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Regarding Item #14, Adoption of Civic Center Vision and Implementation Plan--an open letter to the Berkeley City Council

Steven Finacom
Monday September 21, 2020 - 11:11:00 AM

I am writing to strongly recommend that you not take final action to adopt a single “Vision” for the Civic Center at your Tuesday, September 22, 2020 meeting but instead hold a workshop to hear a presentation of the current staff and consultant recommendations, thank the consultants for their work so their contracts can be wrapped up, and move to the next stage which should be review of the proposed Visionby three or four Commissions and opportunity for general public review and comment.

The proposal should certainly go for comments to the full Landmarks Preservation Commission and the full Parks & Waterfront Commission, both of which share jurisdiction over review and advising on buildings and facilities in the Civic Center area.

It should also probably go to the Public Works Commission—since it involves changes to two streets, and infrastructure—and to the Civic Arts Commission, since a major array of performing and visual arts facilities is proposed for the Civic Center.


The “Vision” can then come back to the Council at a future date for possible action. That should probably be about three or four months from now. By that time Federal and State elections will also be over and at least the broad parameters of the state and national economic and political situation will be clearer, with all their implications for municipal budgets and funding and opportunities for—or roadblocks to—civic improvements.

You have been told that the final “Vision” went through a robust community process and is ready for your action. This is not correct or accurate.

The reality is that the actual public process involved review of three options, while the final recommended “Vision” was only released publicly this month, incorporated into a more than 900 page report, with supplemental documents and reports. There has been no meaningful opportunity for Commissions, the general public, other stakeholders like community groups (in preservation and the arts in particular) or even Councilmembers for that matter, to review, digest, react to, and consider all this material. 

The Civic Center project did begin with a robust “visioning” process that began late last year. I was a participant in this as one of three (later, reduced to two) members of the Landmarks Commission serving as liaisons to the Measure T-1 planning process. Other Commissions—Public Works and Parks / Waterfront—also sent liaison members, 

so we formed a working group that the staff dubbed a “super-subcommittee” to hear presentations and discuss stages in the Civic Center process. 

All worked well until the COVID-19 disruptions and shutdowns in mid-March. Right before that, the super subcommittee had met with Civic Center consultants and staff, and heard a presentation and commented on three broad alternative scenarios.  


I believe we all expected that the next step would be a full public airing of the scenarios, then further consultation with the super subcommittee, then work by the staff and consultants to narrow things down to a preferred DRAFT concept. That concept then could be aired with the general public and several commissions during the late Spring and Summer, fine-tuned and, finally, sent this Fall to the Council for its review. 

Instead, because of COVID-19, the public process to review was quickly and understandably shifted from big public meetings to a website where comments could be received. You’ve seen the staff report on the comment process. The public comment process on the three scenarios seems to have wrapped up in April, or early May.

At that point it appears that further discussion refining the three broad concepts into a preferred concept was concentrated within City staff and consultant interaction. Apparently there was also some internal consultation between the project team and Councilmembers or their representatives in June or July. 

I can’t find any personal record of the “super subcommittee” being contacted from mid-April to mid-September, nearly a five month period. Then subcommittee members suddenly received a invitation to a Friday, September 18, Zoom presentation of the “final” vision recommendations, and links to the Council agenda. This was the first I 

had heard for some months that the process had moved ahead and I was flatly astonished to hear that there was a “final” recommended “vision” with specifics about the buildings, parks, and streetscapes, including basic design and proposed uses. 

I attended that meeting last Friday, as did two of the other six Commission members. We were given a Powerpoint overview of the recommendations, told that the final concept was done, it was there for the Council to review, and the Council would be asked to adopt it on Tuesday. The mid-September release of the item in the Council agenda packet was also apparently the first “general public” release of the final recommended Vision. 

There have been vexing issues with the size of the document files. I haven’t yet been able to download all of them on my computer for review. At least two of the other people at the Sept. 18 meeting with staff said the same. 

Given this context, the resolution before you—“Adoption - Civic Center Vision and Implementation Plan”—is not accurate in its statement thatthe City of Berkeleys project team has conducted an inclusive and transparent community process, engaged meaningfully with stakeholders, and providing a compelling and shared vision for the Civic Center area…” 


The truth is that the process broadly engaged with stakeholders through April when there were still three concepts. Then, in part because of COVID-19, the process deliberations went “internal” for four or five months and remerged with a single recommendation that has gone straight to the Council without any opportunity for Commission or general public review or thoughtful comments to the Council. 

I also have had the opportunity to speak briefly with one Councilmember who told me their understanding as of last week was that the Council would be having a workshop on Tuesday, not adopting a specific singular “vision”. But the resolution states that the Council declares its intent to support the vision and preferred design concepts articulated in the plan(and)the City Manager is hereby authorized to further the implementation of the plan and its ambitious vision…” 

That is premature. I do not write this as an attack on the City staff or consultants. 

They, like all of us, have been doing the best they can in unprecedented times and circumstances. I have admired the work and energy in particular of the City’s Project Manager. She, and they, have done their part. 

But the next step should be the opportunity for Commissions and community groups to comment and do their part, followed thennot immediately—by Council consideration and action. 

From the partial materials I have seen of the recommended “Vision” there is a lot to like. It recommends restoration and re-use of the landmark City Hall and Veterans Memorial Building which form the core of the Civic Center facilities. It correctly focuses on the Veterans Building as a great place for flexible performing arts space. It has some concepts—some interesting, some problematic—for Civic Center Park.  

But we all—including you—need time to review this material. 

I also want to also speak to you about one key recommendation of the “Vision” that I do find problematic. This is the literal “centerpiece” proposal for a large new City Council chambers to be built in Civic Center Park. (Calling this a “meeting hall” is disingenuous. Regardless of whether it could or would be used for other meetings, the central function would be as a Council Chamber.) 

I strongly caution the Council not to go on record as supporting this specific concept, at least not at this time. 

There should be good and functional places for the Council and other City bodies and civic and community groups to meet and they should be in Civic Center. But the solution is not an expensive (up to nine million dollar?) purpose built new building that occupies park land. 


If you examine all the buildings of the Civic Center—and I have been through all of them, literally from top to bottom, room to room, space to space, in recent years—there are at least a dozen existing, but un-renovated, meeting and event spaces that could, if properly redesigned and renovated, house all sorts of public meetings including Council meetings. These existing spaces can accommodate groups from 30 to nearly 3,000 people. They are all currently vacant and unrenovated. The City is not using them. Planning to spend millions to build yet another meeting space—and, at the same, time, diminish public park land in the City’s core—is simply crazy. 

In addition to the facilities that the City directly owns and controls, there is potential for large meeting facilities in the Community Theater—currently unused by the School District—and, perhaps, the Main Post Office which a more enlightened Federal Administration could loan, lease, or sell to the City for inclusion in the Civic Center. 


Focus on building a new, unnecessary, and unnecessarily grand, Council Chambers is the same mistake another Council made two decades ago when it proposed a bond issue for renovation of City Hall that failed. Don’t make that mistake again, particularly when every person and every organization around you, is struggling with crushing health, economic and financial challenges. 


Do you—as a group, and individually—want to go on record that one of your highest priorities for Civic Center is spending money the City doesn’t currently have on building a new meeting hall for yourselves? You all have better political acumen than that. 


But make no mistake that adopting the current “Vision” as it is presented you, would lead you directly into that huge error. 


Steven Finacom is a member of Berkeley's Landmark Preservation Commission and past president of both the Berkeley Historical Society and the Berkeley Architecture Heritage Association. 

 

 


Cheryl Davila – The Conscience of the Council

Dr. James McFadden
Monday September 21, 2020 - 11:04:00 AM

In this election, there is one incumbent member of the Berkeley City Council who truly deserves to be re-elected – Cheryl Davila of District 2. Cheryl Davila is by far the most progressive candidate in the field, consistently demonstrating her dedication to enlightened politics since her election in 2016. It was with heavy heart that I learned that Max Anderson would retire in 2016. Max was the Conscience of the Council. Who would fill his shoes? The answer became clear only a few months into 2017. Cheryl Davila became the new Conscience of the Council. She has championed causes for South Berkeley, spoken out against the gentrification policies pushed by the City Manager, advocated for the homeless, fought for affordable housing, and denounced police militarization and police harassment of POC, the homeless, and those in mental crises. Her voting record is exemplary – always choosing the moral position over pandering to the wealthy and developers. She has the strongest environmental voting record on the Council. Most recently, Cheryl pushed the Council to eliminate tear gas and other pain compliance devices from the police, and she had the foresight to make the only “defunding police” proposal that didn’t just kick the can down the road.

Cheryl has shown courage in standing up to the Mayor and other Council members who have regularly marginalized and disrespected her during Council meetings. As the Conscience of the Council, Cheryl frames her vote in terms of a moral choice rather than a bureaucratic, business decision. Such framing has left the mayor and some Council members embarrassed and angry. Attempts to silence her during Council meetings are legend, with the public often erupting in protest, demanding to “let her speak.” And unlike previous elections where Council members cross-endorsed each other, in this election the majority of Council members are determined to rid themselves of this thorn in their side. They want to remove Cheryl because she dares to identify the moral underpinnings of decisions that impact the community. But the real progressive community leaders know better, which is why Cheryl has the endorsements of Max Anderson, Gus Newport, Jovanka Beckles, Barbara Brust, Moni Law, Rev. Michael Smith, and Ms. Richie Smith - just to name a few. For a complete list of her endorsements, see her website https://cheryldavila.vote/endorsements/.  

