreas, then the UN and other countries issuing sanctions may also be satisfied. (Sanctions can be reapplied if Kim reneges.) 

Because of the promising talks between the Korean leaders, Trump has lost much of his leverage. Will Trump settle for a symbolic “victory” if the two Koreas sign an agreement, or will he press for specifics and substance? What’s the alternative: war, more sanctions, or maintain the status quo to see if Kim keeps his promises? 

No matter what happens, it is a win-win for Kim. 


Arts & Events

Berkeley Arts Calendar

Tom Hunt and Bonnie Hughes
Saturday May 05, 2018 - 10:12:00 PM

To learn what's happening on Berkeley's arts scene, you can now reach the Berkeley Arts Festival Calendar directly from the Planet. You can then click on an individual date for a full description of every event on that day.

To reach the calendar, click here.


Jordi Savall’s Celtic Music Program with Carlos Núñez

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Friday May 04, 2018 - 03:15:00 PM

A tireless researcher of early music from many countries and cultures, Jordi Savall is the true ambassador to world music that Yo-Yo Ma arrogantly thinks is his rightful position. Sorry, Yo-Yo, you take a back seat to Jordi Savall, and for that matter to many others, all of whom bring far more passion and dedication to their music than you do. You, Yo-Yo Ma, are only the ambassador to music’s wealthy patrons; whereas Jordi Savall is without doubt the people’s ambassador to world music, especially early music from around the globe.

On Thursday evening, May 3, San Francisco Performances brought Jordi Savall to Herbst Theatre for a concert of Celtic music. Featured alongside Jordi Savall was Carlos Núñez, one of the world’s top performers on bagpipes from his native Galicia in Northwestern Spain. A charismatic performer, Carlos Núñez opened this concert by marching slowly down the aisles of Herbst Theatre playing an air on his bagpipes. When he reached the stage, Carlos Núñez launched into an extended improvisation on bagpipes that, to me, sounded for all the world like John Coltrane’s famous improvisations on soprano saxophone on “My Favorite Things.” Believe me, that’s no small tribute! Likening Carlos Núñez on bagpipes to John Coltrane on soprano saxophone may be a surprising rapprochement, but if you have recordings of each musician, play them back to back and you’ll hear what I mean. 

Rounding out the instrumental ensemble for this concert were Pancho Álvarez on Viola Caipira (a Brazilian guitar of Baroque origin), Andrew-Lawrence King on Irish Harp and Psalterium, Frank McGuire on Bodhrán, and Xurxo Núñez on Percussions. Jordi Savall played either Treble Viol or Bass Viol. When introducing the latter instrument, Savall pointed out that its low register imitated quite clearly the low register of bagpipes, and he demonstrated this effect on his bass viol. As for Carlos Núñez, when he wasn’t playing bagpipes he played various recorders and small pastoral pipes, and even an ocarina. Carlos Núñez also related to the audience the wonderful experience this group recently had of performing in the pilgrimage cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia. The first half of this Herbst Theatre program was devoted to Celtic music from Galicia, Ireland, and Scotland. Often, the treble viol of Jordi Savall echoed the recorder melodies played by Carlos Núñe. 

After intermission, the group returned to the stage to perform more Irish and Scottish music, then performed three pieces featuring Andrew-Lawrence King on either Irish Harp or Psalterium. King was accompanied only by percussionist Xurxo Núñez and Frank McGuire on Bodhrán. Following these pieces, the group performed works from Celtic lands from the Basque country to Brittany (Bretagne, in French). Particularly sweet was a Basque lullaby. The final piece in this series featured Carlos Núñez on ocarina. 

Rounding out the program were songs evoking Irish landscapes, capped by a rousing jig called “Morrison’s Jig,” with Carlos Núñez featured on bagpipes. Responding to tumultuous applause from the audience, the group performed two lively encores. What an exhilarating concert this was! Thank you, Jordi Savall and Carlos Núñez, who co-conceived this illuminating program of Celtic music!


The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, April 6-13

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday May 05, 2018 - 10:04:00 PM



Worth Noting:

  • Monday - Police Review Commission (PRC) to complete the review and revision of the PRC Reform Subcommittee proposed Charter amendment,
  • Tuesday - Urban Shield City Council Subcommittee 1:00 pm, City Council Special Session 6:00 pm
  • Wednesday - Police Equity Report at the Police Review Commission, report showing Berkeley policing bias/racial profiling to be reviewed, Community forum – panel on Access and Disability Rights
  • Thursday – jam packed with 4 worth noting meetings at the same time, CEAC, Homeless Commission, ZAB, and event on Displacement and Gentrification


When notices of meetings are found that are posted after Friday 5:00 pm they are added to the website schedule https://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/whats-ahead.html and preceded by LATE ENTRY



June 5 Primary vote by mail ballots start arriving this week. You can still register to vote and/or request vote by mail ballot, but don’t delay http://www.sos.ca.gov/elections/voter-registration/vote-mail/ 

Sunday, May 6, 2018 

Relax, no meetings, events found,  

Monday, May 7, 2018 

Ad Hoc subcommittee on Paid Family Leave, Mon, May 7, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm, 2180 Milvia, Pine Office Room 5th Floor, Agenda: discussion Recommendations18 a&b from April 13 City Council 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/paidfamilyleavesubcommittee/ 

