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Joy in Tacoma: Gen Obata and a neighbor make music at a social distance on a porch.
Rebecca Stith
Joy in Tacoma: Gen Obata and a neighbor make music at a social distance on a porch.
 

News

AC Transit Imposes Seating Limits During Pandemic

Jeff Shuttleworth (BCN)
Wednesday April 15, 2020 - 09:04:00 PM

The Alameda-Contra Costa Transit District said on Wednesday that it is implementing seating limits on its buses and encouraging riders to wear masks to keep people safe during the coronavirus pandemic. 

AC Transit, which serves parts of Alameda and Contra Costa counties, already had implemented social-distancing standards that called for passengers to use the rear doors of its buses to keep the drivers safe. 

The bus agency said its new policy of minimizing the number of passengers on buses will remain in place until further notice. 

AC Transit said 30-foot feeder coaches will now only allow 6 passengers, 40-foot standard coaches will be limited to 10 passengers, 60-foot articulated coaches will only allow 16 passengers and 44-foot double-decker buses will be limited to 24 passengers. 

The agency said operators may bypass stops once a bus's passenger count nears the new seating threshold. 

AC Transit warned that because of the new policy riders may experience trip delays and are asked to plan accordingly. 

The bus agency said that in addition to social-distancing, it strongly encourages riders to follow the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's guidelines to wear a cloth face mask on board which covers their nose and mouth, effective immediately. 

AC Transit said its drivers already are wearing personal protective equipment, including gloves, eyewear and masks. 

It said riders should avoid interactions with their drivers.


Status Update om COVID-19 in Bay Area

Eli Walsh (BCN)
Tuesday April 14, 2020 - 09:26:00 PM

The latest developments around the region related to the novel coronavirus, also known as COVID-19, as of Tuesday afternoon include: 

The 50th annual San Francisco Pride Parade and Celebration will not take place June 27 and 28 as scheduled due to the novel coronavirus pandemic, organizers announced Tuesday. The event normally draws in hundreds of thousands of people who pour into the city's Civic Center area. 

Despite calls from activists and city supervisors to house homeless people of all ages in hotel rooms after nearly 100 at a San Francisco homeless shelter were found to be infected, Mayor London Breed and other city officials on Monday defended their plan to only house those who qualify. So far, the city has secured 2,082 hotel rooms across 13 hotels and has already placed some 750 people in rooms. More hotel rooms will be secured on a rolling basis. 

The number of inmates at the Santa Rita Jail in Dublin who have the coronavirus has decreased by six because six who tested positive have completely recovered, Alameda County sheriff's officials said on Monday. A total of 73 inmates have been tested so far, with 42 testing negative, 15 testing positive and 16 results still pending, according to the sheriff's office. 

Since March 20, more than 58,000 Californians have signed up for insurance through the Covered California health insurance exchange, according to state officials. That's three times more than the number of people who signed up during the same period last year. 

As of Tuesday at 3 p.m., officials have confirmed the following number of cases in the greater Bay Area region: 

Alameda County: 888 cases, 23 deaths (888 cases, 23 deaths on Monday) Contra Costa County: 552 cases, 11 deaths (552 cases, 11 deaths on Monday) Marin County: 170 cases, 10 deaths (164 cases, 10 deaths on Monday) Monterey County: 87 cases, 3 deaths (87 cases, 3 deaths on Monday)  

Napa County: 38 cases, 2 deaths (34 cases, 2 deaths on Monday) San Francisco County: 987 cases, 15 deaths (957 cases, 15 deaths on Monday) San Mateo County: 721 cases, 21 deaths (701 cases, 21 deaths on Monday) Santa Clara County: 1,666 cases, 60 deaths (1,666 cases, 60 deaths on Monday) Santa Cruz County: 91 cases, 2 deaths (91 cases, 1 death on Monday) Solano County: 135 cases, 2 deaths (121 cases, 2 deaths on Monday) Sonoma County: 152 cases, 2 deaths (147 cases, 2 deaths on Monday) Statewide: 23,338 cases, 758 deaths (22,348 cases, 687 deaths on Monday)


Flash: Blake Street Fire Spreads to Two More Buildings, Is Contained

Jeff Shuttleworth (BCN)
Tuesday April 14, 2020 - 09:23:00 PM

A fire at a two-story structure in central Berkeley that was reported just after noon on Tuesday spread to two adjacent structures but has now been contained, a city fire spokesman said. 

Assistant Chief Keith May said the fire in the 2000 block of Blake Street was reported at 12:04 p.m. and quickly spread to a single-story structure on its west and to a three-story structure to its rear. 

May said the fire department's response to the blaze was upgraded to a second alarm and then to a third alarm but the third alarm was canceled a short time later. 

All of the residents of the three buildings were able to get out safely and there aren't any reports of injuries to the residents or firefighters, according to May. 

The exposure fires to the two adjacent buildings have been extinguished but firefighters haven't yet been able to enter the building where the fire originated, and at this point are preventing it from spreading further while they're in a defensive mode, May said. 

The American Red Cross is at the scene to help residents who've been displaced, according to May. 

The cause of the fire and the extent of the damage haven't yet been determined because it's still an active scene, May said.


Bay Area COVID-19 Developments

Kathleen Kirkwood (BCN)
Saturday April 11, 2020 - 10:57:00 PM

The latest developments around the region related to the novel coronavirus, also known as COVID-19, as of Saturday afternoon include: 

In order to support struggling San Francisco restaurants offering take-out food during the shelter order, Mayor London Breed on Friday issued an emergency order temporarily placing a cap on delivery fees from third-party delivery companies. 

Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf announced an emergency initiative dubbed "Oakland Slow Streets" that designates 74 miles of neighborhood streets in her city to be used primarily for walking, running and bicycling, starting on Saturday. 

After an outbreak of the novel coronavirus affecting 70 people at San Francisco's largest homeless shelter, the city has opted to convert the location into a medical facility. 

The number of new coronavirus deaths of residents at a skilled nursing facility in Hayward has increased to nine, Alameda County public health officials said on Friday. 

Blanket orders calling for the isolation of all Sonoma County residents diagnosed or suspected by their health care provider to have new coronavirus was issued Friday by Dr. Sundari R. Mase, the county health officer. 

Santa Clara County nurses are calling on the county to provide more paid leave for frontline healthcare workers who could be affected by the novel coronavirus outbreak.  

A new service in San Francisco will allow people in dangerous situations to text 911 instead of calling, city officials announced Friday. 

As of Saturday at 1:30 p.m., officials have confirmed the following number of cases in the greater Bay Area region: 

Alameda County: 806 cases, 21 deaths (768 cases, 20 deaths on Friday) 

Contra Costa County: 530 cases, 11 deaths (511 cases, 9 deaths on Friday) 

Marin County: 153 cases, 10 deaths (154 cases, 10 deaths on Friday)  

Monterey County: 79 cases, 3 deaths (71 cases, 3 deaths on Friday)  

Napa County: 34 cases, 2 deaths (32 cases, 2 deaths on Friday) 

San Francisco County: 857 cases, 13 deaths (797 cases, 13 deaths on Friday)  

San Mateo County: 652, 21 deaths (638 cases, 21 deaths on Friday) 

Santa Clara County: 1484 cases, 50 deaths (1,442 cases, 47 deaths on Friday) 

Santa Cruz County: 82 cases, 1 death (80 cases, 1 death on Friday) 

Solano County: 121 cases, 2 deaths (115 cases, 2 deaths on Friday) 

Sonoma County: 145 cases, 2 deaths (142 cases, 1 death on Friday) 

Statewide: 21,524 cases, 599 deaths (19,472 cases, 541 deaths on Friday)


Berkeley Reports First COVID-19 Death

Jeff Shuttleworth (BCN)
Thursday April 09, 2020 - 11:08:00 PM

Berkeley Health Officer Dr. Lisa Hernandez announced Thursday that a resident in their 40s has died of the new coronavirus, the first such death the city has seen so far in the pandemic.  

Hernandez said the resident had underlying health problems, which she said data shows makes people more likely to suffer severe illness from COVID-19.  

She said people over the age of 60 also are more susceptible to severe illness but the coronavirus affects people of all ages.  

"I am deeply saddened by the news of the first COVID-19 death in Berkeley and my condolences go out to their family," Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguin said in a statement. 

"We all have the power to reduce the spread of this virus and the deaths and heartache it creates. We must all follow the shelter-in-place order to protect ourselves, our neighbors, family and those most at risk," Arreguin said.  

Hernandez said, "This tragic death is a reminder that none of us can afford to dismiss the threat from this disease. It can affect anyone, with consequences as severe as death."  

She said, "This death is also a sad reminder of the urgency to shelter in place."  

Hernandez said the resident's death is one of 17 lab-confirmed COVID-19 deaths in Alameda County, 442 in the state and 12,745 in the nation.  

She said 34 people in Berkeley have tested positive for the virus so far.


“There is much sorrow and fear in Berkeley” Berkeley and the 1918 Influenza (Fourth Installment: Part A)

Steven Finacom, Copyright by the author
Saturday April 11, 2020 - 04:34:00 PM

We can learn a great deal about ourselves and the present by remembering the past. Heres the fourth installment of my chronological account of what happened in Berkeley during the 1918-19 Spanish Fluepidemic. The stories are largely drawn from the pages of the Berkeley Daily Gazette, Berkeleys hometown paper at the time. Each installment covers about one week, or six issues (Monday through Saturday), of the Gazette.

I started with October, 1918, because the first cases of the influenza apparently appear ed in the Bay Area in September of that year, and it took some weeks for the local crisis to visibly emerge.


This installment took a long time to assemble and is the longest of the four to date. Not only were there many articles to transcribe, but new issues and subtopics in the health crisis came up as the month of October, 1918, wore on. In it the events of 1918 also begin to track more closely with the events of 2020, with disputes and confusion over several issues related to the influenza and its impacts.

Note: because of its considerable length, this installment covering one week is broken into three sectionsA,B and Cfor posting. The first and second sections report on events related to the influenza in the fourth week of October, 1918. The third section includes the obituaries of those who died of the epidemic in Berkeley that week, and contemporary news and information on other topics.

Introduction

We have now reached the fourth week of October, 1918, in Berkeley. The Spanish Influenza appears to have become “epidemic” in Berkeley, and precautions and reactions are occurring all over the city. 

The previous weeks had seen the closure of Berkeley’s “places of amusement”, the prohibition of indoor meetings or events, including church services—a major issue in Berkeley, a town that would later promote itself as “a city of churches”—and the reluctant closure of public schools, although supervised public playgrounds were explicitly left open. (There was some public dispute over whether church services should be prohibited and even some civil disobedience in that regard.) 

It appears that most businesses stayed open; there was, as yet, no widespread shut down of commercial activity. 

During the epidemic University and the City followed similar policies to fight the flu but imposed them at different times and by independent processes. The University was probably a bit ahead of the city in imposing quarantines and preventive measures, but the UC campus was also kept open with classes in session, a dramatic difference from today.  

The approaching end of the month saw a spike in flu cases, more than 200 a day on one day in Berkeley, a city which would record just over 56,000 residents in the 1920 Census. By the end of the week nearly 1,000 people in Berkeley were reported sick with the influenza, probably representing two percent of the population, at minimum. 

Berkeley people of all ages and backgrounds and stations in life died, both in Berkeley itself and while traveling, working, or serving in the military outside the city. Some prominent local figures came down with the influenza. 

As in previous installments I remember those who died by including their obituaries in full at the end of the article; for this week, alone, I found the names of twenty locals—either permanent residents, or UC students—who died of the influenza and complications from it, in addition to former Berkeleyeans who died elsewhere and whose names were reported in the paper.  

By the end of the week, October 26, 1918, a Gazette article would say that Berkeley had suffered 33 deaths from the epidemic to date. I think I have found and recorded in these articles, to date, obituaries for some 28 of them. 

The disease rapidly spread within single homes and some group quarters; one family had ten members sick. Some local services started to break down under the tide of infection, and a visible sign of hazard was imposed, the compulsory wearing of masks in public, both on and off the campus. 

In fact, during that week in 1918—just as is now taking place 102 years later during our current pandemic—there was a sudden major emphasis on wearing cloth masks, with everyone from city and county officials to the Governor of California urging the practice and some cities—including Berkeley and San Francisco—requiring it. 

Readers will remember that just a few weeks ago in our own epidemic we were being advised that masks were not essential and the best quality ones should generally be reserved for health care workers; now, we’re officially told that masks are essential outside, and in group settings like grocery stores, and cloth masks will do. 

In 1918, there was a similar focus on cloth masks as the epidemic spread, and some parties engaged in excess hyperbole; at one point, as you’ll see in this installment, a group of well-respected organizations including the local Red Cross, told locals that “A Gauze Mask is 99% Proof Against InfluenzaThose who do not wear them get sick. The man or woman or child who will not wear a mask now is a dangerous slacker. 

Local physicians and nurses were in the beleaguered forefront of the local 1918 response, as were charitable women’s organizations, including the Red Cross. Those groups indefatigably turned out volunteers, medical supplies, and expert volunteer services, and essentially took over much of the nursing and care of hundreds of sick Army cadets on campus. 

As I noted in previous installments, the general practice in 1918 when someone was sick was to care for them at home, with a doctor, and perhaps trained nurses, making regular house calls. Hospitals were less central, except on the UC campus where the University Infirmary cared for many sick students in group wards. 

That probably accounts for the fact that I haven’t found any parallel in the 1918 coverage to today’s major, and real, concern that hospitals will be overwhelmed with influenza patients. In fact, in 1918, there was even one announcement to the contrary. It was reported that on the UC campus—after the temporary conversion of a fraternity and four military barracks to flu wards—there was enough space to house patients. We must remember as well that in 1918 a hospital wasn’t full of sophisticated mechanical and electronic equipment; much of what could be medically be done in a hospital then to ease a case of influenza might be done almost as well at home, with competent nursing and regular visits from a physician. 

Medical measures to fight the flu were limited in 1918. As noted, there was much emphasis on gauze masks (which probably didn’t effectively keep out the tiny viruses, at least not to the extent promised) and on the value of “fresh air” which would have been a health benefit in general but was also sometimes erroneously promoted as a way to prevent catching the flu or a way to help cure it. 

In 2020, one of the issues involved with the COVID-19 crisis is whether and how numbers of those who have been infected can be accurately counted and whether all deaths from the virus are accurately recorded as such. In 1918 there seems to have been some similar confusion and doubt, even among health officials (who, in at least one local instance, said that some people who said they had contracted the influenza were suffering from hysteria instead). 

If you look at the obituaries I’ve included in these installments you’ll see that some are written for people who died of “Spanish influenza”, some for people who died of “pneumonia” (a complication of flu, not a virus itself), and a few link the two—i.e., the article might say something like ‘he died of pneumonia after a case of the influenza. 

What does this mean? I think it means that in both 1918 and 2020 there is room for some ambiguity on precisely how many caught the influenza and how many died of it, but the broader parameters and spread of the epidemic are clear. 


As in previous installments I begin with a rundown of influenza-related news and events in Berkeley during that week of 1918, move on to news of the war and wartime “homefront” activities, and finish with the listing of obituaries of those locals who died of the flu, then brief notes on other news events of the day. 

Influenza 

As Berkeley entered the last week of October, 1918, a tiny second-column note on page two of the October 21 Gazette reported: According to a report at the office of Health Officer J.J. Benton, this morning 238 new cases of influenza were reported to the office Saturday. There is now a total of approximately 800 cases in Berkeley, according to Dr. Benton. Three deaths were reported to the office yesterday. 

October 21. All persons making use of buildings on the campus of the university must wear masks of gauze as a precautionary measure in preventing the spread of Spanish influenza. This order was issued early Saturday by Pres. Benjamin Ide Wheeler of the university upon the advice of the state board of health and of the university physician. Placards announcing that the order goes into effect without delay were posted in all parts of the campus and in the buildings. 

The university auxiliary of the American Red Cross, with Miss Evaline Cutler in charge, is making 7,000 masks for use by students, members of the faculty and other persons entering the buildings on the campus. The masks are being distributed as rapidly as they are made by the women students of the University. Two distribution booths have been established in Wheeler Hall, one in California Hall and one in the University Library building. The masks consist of four strips of thin gauze and will be worn in such a way as to cover the nostrils and mouth.  

The order, as it applies to members of the Students Army Training Corps unit, the School of Military Aeronautics and the Naval unit, and other military schools will be enforced by Major William H. Brooks, M.C., the army medical officer in charge, who was especially detailed to the university. University authorities will require the enforcement of the order by non-military persons. The regular classes were held today and President Wheelers order will be enforced. The order, it was announced by the university, was issued as a precautionary measure. 

This article was paired with a piece headlined “Red Cross Sends Nurses to Aid Berkeley Sick.” It gives a useful perspective on the volunteer work going on in Berkeley to combat the influenza.

The efficiency of the Red Cross organization and the way in which it can promptly and efficiently handle an emergency has been once more demonstrated by there part the Berkeley Chapter is playing in helping to combat the present influenza epidemic.Many activities usually carried out for the acquisition of funds and other purposes are suspended temporarily, and the capable women in charge are lending to this present emergency the same ability which has made a success of their other undertakings. 

In addition to the care of the cases at the SATC Barracks, the workers have turned their attention to relief among citizens. Every family which needs help is reported at once, by doctor, charity organization, the dispensary or neighbors, to Miss Edna Osborn at Red Cross headquarters. These names are at once handed to Mrs. J.U. Calkins, in charge of a committee of relief visitors, who investigate the conditions and needs of each family noted, and report back to Headquarters through Mrs. Calkins. Where a nurse is needed, Mrs. Charles R. Stone sends one from her list, and food is provided once a day at the expense of the Red Cross, by Mrs. F.I. Lipman, under physicians direction as to what is needed for the case. 