It is important to understand why the Berkeley City Council so desperately need a conscience. This will require me to digress from the specifics of this election to the general operation of our systems of governance.  

The world has become so corporatized, so branded, so commodified, that we sometimes fail to recognize that the tendrils of corporate-machine-thinking have infected Berkeley. Berkeley is incorporated. Berkeley is a corporation that employs a staff of bureaucrats whose job is to make sure the city continues to run. The staff are cogs in the machine, each one following rules to make the machine efficient and keep the machine running. The machine’s primary purpose is to maintain itself in the hope that this maximizes the general welfare of the people of Berkeley. But such machine thinking lacks compassion. It is reptilian. Staff become atomized agents operating in a market – doing their job but not viewing the big picture. Short-term thinking is the general rule – thinking that discounts the future and discounts people who are not seen to contribute to the operation of the machine.  

Berkeley, like all corporate machines, has no moral center, no emotions, no compassion. Staff must follow the rules, not their hearts. It is not that staff don’t have compassion as individuals. It is just that in their bureaucratic roles, they have put on the straight jacket of corporate operations that prevents them from acting outside those rules. This corporate structure simultaneously absolves them of any blame for enforcing those rules that can hurt members of the public. C. Wright Mills describes the operation of this machine in his book “The Power Elite.” Those who follow the rules are promoted and move up the corporate ladder, move higher on the pyramid of rule-based decision making. The assumption is that the mechanical rule-based operation of the machine is always beneficial to the public. However, there is a check on that machine logic embodied in the City Council. Part of the Council’s job is to look at the big picture and provide compassionate guidance that prioritizes the general welfare of the community over efficient operation of the machine. But the machine will resist what it views as outside interference.  

The City Manager is the CEO of the machine. She does not want the Council, the city’s Board of Directors, interfering with her machine’s efficiency. This conflation of efficient operation with beneficial operation is the root cause of the dysfunctional response by the city to society’s problems. With machine logic, the homeless are problems, not people. So when a complaint happens, in go the police to move them and confiscate their property – viewed as an efficient solution to solve the complaint. Protesters are problems to efficient operation of the city, so tear gas is demanded as the most efficient mechanism to disperse the problem. The struggling poor, who often do the majority of necessary work, are not contributing enough to city finances with this machine logic, so gentrification and market-rate housing is the solution. Aging equipment is replaced with more fossil fuel-based vehicles as the cheapest, most efficient solution, discounting a future that includes climate chaos via machine logic. And a shortage of city finances is viewed as a problem that requires waivers of environmental codes to maximize construction (and city income), discounting the problems of gentrification and climate change. The myopic, compassionless operation of the machine requires a conscience - and the City Council must be that conscience.  

Unfortunately, the mayor seems have become a cog in another machine – the Democratic Party political machine. Like the corporate machines described by C. Wright Mills, the local Democratic Party demands rule-based conformity that benefits the Party first and foremost, not the community. There seems to be an underlying assumption that what is good for the Dem Party is good for the community – a variation on “What's good for GM is good for America.” Benefiting the Party means benefiting the major donors to the Party – developers, landlords, businesses. Therefore the mayor finds bureaucratic reasons to justify his votes for money interests, ignoring Cheryl Davila’s appeals for compassion and morality. Other members of the Council justify their votes as beneficial to their district’s narrow interests – which appear to be a new form of red-lining. Gentrification of District 2 will move the red-line to the city’s borders, making property values higher and adding revenues that can be used to benefit the wealthier sections of the city without requiring them to accommodate change. District 2 is a sacrifice zone for these council members.  

These conflicting interests will go unnoticed without a Council conscience. The city of Berkeley needs someone with the moral fiber to defend District 2 from the money interests. For the last four years that person has been Cheryl Davila. She deserves to be re-elected. But even more so, the people of Berkeley need her on the Council. We so desperately need a Conscience of the Council in these chaotic times. Please support Cheryl Davila for District 2. We need her moral center. 

 


Remembering David Mundstock

By Loni Hancock (with assistance from David’s friends: Marty Schiffenbauer, Ying Lee, Carla Woodworth, Rich Illgen, Judith “Ep” Epstein, Jane Scherr)
Saturday September 19, 2020 - 10:50:00 PM

David Mundstock, a progressive political activist, world traveler, Cal and UC law school graduate and historian of Berkeley electoral politics passed away August 28th at his home in Berkeley. David was 72 and his sudden death shocked his family, the members of his longtime walking group and the numerous other friends he made over the decades he lived in Berkeley. 

As a UC Berkeley law school student in the early 1970s David played a key role in organizing Cal students to become a major constituency of the progressive coalition that elected the first representatives of the “new politics” to the Berkeley City Council. Throughout the 1970s David attended every meeting of the Council and recorded the dynamics and personal relationships as well as the votes. As a volunteer, he worked on every election campaign, from registering voters, to “sniping” campaign posters to cruising Berkeley in a “get out the vote” sound truck on election day, to devising campaign strategies. He was passionately committed to the idea of Berkeley as “a place where things begin.” 

From my years as a Berkeley city council member in the early 1970s, to serving as Berkeley’s mayor from 1986-94, and later serving as a member of the California State Assembly and State Senate, I appreciated David’s support and ideas. Nancy Skinner, now a member the California State Senate, credits David for being an early political mentor. “David was one of the first people involved in local Berkeley politics that I met when I arrived at Cal in the 70s. He taught me and my friends how to register students to vote with an ironing board and many clipboards, that we’d set up in Sproul Plaza. Had I not gotten sucked into the orbit of David, being elected the first student to the Berkeley City Council, to my political career to today, would have never happened. David you were a true mensch!” And former Berkeley City Council member, Ying Lee, stated: “David had a prodigious memory and was a walking archive of Berkeley political history. He was largely responsible for my candidacy and election to the Council.” 

In Berkeley’s April, 1973 municipal election, David’s imaginative efforts included placing a marijuana legalization initiative on the ballot. In coordination with the initiative, he helped organize a raffle with a kilo of marijuana as first prize. David was actively involved in the campaigns to establish rent and eviction control in Berkeley, and was one of the few who recognized that switching Berkeley municipal elections from April to November, to coincide with state and federal elections, would vastly increase voter turnout as well as save the city the cost of an extra election. The April to November election date change was approved by Berkeley voters in June, 1982 and following the November, 1982 and 1984 municipal elections, 8 of the 9 elected Berkeley City Council members were progressives. 

David’s detailed first-hand account of Berkeley progressive electoral politics in the 1970s is an invaluable resource for Berkeley historians. He also amassed an extensive collection of political posters, buttons and other election memorabilia. 

David’s history of Berkeley’s electoral politics in the 1970s is here:  

David’s political poster collection is here: 

David traveled extensively throughout the globe, visiting over 70 countries, from Argentina to Zimbabwe. As the “Intrepid Berkeley Explorer,” he documented his travels with photos and videos that rival those of Rick Steves. David regularly hosted screenings of his travel videos for friends at his home. His travel videos, with his quirky commentary, are available at his YouTube channel, where they’ve had hundreds of thousands of views, as well as at his own travelogue website. 

David’s YouTube channel is here: 

David’s travelogue website is here: 

An only child, David was born in Canada where his father had immigrated after escaping from Nazi Germany at the last minute, before it became impossible for Jews to leave. His mother’s family, also Jewish, had immigrated to Canada from Lithuania earlier. David’s parents moved to the U.S. when David was 3-years-old and he was raised in San Francisco, attending George Washington High School. As an alumnus, he was active in the efforts to preserve the Victor Arnautoff “Life of Washington” murals at the school. After graduating from UC Berkeley’s law school, he worked as an attorney for the State of California Energy Commission from 1980-2002. 

David was truly a Berkeley original. From his singular fashion sense to his dry wit he exemplified the “sui generis” individual that makes Berkeley such a unique city, politically and culturally. 

David will be missed by his family, his Berkeley political comrades, his walking group and the many other friends with whom he was always generous with his time and counsel. His large collection of posters, buttons and other Berkeley political memorabilia will be curated by a Berkeley historian and donated to an archive of Berkeley history. 

Donations in David’s memory may be made to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), East Bay Community Law Center, People for the American Way.


Opinion

Public Comment

What We Demand from the Adeline Corridor Plan

Friends of Adeline
Saturday September 19, 2020 - 09:42:00 AM

For more than 5 years Friends of Adeline has been working for creating low-income housing and reversing the displacement of African-Americans as a part of the City's Adeline Corridor Plan.

What we demand:

  1. All housing on publicly-owned land MUST be dedicated for 100% low-income housing that our community can actually afford, as well as a guaranteed future for the Ashby community flea market and its vendors.
  2. At least half of all housing in our community, both new and old, must be affordable for low-income people, including family-sized units. Developers should not be allowed to pay a fee to get out of building the low-income housing we need.
  3. One-third of our housing trust fund must go to South Berkley, with at least a minimum of $50 million over 10 years.
Friends of Adeline supports the subcommittee's revisions to the Adeline Plan, and we ask the Planning Commission to adopt all of the subcommittee recommendations, including a goal of 100% affordable housing at the Ashby BART station, a guaranteed future for the flea market, hiring local residents for jobs created in the corridor, and a right to return for people who've been displaced or are at risk of displacement.


2009 Trump was right

Jagjit Singh
Saturday September 19, 2020 - 10:01:00 AM

2020 President Trump dismissed climate change as a hoax. Perhaps he has forgotten, 2009 Trump purchased a full-page ad on 6, Dec. 2009, on climate change which stated, “If we fail to act now, it is scientifically irrefutable that there will be catastrophic and irreversible consequences for humanity and our planet.” Well said sir! Please convey your wise words to 2020 Donald Trump who stubbornly refuses to accept the devastating impact of climate change for political purposes. Another gross lie to mislead the American people 

2020 Trump blames California for poor forest management but perhaps he is unaware that vast majority of the acreage burned is the responsibility of federal Department of Agriculture. These have been grossly mismanaged by your appointees for the past three years. 