Personnel Board, Mon, May 7, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: Update on number of temporary employees 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Personnel_Board_Homepage.aspx 

Police Review Commission – Special Meeting, 6:00 pm, 2939 Ellis St, South Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: complete review and revisions of proposed Charter amendment from the Commission Reform Subcommittee https://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Police_Review_Commission/Commissions/2018/2018-05-07-PRC-pkt.pdf 

Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board – a special meeting is listed on the Berkeley City Community Calendar, however, no agenda or meeting notice is on the Rent Stabilization Board website for a Mon, May 7, 7:00 pm – 11:00 pm, 2134 MLK Jr. Way, City Council Chambers 

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/rent/ 

Tax the Rich rally – Mon, May 7, 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm top of Solano in front of closed Oaks Theater,  

Tuesday, May 8, 2018 

Urban Shield Council Subcommittee, Tue, May 8, 1:00 pm, 2180 Milvia, Agenda: NICRIC, MOU as discussed last meeting, Agenda not posted. 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Urban_Shield_Subcommittee.aspx 

Berkeley City Council – Special Session, Tues, May 8, 6:00 pm, 2134 MLK Jr Way, City Council Chambers, Agenda: 2019 Budget, T1 Bond report, Parks, Recreation Waterfront capital improvement update, Public Works projects planned for 2019 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2018/05_May/City_Council__05-08-2018_-_Special_Meeting_Agenda.aspx 

Solano Avenue Business Improvement District Advisory Board, Tue, May 8, 6:00 pm7:00 pm, 1821 Catalina Ave, Thousand Oaks Baptist Church , Agenda: Special Project Grant requests, planned expenditures 2018, https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Solano_BID_Board.aspx 

Wednesday, May 9, 2018 

Berkeley Forum on Access and Disability Rights, Wed, May 9, 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm, 3075 Adeline, Ed Roberts Campus, Agenda: Progress on and challenges to access for persons with disabilities, Panel Karen Nakamura UCB Chair in Disability, Silva Yea, Staff Attorney, Rita Moran Moderator 

Commission on Labor, Wed, May 9, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: work plan, homeless youth, paid family leave, living wage ordinance revisions, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Commission_on_Labor_Homepage.aspx 

Parks and Waterfront Commission, Wed, May 9, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 2800 Park St, Frances Albrier Community Center, Agenda: T1, PRW Capital Improvement projects, urban pollinator habitat, tree donations 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Parks_and_Waterfront_Commission.aspx 

Police Review Commission, 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm, 2939 Ellis St, South Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: Police Equity report (to be delivered) 

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Police_Review_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Thursday, May 10, 2018 

Displacement &Gentrification: How did we get here and how do we stop it, Thur, May 10, 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm, 2043 San Pablo, Neyborly, The Poet’s Corner, RSVP requested 

https://actionnetwork.org/ticketed_events/displacement-gentrification-20180510 

Community Environmental Advisory Commission, Thur, May 10, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Russell St, South Branch Library, Agenda: City-Wide Green Development, Stormwater Infrastructure, Removing Plastic Microfibers 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Community_Environmental_Advisory_Commission/ 

Homeless Commission, Thur, May 10, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: non-abandoned property, Pathways Project, acquisition 1001, 1007, 1009 University, 1925 Ninth St, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Homeless_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Zoning Adjustments Board, Thur, May 10, 7:00 pm – 11:30 pm, 2134 MLK Jr. Way, City Council Chambers, staff recommend approve of all listed projects 

  • 1711 & 1713 MLK Jr Way – legalize conversion of existing commercial spaces, increase bedrooms on parcel from 3 to 15, reduced parking 8 to 0
  • 1338-1340 Kains Ave – raise 1-story duplex, increase bedrooms from 3 to 7, add accessory building with full bath
  • 803 Folger Ave – 4 new 3-story 3000 sq ft live/work units, convert 1st floor of two of the buildings to two 1000 sq ft offices
  • 3000 Shattuck – 5-story, 23 dwelling, mixed use building with ground floor retail and 4 BMR (below market rental),
http://www.cityofberkeley.info/zoningadjustmentsboard/ 

Ad Hoc subcommittee on Small Business, Thur, May 10, time location, agenda unknown, not posted call secretary Kerry Birnbach 981-7180, subcommittee members Droste, Hahn, Harrison, Maio 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Council_8/Small_Business_Subcommittee.aspx 

Friday, May 11, 2018 

Reduced service day city services, check that service is available before going 

Saturday, May 12, 2018 

March for Our Health – Medicare for All - SB 562, Sat, May 12, 1:00 pm, Oscar Grant/Frank Ogawa Plaza, Oakland, endorsed by Sunflower Alliance 

http://www.sunflower-alliance.org/march-for-our-health-may-12/ 

Sunday, May 13, 2018 – Mother’s Day 

Indivisible Berkeley General Assembly, Sun, May 13, 7:30 pm – 8:30 pm, 1970 Chestnut St, Finnish Hall, General Assembly meeting, 

https://www.indivisibleberkeley.org/