Up to this morning 49 families needing help were reported to Headquarters and cared for, the number of influenza patients varying from two to ten in one family.  


Cases in west Berkeley are handled with the co-operation of the Berkeley Dispensary. Eight nurses are sent every day from Red Cross Headquarters to the dispensary to be assigned to duty as needed. A record is kept at headquarters of all cases cared for and the kind and amount of help given. 

The great need now is for volunteers to help the Red Cross in this work. Nursing experience is not essential, as in many families the need is for other kind of work, such as preparing food, keeping the house in order, caring for the children and countless other home duties. It is not easy work and not as picturesque or romantic perhaps as working at the Barracks, but is is absolutely necessary and the committee at Headquarters urges all women who are willing to do this work to report at once to Miss. Osborn, at the Red Cross Headquarters. Prompt response on the part of the public will do more than anything else to stamp out this epidemic. 

The Red Cross also the epidemic partially stymie its efforts to educate and enlarge the number of volunteer health care workers. October 22, it was announced “Red Cross Classes to be Suspended”. 

Following orders issued by the Berkeley Board of Health to omit all gatherings of people until the epidemic of influenza is over, Red Cross classes in first air and home care of the sick under Dr. McVey and Mrs. Zeitfuchs respectively, will be discontinued until further notice. This includes classes now in session as well as those about to be organized. 

October 22, 1918 the paper reported, “U.C. Women Make 8,300 Flu Masks”. 

The University Red Cross unit completed 8,300 masks yesterday afternoon and work was started on a new rush order of 4,000 more masks. The cause is furnished by the American Red Cross and a charge of five cents is made for each mask.  

The masks worn by the SATC men will be collected every night at bedtime for the purpose of sterilization. Fresh masks will be distributed in the morning. This means that two masks must be made for each member of the SATC. 

Students are asked to take good care of their masks as only one will be furnished to each student. The masks are sterilized before distribution, by students in the Hygiene and Pathology Department. 

Students should observe the following regulations in regard to their masks. Boil mask for five minutes every night or dip in lysol solution. The black triangle is to be worn on the outside. When mask is taken off, fold with black mark on outside and roll up tight. Do not dangle by strings. 

October 22, 1918. Beginning tomorrow the Berkeley chapter of the Red Cross will have a limited number of influenza masks for sale at the information desk at Red Cross headquarters, corner of Allston Way and Shattuck Avenue. 

October 25, the Gazette reported that students at Oakland’s Mills College—an all-women institution at the time—had sewn and sent 1,050 gauze masks to the Red Cross at UC Berkeley, and had subsequently been sent enough additional fabric for twice this number

October 22, 1918. Dr. W.H. Kellogg of Sacramento, secretary of the state board of health, yesterday issued ordered to doctors, nurses, attendants and visitors within hospitals and homes where there are cases of Spanish influenza to wear gauze masks. The order was transmitted through the county health physicians. 

Members of families where there are cases of influenza and all persons suffering from colds in the head or acute coughs or showing other recognized symptoms of the malady also will be require to wear masks when indoors. Reports received here today show a total of about 33,000 cases have been reported since the outbreak of the influenza epidemic in California. 

October 21, 1918 Army students at UC were restricted to campus. (This was not quite a firm “shelter in place” isolation order since the barracks where they lived were densely populated, and they could still roam around the large campus in groups and interact with the regular UC students.) 

Until the influenza epidemic has abated no member of the Students Army Training Corps will be allowed to leave the campus, according to an announcement made yesterday. A strict quarantine has been ordered by the commanding officer and until further notice the student soldiers will be confined to the university grounds. Although it will be impossible to prevent the mingling of the men with the other students who are not under quarantine, it is hoped to localize the disease to a great extent by adopting these precautionary measures. 

Every effort to control the epidemic is being made by the university authorities. Although four hundred and sixty-eight cases of this and kindred diseases are now being cared for on the campus, the medical authorities state that they have every expectation that there will be no further increase in the number of influenza patients. Major W.H. Brooks, medical corps, United States Army, has taken general charge of the situation here. While there is no cause of alarm, say the physicians who are combatting the epidemic, every precaution to prevent its spread should be taken by the students of the university. 


The order of the president that gauze masks are to be worn to classes and in the library will be enforced for several days, until all danger is past. It is expected that this measure will be effective in stamping out the disease on the campus.  


Forty two new cases were reported yesterday, and seven deaths have occurred in the university community to date. The names follow: Miss Alma Gunderson (nurse), Kenneth Henry Coats, Carl Goll Petsch, Eugenia Thayer, Vernon Thurwell, Flores (sic) Pattee and Jose D. Dudero. 

October 24, 1918, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors voted to make wearing gauze masks compulsory in that city. 

The next day—and four days after the campus required masks for everyone—on October 25, 1918, the City of Berkeley followed suit.The wearing of gauze masks as a guard against Spanish influenza became compulsory in Berkeley this morning when the city council passed an ordinance, designated as an emergency measure, requiring the wearing of the masks on the streets and in all public places. The ordinance is similar to the one adopted in San Francisco yesterday, except that the penalty for violation is greater. 

The penalty attached to the Berkeley ordinance is a fine of not more than $500 or imprisonment for not more than ten days in the county jail, or both. Violation of the ordinance comes under the class of misdemeanors. 

A section prohibiting expectorating on the streets is also contained in the measure. This prohibits anyone from spitting on the streets or in public places, and the penalty for the violation thereof is the same as for not wearing the gauze mask. 

The number of influenza cases in the city is diminishing, according to reports of the health office. Yesterday a total of 73 new cases were reported, off which number only 38 were from the city, the remainder being reported by the university physicians. There have been a total of 958 cases reported to date. Twenty-eight deaths have been reported. 

As the week came to an end on Saturday, October 26, 1918, six deaths and 194 new cases of Spanish influenza were reported yesterday to the health office. The jump in the number of cases is not considered alarming by the authorities, for they are cases, the health department says, delayed in reporting, and most of them are said to be old cases. It brings the total number of cases up to 1,152 however. The total number of deaths during the month from the disease is now 33. 

October 23, 1918, Dr. Kellogg, head of the State Board of Health, was in Berkeley and told the Gazette that he “advocated the continuance of the use of gauze masks. He said great credit was due health authorities because of the rapidity of in which gauze masks had been popularized. He said that in addition to requiring that physicians, nurses and attendants in hospitals or private families wear masks, it was also compulsory for anyone suffering from a cold, or showing any symptoms of influenza, to wear masks. he said health authorities had authority to enforce the ruling. It was not compulsory for others to wear masks, he said, but reiterated that everyone was asked to do so. 

October 23 there was a full page advertisement in the Gazette by the “Alameda County Relief Committee”, which appeared to be a conglomeration of government, civic, and business organizations. 


WEAR A MASK AND SAVE YOUR LIFE! it proclaimed. 

The Emergency that now confronts our city is beyond the facilities of the Health Department. The Red Cross has come to the assistance of the Board of Health. Doctors and nurses can not be obtained to take care of the afflicted. You must wear a mask, not only to protect yourself but your children and your neighbor from influenza, pneumonia, and death. A Gauze Mask is 99% Proof Against Influenza. Doctors wear them. Those who do not wear them get sick. The man or woman or child who will not wear a mask now is a dangerous slacker. WEAR MASKS going to work, at work, going home, at home. 

The ad ran opposite a newspaper article which noted that Governor W.D. Stephens has called upon everyone in the state to wear a gauze mask on account of the influenza epidemic. His request follows:  

As an aid in winning the war, it is a patriotic duty for every American citizen to assist in preserving the health of himself and his fellow citizens. The health of our people and our nation is essential and vital to the end that we may have men and money to give to preserve the principles to which our nation stands committed. An unfortunate epidemic has attacked the health of the people of this and other states. It will not be disastrous. It will be overcome. It must not be ignored. It must be fought. Unless the people of this state support our authorities in their efforts to suppress this epidemic they are not doing their full duty either as citizens or as loyal Americans. Our health authorities advise it is imperative that all persons wear a gauze mask over the nose and mouth, thus presenting the spread of this disease. Compliance with this temporary edict means but little discomfort, and means a service rendered to our fellow-men and to our country. It it most essential it the health of our state. As a duty which each citizen can easily perform to our country and our state. I therefore earnestly request that this precaution and protection be followed immediately. 

Did cloth masks work to reduce the spread of flu in 1918? That’s a relevant question given the sudden new emphasis on wearing masks in Berkeley, California, and the United States this week. 

I found this interesting observation in Americas Forgotten Pandemic: The Influenza of 1918, by Alfred W. Crosby, published in 2003. 

The wearing of surgical masks, pads of gauze fastened over mouth and nose by strings tied behind the head, had been common, especially by medical personnel, since the first appearance of Spanish influenza. In its first Spanish influenza pamphlet, issued in September (1918) the USPHS recommended that those nursing flu patients wear gauze masks. Soon laymen decided that what was a sensible caution in the sickroom would be just as sensible in every situation. Gauze masks became a common sight in the streets and department stores of communities in the eastern United States. People could and did honestly believe that a few layers of gauze would keep out flu bugs, just as screens kept the flies off the front porch. 


The influenza virus itself is, of course, so infinitely tiny that it can pass through any cloth, no matter how tightly woven, but a mask can catch some of the motes of dust and droplettes of water on which the virus may be riding. However, to be even slightly effective during a flu epidemic masks must be worn at all times when people are together, at home and at work and in between, must be of a proper and probably uncomfortable thickness, must be tied firmly, and must be washed and dried at least once daily. Enforcement of such conditions is impossible and so the communities where masking was compulsory during the Spanish influenza pandemic almost always had health records the same as those of adjacent communities without masking. 


There is another interesting side note here in medical history. Historians familiar with medical practices raised the possibility in a 2009 paper that at least some of those who died of influenza in 1918/19 could have been actually accidentally poisoned with aspirin. How? Aspirin was developed in the 1890s and in 1917 the patent expired, so much copycat production (what would be called “generic drugs” today) ensued, as well as extensive advertising of the benefits of aspirin by those who stood to benefit from its sale. In 1918 the military also started using aspirin as a treatment and the recommended dosages were much higher than levels of use that are considered safe today. And high dosages of aspirin can create pulmonary edema, fluid in the lungs, which was also a symptom of the flu. So, some speculate, a portion of the influenza deaths could have been caused, or hastened, by unsafe dosages of aspirin. Source: see this link for the identification of the research paper and an abstract. https://academic.oup.com/cid/article/49/9/1405/301441 

Beyond what was happening on the front lines in local hospitals and the homes of the infected, Berkeley was experiencing other impacts of the flu in 1918. By late October, the mounting numbers of sick started to strain some non-medical services that depended on groups of people working closely together. October 25, the Gazette carried this announcement. Owning to the telephone service not being up to the usual standard of efficiency on account of the Spanish influenza epidemic incapacitating many of the telephone operations, as well as increasing the telephone service, Fire Chief Rose has suggested that in cases of fire, the fire alarm boxes be used, instead of depending on the telephone to notify the fire department. In an order issued today, Fire Chief Rose states:

The influenza which is now epidemic in Berkeley has been the cause of the local telephone service not being up to its usual standard of efficiency, inasmuch as the operators are answering more emergency calls on account of the large number of calls that are coming in for the service of doctors and nurses. Owning to this condition Chief Rose of the fire department would urge in case of a fire breaking out that the fire alarm boxes be used in preference to the telephone in sending in the alarm. By so doing there will be no delay in responding to the same by the department. By using the telephone, in all probability, much valuable time would be lost, for the reasons as hereinbefore (sic) stated, and serious loss would be the result. The chief would further urge that the public familiarize itself with the locations of the boxes so in case it was necessary for the calling out of the department, no time would be lost owing to being not familiar with their locations. Following are the instructions to send in an alarm, Break glass in door, turn key to right, open the door, pull down hook once and let it go. Person sending in an alarm should stay at box until the arrival of the apparatus and direct the men to the location of the fire. Following are the locations of the fire alarm boxes.  

(A list of the locations of 81 fire alarm boxes was provided. Curiously, the numbering system started with 4-13, and ran intermittently up to 242; the numbers were in rising order, but were not consecutive; possibly they were numbered by some sort of district or geographical formula. 

A bit of explanation may be in order for those not familiar with older forms of electric communication. In 1918 if you used the telephone you first called the operator, who then manually connected your line to the telephone line you were calling; the operators sat together in front of switchboards which were physically real, not virtual. Fewer operators working because of sickness meant a slow-down in this necessary process to manually connect calls. Fire alarm boxes were just as described in the announcement; fixed locations around the city where someone could go to manually trigger a alarm signal would be transmitted to the fire department, which responded with engines sent to the location of the box—or the visible smoke, whichever was more obvious.) 

(continue to Fourth Installment, Part B, for the remainder of Berkeley news from the fourth week of October, 1918.) 


 


Berkeley and the 1918 Influenza: Fourth Installment (Part B)

Steven Finacom,copyright by the author
Saturday April 11, 2020 - 04:40:00 PM

Despite the growing toll of sick and dead and the heightened restrictions during the fourth week of October, 1918 as the “Spanish Influenza” epidemic spread in Berkeley, on October 23, 1918, the Berkeley Daily Gazette reported that the city was allowing public playgrounds to stay open. The reason given was the same reason used in the previous push to keep local public schools open; children could be better monitored for illness when they were together in supervised groups. 

Playgrounds are being kept open for the use of the boys and girls it being declared more desirable to have the children playing on the playground under careful supervision of the Play Directors, then to have them playing on the street. The open air and the deep respiration which comes about through playing games, and at the same time stimulating the revitalizing physical condition of the children is especially recommended by City Health officer Dr. J.J. Benton, who has endorsed the keeping open of the playground at this time. 

Substantiation of Dr. Bentons statement comes through a statement in the San Francisco Bulletin of a few days ago, made by Dr. Woods Hutchinson who is at present at the Palace Hotel in the city, when he recommends open air and deep breathing for all persons affiliated with influenza, this being declared one of the best means as a preventative. 

(We will hear from Dr. Hutchison a bit later, when he visited Berkeley later in the week.) 

Gustavus Schnider, Superintendent of Playgrounds in a special meeting with the play directors, gave special instructions which will help to safeguard all children using the playgrounds at the same time. The playgrounds shooting units will be discontinued for the present as all shooting was being done indoors. Play week as planned will be postponed indefinitely, an announcement of dates to be made later. 

(That’s an interesting reference to “shooting units”. I have not come across this before, but I infer it meant target practice with firearms. Taught by the City of Berkeley at public playgrounds.) 

October 23, 1918 the United Press reported optimistically that in San Francisco there was a decided decrease in the number of deaths and new influenza cases reported to the board of health today gave indication that the epidemic has been partially checked. A total of 840 (new) cases had been reported at noon, as compared with 1,200 at the same time yesterday. Twenty deaths were reported. Wearing of gauze masks was declared to be partly responsible for the decrease in the number of cases.  

Two days later, however, the San Francisco case load was back up. October 25, 1918 the Gazette reported that in San Francisco there were 1,080 new cases of Spanish influenza and 48 deaths due to the diseasereported to city health authorities up to noon today. City Health Officer Hassler said he believed the disease had been checked. Twenty-five percent of the cases reported are due to hysteria, Dr. Hassler said. The number of cases reported this morning shows a decided decrease due, the health officer says, because of the enforced wearing of influenza masks. All prisoners in the city jail today were given masks to wear. Federal Judge Dooling today dismissed his entire jury panel; announcing that no jury trials would be held in his court room until the epidemic had ended. 

(Another San Francisco judge held his police court out of doors, and caught a severe cold as a result. A later article would report that after a staffer at the San Francisco jail collapsed on his rounds from influenza, and inmates started leaving their temporarily unlocked cells. Then, as now, there was concern that once the flu got into crowded jails and prisons it would spread rapidly among those who could not go elsewhere to be safe from infection.) 

Elsewhere in San Francisco, “the Downtown Association launched a campaign today to convert the historic Cliff House into a big childrens hotel for youngsters whose parents have died or are ill with the disease. 

Statewide, the same day—October 25—total reported cases numbered 55,528, an increase of 4,459 since Thursday night. San Francisco had the most, Los Angeles had more than 1,000 new cases—a sharp increase over yesterday—, Oakland had 538 new, Sacramento 221, and other towns and cities reported cases scattered in tens and twenties around the state. 

October 24, it was reported that Oakland saw 22 influenza related deaths, making a grand total of 79 since the beginning of the scourge in the East Bay city. There were at the same time nearly 2,500 people ill and quarantined in Oakland. 

(It is worth remembering in this era that California was still a largely rural state. The state had a population of about 3.5 million at the time, less than 10% of its population today. Berkeley was California’s fifth biggest municipality, with a population recorded at 56,000 two years later in the 1920 Census. The only four bigger cities were San Francisco, Oakland, Los Angeles, and Sacramento. Outside portions of the central Bay Area and parts of the Los Angeles Basin, there were really no large communities by today’s standards; enormous cities today, like San Jose and San Diego, were comparatively tiny then; San Jose in 1920 had less than 40,000 residents So reports of two, three, or four figure cases of influenza per city represented a large demographic impact. With those 3.5 million residents, an infection rate of more than 55,000 would mean that at least 1.5% of California residents were known to have contracted the influenza.) 