Finally there is growing outrage among Trump supporters for the lack of concern for their safety at large rallies. 

Trump told The Las Vegas Review-Journal that he was “unconcerned about catching the Coronavirus because HE WAS VERY FAR AWAY. His supporters heeding the advice of their guru stood shoulder to shoulder in a large manufacturing plant without masks mocking the ever vigilant virus to attack.


What Does It Mean to Act White?

Steve Martinot
Saturday September 19, 2020 - 10:10:00 AM

It is possible that the question we have been chasing in these articles has been the wrong one. We have been asking how white people can overcome their psychological and social hang-ups enough to address the issues of race and racism head on – socially, politically, and culturally. But perhaps the real question should have been how white people can disentangle themselves from the knots and webs of whiteness in which they have been thrust and are caught. These webs and knots allow white people to be used by white supremacy to put black people and others of color in thrall to the needs of white racialized society. The real (liberatory) question should be how white people can stop acting white.

What does “acting white” mean? White people act white when, in social situations, they single out the race of others or give it special attention. It doesn’t matter if the white person does it in an approving or patronizing or gratuitously hostile manner. The notice and naming of a product of white racializing activity serves to nourish the process of racialization upon which white racialized identity aggrandizes itself. It preempts whatever kind of autonomous self-identification the other person might have had in mind for themselves, thus coopting (aka speaking for) the other.

Acting white very often entails acting as if one knows what the other is going to say, or what the other is thinking, and overtly relating to that alleged (self-generated) "knowledge." Usually such things are done without thinking. But racialized "prior" knowledge is acquired from other white people, and not from the person to whom one is speaking. It is simply a way of preempting the other.

Acting white may involve seeing people of color as a threat. To act as if one is arbitrarily threatened by the other’s presence is itself a racializing act. If a white person may find themselves outnumbered by black people, they may try to be super respectful. But it often leads one to speak in a loud voice, and thus reveal that one is scared stiff.
 

In general, white people regulate their actions in mixed company in accord with their awareness of other white people, present or absent. That is, they choose scripts for different situations, tactics for the purpose of psychic stability in the moment. The existence of such scripts, easily detected when in use, simply testify to the artificial nature (pretension) of racism.  

Most anti-racists have been saying that white people need to recognize the racism and white supremacy in themselves, and deal with that. Well and good. For some, that means rooting out their own prejudices. For others, it means understanding how they have absorbed racist attitudes from the surrounding white supremacist culture. Different “rootings-out” involve different transformations of consciousness because related to different intersections and mutual interactions of individual and institutional (systemic) influences. There is a dialectical conjunction between those two, how the individual lives out the systemic, and how the systemic enforces role models on the individual. If “rooting-out” sunders that dialectic by being therapeutic, whether through psychological or social process (making rules, for instance, to govern anti-racist behavior), it takes on the aura of a 12-step program.  

Insofar as one’s internal rectification process, or the discarding of accumulated role models, is engaged from a stance of white orientation or identification, it leaves the core problem unaddressed, namely, the un-neutralized white subject position of the verb, “to racialize.” And that ability to be a racializer is part of the privilege of whiteness.  

White people generally do not see themselves as either privileged or in the subject-position of a racialization process. That subject position lies at a cultural depth below the pragmatics of privilege or the choice of script. It lies in the unthinking modes of acting white.  

The issue of justice is not an "issue"  

In recent months, the issue of "acting white" and the issue of justice have been brought together. The injustice of torturing and killing people of color in public has brought the concept of justice to a new level in civilian consciousness, and attached it in a new way to how white society comports itself.  

This is not to say that white society is in any way uniform. The injustice of killing and torturing is seen differently from the perspective of “white nationalism,” or white jurisprudence, or white anti-racism. While the first opposes equality (the prerequisite for "justice") between black and white people as itself an injustice, the second reduced injustice to that for which there is objective evidence, and the third tends to limit its approach to justice to a Constitutional ethics. But both the "liberal" and the prosecutor, acting within our given trial processes, succeed in reducing the fate of people of color to a conflict of wits between white people (in a courtroom). All three valorize white racialized identity in their own way, as a result of which, the very concept of justice is racialized.  

In the present system, it is not that there is one justice for white people, and one for people of color. Justice on both sides of the color line is basically a relation between white people. In short, though racialized, justice is only white justice. What divides the different forms of justice is not the color line but the line of brutality (a black man who inadvertently shot a white man (a cop) in Arkansas was just sentenced on Sept. 8, 2020, to two life terms and 835 years in prison – absurdity for the sake of destructive hatred).  

In its present structure, the juridical model of contending sides (people vs. defendant) may be efficient with respect to a racialized concept of justice, but it could not coexist with equity as a precondition. Equity would require the community circle and forms of restorative justice, which would replace court procedures with something more dialogical and democratic.  

Here again, we encounter a circle. It is one of a positive (inclusionary) rather than negative (exclusionary) kind. Justice is the foundation for community because it is the sign that there is equality in society, and thus equal participation in decision-making, which is the foundation of (restorative) justice.  

How is one to discuss whiteness if the meanings of "justice" and equality can be so divided across the line of brutality (legality on one side, racialization on the other), with equality being only a pragmatic element in both (rather than an ethical principle)? How can a white person discuss racialization if the only terms available for use are coopted by racialization itself?  

Oddly enough, we find a similar structure in the two party political system as we discern in racialized justice. In the US electoral system, only a few people are empowered (through election) to make decisions for others (whom they ostensibly represent). The system pretends to equality by affirming that all the represented have a vote. But insofar as democratic decision-making requires dialogue and participation by those who will be affected by the policy made, reduction of participation to the vote is a form of exclusion. As in racialized justice, the inequality in decision-making represents the seizure of an entire category of thought. To cover this up, the system pretends that all have an equal chance to be elected to decision-making positions, while forgetting to mention the funds required in a commodified economy.  

In addition, the political system has given rise to its own form of racialization in the popular mind. People of color have come to be known as "minorities." To have a minority character as a group or community means to be a minority prior to any election. It signifies that the people so minoritized will "naturally" be outvoted in advance.  

It is time to call the existence of whiteness into question  

We have spent time examining how the morass and paradox of "race" itself makes it very difficult for a white person to talk about race and racism. At the same time, we have seen that the structure of racialization stands in the way of justice and democracy. If justice and democracy are to be realized in the US, then somehow whiteness and its arrogated hegemonic position will have to be dismantled, and the concepts of justice and democracy de-racialized.  

Equality however presents a decided threat to the stability of white racialized identity. We have noted that many feel seriously threatened by the possibility of abandoning it, as their intimate connection with the race they were given. It reveals a fragility in that identity (a concept allied to Robin Diangelo’s, in her book, White Fragility). The idea that the abandonment of whiteness can be considered an existential threat, as well as a questioning of membership in a socio-cultural structure, clearly signifies its original artificiality. That artificiality is what most white-oriented people are loath to admit, though the history is clear as to how it originally emerged. [Cf. Martinot, Rule of Racialization]  

That artificiality has appeared often in US history, mostly as a call to allegiance to whiteness (race loyalty). The slaveholder response to the abolitionist movement, the white supremacist call to oppose and attack the Reconstruction governments, the “white citizen” response to desegregation after Brown vs. Board, and the many layered oppositions to affirmative action; all occurred in the name of "protecting" whiteness from policy.  

Three central aspects of white culture were revealed in that history and its many calls to white loyalty. First, there was a need for violence against black people in order to disguise white dependence on their existence (discussed in Part 3 of this series). Second, since white racialized identity is imposed on white people by white supremacist society, a second order of internal violence is needed to enforce the white allegiance and regimentation on which violence against people of color relies. It involves social exile, ostracism, and terror.  

And third, there is a blindness to the political purpose of that violence. Today, with the violence having been transformed into police brutality, the white racialized demand for allegiance has been shifted to police demands for obedience, which occurs in a myopic distance. And associated with the unending killings by police, there is the silent unacknowledged thought that the on-going killing is the real police response to the massive demand that they stop killing. As a refusal of the government to provide justice for the people who demand it, it is too big to see.  

Alternatives to white identity  

It would seem that anti-racist whites should have been acting strongly against police profiling as a primary way of being proactive against the structures of racialization. After all, racial profiling is a central mode of racializing people. To stop a person of color on suspicion is already racializing, but as a prelude to demanding obedience which can then be turned into punishment for disobedience, it is a tactic to arrive at violence. The fact that the person is compliant to police commands is immaterial; witness how many black people are beaten or tased after being handcuffed.  

To petition police departments to cease their profiling, or to petition City Council to legislate against the policy, rarely stops the practice. It does not take account of the depth of the culture of racialization in which the police involve themselves. The legitimacy of profiling was developed out of the drug war and the opportunity it presented to stop people on suspicion. Through mass incarceration campaigns, and the inducement of crime in the streets that the increase in drug trafficking elicited, the police became the most powerful political organizations in most cities. Now, police political power hangs over people and local government, using its criminalization of people, its proclamation of a “crime problem,” to obstruct attempts to alter local policy on such things as profiling.  

Unfortunately, the anti-racist movement continues to reveal a belief in the representationist system of government. People seem to feel they have nowhere else to go for the construction of policy, nor for appeal against government abuses of power. But this too doubles back on the movement. The police now rely on the way the public relies on its representationist political structures for responses to police killings. Despite demonstrator calls upon City Councils to arrest and charge the criminal cops, those Councils have been put in the position of affirming police actions in advance by the police themselves. In acceding to the independence of the police, City Councils end up obstructing rather than facilitating justice. As long as white people lock their opposition into a political non-opposition controlled by the police, George Floyd will get killed over and over again.  

In a similar manner, the issue of gun control is enlisted in the process of racialization. When the police allowed the white nationalist who had just killed two demonstrators in Kenosha (protesting Jacob Blake’s killing) to leave and go home, they were not only affirming his act of racialization but were revealing the white supremacist ethic at the core of resistance to gun control. The police refusal to take him into custody implied that, for their racializing project, guns in the hands of white people are proper, necessary, and designed to be put into anti-black practice.  

In other words, the Second Amendment debate is only a way to make that political goal look legitimate. The work of guaranteeing white-oriented gun ownership is to establish "mastery" over people of color. In the sense that this "mastery" always promotes itself as self-defense, it is adopting the police and their profiling as its role model, excusing potential brutality in advance as "security." In that sense, the defeat of gun control has become an integral aspect of re-racializing US culture.  

A first step toward social liberation from the culture of racialization would be to dismantle the police and replace it with something that values human life and can be democratically administered at the community level. Can a government agency be created that would not only respect people but guarantees their dignity and autonomy?  

Political opposition to the culture of whiteness and its contemporary avatar in police violence must reposition itself on the cultural plane, where abandoning whiteness as such can be put on the table. That is, an alternative to white racialized identity would require operating outside the representationist political structure that the police and the culture of whiteness control. It would mean organizing and orchestrating a transition from whiteness to democracy, and from the structures of racialization to a cooperativist infrastructure.  

The focus of white supremacist power has always been its ability to defend itself by opposing universalizing reforms (such as health care for all), and opposing gun control. Both those policies present opportunities to be proactive against the structures of racialization.  

Can we speak about the abolition of whiteness?  

Many of the white participants in the recent anti-racist uprisings have analyzed the culture of whiteness and white supremacy, and decided it has to be opposed. Even against their own white upbringing, a human repugnance to the anti-democratic nature of white supremacy and its dependence on injustice must lead to that logical conclusion. And that implies that white identity must be ultimately abandoned, so that all racialization can be abolished.  

In the meantime, some conclude that, since "racialized whiteness" has no real existence beyond its definition and its expressions in violence, it should be possible to throw it off – or at least, since it was given by white supremacy, to give it back. But how does one give back something that is inherent in one’s culture.  

This then raises the specter of futility. Though one can think something “out of existence,” in the mode of self-transformation, it doesn’t always work. One’s whiteness, in particular, will be restored by everyone upon one’s appearance in the street. Self-transformation will only partially change one’s identity. The rest, that aspect imposed by one’s culture, must be dealt with in a different way. And here, we face the practical side of that other problem of the “eye’s inability to see itself seeing.” The identity that one seeks to transform will be in charge of the process of one’s transformation. That is, the social identification that generates social identity, in overseeing one’s attempt to dissolve one’s racialized identity, will actually strengthen itself in doing so.  

White racialized identity’s function is to produce racializing behavior, that is, performances that racialize others. Racism is its function. For that reason, an “anti-racist whiteness,” while not a contradiction in terms, is a practice of oxymoronic gestures. We need an additional level of social critique.  

Eliminating white supremacy  

More and more white people are waking up to their role in racializing the society, and to their (perhaps unwitting) affirmation of its violence and injustices, and they are turning to a different form of social virtue. They now face the need to choose between membership in humanity or membership in whiteness. It is not a choice that is devoid of danger. But there have always been political movements that advocate a form of democracy, and do so by seeking to transcend the oppressions that the structures of racialization impose on all people, though in different ways.  

There are three institutional factors that function at the core of the structures of racialization in the US. One is the police, the second is the prison system, and finally, there is the two party system. [Cf. Martinot, The Machinery of Whiteness, p. 118ff] One might project that if these three institutional forms of racialization were eliminated, the power of racism would disappear. But white racialized identity would persist and reconstitute structures of racialization for itself. The ethic of allegiance and the stance of loyalty to a whiteness that exists only by definition would have to be re-humanized.  

There is one more institution that underlies those three, and which is actually at the core of white supremacy. It is the fact that race emerges from a settler process. The term "settler" refers to people who degrade the world by transforming land into commodities, and by commodifying the labor "it" (the settler) controls by evicting and displacing people from that land through its commodification (the invention of trespassing). In the Americas, the settler was European. The settler calls this process "conquest," but its purpose is an objective degradation of the social world. Whiteness and the structures of racialization are the machinery by which the settler accomplishes this. To own land, or rent it, or work on it for someone else, is to have been displaced from it (that is, from “the land,” as distinct from its “deeded land” aspect). The contemporary form this takes is the exclusion of black people from white neighborhoods with the excuse that real estate values will decline. This is not just a minor constitutional issue. It is the economic level on which the culture of whiteness is situated and sustained.  

If one believes in justice and equality and democracy (which are inseparable), then one must not only refuse to act white, but dismantle one’s white-orientation, and reconstitute oneself as someone who understands the necessity of being human. Being human means to replace (as the opposite of displace) the alienation, insulation, and paranoia of whiteness with the freedom and autonomy of others (and therefore of oneself). Being human refers to how one sees others, not how one sees oneself. Alienation grows from how one sees oneself separated from people. Insularity names the condition, as a lone subject, of relating across a system of activities to others one sees as things (e.g. the verb “to racialize”). And the paranoia is the fear inherited from the supremacy of whiteness as it defines itself through the repression of those others as things. Against the strictures of racialization, one can escape only by becoming an agent of de-racialization.  

Abolition is an important part of our history. It has been evoked against slavery, the prison system, the police, racism, and now race. People are now searching for how to abolish whiteness. It is in service to that project that we have analyzed the structures of racialization, the structure of race as a verb, and the structure of white racialized identity in these articles. The purpose of seeing the aspects of race and white supremacy as social structures which can be defined and described (the three major ones are named above) is to reveal to freedom-oriented consciousness that we can be proactive in opposition to those structures’ existence. We are not confined to “watchful-waiting.”


Updated: New Conflicts at Pacifica; KPFA Meeting Changes

Gar Smith
Saturday September 19, 2020 - 09:40:00 AM

KPFA's Local Station Board (LSB) has announced a new process for public attendance and comment at the station's upcoming public meeting on September 19. On September 17, with only 3 days notice, KPFA's LSB Secretary changed the notice for this Saturday’s bi-monthly meeting to one that requires individuals wanting to attend—or make a Public Comment—to send an email request and to do so by Friday, September 18. 

As a result, Pacifica Fightback has announced that its Town Hall Panel, "Report From The Stations and Building A Vital Strong Pacifica Network," has been rescheduled to September 26 at 4 PM Pacific Standard Time. 

According to Pacifica Fightback: "We will have reports from the stations of Pacifica about where we are and where we want to go as well as art and words. The crisis in this country and the world require a revitalized Pacifica that can be a real voice for the people of this country." 

For those wishing to listen in and/or participate, click on this link: 

https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZEsc-murjktGtSEAURl3UdPMzT9DLlMQ4Mi


The End of Trump or the End of America?

Gar Smith
Saturday September 19, 2020 - 09:55:00 AM

During Donald Trump's recent photo-op stop in California, I heard a radio reporter use the phrase "the president's motorcade." Suddenly, a chill raced down my spine. That phrase—forever associated with President Kennedy's assassination in Dallas—prompted an ominous scenario to take shape in my mind. Here's how it goes. 

Donald Trump has become such a self-destructive political figure that his lies, flip-flops, insults, tirades, and frequently incoherent babbling have become a toxic burden that's weighing down the Republican Party—and rattling the billionaire oligarchs who fund the GOP. 

Looking at Trump's increasingly erratic behavior (and a seemingly endless parade of pre-election book-length exposes) even some former Ever-Trumpers are left with the feeling that Trump's most effective challenger is . . .Trump himself. 

The take-away: Pro-Trump Republicans—and even members of Trump's red-white-and-blue Base—are increasingly concerned about the election outcome. And, if Trump can no longer con his masses, some desperate plotters may determine that he might be "better off dead." (More on this later.) 

What If Trump Loses and Refuses to Leave? 

America faces a fundamental problem in the upcoming election: We are not a democracy. 

In 2016, Hillary Clinton won by 3 million popular votes but it was Trump who took home the Electoral College diploma. This year, the Boston Globe recently predicted, Joe Biden could bypass Trump by 7 million votes and still lose to The Donald in the Electoral College. 

Trump has indicated that he might not leave office if he looses the election. Roger Stone (a convicted criminal pardoned by Trump) has openly urged the President to declare "martial law," if he fails to win in November. 

Trump has warned that, in the event of election chaos, he will meet any popular "insurrection" with deadly military force. Trump has even applauded the extralegal murder of his opponents, calling the police killing of an Antifa shooting suspect a case of justifiable "retribution." 

When Trump was asked directly by Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace whether if would step down should he lose the November election, Trump replied: "I have to see, look, I have to see, I'm not just going to say yes, I'm not going to say no." (During the 2016 campaign, when Trump was asked if he would abide by the voters' will, he responded that he would "keep you in suspense.") 