October 25, the president of Berkeley’s Board of Education, Dr. Roy Woolsey, threatened with arrest and punishment any employer who hired a child under 16 without a proper work permit from the city. This sort of work was probably enticing in a market with well-paying war industry jobs and a labor shortage, and teenagers out of school early with time on their hands because of the flu. 

We have dismissed the schools as a measure to combat the spread of Spanish influenza,said Dr Woolsey and it is the intention of the school authorities that children be kept at home, or off the streets, where there is more danger of their contracting the disease than in the school rooms. The law provides that every employer of a child under sixteen years of age must first secure a permit to employ the child from the truant officer. There are now many instances of violation of this law in Berkeley. 

October 21, 1918, the Red Cross said it was still in great need of sheets and pajamas for the influenza work at the barracks (on the UC campus). Donations of oranges would also be greatly appreciate by the sick boys, as many of them can eat nothing else. An article later in the week appealed for bathrobes and slippers perhaps implying that at least some of the sick at the barracks were becoming ambulatory. 

October 23 the Red Cross was commended for its work on the campus in a Gazette article. 

That the United States government considers the American Red Cross one of most useful aids in time of public emergency has been amply proved here by the events of the past week. At the very beginning of the present epidemic on October 14, two urgent calls brought by SATC boys from the university infirmary, started the ball rolling. Since that time the local chapter has furnished all medical supplies and the trained and untrained volunteer nurses at the three barracks. Included among volunteers are the most prominent women in Berkeley. Because of the generosity of the public, the Red Cross has been able to supply hundreds of pillows, sheets, pillow slips, towels, pajamas and other linen, not only to the three barrack hospitals, but also the Defenders club, which is used as a convalescent home, and to the Zeta Psi home, converted into an annex to the infirmary. 

Note: The temporary barracks were wooden structures built on the UC campus to accommodate the SATC servicemen. I am also not sure exactly where they stood; I think they were near Oxford Street in what is now the “West Crescent” area, which was not extensively landscaped until later in the 1920s. The barracks would have been removed after the War. 

I am not sure where or what the “Defenders’ Club” was. The name makes it sound as if it was an organization formed as part of patriotic activities during the Great War. An article on “Club Activities” in the October 24 Gazette gives some further hints. It appears to have been a women’s club with a large physical facility, since the building was described as having a canteen / kitchen, a “large assembly room” converted into a hospital ward for 60, and “wings” that provided another 25 beds, “several in each small study room.” The article noted prominent club and society women have donned their flu masks and are working valiantly to help convalescent boys successfully finish their fight with the tyrant germs. 

(One of the vexing issues with historical research is that contemporary accounts are often vague because of course everyone at the time knew what the writer was talking about. There was no need to give specific addresses or descriptions for well known organizations. Today, for instance, no reporter would write something like the event took place at Berkeley Bowl, a locally owned supermarket at 2020 Oregon Street…) 

Note: During World War I nearly 116,000 United States Army men died, according to a statistical summary published by the Federal government in 1919. The causes of death were: 50% disease; 43% “battle”; 7% “other”. In the United States, 36,000 soldiers died; presumably the vast majority of those were killed by disease, particularly the Spanish influenza. October, 1918, was the statistical peak of Army deaths; during that month nearly four out of every 1,000 soldiers died per week. The spike in deaths then sharply declined into mid November. Most military camps were concentrated in the Midwest and East, but there were three major ones on the West Coast: Camp Lewis in Washington, Camp Fremont in the Bay Area, and Camp Kearny near San Diego. Source: see https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/00333549101250S311 

October 24, the Gazette headlined “Influenza Cases are Decreasing”, above another story headlined “ ‘Flu’ Cases in State Increase”. 

The first article said The Spanish influenza at the university is subsiding, the discharges from the hospital exceeding the admissions for the last three days. That the epidemic has been effectively checked at the School of Military Aeronautics was announced today. Only four new cases were reported among the flying cadets yesterday. 

Three new deaths from Spanish influenza were reported at the city health office before noon today, This brings the total number of deaths in Berkeley to 24, according to health officer statistics. There are now a total of 885 cases in Berkeley, according to the figures. Of this number, 119 were reported yesterday, all but 48 cases having been reported by university physicians.  

In boarding houses where 537 women are living, only four cases have developed within the last 24 hours as against seven of the preceding day. In clubs and sororities of 406 members, only one cold has been reported during the last 24 hours, compared with four of the day before. This shows that influenza is on the decline and by wearing masks a further decrease in new cases is expected. 

There are at present 450 cases being cared for by the university. With barracks 3,4,5, and C being used as hospitals for members of the Students Army Training Corps and Naval units and with the Students Infirmary and Zeta Psi Fraternity house available for non-military males and women students, ample hospital accommodations are ready to meet any expected increase in the number of cases on the campus. 

A group of visiting nurses aides, volunteers from the student body, has organized under Dr. Lillian Moore of the physiology department to visit cases discharged from the infirmary. They are to see that convalescing patients are progressing satisfactorily, and will also get in touch with students living in isolated homes with no one to care for them. 

By organizing these aids, it is hoped that all students in need of medical care and unprovided for, while be reached. Several nurses aides have already been detailed to take care of women doing their own housekeeping work or living alone in apartment houses. This is aimed to relieve the pressure on the infirmary and at the same time to provide adequate treatment for all cases. 

Despite such assurances, the toll of illness on the campus was such that normal academic operations faltered. For October 25, we find this article. 

University Work Is At A Standstill. President Benjamin Ide Wheeler of the university has informed the various departments of the university that on account of the great number of absences from classes, due to the influenza epidemic, it has been found necessary to allow opportunities for instructors to reorganize their work in order that classes may commence again on an even basis when the epidemic shall have ended. The president has recommended to the departments that in classes where work has been seriously disorganized no new assignments be made for the period up to November 3, or an earlier date to be determined at the discretion of the instructor concerned.  


The president states that classes will meet as usual, instructors utilizing the time for review or for individual conferences with students who have dropped behind because of illness or for other reasons. 

The second article on October 24 reported that Influenza cases in the state total 50,135 this morning. This is an increase of 4,441 over Wednesday night (and, inexplicably, a drop of some 5,000 from a few days before. Perhaps those considered recovered were removed from the tally. But then, as now, even official totals could be muddled in a fast moving health crisis). 

San Francisco still led the list with 1,371 new cases, Los Angeles came second at 720, and Oakland had 391. Berkeley with its 119 new cases was below several cities including Sacramento which had 131 new cases, and tiny Richmond which reported 132. 

A debate broke out in the pages of the Gazette on October 22 regarding open-air church services. Whether the holding of church services in the open air in North Cragmont, outside the city limits, is a violation of the spirit of Dr. J.J. Bentons order against the holding of meetings of all kinds because of the Spanish influenza, has become a matter of discussion between two church organizations, both of which have asked the city council for a decision. 

In view of the fact that Dr. Benton allowed St. Josephs Catholic church to hold open air meetings Sunday, said Mrs. N. Cleveland of the Second Church of Christ, Scientist, we propose to hold an open air meeting at our church tomorrow night, unless the city council orders us not to do so. Dr. Benton told us Saturday there could be no open air meetings within the city, He said he would raid, with the aid of the police, any meeting which it was attempted to hold (sic). In view of his order we held services in Cragmont. The Catholics held their services within the city, however. 

Dr. Benton has threatened and failed to make good. Now we have asked the council to offer a ruling. 

According to Mayor Irving and (Police) Chief Vollmer, the Catholic service was held Sunday because of a misunderstanding on the part of city officials of Dr. Bentons order. Chief Vollmer said he had received no orders to raid any church service, and if there was a violation of Dr. Bentons order, there should be warrants issued for the arrest of those who were responsible for the violation. 

Dr. E.P. Dennett, pastor of the Trinity Methodist Church, asked city officials this morning to interpret Dr. Bentons order. He said his church desired to hold services in Cragmont, if such a meeting would not be interpreted as violation of the spirit of the order. 

October 22, the Gazette weighed in with a rare editorial about the influenza—in fact, the first one I’ve found in all the October editions, at a time when the paper was wont to run three to five separate editorial statements each day on various topics. 

Church assemblages are essential to victory in the spiritual war as well as the physical war and to conquer sin, Satan, and the kaiser the paper said. There is little danger in church assemblages to save the soul. As a rule our churches are high ceilinged, well ventilated, and not crowded. The clergymans complaint is that they are too often half deserted for the golf links or for long automobile rides or for social festivities. To pronounce an unfilled church a crowded assembly, menacing the public health and on that grounds to close it altogether is an act of grim and cruel irony. 

October 23, the Gazette carried a letter from Mrs. N. Cleveland of the Second Church of Christ, Scientist. Editor: Will you kindly give publicity to the following explanation of the two outdoor services held by Second Church of Christ, Scientist, of Berkeley, the first on the lot on Oxford Street and the second at Cragmont Rock, outside of the city limits. In the first instance we had permission from the mayor, and were assisted by a member of the police department. This meeting was announced in the Gazette before it was held. Afterwards, intimation came to us that the heath officer had ruled that no church services indoors or out could be held in the city of Berkeley. This ruling being in contradiction to that of the state board of health, the district attorneys office was consulted for a statement of the exact law; that the statues are entirely vague and general. Inasmuch as it was the widely advertised opinion of the state board of health that churches should not be closed and, so far as has some to light, have not been throughout the state, it appeared to be the duty of the churches to regard themselves as an essential industry along with shipyards and other organizations which were not closed and to make every effort to continue to hold their services in order that they might fulfill another requirement of the state board of health, that there should be no undue hysteria during this time. When President Wilson called upon the American nation to assemble in their churches and pray for victory over a threatened evil last May, he manifestly regarded the church as an essential industry. Therefore, pending a final decision by the city council on this vital point, it was deemed by the board of directors of the Second Church of Christ, Scientist, that rather than ask its members, many of whom lived in North Berkeley, to attend the services of church of their denomination which were held with the approval and encouragement of the state board of health in Oakland, to arrange for services outside the north boundary instead. 

Yesterday the city council gave its final decision and decided that it would uphold the ruling of the health officer and forbid people to assemble within the city limits for prayer. Therefore, in order not to be misunderstood, Second Church of Christ, Scientist, will discontinue its services for the present. 

October 25 the debate over the meetings held by the Second Church of Christ, Scientist, continued in the pages of the newspaper. There was a letter from a church member published. 

Editor Gazette: Since last Sundays meeting at North Cragmont and an article in Tuesdays Gazette give an erroneous impression of the attitude of many Christian Scientists, I am glad of the opportunity to make the following statements:  


First, as a member of Second Church of Christ, Scientist, in Berkeley, I am eager to assure Dr. Benton and other residents of the Gazette, that the North Cragmont meeting was not the result of a decision made by the church members, nor was it even the consequence of an action taken by the entire Board. There are a number of us who protested against the holding of any meetings, anywhere, and who would not attend that or any other. 

It is my desire also, to express appreciation of the dignified courteous spirit shown in Dr. Bentons statement last evening, as well as hearty approval of the sentiments there given. 

This is not a time to strain at gnats and to swallow camelsto quibble over questions of authority and forget the law of brotherly kindness to our neighbors in distress. Doctors themselves differ as to the advisability of closing churchesand, too, of wearing masksbut whats the difference? There is much sorrow and fear in Berkeleythe majority of its people desire that these measures be taken. 

There is nothing to lose if each family study its Bible and pray alone at home for a while, if all refrain from gathering together anywhere for any purpose and if each individual wear a mask when out in public places. On the other hand, there is everything to gain from expressing clear-cut obedience, true, helpful citizenship and the utmost consideration for the rights and feelings of others among who we find ourselves. Edith L. Mossman. 

What was Dr. Benton’s “statement last evening”? He decided to reverse himself and allow outdoor church services! 

The official statement, printed in the October 25 and 26 Gazette editions, was laid out and boxed like an advertisement and read: 

Notice to the Public and Churches in Particular. Churches of the city will be permitted to hold open air meetings on Sundays by obtaining a permit from the health department. As prerequisites to the issuance of the permit, the pastor shall be required to state the place at which the services are to be held and shall agree to see to it that all persons attending wear gauze masks. Dr. J.J. Benton, Health Officer for the City of Berkeley. 

There was also this article on the front page. Churches May Hold Open Air Services. 

In announcing today that church services may be held n the open air providing all persons in attendance wear gauze masks, Health Officer Dr. J.J. Benton, today issued the following statement:  

In view of the fact that St. Josephs Catholic held its services in the open air in their gardens last Sunday in violation of the order that no church services, whether indoors or out of doors be held, and in view of the further fact that Mrs. Cleveland, president of the Second Church of Christ, Scientists,claims that said services were held under a permit issued by me as health officer, as stated in the issue of the Gazette of Tuesday, together with an admission on her part that her congregation, that is the Second Church of Christ, Scientists, held a meeting in North Cragmont, beyond the city limits, on Sunday, I believe it necessary that such inputation of favoritism be answered by myself. 

The facts in the matter are these: the health officer issued an order that no public meetings of any character whatsoever should be held in the city of Berkeley, said order to be enforced by the police department. In reference to the meeting held at St. Josephs Catholic church investigation shows that it was claimed to have been held under a verbal permit from some official who had no authority to issue even a verbal permit therefor (sic). 

As regards the meeting in North Cragmont, I have this to say, that it was absolutely responsible in that it was in defiance, in spirit at least, of constituted authority and was certainly not in line with the teachings of Jesus Christ, who taught in the Bible, which is the standard of all who profess to be Christians to render under Caesar the things that are Caesars and unto God the things that are Gods thereby hoping to inculcate into his followers a respect for and submission to constituted authority whether or not they agree with the edicts of said constituted authority. Now, in order that there may be no further misapprehension regarding the holding of services by the churches in the open air, the following order has been issued. 

Churches of the city will be permitted to hold open air meetings on Sunday by obtaining a permit from the health department. As prerequisites to the issuance of the permit, the pastor shall be required to state the place at which the services are to be held and shall agree to see to it that all persons attending wear gauze masks. 

(What made Benton change his mind? The City Council had just officially backed his closure order on churches! No articles seem to speak to the underlying reasons, although Benton is clearly perturbed at two things in his statement above—what he regarded as the un-Christian “defiance” of the Second Church of Christ, Scientist, and an unnamed “some official” who was alleged to have given the Roman Catholic parish verbal permission to hold services. 

Possibly Benton had been privately pressured by some civic leaders or public officials to go easy on the churches. The conditions he required—tell the city where the service will be held, and all attendees must wear masks during your service—were hardly onerous since the church would be telling its parishioners of the location of the service anyway, and the City was already requiring everyone to wear masks outside the home. In essence, his reversed order carved out a special exemption for churches alone to have big public gatherings in Berkeley, at least outside the UC campus.) 

Several churches acted immediately after Benton’s new order to schedule services for the following Sunday, October 29, according to an article in the Saturday, October 28 Gazette. These included First Baptist, Trinity Methodist and Epworth Methodist which planned a joint service, and First Christian, First Congregational and First Presbyterian, which held a similar triple joint service on the First Congregational grounds. 

All of Berkeley’s Episcopal congregations with the exception of Good Shepherd (in west Berkeley), held a joint service on the grounds of St. Clement’s at Russell and Claremont. North Congregational Church also planned a morning service. 

In the afternoon, at 4:00 PM, there was a larger joint service at First Congregational Church. 


The Roman Catholic St. Joseph’s Church on Addison Street held its services in the garden of the Sisters of the Presentation convent next door (where the University Terrace UC faculty housing is now located, along California Street; portions of the garden survive in the inner courtyard of the housing complex). 


And the Second Church of Christ, Scientist? They resumed their outdoor services on their lot on Oxford Street. 

While some Methodists, Presbyterians, Congregationalists, Baptists, Christian Scientists and Roman Catholics all opted to hold outdoor services, there’s curiously no mention of Lutherans. Berkeley had a number of Lutheran congregations, primarily in west Berkeley, usually organized in first generation immigrant communities from northern Europe. 

October 23 the Gazette’s special column on West Berkeley news noted Not a church in the West End opened its doors Sunday for public worship by order of the health department. Presumably they continued that practice when the restriction was lifted the following Sunday. It is also possible that they didn’t have outdoor spaces to gather since West Berkeley church properties tended to be smaller then those in East Berkeley. 

A last note on churches, from October 26: College Avenue Methodist Sunday School is to adopt a novel way of observing Go-To-Sunday-School-Day tomorrow. According to letters sent out by the superintendent, Percy F. Morris, each family represented in the Sunday school membership is to hold its own school at home at 11 oclock Sunday morning. All scholars studying the Graded Bible Lessons have been asked to prepare written lessons and to submit same to the teacher on the first Sunday the church is again open. An award of a Bible is offered to the scholar having the best set of lessons. 

(I feel for the parents at that church. Not only were their children home and underfoot during the week from Berkeley public schools that had been closed by the flu, but the parents were now expected to assign, monitor, and turn in for grading Sunday school homework as well. No rest for the weekend.) 

By the last week in October it was clear to many local organizations that they couldn’t conduct business as usual, at least in terms of holding events. October 21 the Berkeley Federation of Mothers’ Clubs cancelled its planned October 24 “reciprocity picnic” at Live Oak Park, to prevent the spread of Spanish influenza in Berkeley. The same day the Berkeley Musical Association announced it was postponing a five concert series until the flu crisis was over. October 22 it was announced that the regular Collegiate Alumnae luncheon at the Hotel Oakland was indefinitely postponed on account of the influenzaThe luncheon will probably be merged with the November affair. The Washington School PTA canceled all meetings until the ban is lifted on public gatherings by the health officers. 