Retired Military Leaders Support Trump's Removal 

Appalled by Trump's despotic intimations, two respected retired Army Officers—Col. Paul Yingling and Lt. Col. John Nagi co-authored an article in the military journal Defense One appealing to Gen. Mark Milley, Chair of the Joint Chiefs, to be prepared to order the military to remove Trump from office should he try to delay, disrupt, cancel or simply ignore the results of the November 3 election. Yingling was clear: "A president who defies a Constitutional succession of power might be guilty of treason." 

Yingling and Nagi were not the first to suggest this unprecedented remedy. On June 10, during an appearance on The Daily Show, Joe Biden assured host Trevor Noah that, if Trump attempted to "steal" the election, the military—as sworn guardians of the Constitution—would escort him out of the White House "with great dispatch." 

War-gaming the Election Aftermath 

The various scenarios have become so dire, that late last year, a group of 70 former government officials and retired military officers assembled to conduct a "war games" exercise to explore possible responses should Trump attempt to seize power. The so-called "Transition Integrity Project" (TIP) was comprised of Democrats and Republicans. It split into seven competing groups that considered four possible outcomes—a Biden blowout, a narrow Biden win, a Trump win, and an uncertain outcome. 

The results of the experiment were published in August. The progressive Indivisible Project reviewed three predicted outcomes. 

  1. Trump loses by a significant margin but refuses to leave office.
  2. It is a close election and, with mail-in ballots slow to arrive, the final results will not be known for days or weeks. Trump will immediately declare victory, insisting that attempts to record uncounted ballots would be proof of a "rigged" system.
  3. Trump triggers a Constitutional crisis that would be addressed by courts packed with Trump-picked jurors. At this point, the TIP gamers concluded, the only recourse for Trump's critics would be to respond with "a show of numbers in the streets."
As David French writes in the September 21 issue of TIME Magazine: "the result in every scenario, except a Biden landslide, would be 'street-level violence and political crisis.'" Not even a cold-blooded multi-billionaire would look forward to such a dystopian outcome. Pandemics of street violence are not good for business. So, is there another scenario? 

The Sad End of Donald Trump 

This brings me back to that chill I felt upon hearing the phrase, "presidential motorcade." 

There may be an alternative that would avoid unleashing a Civil War/Race War in the streets of America. 

The quick-and-easy solution? Trump must go. Most likely via a shocking, pre-election assassination. 

It could be politically useful (but not in any way necessary) for Those In Power to blame Trump's demise on "Antifa" elements or "Socialist Democrats" but it will suffice just to have Trump removed from the scene, thereby allowing Mike Pence to step forward and assert "emergency powers" to claim Republican control of the Republic. 

A presidential assassination would not be an uncommon event in US history. There's a good chance the US has lost more leaders to assassins than any other modern nation. You could say assassinations have become "as American as apple pie." Four sitting US presidents have fallen victim to assassins, including: Abraham Lincoln, James Abram Garfield, William McKinley, and John F. Kennedy. (Not on the list: Warren G. Harding, a notorious philanderer who some believe was poisoned by his wife while he was facing impeachment for corruption.) 

Seventeen US presidents (including all 12 of our most recent leaders) have been the victims of attempted assassinations including: Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, William Howard Taft, Theodore Roosevelt, Herbert Hoover, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman, John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, and Donald Trump

Fifteen Congressmen have been killed in office—10 Democrats, four Republicans, and one Democratic-Republican.  

Assassins have murdered numerous progressive activists including: Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., Robert F. Kennedy, Malcolm X, Fred Hampton, Harvey Milk, George Moscone, and Liberal radio host Alan Berg (murdered by white supremacists in 1984). 

Trump has already been the target of three assassination attempts. In 2016, a British citizen named Michael Sandford grabbed a police officer's pistol at a Las Vegas campaign rally and tried to shoot candidate Trump. In 2017, a member of the Islamic State of Iraq was arrested by Philippine National Police and charged with plotting to murder Trump during his visit to an ASEAN summit. In 2018, Trump was targeted by a US Navy vet named William Clyde Allen III who mailed poison-laced letters to the White House. 

Salon-founder David Talbot has written extensively about the JFK assassination. His book, The Devil's Chessboard: Allen Dulles, the CIA, and the Rise of America's Secret Government, offers compelling evidence that Kennedy was the victim of a well-orchestrated government coup engineered by CIA Director Allan Dulles. 

 

In a letter posted on Facebook and widely shared, Talbot begins by asking the question: "Why was Kennedy assassinated by his own national security forces but Donald Trump has so far not been?" After the Bay of Pigs fiasco, Kennedy challenged the intelligence community and threatened to dismantle the CIA and cast the pieces to the winds. Trump has also railed at the powerful and secretive intelligence community—aka the "Deep State." 

Two things have saved Trump, Talbot believes. First, there is no longer a single, powerful master at the head of Trump's Deep State foes—no Allan Dulles. Second, despite his derogatory swipes at the leadership in the Pentagon, the CIA, the NSA and the rest of the vast intelligence empire, Trump still glorifies militarism and is committed to promoting wars and the military sales propagated by endless conflict. "So, no matter how he blows off steam on Twitter," Talbot concludes, "there are significant factions within the deep state that are still cheering him on, or that at least find him a useful idiot." 

The Secret Service Targets Trump 

In a September 20, 2016 article in The Berkeley Daily Planet, I wrote about a disturbing report aired by the CBS Evening News. The report was aired while Barack Obama was still in the White House. Here are some excerpts: 

"Reporting on the extensive efforts taken to protect the president, CBS's Margaret Brennan explained how members of the Secret Service's elite counter-sniper team 'are trained to hit targets dead on and, in the worst case scenario, put themselves in the line of fire.' 

"In Brennan's report—titled "Inside the Secret Service sniper team"—government snipers were shown polishing their skills at a private government shooting range. 

Instead of aiming their powerful long-range rifles at a generic black silhouette, however, the snipers in the CBS report were shown shooting at an identifiable human face—in this case, a cropped photo of a white, blond-haired male. 

"The Secret Service snipers' target bore an uncanny resemblance to presidential candidate Donald Trump." [Note: You can see the image at the Planet link.] 

The article also noted another disturbing element of the CBS report: "the government snipers appear to be aiming most of their fire not at the source of a 'would-be assassin's' high-rise window, but at the line of cars in a mock presidential motorcade." 

Snipers are neither "protective" nor "defensive." Their mission is to kill specific targets invisibly, at a great distance. 

[Note: CBS never responded to requests to address the identity of the individual who's face was posted on the Secret Service's targets.] 

 

How an Assassination Could 'Bring the Country Together' 

If (God forbid) Trump were to become the victim of political violence, many voters would respond by closing ranks around Vice President Mike Pence, the new GOP candidate, in a show of political—and national—solidarity. This "rally 'round the flag" effect would not benefit the Democrats. All sympathy would gravitate toward the White House and the images of grieving family members. 

Under the vale of "victim sympathy," Republicans—and, potentially, many Democrats—would rush to put "nation before party," closing ranks under the flag of "national sorrow" and "national unity." 

A Trump assassination would not help Joe Biden's campaign. In the wake of such a shattering national calamity, the "herd instinct" would most likely drive a majority of voters to demonstrate their patriotism by mourning Trump (for all his sins and failures) as the embodiment of "the presidency." An attack on Trump would be seen as akin to an attack on the nation itself. 

Rallying around Pence and Trump's grieving family could be spun as "standing up to terrorism"—while serving to defend and promote the agendas of the GOP. 

While forfeiting the election in the name of "stability" would mean submitting to the "status quo" politics of the previous four years, this grievous outcome might well be preferable to the alternative—the outbreak of a deadly, suicidal Civil War driven by internal divisions of race, religion, and resentment. 

Imagine if, in addition to losing entire towns to climate-change-fueled wildfires, tornados, and hurricanes, and losing millions of lives to Covid-19, our cities would to erupt spiraling pandemics of citizen-on-citizen violence. This could unleash a reign of looting, shooting, and polluting that would signal the end of the American Experiment. 

This Just In . . . 

Or, as investigative journalist Greg Palast speculates, Trump's total seizure of power could be achieved by leveraging right-wing attacks on voting stations and US Post Offices to the point that even holding an election becomes untenable. 

If GOP-controlled Florida, Milwaukee, and Michigan claim the chaos makes it impossible for them to conduct elections or count the ballots, Team Trump would be free to invoke the Constitution's 12th Amendment. That would mean the next president would be elected by the House of Representatives—on the basis of a single vote cast by each of the country's 50 states. Palast explains this in greater detail below: 


PS: One of my motives for writing this long exercise in political projection is the hope that, by speculating on the possibility of another shocking example of "executive action," it might actually prevent such a scenario from occurring.


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE: What Happens After November 3

Bob Burnett
Friday September 18, 2020 - 04:31:00 PM

There's a lot of concern about what happens after the polls close on November 3rd. Here's the BB view: mainstream media "exit" polls will show that Joe Biden won the popular vote by more than ten percentage points. Before midnight, on the West Coast, enough California results will be published to confirm this -- Biden will gather two-thirds of the Golden State early vote. Then the nation will wait on the electoral-college results. 

The Popular Vote: For the past month, according to the 538 website, Biden's lead over Trump has stayed between 7 and 8 percentage points. (https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/polls/president-general/national/) It's unlikely that Trump can narrow this gap, but he can make it widen. For example, Trump's continuing harangue against mail-in ballots will hurt him with senior Republican voters -- who traditionally vote using mail-in ballots. (https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2020/9/7/1975717/-Rep-Kevin-McCarthy-We-re-Screwed?

Trump is likely to lose badly in the debates. And, he is running out of money. Ergo, the popular vote margin won't be close. 