The Red Cross unit of the Berkeley Women’s Temperance Union, the Red Cross unit of the Hillside Club, the women of the Twentieth Century Club (on Derby Street above College Avenue) and the women of Trinity Methodist Church continued meeting, but the gatherings were to sew gauze masks, not social affairs. The Twentieth Century Club, one of Berkeley’s more exclusive women’s organizations, noted in its announcement on October 23 that The club extends a hearty invitation to any woman who may find this a convenient place of work to come and help with the masks. 

Some Berkeley families continued to have social gatherings. “Society News” in the October 24 Gazette noted Yesterday was the eighteenth birthday of charming Evod (sic) Geraldine Lumley, daughter of Major and Mrs J.C.W. Niemeyer of Thousand Oaks, and despite the flu and other unfavorable conditions, the day was not allowed to pass by unnoticed. In the evening Mrs. Niemeyer gave a very small Victrola dance for her daughter, about half a dozen of the young girls most intimate friends being asked to enjoy an hour or so of relaxation with her. 

But other families decided it was not time for social gatherings. October 25, 1918 Mr. and Mrs. H.B. Purcell of Dana Street announced they were postponing their golden wedding anniversary. A reception had been planned in their honor, but because of the war it had been decided to send out no cards, merely verbal invitations. Now, on account of the epidemic, the reception will be postponed one month, to take place November 26, at their home…” 


There were still some public events planned. October 23, a Wednesday, it was announced that the next day Professor Arthur Falwell, acting head of the department of music, would hold a “song mass meeting” in the Greek Theatre. The chorus will learn both simple songs and the great chorus of the masters, and from time to time free public performances will be given. The people of Berkeley and the Student Body are especially invited to take part in this movement. 

The next day, however, a terse article said the meeting will not assemble, according to word given out at the office of President Benjamin Ide Wheeler today.  

The postponement of the Community Chorus meeting is taken as a precautionary measure in view of the Spanish influenza epidemic and because of the fact that it is considered inadvisable to hold even outdoor meetings at which residents of Berkeley and students of the university would come in contact, one group with the other. 

(One wonders what words might have passed between Wheeler and the Music Department acting chair if they discussed this in person? In 1918 Wheeler was winding down his career. Worn out by full-time service—except for some periodic sabbaticals—as UC President since 1899 and battered by wartime insinuations he was not sufficiently patriotic, Wheeler would retire in 1919. But he was still a strongly hands-on administrator and his critics claimed he often led like an autocrat. He would have been quite capable of calling a professor on the carpet and ordering plans to be immediately changed.) 

Interestingly, on October 25 Wheeler did allow another mass event, one of the regular “University Meetings”, to go on in the Greek Theater. On these occasions all students were invited to a central gathering place—usually either the old Harmon Gymnasium, or the Greek Theatre—to hear University officials and visiting speakers. 

This time two speakers, both doctors, admonished the crowd to Get into the fresh air if you get it (the flu). The doctor who offered that advice, Dr. Woods Hutchinson, then spoke to The history of the disease. 

The world has known five pandemics of Spanish influenza. The first was during the Napoleonic era, when the army was attacked and forced into retirement. The second was in 1830; the third, in 1860s; the fourth in 1889, and the fifth one at present.

The disease has always come out of the great unwashed portion of Central Asia, and has proceeded westward along the lines of travel. This time it is appearing in the same old way. It appeared in Spain in April and May of this year, and the reason for it first becoming known there is that Spain was the first country it hit which told the truth about it. The other nations were at war and suppressed news of it. Now we know that it was in Germany in February, and, thank God, it was responsible for holding up the spring drive of the Germans three weeks, giving this country just that much more time to rush reinforcements to the allies. But it the European countries it was not in the virulent form that it has been in this country. In France there were only about 2,000 deaths, and in England about 3,000. It was little more than a cold or the
grippe. It was brought to the United States by returned sailors, and was first noticed at Boston. It spread to the naval schools about Boston and finally reached Camp Devon. There was where it showed up in its virulent form, the worst that was ever known. It has developed into a dreadful plague. Out of 45,000 soldiers at that camp, there were 14,000 cases with 900 deaths. To date, there have been 17,000 deaths in the army. It has killed more men than Hun bullets. ewer have found that it attacks people between the ages of 20 and 40 years. That was because it developed in this camp, where the men were of about the same age, and the germ developed to work on people of that age. 

We have found that the germ is easily killedis a frail sort of animaland must be kept at human temperature to live. A variance of five degrees either way will kill it. So it is not dangerous unless you breath the germ directly from some one who has it. That is why the mask is effective 


An epidemic of this kind usually affects about 10 percent of the population. We figure that one out of every fifteen will get it. Of this number, we figure out of of every six will develop into pneumonia, and also that one out of every six who develop pneumonia, will die. The efficiency of the mask will be tested by the number of cases less than 300,000 which you have in California. That number would be the average if the epidemic went unchecked. 

(Note: we now know that the worldwide impact of the ‘Spanish influenza’ was much higher than Doctor Hutchinson projected. It is now believed about one third—500 million—of the people then living were infected and between 20 and 50 million died.) 


And meanwhile, in Alameda? The Neptune Beach amusement park, mentioned in previous installments. was still going strong October 23. An article (which read like an advertisement and was probably a press release printed verbatim by the paper) said Spanish influenza is unknown at Neptune Beach where thousands of people take sun baths daily on the sandy beach. Sunshine and salt water are the real antidotes for the influenza germ, it is claimed and it is noticeable that none of the Neptune regulars have been stricken with the imported malady. The dance hall and (swimming) tank have been closed in order to prevent people from congesting (sic) but the tide is ideal for surf bathing and present and last Sunday two thousand enthusiastic bathers paddled in the shallow channel. Picnics, “Shipbuilder’s Day”, tug-of-war and water polo contests and dances were touted. 

Meanwhile, well-known local figures were coming down with the flu. 

October 22 it was reported Professor Charles Mills Gayley, dean of the faculties, was confined to his home by illness yesterday, and it was reported today that he is suffering from Spanish influenza. (Gayley lived at Durant and Piedmont, in a house that has since been converted and expanded into a sorority.) 

October 23 a Gazette article reported J. Stitt Wilson was stricken with Spanish influenza at Fresno last Saturday, while enroute to his home in this city, from Los Angeles, where he has been on a lecture tour. Wilson was making the trip in his auto and expected to reach here Sunday. Sunday morning Mrs. Wilson was summoned to Fresno by a phone message from a physician at that city, to the effect that her husband was quite ill at Hotel Fresno. She left at once for Fresno. Wilson is much improved according to a telephone message received this morning by his brother, B.F. Wilson of this city. Mrs. Wilson expected to return within a few days and Wilson will remain in Fresno until strong enough to make the trip in safety. 

Wilson was a recent Mayor of Berkeley and a nationally known Socialist orator and activist. The October 24 Gazette reported him in a favorable condition and recovering with his wife and a doctor at his side. He would survive the flu and live another 22 years. 

October 25, Dr. A.S. Kelley, one of the foremost physicians of the east bay and president of the Oakland Board of Education, died of pneumonia following an illness of two weeks

San Francisco’s Palace of Fine Arts was closed to the public October 22, 1918. The Palace at that time, just three years old, still included art galleries in the building behind the grand rotunda. The closing was said to be in conformity with the action taken by other public institutions

October 24, the Gazette ran an article entitled “Suggested Diet for Convalescing ‘Flu’ Patients”. 

The local chapter of the Red Cross has issued the following diet for influenza patients, which has been arranged by Dr. Agnes Fay Morgan of the home economics department of the university. 

I won’t reproduce the entire article here, but the basics were: 

During the illness: toast, starch and bread puddings, cereal mushes and gruels. Ice cream may be given two or three times a day if desired. No coarse vegetables or fruit fiber, but purees were allowed. Meat broths are of little value. Fruit juices, eggnog (presumably non-alcoholic), and custard were allowed. Caregivers were told to encourage the patient to eat, since lack of appetite was a symptom, but do not experiment with the patients digestion during the critical period. 


During convalescence: after temperature becomes normal, egg dishes, simple vegetable salads, with plenty of oil dressing, broiled or boiled lean meats and fish, bacon, rice, baked and mashed potatoes, macaroni and fresh fruit may be added to the diet advised for the fever period. A list of suggested daily menus was also provided. 

(Professor Morgan would become a notable figure in both university and medical history. She was an accomplished chemist who came to Berkeley in 1916. Systemic discrimination against women in science relegated her to a position in Home Economics, not chemistry or another basic science. However, she would turn the Home Economics department into a respected research program, requiring high standards of training for her students, and conduct pioneering research and teaching in nutrition. She would remain on the Berkeley faculty for 50 years.) 

Berkeley businesses were still open, but beginning to make adjustments. October 24 three of Berkeley’s leading merchants—S.H. Brake & Co., A.O. Donogh, and J.F. Hink and Son, Inc.—advertised that they were changing their procedures because of the influenza. Their announcement proclaimed: 

LADIES OF BERKELEY! Your dry good merchants are using every precaution to check the epidemic which is now in our midst, and therefore we respectfully request your further cooperation. UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE Merchandise will not be sent on approval or will not be exchanged. 

Presumably this was done to prevent possibly infected clothing and other goods from being returned to the stores. 

October 23, 1918. “Discover Vaccine To Stop Influenza” the Gazette headlined. A vaccine to prevent Spanish influenza has been discovered, and, beginning today, will be man fractured by the State Hygienic Laboratory on the campus at the university and distributed to the people of California, free of charge, as fast as it is possible to make it. This announcement was made this morning by Dr. W.H. Kellogg, secretary of the State Board of Health, upon his arrival in Berkeley. 

The article went on to say that the proposed vaccine at been discovered by Dr. Timothy Leary of the Tufts Medical College, of Boston and during the past week he has vaccinated thousands of doctors, nurses and hospital attendants in Boston with the best of results. 

(Note: this was not the Timothy Leary known for his development of LSD. That Leary was born in 1920. This Leary was his uncle, a pathologist at Tufts. Leary’s supposed vaccine was sent to San Francisco, one of its major testing sites, by train and there was a lot of press attention to it. A bit of online research indicates that Leary’s vaccine is a whole story in itself, but I won’t go into it here since it’s only peripheral to Berkeley.) 

(continue to Fourth Installment, Part C, for the remainder of Berkeley news from the fourth week of October, 1918.)


Berkeley and the 1918 Influenza: Fourth Installment (Part C)

y Steven Finacom, Copyright by the author
Saturday April 11, 2020 - 04:44:00 PM

This third and last section for the fourth week in October, 1918, reports on non-flu related news from that week including the approaching denouement of the “Great War” and wartime “Homefront” activities. It begins with the obituaries of those who died from the influenza in Berkeley that week.

Flu Deaths in Berkeley

I continue here the practice of transcribing, in their entirety, obituaries and news stories about the death of Berkeleyans from the 1918 flu or pneumonia. This includes both people who died in Berkeley and people from Berkeley who died elsewhere of influenza. For the first week in October I found one such obituary in the paper. The second week had six, the third week had ten. This week there are twenty-two, twenty of them for people who died in Berkeley. The date after the obituary is the date in which the item appeared in the Gazette

Charles Hall Cope, of 2140 Los Angeles Avenue, manager of the Acme Lithograph company, died this morning at Roosevelt Hospital, following a weeks illness of influenza and pneumonia. Cope was twenty-seven years of age, and is survived by his wife, Mrs. Eloise Cope, and two young children. The body will be taken to Los Angeles, where funeral services will be held and interment made.(October 21, 1918). 

Joseph Thomas died at his home Saturday, following a weeks illness from Spanish influenza and pneumonia. Thomas was a native of California and was 39 years of age. He is survived by his widow, Gertrude Thomas, and by four brothers, Frank, William, Manuel and George Thomas. Open air funeral services will be held at St. Colombos Church at 9:30 oclock tomorrow morning and interment will be made at St. Marks Cemetery. (October 21, 1918). 

Miss. Florence L. Pattee, sophomore in the College of Letters and Sciences and instruction (sic) in swimming at the university, died Saturday night at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Pattee, 1533 Spruce Street, of pneumonia following Spanish influenza. Miss Pattee was a native of Nevada and was twenty-six years of age. She had been instructor in swimming at the university for a couple of years in the physical education department and was also an instructor in the Oakland swimming school at Lake Merritt last summer. Miss Pattee is survived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Edgar Pattee, and by one brother, who is in the navy, and one sister. Funeral services will be conducted at Santa Cruz, the former home of the family. (October 21, 1918.) 

John Kenneth Moody, 22, captain of the University of California track team last year, is dead at Mare Island today following an attack of pneumonia induced by influenza. His father, H.L. Moody of this city (Redding), received word of his sons death this morning. Young Moody enlisted in the navy and began a course in January. He would have taken an examination this week for an ensigns commission.Moody was a third year student in letters and science at the university last year. he was a member of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. (October 22, 1918) 

Funeral services for Robert A. Mann, son of Mr. and Mrs. H.V. Mann of 2330 Webster Street, will be conducted at Oakland undertaking parlors, at 3:30 oclock tomorrow afternoon. Dr. R.C. Brooks of the First Congregational Church will conduct the services. Mann died in Tarkington, Wyo., last Saturday, following a brief illness from pneumonia. He is survived his widow, one son, his parents and two sisters. (October 22, 1918.) 

Mrs. Ida Cuneo, wife of J.D. Cuneo, of 2219 Roosevelt Street, was stricken with Spanish influenza last Thursday while caring for her husband, who was ill with the disease, and passed away last night at the family home. Her husband is recovering, but will be unable to attend the funeral services. Mrs. Cuneo was a native of San Francisco and was thirty-five years of age. The family lived in this city for the last ten years. Mrs. Cuneo is survived by her husband, J.D. Cuneo, and by one brother, John Bedoni of San Francisco. (October 22, 1918). 

“W.L. Parry of 2112 Grove Street, has returned from Junction City, Ore. where he attended the funeral services of his son, William Clarence Parry, newspaper man of that city, whose death occurred following two days’ illness from pneumonia. Parry was twenty-nine years of age. He formerly lived in this city attending the Berkeley schools and graduating from the college of commerce at the university. He is survived by his widow, one young son, David Dixon, his father, W.L. Parry of this city, and two brothers. One brother is serving in the trenches in France.” (October 22, 1918). 

George P. Drew, a member of the Students Army Training Corps, died yesterday afternoon at the U.C. Infirmary of pneumonia. Drews home was in Canada, and his mother is en route to this city. Jose Dubero, a freshman, died Sunday of the influenza. (October 22, 1918). 

As noted earlier, it was reported October 22, 1918 in an article on the situation on the UC Berkeley campus that “seven deaths have occurred in the university community to date. These are the names of those who haven’t separately been listed by obituary in previous installments or in the list above. Miss Alma Gunderson (nurse), Kenneth Henry Coats, Vernon Thurwell. I have not found obituaries in the Gazette for them. 

Mrs. Helen E. Shone of 2110 Kittredge Street, a resident of this city for the last six years, died Friday of pneumonia following three weeks illness. Mrs. Shone was a native of Iowa and was sixty-eight years of age. Before coming to this city she was for a time, matron of the Fred Finch Orphanage. She was a woman of rare traits of character and charitable in disposition and was active in the work of the First Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Shone is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Edward Euel, who came from Wyoming to be with her her mother during the last of her illness. Brief funeral services were held here and the body was taken to Healdsburg, where internment will be made beside her husband. (October 22, 1918.) 

Dr. Herbert C. Mills, well known physician and surgeon of this city, died last night at his home, 1921A Francisco street, following a weeks illness of Spanish influenza and pneumonia. Dr. Mills was a native of Sydney, Australia, and was thirty-eight years of age. Dr. Mills has been a resident of this city for the last eighteen years, with the exception of two years spent in Alaska. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Craig Marshall Mills, and by a number of brothers who live in Australia. Private funeral services will be conducted at 10 oclock tomorrow morning at local undertaking parlors, by Rev. A.M. Elston. (October 23, 1918.) 

Mrs. Mary Catherine Hansen, wife of Benjamin Hansen of 984 University Avenue, died yesterday after a brief illness of Spanish influenza. Mrs. Hansen was stricken with the disease shortly after the birth of an infant, last Thursday. She was a native of this state and was twenty-nine years of age. Funeral services were conducted today at St. Marys cemetery.(October 23, 1918.) 

Funeral services for Private Rolla Ramos, whose death occurred at Camp Lewis last Sarturday, will be held at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Antone Ramos, 2007 Fifth Street, at 9:45 oclock tomorrow morning. Interment will be made at St. Marys cemetery. Ramos died at Camp Lewis. The body arrived yesterday from the north. Ramos is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Ramos, and three brothers, Joseph, Antone Jr. and William Ramos. He also leaves a sister who lives in Ogden, Utah.(October 23, 1918). (Although this obituary does not mention the cause of death, I am surmising it was influenza. The other plausible reason for death at a military camp in that period would be an accident during training, and that cause would most likely have been mentioned in an obituary. Camp Lewis was in Washington State and had been specially built in 1916-17 as a training camp for the vastly expanded wartime Army.) 


Funeral services for Private Rolla Ramos were held at the home conducted by Rev. F.X. Morrison of St. Joseph’s Catholic Church a small item reported the next day.The casket was draped in the American flag and was banked with flowers. Soldiers acted as pallbearers. Interment was made at St. Marks Cemetery. This was the first soldiers funeral which has been held in West Berkeley.(October 24, 1918.) 