Exit Polls: There's a lot of concern that Americans won't know what's happening, at the end of election day, because the traditional exit polls won't work -- most voters (estimated 75 percent) won't go to actual polling places, they will instead vote by mail. But that scenario assumes that pollsters won't do the obvious: call up registered voters and ask, "Did you vote? (If yes) How did you vote? Who did you vote for?" But pollsters will adapt and the new "exit" polls will be available. 

Therefore, on the evening of November 3rd, we will have exit polls projections for the national popular vote and for individual states -- so we will have a preliminary electoral vote count. And then we will wait for the actual votes to be counted. (The deadline is December 14.) 

Electoral College: The current Cook Report electoral projections shows Biden with 290 electoral votes, Trump with 187, and 61 as tossups. I'll focus on eight of the Cook-designated swing states and consider how their votes will be processed and what we should expect on November 3. 

Arizona: (11 electoral votes, Cook rates lean Democrat.) Real Clear Politics shows Biden leading by 5 percent; Biden has been leading for several months. (Trump has pulled his TV ads in Arizona (https://www.abc15.com/news/election-2020/president-trump-campaign-goes-dark-on-local-tv-but-for-how-long ).) 

Arizona relies heavily on mail-in ballots. (They have a permanent mail-in ballot option.) Roughly 80 percent will vote by mail. Ballot tallying can begin 14 days before Election Day but results cannot be released until polls close. 

Prediction: Biden will win. We'll have most results within 24 hours and final results within 72. 

Florida: (29 electoral votes, Cook rates tossup.) Real Clear Politics shows Biden leading by 1.6 percent; race is too close to call. 

Florida makes it relatively easy to cast a mail-in ballot. (In 2018, 31 percent voted by mail.) Ballot tallying can begin 22 days before election day but the results cannot be released until polls close. Unfortunately, voting in Florida has been subject to a variety of obstacles -- and lawsuits. 

Prediction: toss up. We'll have most results within 24 hours and final results within 72. 

Georgia: (16 electoral votes, Cook rates tossup.) Real Clear Politics shows Trump leading by 1.3 percent; race is too close to call. 

Georgia makes it relatively easy to cast a mail-in ballot. (Nonetheless, in 2018, only 6 percent voted by mail.) While signature verification can occur when ballots are received, actual ballot counting does not occur until November 3rd. Georgia is another state where voting has been subject to a variety of impediments. 

Prediction: toss up. Results won't be known for more than a week. 

Michigan: (16 electoral votes, Cook rates lean Democrat.) Real Clear Politics shows Biden leading by 4.8 percent; Biden has been leading for several months. (Trump has pulled his TV ads in Michigan (https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-09-14/trump-campaign-slashes-ad-spending-in-key-states-in-cash-crunch ).) 

Michigan makes it relatively easy to cast a mail-in ballot. (in 2018, 24 percent voted by mail.) Actual ballot counting does not occur until November 3rd. 

Prediction: Biden will win. Definitive results will take a week. 

North Carolina: (15 electoral votes, Cook rates tossup.) Real Clear Politics shows Biden up by 0.9 percent. 

North Carolina makes it relatively easy to cast a mail-in ballot. (In 2020, the election director expects that 80 percent will vote by mail.) Ballot counting can occur two weeks prior to Election Day -- but results cannot be announced before November 3rd. 

Prediction: Biden will win. We'll have most results within 24 hours and final results within 72. 

Pennsylvania: (20 electoral votes, Cook rates lean Democrat.) Real Clear Politics shows Biden up by 4.3 percent; Biden has been leading for several months. (Trump has pulled his TV ads in Pennsylvania.) 

Pennsylvania makes it relatively easy to cast a mail-in ballot. Actual ballot counting does not occur until November 3rd. (There's legislation pending to speed this up.) 

Prediction: Biden will win. Definitive results will take a week. 

Texas: (38 electoral votes, Cook rates lean Republican.) Real Clear Politics shows Trump up by 3.5 points. 

Texas make it difficult for anyone but seniors to cast a mail-in ballot. Actual ballot counting happens on election day. Another state where Republicans have tried to impede voting. 

Prediction: Trump will win. Results won't be known for more than a week. 

Wisconsin: (10 electoral votes, Cook rates lean Democrat.) Real Clear Politics shows Biden up by 6.7 points. 

Wisconsin makes it relatively easy to cast a mail-in ballot. Actual ballot counting does not occur until November 3rd. 

Prediction: Biden will win. Definitive results will take a week. 

Summary: Biden will win the electoral vote but it will take at least a week to confirm this. (Georgia and Texas will be a mess.) 

Take a deep breath. 


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

 


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Defying Prognoses

Jack Bragen
Friday September 18, 2020 - 04:27:00 PM

Treatment practitioners do not have a mandate and probably do not have an incentive to be invested in the success of those they treat. Proper clinical work seems to consist of good documentation of how sick a person supposedly is, how hopeless we are, to what extent our inappropriate behavior can be remediated, and to what extent not. Documentation is everything. It keeps the money rolling in. It demonstrates that work is apparently being done. It shows how the sick people can be kept under restriction, and, if not, where to funnel the person into the criminal justice system, as well as how to do that. 

Second to documentation is clinical technique. This is where, mostly through dialog, a patient's wild ideas of doing something in the world can be bobbed. And it is a method for neutralizing a person's anger or other difficult emotions, those that could make someone difficult to manage. 

Our success in life? Our happiness? It doesn't seem to enter the picture. If we want to be helped in gaining better living conditions for ourselves, we must sell ourselves to treatment professionals, and we must demonstrate that we want to do good, perhaps great things--and that we could be capable of accomplishing that. Yet not all treatment professionals will greet this with enthusiasm. On the other hand, if we can show that we are both constructive and unstoppable, more will join our side. 

On our side of the work, we need to be invested in our own success, irrespective of other agendas of treatment practitioners. This will be helped by keeping our appointments as much as possible. It will be helped by being medication compliant. But it will also be helped by seeking enlightening experiences outside of the treatment system. For example, interaction with teachers at a Buddhist temple. Or, if that doesn't work for you, you could go on a trip to Barnes and Noble and look at some books. If broke, there is also the library, which loans books free of charge--you have to bring them back on time. 

The internet is essentially limitless. But we should realize that it does not replace those outside experiences. People contact is difficult to pursue in our present-day period of coronavirus; and this can create stress. 

Defying my prognosis in my twenties meant learning more electronics, beyond what I had learned as a young hobbyist, and turning that knowledge into the ability to repair televisions and make money at it. I didn't make a lot because I wasn't good enough or fast enough with the repairs. Yet the work conditions were far better than those in unskilled jobs. And I had interactions at work that made my personality more rounded out. I needed that. (And I still need more of that.) 

In my initial prognosis, given when I first became ill, I was told I could probably do "fairly well for a while." This apparently meant that the psychiatrist believed I could do janitorial work until a bit older, at which time...I don't know, because the doctor didn't say. It was supposedly a better prognosis than the one for my older brother who had become schizophrenic at the same age. 

In the case of both my brother and me, we have exceeded our prognoses, especially as we've gotten older. Schizophrenia is said to ease up when you get older if you can survive that long.  

However, the view of many psychiatrists is that people with schizophrenia don't have much going for us between the ears. We are perceived as extremely limited people. The reader should realize the symptoms limit what we can handle, yet the symptoms are like a yoke limiting a person who would otherwise be much greater. If we can work around the symptoms, we may have the potential to do great things. 

I resented the prognosis I'd been given and those who gave it. This challenged me to do better. I decided that I am a highly intelligent and capable person whether the world acknowledges this or not. I've been determined not to become molded by others' false beliefs about me. 

High I.Q. people with mental illness have it rough because we feel capable of great things, but we keep getting knocked down by the folly produced by the illness, and by other people's prejudgments. 

Should you defy your prognosis? Or should you accept it? If you decide it isn't good enough to live according to the definitions of others, you could be in for a rougher ride than otherwise. It isn't always for the faint of heart. Additionally, while on your quest to do great things, you should include a dose of realism. Yet, your version of realism could differ from that of the people who gave you a prognosis. 


Jack Bragen lives in Martinez, California, has written for East Bay Times, Bewildering Stories (See issue 872, this week) and other publications, and he is author of several books that can be purchased on the web.


ECLECTIC RANT:Trump, the "Climate Arsonist”

Ralph E. Stone
Saturday September 19, 2020 - 09:43:00 AM

In a September 14 speech, Joe Biden blasted Trump for "his disdain for science and facts.” "If you give a climate arsonist four more years in the White House, why would anyone be surprised if we have more of America ablaze?" Of course Biden was referring to the wildfires raging in California, Oregon, and Washington. 

During a morning roundtable in California on the same day, Wade Crowfoot, Californias secretary for natural resources, said to Trump,  

We want to work with you to really recognize the changing climate and what it means to our forest, and actually work together with that science,” “If we ignore that science and sort of put our head in the sand and think its all about vegetation management, were not going to succeed together protecting Californians.”  

Itll start getting cooler,” Trump replied. You just watch.” 

I wish science agreed with you,” Crowfoot said. 

Well, I dont think science knows, actually,” Trump replied. 

Trumps denial of climate change is in keeping with his past disparagement of climate change science. He has called climate change a total hoax,” “bullshit” and pseudoscience.” In a tweet, Trump argued that global warming is just a concept "created by and for the Chinese to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive.” 

Yet, back in 2009, Trump and his three adult children joined some 50 business leaders in signing a full-page advertisement in The New York Times calling for meaningful and effective measures to combat climate change.” “If we fail to act now, it is scientifically irrefutable that there will be catastrophic and irreversible consequences for humanity and our planet.”  