Mrs. Reba Ballou Hunter, wife of Lieutenant Colonel George B. Hunter, commander of the School of Military Aeronautics on the campus, died yesterday at her home of bronchial pneumonia, following an attack of Spanish influenza. Mrs. Hunter had been ill for two and a half weeks. Mrs. Hunter was born in Fort Sam Houston, Texas, thirty years ago. She was the daughter of Major General C.C. Ballou, United States Army, in command of the 92nd Division of the American Expeditionary Forces in France and was a graduate of the Randolph-Macon College in Virginia. She came here a year ago from Washington, D.C. when her husband was ordered to the Berkeley school. Mrs. Hunter is survived by her husband, Lieutenant Colonel Hunter, a four-year-old son, George B. Hunter, Jr. and her parents, Mayor General and Mrs. C.C. Ballou. Mrs. Ballou is now in Washington, D.C. No funeral services were conducted here and the body was sent to West Point, for interment, accompanied by Colonel Hunter. (October 23, 1918.) 

Two Deaths in one Family Within One Week. William F. Streuli, son of Mr. and Mrs. W.A. Streuli, of 2141 McGee Street, passed away yesterday afternoon, while members of the family were attending the burial service of his sisters husband, Michael OConnell. Streuli was a native of San Francisco and was thirty-three years of age. he had been ill for one week of Spanish influenza and pneumonia. Michael OConnell died in a military camp at St. Paul of Spanish influenza, and the body was brought here for burial, which took place yesterday at Holy Cross Cemetery, San Francisco. Mrs. OConnell has been residing with her parents,while her husband was in the service. Streuli is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W.F. Streuli; his sister, Mrs. Louise OConnell, and one brother, Albert Streuli. Private funeral services will be conducted at 12 oclock tomorrow. (October 25, 1918) 

George S. McComb, for sixteen years clerk of the Justice Court, San Francisco, died yesterday at his home, 2443 Derby Street of influenza. He was forty-six years of age and had been identified with many activities in San Francisco. He was the son of General John McComb, one of the pioneer newspaper men of California. 

McComb was a member of Stanford Parlor, Native Sons of the Golden West, and was leader in the swimming class at the Olympic Club, San Francisco before the fire. Of recent years he has been in the marine insurance business. McComb is survived by his widow, and one daughter, Alice, who was on the stage with DeWolf Hopper. Funeral Services will be conducted in San Francisco tomorrow. (October 25, 1918). 

James Robb of the Robb Paper Company of South Berkeley, died at his home, 3027 Grove Street, last evening following a weeks illness from Spanish influenza and pneumonia. Robb was a native of Pennsylvania and was 36 years of age. He came to the western coast nine years ago today and for the last five years had been a resident of this city, where he had been engaged in business. Robb is survived by his widow, Mrs. Evelyn Robb, and his mother, Mrs. James Robb of San Francisco. He leaves one sister, Miss Elizabeth Robb, and two brothers, Alexander and Russell Robb of San Francisco. Funeral services and internment will be private. (October 25, 1918) 

Grover C. Dawson, outside foreman of the Eldorado Oil Works, who is the father of nine children, died this morning at his home, 2100 Sixth Street, following an illness of the influenza. Dawson was 32 years of age and had been employed at the Eldorado Oil Works for the last seven years. The flag at the oil works was at half-mast in his honor today. Dawson is survived by his widow and nine children. Funeral services will be conducted Monday.(October 26, 1918). 

Charles Wesley Miller, inspector for the Santa Fe (Railroad), employees at Richmond, died this morning at his home 2330 Shattuck Avenue, following an illness of influenza. He was thirty-two years of age and is survived by his widow and one child.(October 26, 1918). 

Here’s one obituary without a cause reported, but might have been the influenza. The five months old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ira V. Boehrer of 2926 Fulton Street, died Saturday morning following a brief illness. Boehrer is a member of the fire department. (October 21, 1918) 

War news 

As the epidemic raged in the United States, the Great War continued. Allied forces were on the offensive in France near the border of the Netherlands and elsewhere. There were repeated reports in the paper that week that German defenses through Belgium and northern France were strained and giving way in some places. 

As the Germans retreated from long-held defensive lines in occupied Belgium and French territory, “from all quarters of the countries that have been under the heel of the enemy come stories of brutality toward helpless women and children, theft of provisions intended for their help and other acts of savagery”, the United Press wrote October 21. German troops were said to be looting or destroying buildings in some towns about to be liberated, removing civilian men—who were reportedly taken to Germany to do forced labor—and removing portable foodstuffs, livestock, and industrial equipment. 

A German diplomatic note argued that for covering a retreat, destructions will always be necessary and, insofar as necessary, they are permitted under international law. 

There was also a lot of news and speculation in the Gazette about diplomatic offensives and neogtiations, the possibilities of a cease fire, and American opposition to ending the war without unconditional surrender. 

October 21, the paper reported that the war department is forging ahead with its plan of four million men abroad by mid-yearand the shipping board has been called on for more troops and cargo ships. Some pundits said that as Austrian and Turkish war-fighting capacity collapsed, paradoxically German resistance might stiffen since Germany would no longer be supporting the extensive Austrian and Turkish fronts in south eastern Europe and could draw inward. 

An article on October 21 in the Gazette profiled the service of African-American troops in segregated units in France. I quote from it verbatim here to give readers an accurate sense of the times, despite the racist offensive terminology it includes. Darkey Doughboys Win Approval of French Officers, the piece was headlined. 

Colored troops from America already have established themselves in Europe as being cool and reliable fighters in the front line. Both American and French commands say so and, if the Germans ever discovered who it was that held part of the line through Argonne Forest when the boches failed to get through some time ago, the German command has a decidedly high respect for American colored infantry. 

Up and down the line, after the test of a years service, you hear no doubts expressed regarding the colored infantry. The darkie doughboys have made good in the line as well as behind. They have proven themselves cool and brave soldiers in the trenches, and gentlemen when back at rest in French towns. You are continually running into units of these colored chaps as you travel up and down the line from Switzerland to Flanders.

The article went on to describe practice maneuvers of African-American units and how troops had entered into and held the front lines and were praised by both French officers and civilians. 

Homefront
 

Berkeley remained on its own war footing to support the national effort. Results from Berkeley’s Fourth Liberty Bond loan drive were in on October 21, and the City had subscribed at least $3,006,200 to the cause. Berkeley’s Federally assigned quota was $2,357,735. 

According to the latest advices, Berkeley leads the cities in Class D in the competition for the honor of having a ship named after the city which makes the greatest percentage of oversubscriptions. The other cities in this class are Sacramento, San Diego, Pasadena, San Jose and Ogden, Utah. 

Unfortunately, Berkeley has a few residents who have not done their duty by the government. The announcement made during the closing days of the campaign brought a large percentage of these into the list of subscribers. But the others are being carefully checked and if the records show that they have subscribed either nothing or an amount far below what they should, their names will be published, the article noted, repeating the threat made the previous week.
 

I couldn’t find in the Wednesday edition or subsequent papers any such list of names to be shamed. Maybe everyone bought a bond, or perhaps the threat was just for publicity sake. 

By the end of the week, on Saturday October 26, the Fourth Liberty Loan Committee published precise final results. Berkeley had raised $3,061,00 from 21,689 subscribers, totaling $709,300 above the loan drive target. That total doesn’t necessarily prove that nearly 22,000 Berkeley residents individually participated since Albany residents were also included in Berkeley’s total, and many bundled subscriptions that came in from Berkeley businesses represented contributions by their employees, who weren’t all necessarily Berkeley residents. But regardless of the exact number, the response from a city of not much more than 50,000 residents at the time, was considerable. 

It is interesting to see what banks were used for the subscriptions, since that would also indicate the leading banks in Berkeley in that era. The largest by far was the First National Bank, followed by the Berkeley Branch of the Oakland Bank of Savings, and the West Berkeley Bank. The Berkeley Branch of the First Savings Bank of Oakland brought up the rear. 

(The West Berkeley Bank building still stands at the northwest corner of the intersection of University and San Pablo where it is now a Wells Fargo branch. Two of the other bank buildings, at least, have been demolished.) 

October 23, 1918 it was announced that a “big War Work Drive” was planned for the week of November 11-18, and organization work was continuing despite the influenza. Headquarters were at 2282 Shattuck Avenue. This was part of a national campaign. 


October 25, the Gazette ran an editorial signed “The Manufacturer” that mocked the idea of health insurance. 

It would make a cat laugh to have heard a supporter of Health Insurance get up and with tears in his voice say: The only pity is that it is physically impossible to put health insurance into operation now as a war measure. It is actually needed now as a measure of justice and efficiency to the industrial army. We dont ask the individual soldier to bear personally the financial risk of injury in war, and we ought not to ask the individual workman, who happens to be broken down by the war pace of industry, to bear a cost which ought to be distributed over the industry and the public. 

The broken-downwar workersthink of it! Working eight hours a day at unheard-of wages and double pay for overtime and the boilermakersunion now demanding a 44-hour week5 1/2 days. 

Picture our broken downwar workers as they trudge home (the majority of them in their own automobiles now days) Saturday night with from $35 to $100 in their weekly pay envelope. 

Isnt it a shame the way they have to work for eight hours when our soldier boys only work 24 hours a day seven days a week if called on and lay down their lives in addition if necessary. Yet they work for $32 a month and dont grumble nor strike. 

Its pulling the sob stuff pretty strong when the state is asked to load up with personal doctor bills for the broken downworkmen and their families when they are making double, treble and quadruple what they ever made before and who are fully projected by the work-unions compensation act against all accidents due to their employment. 

Why not go a step further and have the state do their laundry and buy their shoes as these are most essential articles and worn out working for the country (at $5, $6, $7, $8, $9, and $10 per day). 

Nay, nay, Pauline! The public will gladly assume any amount of financial burden for the boys who go to the front, but it cant see that the poor, broken downworkman who stays at home and assumes the heavy burden of working shorter hours at larger pay than ever before received is in the same class. 


The workmens compensation act already fully protects the workman. 

Today, of course, we can see the more than echoes of century-old editorials like that in some contemporary American politicians and pundits. It’s telling that the business-oriented Gazette felt it advisable to run this piece even as hundreds of local people, many of them hourly workers, fell sick from the flu. 

In 1918, of course, if a workman caught the Spanish influenza and couldn’t work for weeks, that supposedly munificent paycheck would simply stop and he and his family would be thrown on their own resources not just for living expenses but also for medical care—since workman’s comp would presumably not cover the influenza since it was not a work related illness. 

A previous editorial on October 24 provides more background context for this editorial assault. Two vicious measures will be submitted to the voters of California in November, health insurance and single tax. This state is fertile ground for experimentation and every faddist finds it easy to have his fads placed before the peopleHealth insurance is something new. It is opposed by labor, whose welfare it is presumed to have in mind. It is a measure of creation of more jobs for the job seeker, and to saddle the state with an enormous additional expense. It is legislation that is contrary to the spirit of our institutions, will impose on the many a heavy burden for the benefit of the very few. It should be defeated at the polls. The source was given as the Bakersfield Californian, presumably the paper that first ran the piece. 

(It’s also illuminating that during October, 1918, the Gazette found the room to run only one editorial about the flu epidemic—urging that churches be kept open—but two editorials attacking reformation of the heath care system.) 

There was a housing shortage in Berkeley in 1918 resulting from the influx of war industry workers into the Bay Area, including at East Bay shipyards in Oakland and Alameda. It’s also likely that the University of California’s rapidly growing enrollment placed pressure on local housing stock, along with Federal restrictions on civilian construction that were in place to ensure that vital or scarce materials went directly to war-related uses. 

October 24, 1918 the Gazette reported: Berkeleys application for a federal permit to construct 300 houses for war workers will receive official approval as the outcome of a conference held at the rooms of the Chamber of Commerce last evening. 

James W. Plachek, chairman of the U.S. Homes Registration committee for this city presided, and statements from property owners who are planning to build were heard by L.B. Swaner, chief aid to R.A. Petit, the Pacific Coast manager of the U.S. Housing Corporation, all projects for construction being inquired into carefullyIt was shown that plans for at least 116 houses are ready at this moment. All of these come within the requirements of the government for early construction, namely: that they shall cost not more than $3,500; that they are such as will be used to house war workers; that they shall be sold on reasonable conditions or rented at about $25 per month. 

It was developed that without such a permit as contemplated in Berkeleys application it is not possible for owners or contractors to obtain material. Swaner explained that he would not promise that either material or labor could be obtained. In the east there is a great shortage of both these elementsSwaner said that in company with Chairman Plachek he drove to the different parts of Berkeley yesterday afternoon, and made a careful inspection of the factory district, and was impressed with the splendid transportation system which this city possesses, rendering it an ideal place for the housing of all who desire to make their homes hereA motion was adopted requesting that a telegram be forwarded to Washington for the federal permit to build 300 cottages and bungalows. Swaner stated that this method will be recommended buy him and that he hoped to have favorable action by the government authorities in a few days, though of course he could make no promise on that point, as the decision rests with officials in Washington. 

Other news:
 

There was a local labor shortage in 1918. I took a look at want ads in the October 22 Gazette. There were 22 separate ads seeking “Help Wanted - Female”. Most of them were advertising for domestic help, women who could do part-time housework, laundry, or childcare. There were also other jobs available including work for chamber maids in hotels, and waitresses, kitchen helpers, or hairdressing salon workers. 

Interestingly, there were just two jobs for males offered: one was running an apartment building elevator in the evening, the other was making deliveries for a drugstore. 

Eight individuals were advertising, looking for work. Half of them listed themselves as Japanese (it was not uncommon in that era to advertise for work, or for help, specifying the race or preferred race of the worker). “A Japanese boy wants general housework”; “Japanese woman day worker, washing, ironing, house cleaning.” A “expert young lady” wanted a stenographer and dictation position, and a “man of good repute and good workman”, wanted employment “caring for premises, home, etc.” 

A winter storm swept across Nebraska and Kansas on October 26, 1918, dropped nearly a foot of snow, blanked the land with ice, and downed telephone and telegraph lines, cutting off much communication between west and east. 

Neither influenza nor war would prevent the Cal varsity football team from playing a fall schedule in 1918, the third year of coaching by the upcoming but non-yet legendary Andy Smith. A tentative schedule was announced October 24. It would begin on October 26. Four games were scheduled at California Field, the wooden stadium on the Berkeley campus that stood where Hearst Gymnasium is located today. Two of these games would be against military teams—from Fort Baker, and from the Marines—and the other two against the University of Southern California and St. Mary’s College. November 26, a version of the “Big Game” would be played in Sacramento at Mather Field, a military base. “Aviators at Mather Field, in the majority of cases, are former university students with a football past.” 

(This late October article announcing a five game season is curious since historical records show that by that date in 1918 the Golden Bears had already played two games on Oct. 5 and Oct. 12, and would play six more later in the year. Possibly the earlier October games were not noted because they were non-conference. The USC game would end up being switched to December 14, but the St. Mary’s and Mather Field games would take place as announced. Cal would also play Oregon on November 23, and Stanford on November 30, the only two Pacific Coast Conference games on the schedule. A game against “San Pedro Navy”, presumably another military team, would complete the schedule on December 7.

The Berkeley team would finish the season 6-2, outscoring opponents 186 points to 62. The Golden Bears beat Stanford 67-0 in this season, the worst Stanford loss in the history of varsity football competition between the two universities, but Wikipedia tells us, The 1918 game, in which Cal prevailed 67-0, is not considered an official game because Stanfords football team was composed of volunteers from the Student Army Training Corps stationed at Stanford, some of whom were not Stanford students. 

The Berkeley City Council raised garbage fees on October 25, 1918. You’ll recall in a previous installment I wrote about earlier stages of this process. The city was now divided into three garbage districts, in bands that ran roughly north / south, and the minimum charges in the districts are 40, 45, and 50 cents, with west Berkeley addresses charged the lowest rates. 

And, finally, if you read this far I’ll end a relatively grim recital on a mildly humorous note. Not only flu was the scourge of Berkeley in October 1918. There was also a danger or at least, annoyance, from overly amorous young people. Wanted: a place for young people to spoon. This S.O.S. call was sent out this morning following the action of Mrs. Dane Coolidge in calling upon the police to stop spooning on the lawn of her home at the head of Dwight Way. She told the police that during the last few moonlight nights couples have wandered to the shade of the cypress trees in her yard, where they have made themselves at home. She asked the police to watch and arrest anyone found spooning there. This was in the October 22 Gazette. “Spooning” was then a slang term for what would be called making out in later decades. 

But…oops! The article was wrong, perhaps the doing of an over-eager re-write man at the paper or a police beat reporter trying too hard to generate a story on a slow day. October 25 a small correction ran, saying that Mrs. Coolidge had actually called the police to report a blackjack lying on the ground under a cypress tree a block from her house. She told the police officer that it was a tree where people frequently sat at night, but the follow-up article emphasized she did not report or complain about “spooning”.


Opinion

Editorials

Updated: We Can Still Have Joy

Becky O'Malley
Wednesday April 15, 2020 - 04:11:00 PM
Joy in Tacoma: Gen Obata and a neighbor make music at a social distance on a porch.
Rebecca Stith
Joy in Tacoma: Gen Obata and a neighbor make music at a social distance on a porch.

“After all I’ve seen, I still have joy.”

That’s a line I heard sung many years ago by a gospel choir at St. Paul A.M.E. Church. I’ve had the quote pinned to bulletin boards above my various desks for a long time.

It’s good to think about when things seem to be getting out of whack. The bewildered television newsies have lately taken to using the phrase “at times like these” or perhaps “on a day like today”, but in fact there haven’t been many times like these.

I confess that more than once when I heard someone complaining about the horror that is now president of the United States I said jocularly that at least we didn’t have the black plague to contend with in addition to Trump. That one’s come back to haunt me.

But if the descendants of enslaved ancestors can sing that they still have joy amidst adversity, the rest of us can do our best to find joy in the life we have now. 

Last week a couple of the Abrahamic desert religions, each in its own way, were celebrating deliverance from evil. 

Passover, to use the common English name, according to Wikipedia celebrates deliverance of the Israelites from the tenth of the plagues which God inflicted on the Egyptians, and it also celebrates their escape from slavery. 

Easter, the Christian celebration, is all about resurrection from the dead, another good concept consistent with the arrival of spring, which was celebrated in pre-Christian Britain with rabbits, as it still is to this day. 

But this last week many of us have been tempted to despair, especially because the prospect of release from confinement is constantly dangled in front of us by our witless “leader”. Not, of course, that anyone likely to read this has been seriously inclined to believe him, but the temptation exists. 

Most of the reality-based people I know, and I know a lot of them, think that the present crisis will last until midsummer at least. Those of us in risky categories will be the last to escape from home confinement, if and when we do. 

We’ve been grasping at digital straws, organizing zoom get-togethers with family, colleagues, and old friends, and this has proved to be very rewarding in many cases. 

Neighbors have been waving to each other from porches and at a prescribed 6-foot remove when walking the dog. This form of human encounter is bracing, much more than we’d ever expected it to be. 

Those of us who’ve previously disdained Facebook are starting to learn how it works. I’ve come to value it primarily as a way of keeping track of second and third cousins whose names I can barely remember. These days I check out what they’re up to in their various quarantine venues. 

This week I’ve found a video on the Facebook page of—a third cousin, perhaps? Her grandfather and my grandfather were first cousins, I believe, if I remember correctly. We both came from St. Louis originally, but now she and her musician husband, Gen Obata, live in Tacoma. 

(Berkeley connection: she went to UCB for a while as an undergraduate and he’s the grandson of famous Berkeley artist Chiura Obata.} 

Her Facebook video shows him sitting at one end of a long porch playing a guitar, with a flute-player at the other end, well over six feet apart. They’re duetting on a Carter Family song in the general category of old-timey or perhaps blue-grassey—the musical equivalent of comfort food, and it sounds lovely. 

 

 

In yesterday’s Chronicle there was a story about a similar collaboration, between two musicians who are next-door neighbors in San Francisco. They took a few pickets out of their joint backyard fence so they could play together. 

In both cases, I’m sure those who heard the music felt better about the general situation. 

Here in Berkeley, the inimitable Lisa Bullwinkle, whose email identifies her as “Hoopla CEO” and who has devoted many years to publicizing the arts, put out this call to action when the shutdown started: 

BERKELEY MUSIC CIRCUS 

These need not be such dark times.  

There is still art to be made! Warm up your vocal chords or start practicing your instruments. Each week, on Wednesday at noon, step outside your door or open your window and make the hills (and the flats) come alive with music. 

You will have one week to learn the words or practice on an instrument. These are simple songs and easy for everyone to learn. This will give kids incentive to practice their violin or flute and lessen the boredom of being sequestered, just a bit. It may even put a smile on your face. 

If you are a block captain, or feel like you are capable, please go out in the middle of your block to act as the conductor, starting your neighborhood off at the same time and setting the tempo for the music. On the sidewalk please! 

A list of songs and lyrics was included. 

On my corner on the first Wednesday people from five houses came out to sing “Take me out to the ballgame”. 

The fact that our street happens to be Ashby made coordinating challenging. It’s at least 25 feet between our houses—the standard traffic lane is 12 feet wide. 

Next week, the song was “Don’t worry, be happy”, which was pretty funny, because none of us knew it, until the neighbor with a gorgeous soprano voice came out and showed us what it sounds like. 

Week three, however, it was down to only me and one other neighbor, a woman I met 50 years ago when we both worked on the Shirley Chisholm campaign in Ann Arbor. No shrinking violet, either one of us. 

What happened to the rest? Well, one of them confessed to me that they’d been intimidated by this threatening language which was quoted on NextDoor.com from our District 8 Councilmember Droste’s newsletter: 

“(2) Please stop socially-distancing block parties, dance parties and cocktail parties. Now is not the time to socialize in person, even at a distance. This is a public health pandemic. Of course, we encourage you to call or email your neighbors, friends, and loved ones for wellness checks, particularly if they are elderly or have a pre-existing condition but I want to be clear that you must stay at home as much as possible. It is also a punishable misdemeanor.  

“(3) Stay at home as much as possible. You should only leave your home to get groceries, go to the doctor, provide essential work, travel for essential business/care, and/or get essential exercise (only with your household). That is it." 

Asking around, I learned that Berkeley police had been called to a similar gathering (which also involved dancing in place!) on Russell Street. Participants were admonished, though not arrested, at least this time. 

On the other hand, the police who were called to a North Berkeley street on a similar complaint told the musicians that everything was just fine, they should keep it up. All in all, I wondered exactly who’s been making these “rules”, and whether they were either legal or necessary. 

Who claims the authority to forbid Berkeleyans from having “socially-distant block parties?” 

Frankly, it sounds a lot like Trump’s press conference claims that the President can do anything he pleases and get away with it. 

I called Droste’s office, and after a day or two one of her aides called me back. I asked for a code cite for the source of these threats, especially the one calling “socializing” a “punishable misdemeanor”. All the aide (Brie?) could say, repeated several times, was “it’s citywide”. Perhaps it was Ms. Droste’s own idea? 

So I called a couple of other councilmembers who told me on background that they’d never heard of any such thing. 

But no one showed up to sing today. Even though I can’t sing worth a dime, I feel like it’s a sad loss. 

I told Rebecca Stith, my Tacoma cousin, that someone in Berkeley is trying to forbid group singing outdoors during the pandemic. She’s a retired environmental and civil rights attorney, so she was appropriately shocked. 

Between us, I think we should get to the bottom of this. She’s not only a lawyer herself, she's in a good position to ask around, since one of her sisters is a Missouri Supreme Court Justice (former Chief Justice) and another sister teaches at Yale Law School (and is a former Acting Dean). 

I suspect the First Amendment might enter into the discussion. Singing “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” outdoors with people 25 feet away is not the same as shouting fire in a crowded theater. 

After all we’ve seen, we still need joy, wherever we can find it. 

I’m told that at the virtual Seders which had to be zoomed this year the traditional “Next year in Jerusalem” was often “Next year in Person”. It’s a virtuous wish which we can all share. 

I was reminded that sometime in the 60s I attended an alternative Holy Thursday celebration with a group of Liberation Theology fans, held for some reason I no longer remember in a University of Michigan cafeteria. The leader was a Jesuit who was also a U.of M. faculty member, again for reasons I no longer remember. But I’ve never forgotten the theme of his informal homily, which riffed on “Next Year in Jerusalem”. He pointed out that it could just as well be “Next Year in Chicago” or really Next Year Anywhere. 

As it happens, I was supposed to visit my granddaughter in Chicago this week, but the University of Chicago sent her home to Santa Cruz after the pandemic pandemonium happened, so our family had a virtual Easter instead. But getting together in harmony with family, friends and neighbors is what’s important, not the place you do it, even (or especially) during a “public health pandemic”. And we all need music. 

You should tell your councilmember and the mayor this: 

“These need not be such dark times. There is still art to be made!” 

Here’s a Berkeley family making art out of adversity. These links came in over the transom, so I don’t know their name, but their music is wonderful. 

 

 

 

 

And this one cheered up all of Britain during The War. Hear them sing along: 

 

 

Finally, a suggestion from the Planet's consulting biologist, Dr. Rachel E. O'Malley: "You should add these citations and explain that outdoor exercise is more dangerous and no more necessary than singing in a pandemic." 

Benefits of group singing for community mental health and wellbeing : survey and literature review 

Choral Singing, Performance Perception, and Immune System Changes in Salivary Immunoglobulin A and Cortisol  

 

And after all these brave women must have seen, they still have joy in singing:  

 


Public Comment

The Coming Depression

Harry Brill
Saturday April 11, 2020 - 04:32:00 PM

As you probably realize, the American economy is rapidly going downhill. But it would be a serious mistake to blame this new and ominous development on the coronavirus. Undoubtedly the attempt to cope with the disease that the virus has precipitated has resulted in a loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs. This is certainly a substantial loss. 

However, unrelated to the virus, we are experiencing the decline in millions of jobs in many industries According to the San Francisco Chronicle, for example, 450,000 jobs in March were lost in restaurants, hotels, and casinos. Doctor’s offices sliced 12,000 jobs. Law firms cut 1,700 positions. These cuts cannot be blamed just on the virus. The blame for the job losses is related to the problems of the American economy and how it has been managed. The result has been the failure to provide working people with sufficient purchasing power.  

In the past three weeks about 17 million workers have applied for unemployment insurance. It is expected that the unemployment rate this month will reach close to 15 percent, which will be the highest since the 1930s depression. In fact, the president of one of the federal reserve banks is worried that the unemployment rate could reach in several months 30 percent! 

Moreover, a tremendous number of full-time jobs are being converted into part-time work. Statistically speaking, this seems like good news because more jobs are being created. That is, what was counted as one job is now officially recorded as two jobs. But actually the reality is very grim. The wages of these formerly full-time jobs have been cut at least in half. And the number of job seekers who can now only find part-time positions has jumped in March by one-third to almost 6 million jobs.  

What then can be done to help working people during this crisis? Clearly, the commitment and active participation of the government is necessary. Congress did recently approve what is called the 2 trillion dollar stimulus. But it is really not very stimulating. Five hundred million dollars of that money is a gift to big business. Although some money has been allocated to small business, the amount is only a drop in the bucket. Also, although workers are entitled to an additional $600 a week in unemployment insurance, this benefit expires in four months, which will be long before the recession expires. 

Unfortunately, the United States (US) is short on programs that provide a sufficient safety net for workers who lose there jobs. The problem is that American workers depend on employers to provide progressive programs. But in the European Union (EU) countries, this task belongs to government. 

In Britain, for example, unemployed workers thanks to government policy are receiving 80 percent of their pay (up to $3,125 a month). And they are guaranteed to get their jobs back. Many countries, like Germany, send the workers home while the state replaced most of the earnings. Particularly important is that the EU countries are not laying off workers at the same high rate that the United States is. 

Also, US workers, unlike working people in EU countries, lose their employer covered health benefits when they lose their jobs. To continue their coverage, they can join a plan called COBRA. But it is very expensive. The cost could be as high as $20,500 per year! Other plans are troubling because they involve huge deductibles before the insured is actually covered. 

Clearly, losing one’s job in this country is an especially tragic event. But so far it has not deeply troubled the American government.


Open Letter to UC President Janet Napolitano
Request to Withdraw Notice of Preparation dated April 7, 2020

Southside Neighborhood Consortium
Saturday April 11, 2020 - 01:07:00 PM

We are asking the University of California to withdraw the Notice of Preparation (NOP) for UC Berkeley’s next Long-Range Development Plan (LRDP), which was filed with the Office of Planning and Research by the Berkeley Campus on April 7, 2020. The state of California is currently operating under a State of Emergency, and the Bay Area counties are under mandatory orders that permit only Essential Activities or Minimum Basic Operations.

The NOP will require numerous public agencies, local governments and community organizations to devote thousands of hours of time to respond---time diverted from essential life-saving activities---during the State of Emergency. The LRDP is a large, complex undertaking that requires many hours of work by many people and would require our public safety officials to spend hundreds of hours to review and comment. We would all better served if the NOP were withdrawn until we are past the State of Emergency. 

Our requested postponement is only a matter of a few weeks, and we note that the two housing projects included in the NOP could move forward under the 2005 LRDP EIR if it were necessary. UC has not used the capacity to build several hundred units provided in that programmatic EIR. 

Chancellor Carol Christ’s decision to file the NOP and to move forward with a scoping session later this month is extremely ill-advised. It may violate both Governor Newsom’s executive orders and the local public health orders that allow only Essential Activities or Minimum Basic Operations. 

Please help us all responsibly address the current State of Emergency and save lives by withdrawing the NOP. 

We look forward to your prompt action on this matter. 

Best regards, 

Southside Neighborhood Consortium: 

Joan Barnett, President, Dwight-Hillside Neighborhood Association 

George Beier, President, Willard Neighborhood Association 

Phil Bokovoy, President, Save Berkeley’s Neighborhoods 

Lesley Emmington, President, Make UC a Good Neighbor 

Mike Kelly, President, Panoramic Hill Association 

Mark Humbert, President, Claremont-Elmwood Neighborhood Association 

Gianna Ranuzzi, President, Le Conte Neighborhood Association 

Andrew Johnson, Bateman Neighborhood Association 

Dean Metzger, President, Berkeley Neighborhoods Council 

David Shiver, Stuart Street/Willard 

 

 

Cc: Governor Gavin Newsom 

UC Regents Chair John Perez 

Chancellor Carol Christ 

Dr. Erica Pan, Alameda County 

Dr. Lisa Hernandez, City of Berkeleyi


Open Letter to Raphael Breines, Senior Planner Physical & Environmental Planning University of California, Berkeley

Daniella Thompson
Saturday April 11, 2020 - 01:05:00 PM

It can be taken as a truism that UC Berkeley will always choose the most inappropriate and inconvenient time to release a Notice of Preparation involving a controversial development project. The current case is no exception. Who else would take advantage of community vulnerability to push its development agenda while a pandemic is raging on?  

No doubt UCB is aware that the California League of Cities on 22 March 2020 requested of Governor Newsom relief to extend a number of deadlines, including the deadline in the Permit Streamlining Act. Yet your Notice of Preparation, released more than two weeks later, cites the Permit Streamlining Act deadline as immutable. 

Furthermore, the only public session allowing community members to speak would be via a live webcast on April 27. Clearly, a single two-hour scoping session, of which a good part would be taken up by UC’s own presentation, is grossly insufficient for the community to express its views on a subject so complex.  

UCB must withdraw the Notice of Preparation for the duration of the current COVID-19 crisis. 

As for the proposed housing projects, both portend highly undesirable outcomes. 

Housing Project #1 will do away with the University Garage (Walter H. Ratcliff, Jr., architect, 1930), a City of Berkeley Landmark. 

Housing Project #2 will be on People’s Park, also a City of Berkeley Landmark, and surrounded by 16 other designated City of Berkeley landmarks, constituting a de facto historic district. Please see all of them in the map attached below and in this photo exhibit: http://berkeleyheritage.com/essays/around_people’s_park.html 

It’s time for UCB to show us that it has a human side. Table the Notice of Preparation until the COVID-19 crisis is over. 


What Recovery? CoViD-19 and job losses

Thomas Lord
Friday April 10, 2020 - 01:13:00 PM

Many of us are falling for the following false picture of our current coronavirus predicament. The half-true, half-wildly-false story goes something like this, in two parts:

  1. We will all hunker down to slow the spread and save lives. After a time, new cases and deaths will drop to near 0. The disease won't be gone, but with lots of testing and care we can keep it from being an epidemic. At some point some mix of treatments and vaccines will come along and the COVID-19 will not be such a threat anymore.
So far so good. All of that is plausible, although there is no strong assurance at all a successful vaccine will ever arise. Otherwise, it is well grounded in medical and epidemiological science given the data currently available. It's a slightly optimistic but reasonable guess.

But the second part of the story, a bit more problematic, goes like this:

  1. When the all-clear is given for some or all idled workers, governments will rush in with stimulus spending to kick start the economy, demand will return to the market, and the economy will come roaring back.
The Republican and Democratic parties are reported to be quibbling, more or less over the details of future stimulus packages. This is the drama that occupies all of the popular media you are likely to read.

The problem is that policy makers and policy analysts at the highest levels are painting a very different, darker picture. In this note, I'll mention just two data points. Just two, but they pack a lot of punch.

  1. A rough estimate of U.S. corona-related job loss in May, April, and June will top 30% of the entire U.S. workforce. This estimate is from the St. Louis Fed. Sound implausible? In just the past three weeks (21 whole days), 16,500,000 new unemployment claims were filed. That's already more than 10% of the entire workforce!
  2. A rough estimate of global job lost starts at 6.7% of all jobs globally, and this is likely a major underestimate. This estimate is from the U.N. International Labor Organization.
It is important to note that the jobs lost are not being mothballed. They can't just wait three or four or six months and then, blow of the dust and voila, they're back again. 

On the contrary, neither demand or supply can return evenly and old patterns of trade - and the jobs associated with them - are gone. 

So we will soon face more than a third of the U.S. workforce unemployed, and some huge proportion of the global workforce, with no immediate demand for labor. 

There is no historic precedent for ths, not even the Great Depression was this large. 

Yet, this is the world in which we now really live. 

Our way of life - the one we knew as late as February, is gone forever. 


Stop trump From Clearing the Way for Massive Theft

Bruce Joffe
Saturday April 11, 2020 - 01:25:00 PM

By removing the Inspector General, who was selected to oversee that the disbursement of the $2 Trillion coronovirus bailout goes honestly without fraud, trump has set himself up to commit the largest theft in the history of civilization. He has removed several Inspectors General as a way of intimidating the rest not to do the job they are skilled and experienced to do. This undermines the system of independent oversight of the executive, established after Nixon's Watergate crimes. 