And in 2014, Trump sent a $5,000 check to Protect Our Winters, an Olympic snowboarder's climate change advocacy group, after a Celebrity Apprentice contestant requested his support.  

And in 2016, the Trump International Golf Links & Hotel Ireland applied for a permit to build a sea wall designed to protect one of his golf courses from global warming and its effects.”  

Is Trump lying or ignorant or using climate change denial as an excuse to do little or nothing about it? Probably all of the preceding. Remember that what Trump does or says is based on what will best serve his personal or political needs at that particular time; its his all-about-me" personality. 

Lets be clear, there is a scientific consensus that the climate crisis is real and is largely caused by man. This is not a theory; it is a fact. In other words, more than 97% of scientists working in the disciplines contributing to studies of our climate, accept that climate change is extremely likely due to human activities." Climate change is no longer about science; it is now a political, economic, social debate. In other words, what do we do about the crisis now? Otherwise we will have to adjust the effects of climate change such as raging forest fires, rising sea levels, thawing permafrost and extreme weather. 

Nothing will be done about climate change if Trump is reelected. The election is less than two months away.


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Saturday September 19, 2020 - 09:46:00 AM

Thank You For Your Service

I'm so proud of my son. I just received word that he has enlisted in the battle to defend America's freedom.

It's sobering to learn that your only child is willing to risk his life to protect democracy here at home. That's why I salute his decision.

He won't be flying overseas to shoot and kill strangers in a foreign country, however. He's chosen to serve as a real freedom fighter—right here in the USA.

He's signed up for duty as a poll worker in our November election.

How Kamala's Plan Could Accelerate the Vote 

Senator Elizabeth "I Have a Plan for That" Warren must be blue-with-envy. Warren's fellow senator and VP Candidate Kamala Harris has introduced the VoteSafe Act, a senate bill that would dedicate $5 billion to revolutionizing the voting process. With millions of Americans fearing exposure to the Covid-19 virus, one of Kamala's Cures could really speed the turn-out in November. According to supporters: "Kamala Harris has a GAME-CHANGING plan to keep Americans safe while they vote this November… DRIVE THROUGH VOTING!! . . . This wouldn't just protect millions of voters from unnecessary danger but would SAVE the 2020 Election." 

As Rolling Stone explained, "curbside voting" would permit voters to drive to outdoor polling stations and "complete ballots safely in their cars while maintaining physical isolation." 

Getting Out the Vote 

The Sierra Club is one of many organizations encouraging volunteers to write letters and make phone calls to increase the turnout in November's critical vote. The Club plans to contact more than 250,000 potential voters in a single 10-day phone-athon. If you would like to know what's involved, here a video tutorial

How Do You "Contain" a Fire? 

As scores of scorching wildfires ravage millions of acres, I found myself wondering: What does "contained" mean and how do you measure the percentage of fire control? It turns out, "contained" actually means: "surrounded." So "50% contained" would apply equally whether a fire half-surrounded by fire-breaks covered one acre or 100 acres. So it looks like a 1500-acre fire that's 95% "contained" would be more scorched than a 15-acre fire that's 5% contained. 

It Hurts to Laugh 

It's a burden trying to abide in these abysmal times.  

The world is so filled with smoke, ashes, and virus that I actually feel guilty if I say something that prompts a chuckle. 

It's no longer safe to laugh out loud these days.  

We must remember to don a mask if we dare to giggle. 

We may need to learn not to chortle in public. 

At least it's still safe to share an occasional socially distanced grin. 

What Were They Thinking? 

A Chronicle ad placed by the San Francisco Department of Public Health posted a simple message: "I Wear a Mask So That We Can Go Out Again." But the graphic—a simple outline of a facemask—was pasted on top of a photo of a packed, nighttime concert with revelers packed shoulder to shoulder and waving their arms in the air. No one appeared to be wearing a protective facemask. Que pasa, sf.gov/coronavirus

Have a Cow, Man 

There's a new kind of "comfort animal" trending worldwide—and the airline industry has cause to worry. (Maybe that should read: "Cows to worry.") Yep, in some parts of the planet, the therapy-animals-of-choice are not cats or mutts, parrots or rabbits but . . .cattle! 

According to Sanne and Evelien, two adventurers who jetted to The Netherlands for a first-hand encounter with cross-species "cowmmunication," the first thing you look for a cow that is lying down but not busy ruminating (aka "cud-chewing"). Non-ruminators are "most receptive to relaxing together.” Once you've chosen your cow, slowly approach the animal's face, take a knee and offer your hand "so it can sniff you, by way of becoming acquainted. If the cow is accepting, you can go ahead and start petting and massaging its head.” 

Those who have experienced cow-cuddling claim there's nothing that brings greater bliss than sharing a hug with a divine bovine. 

(One disappointment: cows do not purr.) 

 

A War of Words in the Cause of Peace 

Another example of how militarism has infiltrated our vocabulary arrived in the form of a campaign statement from former astronaut Mark Kelly, now running as a Democrat to replace Republican Martha McSally as the next Senator from Arizona. Kelly is also a gun-control activist, working hand-in-hand with his wife, former congresswomen Gabby Giffords, who was seriously injured by a gun-wielding terrorist in 2011. As a co-founder of Giffords PAC, "a gun control organization for gun owners," Captain Kelly believes there is such a thing as "responsible gun ownership." (This is sometimes hard to imagine, given that gun deaths in the US are 25 times greater than in any other "high-income nation.") 

Kelly's four-page letter is filled with solid arguments and sincere calls for improved legislation. But it also is filled with a surprising number of ballistic words and phrases. For example (emphasis added): 

• "We… targeted Members of Congress who betrayed their constituents by … cozying up to the gun lobby's money…, and we beat them." 

• "We will fight back against the corporate gun lobby." 

• "We sent an unmistakable signal: We are here to fight." 

• "We will not relent in a single fight …. 

• "We will engage in legislative battles…. 

Help with Your Personal Problems 

I loved a self-effacing ad that recently appeared in The East Bay Express. A local doctor with 50 years of experience placed a notice offering to relieve "Anxiety, Depression and Relational Repair." The terms of the treatment—unusually low-key and reserved—read as follows: "without meds or guarantee, but I'll do my best." And the financial terms were very humane: "If you are broke, no fee, or pay me later. Otherwise, a sliding scale fee." 

Covid-19 Driving a News-Hive Nosedive 

The Daily Kos notes how the pandemic is accelerating the Demise of Independent Journalism: "As Big Tech giants like Facebook, Amazon and Google sucked up nearly 70% of digital advertising revenue, layoffs were already commonplace at news media outlets, with 7,800 jobs lost in 2019. Starting from such shaky ground, it isn't surprising that after the coronavirus spread around the globe over 700 media companies either shut down completely or instituted cutbacks in order to survive, including layoffs, furloughs and salary reductions. In total, tens of thousands of news media jobs have been lost." So let's try to write a few checks to our favorite besieged progressive news providers. 

Shooting Your Way Out of a Firestorm? 

A Chronicle story about Californians trapped inside advancing firestorms began with the harrowing tale of Butte County resident Michael Mattison. "The house was already in flames as he grabbed his partner, Mikaela Smith, his three dogs, his pet cockatoo, Kazar—and a pistol." 

I paused at that line and wondered: is this some Second Amendment fundamentalist who doesn't feel secure without a firearm? No. The motive was grimmer, as Mattison explained to the Chron. "I was going to shoot everybody and myself, so we didn't have to go through the pain of burning up." 

And then it got worse. I found myself thinking: "What if he had children?" Are parents in 21st century USA now going to be faced with the decision whether or not to shoot their children to spare them from the "greater horror" of being burned alive? That thought will keep me up tonight. 

Apparently, this the kind of dystopian, extreme-weather world we're living in now. Mad Max to the max. 

Today's Refugees Might Sympathize  

The September 11 edition of the New York Times published an article by Keren Blankfeld entitled "The Secret History of America's Only WWII Refugee Camp." The piece contained the following, jarring observation: 

"On Aug. 5, 1944, nearly a thousand Jewish refugees from Europe arrived in upstate New York at the invitation of President Roosevelt. It was supposed to be the first of many relief camps. It turned out to be the only one. . . . “All we saw was a barbed-wire fence and American soldiers,” said Ben Alalouf, who arrived at the converted military base as a four-year-old. Everyone thought it was a concentration camp.” 

At least, the children weren't separated from their parents, they didn't have to sleep on the floor, and they didn't have to deal with Covid-19. 

Time for a Weather Map Revolution 

One of the reasons the US is such a dangerous actor on the world stage is "American Exceptionalism"—our sense of uniqueness-squared. We are "the richest/most powerful country in the world" (even though millions of Americans lack homes, jobs, and medical care and one in every four American kids goes to bed hungry). 

But have you noticed that American Exceptionalism also extends to weather maps? 

Every day, people across the USA are looking at weather maps that are obvious frauds. I'm talking about the maps that display weather as happening only inside US borders. No clouds over Canada or Mexico. Migrating weather patterns magically stop at our borders—as if blocked by a Big Invisible Meteorological Wall. A quick, global search of TV weather forecasts suggests this doesn't happen with weathermaps in Canada or Mexico—nor, for that matter, in Europe, Asia, South America or Africa. 

But it does happen regularly on The Weather Channel. 

Maybe it's time to tear down these TV Weather Walls and accept that we share jet-streams, hurricanes, and rising tides with the rest of the world. 