What can prevent an outrageous theft of OUR Money? Perhaps the loud reaction from Vox Populi, the Voice of the People. Perhaps our Senators and Congress representatives can force adequate oversight as a condition for more bailouts. If ever there were a time to speak out, to write, and to call, it is now.


Letter to Berkeley City Council re Handwashing Stations

Thomas Lord
Saturday April 11, 2020 - 01:21:00 PM

Today the Mayor mentioned that a City website advertises the locations of handwashing stations (and portable toilets?). I assume it's there somewhere but I could not find this map. 

I would also like to ask the Mayor: Have you made a practice of traveling around the city repeatedly to check to see if this alleged service delivery is (a) actually happening (b) is adequately maintained (c) is being used (d) is known to the members of our community in need? 

Bureaucracies tend to diverge from executive control without those kind of from-the-top end-to-end checks, consistently applied. Further, services are only services when they reach those in need and are successfully used by them.


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE: Free Fall

Bob Burnett
Saturday April 11, 2020 - 04:55:00 PM

There's a classic routine featured in the early silent comedy films. Action begins when a worker digs a big hole and walks away, leaving no warning sign. Next, an innocent walker falls into the hole.

The denouement takes one of three forms: In the first, the walker falls all the way through the earth and exits in China. In the second, the walker falls onto a trampoline and bounces out of the hole. The third outcome is when the walker falls for awhile and then lands on something such as coal car or an underground river or a (fat) policeman.

Here in California, as a result of the pandemic-inspired shelter-in-place order, we've fallen into a hole. Many of us are in free fall.

I'm not afraid of falling all the way to China. But I know people who are: restaurant workers who don't know when they'll get another job and can't pay their bills. Or gig workers...

On the other hand, I don't expect to quickly bounce back. We've been sheltering in place for three weeks and don't know when it will end. But I do know folks who are carrying on with their (more or less) normal jobs: government employees, healthcare workers, and folks in essential trades. 

I'm going to be falling for awhile and don't know where I will land. Will it all end pleasantly, like swooping down the slide at a water park? Or will I land on the COVID-19 monster that sucks the air out of our lungs? 


Bob Burnett is a Bay Area writer and activist. He can be reached at bburnett@sonic.net 


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Effects of Our Predicament

Jack Bragen
Saturday April 11, 2020 - 04:47:00 PM

Our economy, at a reasonable guess, is analogous to driving a car on the freeway with the gas gauge pointing to just below empty--we have massive unemployment, and we are being told to stay at home to slow the spread of a deadly communicable disease. How does this affect people on a psychological level? I could not begin to assess such a thing, and someone better than me could probably write volumes about it after we extricate ourselves from this predicament. However, in this week's column I will talk to you a bit about how it is affecting me.

As a mentally ill man, I am affected by this when I watch television news and when I interact with people and see a number of people wearing masks in public--when I go out for essential trips. It seems surreal. But, does it trigger my symptoms? Of course, it does.

I am halfway into a change of residence that is mandated by needs of my family unit. At the same time, there is an acquaintance who would like to make their problems into my problems. I have to deal with details on a number of fronts. And I am not prepared for a lot of what I'm up against.

Life was already difficult enough when I was not in the middle of moving, something which is a major life challenge, and when there was not a pandemic at the same time, which affects moving and adds additional strain.  

Meanwhile, while I'm writing this, millions of Americans are expected to do without their paychecks, are expected not to go to work, and are expected to stay isolated. To me, it seems as though Americans are handling this better than a reasonable person would expect. 

I've practiced a lot of self-coaching. The self-coaching allows me to manage my emotions as well as extricate myself from delusions that come up periodically. I've had to deal with real life challenges while at the same time, my brain doesn't really want to track reality--it has required effort for me to make it do that. 

On my side is that I've dropped the expectation that things should be easy. Secondly, I have a lot of power over my emotions, because I've practiced mindfulness on a repeated basis since the time of three months after becoming mentally ill, in 1982. 

(My book, "An Offering of Power: Valuable, Unusual Meditation Methods," shares some of my insights. Yet that book is to be approached with caution and should not be used by someone less than ten years into recovery--no relapses in ten years, or else not mentally ill in the first place. Some of the purchase price goes to a good cause--supporting writings by me that serve the public.) 

In their efforts to fight the coronavirus, Contra Costa County is coordinating between services. Some or all agencies have limited in-person contact to emergency situations only. The mental health clinic that I attend is providing services by phone and by video, with no in-person contact but a lot of support, done remotely. Contra Costa NAMI (National Alliance on Mental Illness) is providing services and support via internet and phone. 

The coronavirus is a challenge to the human species of the same caliber as WWII. When we get it resolved, and that will not be soon, the landscape will be permanently changed.


ECLECTIC RANT: Bernie, are you in or out of the race?

Ralph E. Stone
Saturday April 11, 2020 - 01:45:00 PM

Reading the handwriting on the wall, you suspended your campaign, acknowledging that “the path toward victory is virtually impossible.” Yet, you will stay on the ballot to collect delegates for the convention, "where we will be able to exert significant influence over the party platform.” That sounds like one foot in and one foot out of the race. 

In all your years in Congress, you did not join the Democratic party. Rather, you were content to be merely an ally of like-minded Democrats rather than a full-fledged member of the party. As a result, you were unable to turn very few of your ideas into legislation. 

I suggest you get completely out of the race by taking your name off the ballot in the remaining primaries, publicly endorse Joe Biden, and then exhort your followers to do the same. Your successes in the primaries to date will give you significant clout on the party’s platform. 

You have given Americans an explanation of your progressive agenda during your campaign. Unfortunately, the democratic and independent voters are more moderate than you. Hopefully, some of your policies will be adopted. The Covid-19 pandemic has already made your "Medicare for all” more appealing. 

With your endorsement of Joe Biden, the Democratic Party can more effectively speak with a single voice to counter Donald Trump’s lies and misrepresentations. The alternative may be the unthinkable for this country — another four years of Trump. 

As an aside, my wife and I voted for Elizabeth Warren in the California primary.


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Saturday April 11, 2020 - 01:17:00 PM

Recasting the Forecast 

Bay Area weather can be rather humdrum. Fortunately. 

No approaching hurricanes; no sudden tornadoes to fret about. 

But that can make weather reports rather dull. And, really!—who needs a five-minute computer-assisted, televised weather update when all you really need to do is look out the nearest window? 

However, if your job is to report on the weather, you need to make it sound more interesting than it really is. With that in mind, here's a sampling of recent forecasts from the SF Chronicle that show how to make the same-old-same-old appear newsworthy: 

"Partly sunny." "Mostly sunny." "Some sun." "Periods of sun." "Sunny to partly cloudy." 'Sunshine and patchy clouds." "Times of clouds and sun." "A blend of sun and clouds." 

Want to suggest a few more options? How about: "Overcast with sunny breaks." "Cloud banks with deposits of sunshine." "Gobs of clouds and bursts of sunbeams." 

Taking Stock 

By now, most of us have had the experience of standing in long lines—separated by six feet of air space—waiting to enter a grocery store or shopping site only to discover that the items we were looking for were "currently out of stock, but you can try again Thursday." 

Now, thanks to two teenagers from Texas, there's an app for that. Darshan Bhatta and Rithwik Parrikonda have created an online tool that let's you virtually explore distant store shelves before heading out to shop. They found a need and filled it and here's the link: InStok.org

Bernie's Out. What Are the Alternatives? 

1. Green Party candidate Howie Hawkins explains why he's running: "We have conceived of a campaign designed to grow the Green Party rapidly as we move into the 2020s and provide real solutions to the climate crisis, the new nuclear arms race, and ever-growing economic and racial inequality. I am not out here running by myself. I am running with a collective leadership." 

Howie's collective includes former Green Party vice-presidential candidates Cheri Honkala and Ajamu Baraka; national party co-chairs Andrea Mérida, Tony Ndege, and Margaret Flowers; peace activist Cindy Sheehan; black liberation movement veterans Bruce Dixon and Asantewaa Nkrumah-Ture; progressive commentators Chris Hedges and Kevin Zeese; environmental scientist and DC Statehood stalwart David Schwartzman; Green New Deal policy expert Jon Rynn; and former San Francisco public defender, our own Matt Gonzalez. 

Here are some of the issues Howie promises to tackle: 

• The fast-approaching existential threat of a climate holocaust that could wipe out human civilization; 

• The new nuclear war race that poses a threat to our survival; 

• The unacceptable crises that working families face every month trying to pay for food, rent, utilities, medical bills, child care, college tuition, and/or student loans. 

 

2. Party for Socialism and Liberation presidential candidate, Gloria La Riva, is in the race with a ten-point program: 

1. Make the essentials of life [food, housing, water, education, healthcare] constitutional rights 

2. For the Earth to live, capitalism must be replaced by a socialist system [to address "global warming, pollution, acidified and depleted oceans, fracking, critical drought, plastics choking the seas, nuclear weapons and waste"] 

3. End racism, police brutality, mass-incarceration. Pay reparations to the African American community 

4. Full rights for all immigrants 

5. Shut down all US military bases around the world—bring all the troops, planes and ships home 

6. Full equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer people 

7. Equality for women with free, safe, legal abortion on demand 

8. Defend and expand our unions 

9. Takeover the stolen wealth of the giant banks and corporations—Jail Wall St. criminals 

10. Honor Native treaties. Free Leonard Peltier 

And who is La Riva's running mate? None other than the aforementioned Leonard Peltier, an iconic Native American activist who "has been in prison for over 43 years, persecuted by the US government for a crime he did not commit." 

This wouldn't be the first time a jailed political prisoner has made a bid for the White House. In 1920, Socialist Party candidate Eugene V. Debs ran for president while doing time for criticizing the government's use of the 1917 Espionage Act. 

But this may be the first time a woman has headed a presidential campaign ticket with a man as her VP running mate. 

But wouldn't it be impossible for La Riva to govern with her chosen VP in the slammer? Not really. If La Riva were to win the presidential race, she could pardon Peltier. 

Having a Señor Moment 

It recently occurred to me that, while the Spanish language has the words Señor, Señora, and Señorita, I've never come across the word señorito.  

If señorita is the word for a young girl, why don't we hear the word "señorito" quando hablando en Español

A query on Spanish Dictionary reads: "Ok, so señorita is an unmarried or young woman: Does it have a male counterpart or are all males señores?" This prompted the following response: "According to my Mexican friends, señorito is a pejorative slang word for transvestite." 

¡Dios mio! 

For more analysis of this gender-jiggered dishonorific, I consulted my Spanish-fluent grammar gadfly, Doña Raquel, the Sexy Lexicographer. Her reply began: "You are right: 'señorito' is a pejorative for gay or transvestite—a diminishment, as in señorita." Instead, a young man is referred to as "joven." 

"Señorita, and Señora are sexualized," Doña Raquel continued. "If you are married, or have children, you say Señora, no matter what age a woman is. If you have children at 16, you are a Señora. A woman who never marries is called Señorita (thus my theory of sexualizing women) or Doña, which is reserved generally for older women. A man doesn’t have the same distinctions. Women are addressed according to their marital status (read “sex”) and men have the distinction of being Señores, I assume this is because no one cares about [a man's] marital status, or one assumes that men will bed women when they can." 

To Burn or Not to Burn 

On Friday, April 3, Berkeley author and hip-poet emeritus Arnie Passman dropped the following refrain into his email trail: 

cremate me and pour favor me into a redwood forest 

That short line generated a wide range of responses. Here are a few: 

Laurence of Berkeley wrote: 

But Arnie, Cremation ruins so many good nutrients. 

The forests will be happier if we just get ground up like chopped liver. 

So maybe a rose bush? 

Since there are now 7.8 billion of us worldwide, we are consuming too much of the planet's essential nutrients. We have to have some way of getting them back into circulation. 

My second choice: the way of the Parsis (the Zoroastrians in India). They stick you up on top of a tall pole and let the birds eat you. 

Maria Gillardin wrote: 

But the buzzards in India are already dying when they eat carcasses of cattle treated with diclofenac. They die within days of kidney failure. Bad for the Parsis of India. They believe burying or cremating the dead pollutes nature and traditionally relied on vultures to devour human corpses. 

Cynthia Papermaster wrote: 

The forests are fine without us and our “nutrients." 

Phil Allen wrote: 

A failure of progressives, not even to consider the right of buzzards to a living.... 

I [envision] being buried vertically and my remains used as a pile for an anthill development. 

Maria Gillardin wrote: 

Since humans are so toxic now, our remains belong in Superfund sites. Crematoria in England emitted 11% of the annual mercury along with power plants and industry (2001). And then there are plastics; chemicals and hormones taken in with food and personal care. Flame retardants, radioactive materials and more. Am glad I’m dead by the time I will be disposed of. 

Jeffrey Blanfort wrote: 

As our species has further developed, it continues to find new and creative ways to despoil the planet, not only for profit but for our mutual entertainment. In short, the origin of the feces is our species. How those who survive us manage our departure is, at this point, of little consequence except to our friends and family who will make an effort, nonetheless. 

Annie H. wrote

Cremation of billions of people is unnecessary and burns fossil fuel which we must stop extracting from the ground and stop burning…. Get over it. Please …. a beautiful wrapping and a place in the cool earth is enough. We have such place in Mill Valley, where our dear friend Nick Bertoni resides…. 

Phoebe Anne Sorgen wrote:  

Cremation isn’t allowed in Muslim or Jewish traditions. Burial is the Pagan way, too, but to each their own. Whatever Arnie wants, Arnie gets. 

What’s the name of the natural burial ground in Mill Valley? Know of others in the Bay Area where one can reserve a spot? Know of any that allow a tombstone or permanent plaque w/ name/dates? 

Yes, rather frivolous, and against my usual eco-fanatic nature, but in case our species survives long-term, I want that because I helped my mom with genealogy research by reading inscriptions on ancestors’ tombstones. 

My birthday suit is also my burial suit, except I want warm woolen socks or slippers, stockings, and long gloves (as it’s cold down there,) and jewelry that won’t disintegrate. Wrap me in a silk (or other natural fabric) shroud and plant me deep, but not so deep that I’ll be unreachable eventually by the roots of a healthy oak, redwood, apple, or other fruit tree seedling planted on top. 

Don’t forget to throw some de-stemmed roses on top of me. I’m in no hurry (plan to live another 3 or 4 decades, if we don’t all go under) but this is what I’ve wanted ever since reading Thanatopsis over five decades ago (which poem influenced the Transcendentalists) .  

“… Earth, that nourished thee, shall claim Thy growth, to be resolved to earth again…  

The oak Shall send his roots abroad, and pierce thy mould. 

Yet not to thy eternal resting place Shalt thou retire alone, nor couldst thou wish a Couch more magnificent.  

Thou shalt lie down With ….. The powerful of the earth—the wise, the good,  

Fair forms, and hoary seers of ages past, All in one mighty sepulchre….. 

….All that tread The globe are but a handful to the tribes  

That slumber in its bosom. —Take the wings  

Of morning—and the Barcan wilderness,  

Or lose thyself in the continuous woods  

Where rolls the Oregan, and hears no sound,  

Save [its] own dashings—yet the dead are there:  

And millions in those solitudes, since first  

The flight of years began, have laid them down  

In their last sleep—the dead reign there alone.  

So shalt thou rest, and what if thou withdraw  

In silence from the living, and no friend  

Take note of thy departure? All that breathe  

Will share thy destiny. The gay will laugh  

When thou art gone, the solemn brood of care  

Plod on, and each one as before will chase  

[Their] favourite phantom; yet all these shall leave  

Their mirth and their employments, and shall come,  

And make their bed with thee. As the long train  

Of ages glides away . . . , sustained and soothed  

By an unfaltering trust, approach thy grave,  

Like one who wraps the drapery of [her] couch  

About [her], and lies down to pleasant dreams." 

— William Cullen Bryant (at age 17 in 1811) … 

In parting: When I asked Arnie how he would like to be described for this item—"Author, poet and playwright," "Hip-hop bon-mot artist," "Agin' Ragin' Sage," or "High Commander of Haiku?"—he modestly opted to go with: "Near Death." 

Green Burial Resources 

Fernwood Cemetery (Mill Valley) 

Better Place Forests (Mendocino County) 

Green Burial Council (Placerville) 

Disinfecting a Rumor Gone Viral 

A rogue meme floating in the cybersphere claims that the $2 trillion Federal coronavirus stimulus plan included $25 million in salary increases for members of Congress. The posting came with the snarky observation: "Approximately $39,000 per member. So everyday Americans are worth a one-time $1,200 check but Congress gets 32 times that amount?" 

It turns out, the question mark was well-earned. According Politifact

No version of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act grants pay raises for members of Congress. The House and Senate are slated to receive $35 million from the stimulus. The money will go toward offsetting the costs of maintaining congressional law enforcement and child care staff, as well as improving tele-working capabilities. See the sources for this fact-check 

However, it is true (as the Washington Post and others have noted) that the "Senate aid package quietly sets aside $17 billion for Boeing." 

(Wait a min! Members of Congress receive paid "child care"?) 

Bring Back Captain Crozier 

VoteVets ("the voice of America's 21st century patriots") was one of the foremost online voices demanding the ouster of acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly, whose decision to fly to Guam to castigate the ship's commander cost taxpayers a whopping $243,000. 

Modly's foul-mouthed criticism of Captain Brett Crozier did not go down well with the ship's crew. As Modly ranted, one exasperated sailor exploded with an retaliatory salvo, yelling in disbelief: "What the F----?!" (NBC Nightly News ran the audio and expertly edited the clip so you couldn't hear the full swear word but you could hear just enough to intuit what was coming.) Literally overnight, public outrage forced Modly to issue (1) an apology and (2) his resignation. 

"This is far from over," VoteVets writes. ?We need the Navy to reinstate the hero of the USS Theodore Roosevelt, Captain Brett Crozier." 

VoteVets has a petition you can sign—just click here. (Note: You don't need to be a veteran to enlist in this campaign.) 

A Bailout for the Ballot 

Donald Trump just "said the quiet part out loud." During a March 30 phone-in with Fox & Friends to discuss the federal stimulus bill passed by Congress, he criticized provisions the Democrats proposed adding to the package to make voting easier should the pandemic linger through November. 

"The things they had in there were crazy," said Trump (with a characterisic lack of specificity). "They had levels of voting, that if you ever agreed to it, you'd never have a Republican elected in this country again." 

Think about that. Trump just complained that, if too many people voted, Republicans would lose. Sadly, this has been the operating principle of the Republican Party for decades, going back to 1980, when Paul Weyrich (who co-founded the conservative Heritage Foundation and the Moral Majority) told a crowd of Christian conservatives: "I don't want everybody to vote … Our leverage in the elections, quite candidly, goes up as the voting populace goes down." 

That explains why Republicans oppose practical solutions that would make it easier for eligible citizens to vote — universal vote-by-mail, same-day voter registration and restoring full voting rights to former inmates who have served time for their crimes. 

As Elizabeth Warren points out: "Donald Trump is just the latest in a string of right-wing politicians who’ve embraced efforts to make it harder for people to vote—by closing polling places, purging millions of voters from voting rolls, limiting early voting, and passing restrictive voter-identification laws." 

So how can citizens exercise their right to vote when the coronavirus pandemic makes it dangerous to stand outside in long lines while waiting to use (hackable) electronic voting machines touched by hundreds of fingers? What's needed is a plan to make sure everyone can vote safely in November. 

Not surprisingly, Senator Warren's got a plan for that and she's aiming to implement these "simple steps that Congress needs to take in its next coronavirus relief package to protect the health and safety of America’s voters." The needed fixes include: 

• Universal vote by mail in every state 

• Online and same-day voter registration 

• At least 30 days of early voting and extended voting hours to enhance the safety of in-person voting 

• Guarantee that every poll worker receives added hazard pay for their work 

• Provide at least $4 billion for state and local governments to hold elections and keep poll-workers safe. 

You can click here to endorse Warren's electoral reforms. 

Trump Does TIME 


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, April 12-19

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday April 11, 2020 - 12:51:00 PM

Worth Noting:

All City meetings and events are either by videoconference or teleconference.

Video Updates from the Mayor on COVID-19 are on Mondays and Wednesdays and will be posted on the Mayor’s YouTube page, the April 10 Town Hall is also posted https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgXaP2idglejM_r7Iv7my6w



MondayAgenda Committee meets at 2:30 pm to plan the April 28 City Council meeting and review the status of Boards, Commissions and Committees that have been suspended for 60 days due to COVID-19. The action items on this agenda look to be interesting with three proposed ballot initiatives 11. Change Mayor and Council member status to fulltime, 13. Create a Climate Action Fund, 14. Introduce Term limits for Mayor and Councilmembers

TuesdayCity Council Regular meeting is at 6 pm, item 39. Require Onsite Inclusionary Units in Qualified Opportunity Zones

WednesdayClimate Emergency Task Force is at 5:30 by call in or zoom – 215 on email list for this Zoom meeting

Thursday – Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board meeting is listed as pending

All other previously scheduled meetings have been cancelled.



The agenda for the April 21 City Council meeting is available for comment and follows the daily list of meetings. The agenda includes 7. opting up residential and commercial customers to Brilliant 100 and Municipal accounts to Renewable 100. 

 

Sunday, April 12, 2020  

No City meetings or events found 

Monday, April 13, 2020 

Agenda and Rules Policy Committee Special Meeting, 2:30 pm, This meeting will be conducted exclusively through videoconference and teleconference, Public Comment precedes review of the Agendas, VIDEOCONFERENCE: https://zoom.us/j/606278645 If you do not wish for your name to appear on the screen, use the drop down menu and click on “rename” and rename yourself to be anonymous use the “raise your hand” and wait to be recognized to comment TELECONFERENCE: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID 606 278 645 to comment press *9 and wait to be recognized, you will hear your phone number when recognized Agenda planning for April 28 City Council meeting: (Agenda Committee packet 208 pages) For the full agenda use the link 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/Policy_Committee__Agenda___Rules.aspx 

Proposed April 28 agenda: CONSENT: 2. Formal Bid Solicitations Sanitary Sewer, 3. Contract $32,160/yr for FY21 with City Data Services and authorization to extend for additional 3 years (FY22, FY23, FY24) 4. Amend and extend Contract add $117,000 total $217,000with Youth Spirit Artworks for Transition Age Youth Case Management, Linkage Services and Tiny House Case Management, 5. Contract $500,000 with ENGEO for testing and inspection services for Tuolumne Camp Construction project 5/1/2020 – 7/1/2022, 6. Contract $556,292 (includes 10% contingency) with Andres Construction for Sanitary Sewer Rehab at West Frontage Road, 7. Contracts 1. Add $1,000,000 total $1,500,000 and extend to 6/30/2022 with LCC Engineering & Surveying Inc for on-call civil engineering, 2. Add $1,000,000 total $2,500,000 and extend to 6/30/2022 with Pavement Engineering In for on-call engineering services, 8. Approve Proposed Projects anticipated to be paid for by State Road Maintenance and Rehabilitation Account (RMRA) for FY 2021, 9. Fill Vacancy with appointment of Mr. Carlos Hill (District 1) on Human Welfare and Community Action Commission, ACTION: 10. Public Hearing Submission of 2020-2025 Consolidated Plan Block Grant (CDBG) , Emergency Solutions Grant (ESG) and Home Investment Partnership Program (HOME), allocate 85% of Program Year (PY20) to Housing Trust Fund, 5% to Community Housing Development Organization (CHDO) and 10% Program Administration and authorize City Manager to submit Plan to HUD, 11. Charter Amendment on Nov 3, 2020 Ballot changing Mayor and Councilmembers to full-time status with salary increase, 12. Citizens Redistricting Ordinance, 13. Prepare City Ballot Measure to Create a Climate Action Fund to become fossil free – response to Climate Action Plan and Climate Emergency, 14. Ballot Measure to introduce Term Limits 3 – 4 year terms or twelve years with required 2-year hiatus in order to serve additional terms for Mayor and City Councilmembers, INFORMATION REPORTS: 15. Mid-Year Budget Update, 16. Eight Previous Referrals to Planning Dept Which Can Be Tracked as Fulfilled, 

COMMITTEE ACTION ITEMS: 8. Discussion and Direction Regarding Impact of COVID-19 on Meetings of Legislative Bodies (Design Review Committee, Fair Campaign Practices Commission, Housing Advisory Commission, Joint Subcommittee on the Implementation of State Housing Laws, Landmarks Preservation Commission, Open Government Commission, Personnel Board, Planning Commission, Police Review Commission, Zoning Adjustments Board), re-evaluation of current 60 day suspension of all Boards, Commissions and Committees unless there is time-sensitive, legally mandated business to complete and to meet the meeting must be pre-approved by the Director of Emergency Services. 

Tuesday, April 14, 2020 

Berkeley City Council,  

VIDEOCONFERENCE https://zoom.us/j/724407089 If you do not wish for your name to appear on the screen, use the drop down menu and click on “rename” and rename yourself to be anonymous use the “raise your hand” and wait to be recognized to comment TELECONFERENCE: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID 724 407 089 to comment press *9 and wait to be recognized, you will hear your phone number when recognized 

LIVE AUDIO: KPFB 89.3, LIVE CAPTIONED BROADCAST: Cable B-TV (Channel 33) for the full agenda use the link 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/City_Council__Agenda_Index.aspx 

Closed Session, 4 pm, Agenda: 1. Conference with Legal Council McClintock v. 2398 Parker Street, LLC, Andrew Partos and City of Berkeley, Superior Court RG 18906807, 2. Under Negotiation Price, 830 University, Negotiating parties: City of Berkeley, Bay Area Community Services, Berkeley Free Clinic, Property Owner: City of Berkeley, 

Regular Session, 6 – 11 pm, Agenda: CONSENT: 1. Contract $93,600 with Sonya Dublin Consulting as external evaluator Tobacco Prevention Program, ends 6/30/2021 2. Contract $104,400 Contingency $38,600 with Lind Marine for removal of derelict and abandoned vessels at Berkeley Marina, 3. Contract add $127,200 total $305,000 with Affordable Painting Services, Inc for additional painting Park Buildings, 4. Contract add $300,000 total $500,000 with Bay Area Tree Specialists for as-needed tree services 5/29/2019 – 5/28/2022, 5. Contract add $204,152 total $375,000 with ERA Construction for concrete repair in parks, 6. Contract $3,491,917 (includes $317,447 contingency) with Ghilotti Construction, Inc for Rose Garden Pergola Reconstruction & Site Improvements, 7. Contract $600,000 with Vol Ten Corporation DBA Delta Charter for bus transportation for Day Camp & Summer Programs 6/1/2020-6/1/2025, 8. Ratify action taken by City Manager during recess to add $250,000 to contract total $2,245,725.99 for rental of Police Dept Substation at 841 Folger/3000 Seventh Street, 9. Add $162,568 total $233,868 with Bigbelly Solar Compacting Trash and Recycling Receptacles term remains 8/1/2018-6/30/2023, 10. 2nd Reading Ronald V. Dellums Fair Chance Access to Housing, 11. Call for Consolidated Nov 3. Election, 12. Approval Minutes, 13. Stephen and Mary Birch Foundation Donation to Animal Shelter, 14. FY 2020 Annual Appropriations $28,565,263 (gross) and $15,378,568 (net) 15. Renewal North Shattuck Business Improvement District, 16. 1601 Oxford Interest Rate Reduction to 1%, 17. Shelter Plus Care Program Renewal Grants, 18. 60-year term Lease Agreement 5/4/2020-12/31/2080 200 Marina Blvd for Doubletree Hotel, Berkeley City contribution $3,000,000 for Marina street improvements, 19. Grant Application $42,000 Surrendered and Abandoned Vessel Exchange, 20. Donation Friends of Marin Circle, 21. Waiver of Annual Marina Berth Fees for Non-profits (Berkeley Racing Canoe Club, Cal Sailing Club, The Pegasus Project, Blue Water Foundation) 22. Contract $39,650,670 (includes 10% contingency, add-alternatives) with Robert E. Boyer Construction, Inc. for Tuolumne Camp, 23. Funding $1,000,000 to EBMUD FY 2020-FY 2024 to control wet weather overflows and bypasses, 24. Vacate sewer easement at 2009 Addison, 25. Contract $2,475,200 (includes 10% contingency) with CF Contracting, Inc for Sacramento Complete Streets, 26. Contract add $300,000 total $450,000 with Clean Harbors, Inc. for Hazardous Waste and extend to 6/30/2022, 27. Contract $4,478,909 with Bay Cities Paving & Grading for Street Rehab FY 2020 Project, 28. Contract add $100,000 total $600,000 with Revel Environmental Manufacturing for on-call Storm Water Maintenance extend to 6/30/2021, 29. Contract up to $240,000 with National Data & Surveying Services for On-call Transportation and Parking Survey Consulting Services, 30. Refer to staff to develop mechanism for more thorough count of homeless persons during 2021 Berkeley Homeless Point-In-Time Count, 31. Appoint Ann Hawkins to Mental Health Commission, 32. Budget Referral $279,000 to Fund Berkeley Youthworks, 33. Pints for Paws Fund raiser – Council discretionary funds, 34. Support SB 54 & AB 1080 CA Circular Economy and Plastic Pollution Reduction Act (only 9% of plastic is recycled, billion tons of plastic are added to the oceans each year), 35. Support SB 1160 Public Utilities undergrounding, ACTION: 36. Public Hearing – General Plan Redesign and Rezone of The Rose Garden Inn at 2740 Telegraph, 2744 Telegraph, 2348 Ward, 37. Public Hearing – Zoning Ordinance Amendment for Family Daycare Homes to comply with Senate Bill 234, 38. Nov 3 Election Ballot Initiative Charter Amendment to establish Police Board and Director of Police Accountability, 39. Ordinance requiring 20% onsite inclusionary units in new rental developments (10 units or more) in Qualified Opportunity Zones (QOZs), 40. BMC 13.78 add prohibition of additional fees for existing tenancies and lease terminations, INFORMATION REPORTS: 41. Public Health Officer’s Order Directing the Placement of COVID-19 Isolation and Quarantine Facilities on Public Property for Homeless Persons, 42. Strategic Plan Performance Measures, 43. Summary of Aging Services, 44. Pathways STAIR FY-6 month evaluation, 45. Parks, Recreation & Waterfront Dept Capital Improvement Projects Update, 46. Measure T1 Update, 47. Audit Recommendation Status 911 Dispatchers, 48. Public Works Planned Projects for FY 2021, 49. Children, Youth and Recreation Commission FY 2020 Work Plan, 50. Civic Arts Grants, 51. Commemorative Program. 

Wednesday, April 15, 2020 

Joint Meeting of the Climate Emergency Mobilization Task Force (CEMTF) and RV/Tiny Homes Solutions Task Force, 5:30 – 7 pm, https://zoom.us/j/7635380017 

One Tap Mobile 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID 763 538 0017, Agenda not posted 

Thursday, April 16, 2020 

Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board, 7 – 11 pm, listed as pending, no agenda posted 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/rent/ 

Friday, April 17, 2020 

No City meetings or events found 

Saturday, April 18, 2020 

No City meetings or events found 

Sunday, April 19, 2020 

No City meetings or events found 

_____________________ 

 

The April 21, 2020 City Council Agenda is available for comment for comment email council@cityofberkeley.info 

The April 21 City Council Meeting will be conducted exclusively through 

Videoconference https://zoom.us/j/257156624 

Teleconference 1-669-9009128 Meeting ID 257 156 624 

Live Audio KPFB Radio 89.3, Live captioned broadcasts B-TV (Channel 33) 

CONSENT: 1. Adopt Resolution Ratifying COVID-19 Local Emergency, 2. Bid Solicitations and RFP, 3. On-Call Landscape Architectural Services for Capital Improvement Projects, 4. FY 2021 Street Lighting Assessments, 5. Letter to Assemblymember Wicks supporting AB 1851eliminating parking requirements on faith-based properties for density bonus qualifying housing development projects, ACTION: 6. Public Hearing to grant Franchise Agreement Amendment for Electric Bike Share Program with Bay Area Motivate, LLC, a subsidiary of Lyft, 7. Adopt Resolution to upgrade residential and commercial customers to a 100% GHG-Free Electricity Plan (Brilliant 100) and to upgrade Municipal accounts to 100% Renewable (Renewable 100). 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2020/04_Apr/City_Council__04-21-2020_-_Regular_Meeting_Agenda.aspx 

_______________________ 

 

Public Hearings Scheduled – Land Use Appeals 

1533 Beverly (single family dwelling) 6/2/2020 

0 Euclid – Berryman Reservoir TBD 

Remanded to ZAB or LPC With 90-Day Deadline 

1155-73 Hearst (develop 2 parcels) – referred back to City Council – to be scheduled 

Notice of Decision (NOD) With End of Appeal Period 

1132 Amador 4/28/2020 

2590 Bancroft 4/30/2020 

1440 Bonita 4/28/2020 

1484 Grizzly Peak 4/30/2020 

1476 Keoncrest 4/28/2020 

1397 La Loma 4/30/2020 

11 Maryland 4/30/2020 

74 Oak Ridge 4/30/2020 

1231 Ordway 4/28/2020 

1315 Peralta 4/28/2020 

2418 Sacramento 4/28/2020 

2910 Seventh 4/17/2020 

2910 Seventh 4/23/2020 

1998 Shattuck 4/30/2020 

600 Spruce 4/28/2020 

1665 Thousand Oaks 4/30/2020 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/planning_and_development/land_use_division/current_zoning_applications_in_appeal_period.aspx 

LINK to Current Zoning Applications https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Planning_and_Development/Land_Use_Division/Current_Zoning_Applications.aspx 

___________________ 

 

WORKSHOPS 

June 23 – Climate Action Plan/Resiliency Update, 

July 21 – Crime Report 

Sept 29 – Digital Strategic Plan/FUND$ Replacement Website Update, Zero Waste Priorities 

Oct 20 – Update Berkeley’s 2020 Vision, BMASP/Berkeley Pier-WETA Ferry 

 

Unscheduled Workshops/Presentations 

Cannabis Health Considerations 

Vision 2050 

Ohlone History and Culture (special meeting) 

Presentation from StopWaste on SB1383 

Systems Realignment 

_____________________ 

 

To Check For Regional Meetings with Berkeley Council Appointees go to 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/City_Council__Committee_and_Regional_Body_Appointees.aspx 

 

To check for Berkeley Unified School District Board Meetings go to 

https://www.berkeleyschools.net/schoolboard/board-meeting-information/ 

 

_____________________ 

 

This meeting list is also posted on the Sustainable Berkeley Coalition website. 

http://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/whats-ahead.html and in the Berkeley Daily Planet under activist’s calendar http://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com 

 

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 

 

If you wish to stop receiving the Weekly Summary of City Meetings please forward the weekly summary you received to kellyhammargren@gmail.com,