 

https://www.greenskychaser.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/acttemp_600x405.jpg 

And it's Time for Weathercasts to Mention 'Climate Change' 

Have you noticed that TV weather forecasters in the US get all hot-and-bothered by the latest record-breaking droughts, hurricanes, floods, and wildfire but remain subdued and silent when it comes to using the phrase "human-caused, pollution-stoked climate change"? The London Guardian has just published a report revealing that only "15% of broadcast news segments over a September weekend" dared to link the unprecedented US weather events to the planet's unprecedented levels of global-warming gases. 

Citing a study by Media Matters, the Guardian reported that only 4% of the extensive TV news coverage of catastrophic firestorms on the West Coast bothered to mention the climate crisis. Media Matters found that marked the third year in a row where the climate crisis was mentioned in less than 5% of the broadcast wildfire reports. Media Matters did salute two network weatherfolk who stood out from the cowed crowd: CBS meteorologist and climate specialist Jeff Berardelli and NBC’s Al Roker.  

And a here's special salute to Gov. Gav. During his recent California wildfire photo-op, D. Trump refused to utter the phrase but Newsom nailed the cause and hammered the point home, telling Trump to his face: "It's self-evident: Climate change is real." 

Memorable Quotes 

Throughout our country’s history, presidents have had a lot to say about leadership and responsibility.  

George Washington:
“99% of failures come from people who make excuses.” 

John Quincy Adams:
“If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more, and become more, then you are a leader.”
Abraham Lincoln:
“Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man’s character, give him power.”
Harry S. Truman:
“The buck stops here.”
John F. Kennedy:
“Ask not what your country can do for you — ask what you can do for your country.”
Gerald Ford:
“Our long national nightmare is over.”
Barack Obama:
“Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we've been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.”
And here's Donald Trump appraising his response to the Covid-19 pandemic (with 6 million infected, 196,000 dead, and tens of millions facing financial ruin):
“The virus has nothing to do with me. It’s not my fault.”
If You Love This Country, Vote 

 


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, Sept. 20-27

Kelly Hammargren
Saturday September 19, 2020 - 04:19:00 PM

Worth Noting:

Tuesday the City Council is poised to adopt a plan for the Civic Center which most of us have never seen and is posted as an impossible to read list of documents with no titles attached to the agenda item. The Civic Center Plan needs a full presentation to the public as a worksession with ample opportunity for comment not some resolution passed in the dark of the night.



Tuesday – City Council, 6 – 11 pm key items under action A. Annual Housing Pipeline Report, 13. Navigable Cities - street and sidewalk conditions and impact on persons with disabilities, 14. Adoption of Civic Center Vision Plan, 15. Crime Report and Use of Force Report.

Wednesday – meeting on Bayer’s plan for expansion need to register to attend

Friday – Virtual Summit Series: 8:30 am – 12 pm, Just and Regenerative Future



From City of Berkeley

Bay Area SunShares is offering webinar on solar and battery discount programs Sept 23 at 9-10 am, Sept 29 at 12 – 1 pm and in October, check schedule and sign-up https://www.bayareasunshares.org/webinars

East Bay Community Energy (EBCE) offering Resilient Home program solar and battery with $1250 incentive, Sept 24 at 6-7 pm, Sept 29 at 12-1 pm and Sept 30 at 6-7 pm, check schedule and sign-up https://ebce.org/news-and-events/#section-3

Electric Car and e-bikes Drive Clean Bay Area Preferred Pricing Campaign events Sept 26 at 4-5:30 pm register https://www.eventbrite.com/e/electrify-your-ride-event-tickets-117596729985

Electric Cars 101 rebates, incentives, vehicle range, charging Sept 30 at 5-6 pm https://www.eventbrite.com/e/electric-cars-101-tickets-118065821049



Sunday, September 20, 2020

No City meetings or events found



Monday, September 21, 2020

City Council Public Safety Committee, 10:30 am,,

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Home/Policy_Committee__Public_Safety.aspx

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81289549081

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 812 8954 9081

Agenda: 2. Allowance for Special Response Team to us Tear Gas in Certain Circumstances, 3. Improving Hate Crimes Reporting and Response, 4. Ordinance Police Acquisition and Use of Controlled Equipment,



Tuesday, September 22, 2020

Berkeley City Council,

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

4 pm, Closed Session

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81891250764

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 818 9125 0764

Agenda: 1. Pending Litigation Berkeley v. Regents UC, Case RG19023058, 2. Anticipated Litigation Berkeley v. Regents UC



6 pm – 11 pm, Regular Session

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89880085934

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 89880085934

CONSENT: 1. Resolution Reviewing and Ratifying the Proclamation of Emergency Due to COVID-19, 2. Amend Contract Add $100,000 total $150,000 with AG Witt LLC for COVID-19 Emergency Operations Cost Recovery Consultant, 2. Bid Solicitations $5,510,000, 3. Bid Solicitations $5,510,000, 4. 4. Submit grant agreements to accept COVID-19 response grant, 5. Revenue agreements for Aging Services Programs FY2021, 6. Contract add $73,756 total $116,756 and extend 3 years to 11/30/2025 with CivicPlus, Inc for Software Maintenance and Professional services online registration and reservation system, 7. Contract add $30,000 total $80,000 with Marken Mechanical for on-call heating, ac and ventilations services for the City, 8. Designating the Disaster and Fire Safety Commission as the Citizens’ Oversight Committee for Expenditure of Proceeds of the Fire, Safety, Emergency Services and Wildfire Prevention Tax (measure FF), 9. Providing our Unhoused Communities with Potable Water and addressing water insecurity, 10. Resolution 1 Minute 46 seconds of Mindfulness to City Meetings, 11. Support CA Proposition 17 Restoring Right to Vote after Completion of Prison Term, 12. 8. Support SB-1079 Residential Property Foreclosure, bill intended to mitigate against blight, vacancy and transfer of property from owner occupants to corporate landlords in event that CA experiences wave of foreclosures, ACTION: A. Annual Housing Pipeline Report 13. Presentation on the Navigable Cities Framework for ensuring Access and Freedom of Movement for People with Disabilities in Berkeley, 14. Adoption – Civic Center Vision Plan, 15. 2019 Crime Report and five Year Use of Force Report, 16. Healthy Checkout – stores >2500 sq ft to sell more nutritious food and beverage options at checkout, 17. Support Community Refrigerators $8,000 for those with no refrigeration, 18. Request the US House introduce the “The Breathe Act 

 

Police Review Commission – Police Acquisition & Use of Controlled Equipment Ordinance Subcommittee, 12 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87979396346 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 879 79306346 

 

Wednesday, September 23, 2020 

Bayer Virtual Community Meeting with Neighbors, 6 - 7:30pm 

To register for meeting https://www.eventbrite.com/e/bayer-virtual-community-meeting-with-west-berkeley-neighbors-tickets-117712672773 

Agenda: Application to extend Bayer Development agreement with Berkeley 

 

4 x 4 Joint Task Force Committee on Housing: Rent Board/City Council, 3 pm 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Home/4x4_Committee_Homepage.aspx 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/98671280713?pwd=RFNweitBNk1DRlFqZE15QVlhWmVKQT09 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 986 7128 0713 

Agenda: Updates on COVID-19 on Housing Retention, Emergency Response, Relocation Ordinance 

 

Civic Arts Commission, 6 pm 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/CivicArtsCommissionHomepage/ 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87360137426 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 873 6013 7426 

Agenda Action Items: 6. Proposed Cube Space exhibition, Designs fo San Pablo Park, Endorsement of Turtle Island Fountain Project, Mural Opportunity at James Kenny Park Presentation, FY22 Civic Arts Grant Schedule, FY22 Grant Guidelines, 7. Presentation Measure T1 Phase 2 by Scott Ferris 

 

Police Review Commission, 7 pm, 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87070468124 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID:870 7046 8124 

Agenda: 8. Police Acquisition & Use of Controlled Equipment, 9. BPD policies on questioning the supervised release status of detainees and conducting subsequent searches, including consideration of BPD response to PRC 2/5/2020 recommendation, 10. Recommendation to Council regarding a revised tear gas policy to allow use of Special Response Team in certain circumstances 

 

Special Meeting of the Planning Commission is announced on the community calendar, but no record of such a meeting could be found. 

 

Thursday, September 24, 2020 

Mental Health Commission, 7 – 9 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/97339470197 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 973 3947 0197 

Agenda: 3. Mental Health Service Act 3 yr plan presentation, Nomination Interview and vote on Boona Cheema and Margaret Fine, 6. Discussion Mental Health Crisis services, 7. Possible Action Mobile Crisis Subcommittee Report, 

 

Zoning Adjustment Board, 7 pm 

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/zoningadjustmentsboard/ 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/99162562539 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 991 6256 2539 

2724 Mable – 846 sq ft 2nd story addition to existing single-family dwelling, with existing non-conforming side yard and non-conforming lot coverage – on consent 

1850 Arch – add 18 bedrooms to an existing 10-unit 12 bedroom multi-family residential building, for total 30 bedrooms on parcel – staff recommend approve 

1862 Arch – add 15 bedrooms to existing 10-unit 10 bedroom multi-family residential building, for total 25 bedrooms on the parcel - staff recommend approve 

 

Friday, September 25, 2020 

Virtual Summit series: For an Environmentally Just and Regenerative Future 8:30 am – 12 pm with keynote speaker at 9 am planned and organized by the Climate Emergency Task Force, program details and registration at 

https://cemtf.org/event/september-summit-green-infrastructure-all-electric-buildings-transportation-100-renewable-energy 

 

Saturday, September 26, 2020 

Electrify Your Ride, 4 – 5:30 pm – City sponsored event to learn about discounts on popular electric cars through Drive Clean Bay Area Preferred Pricing Campaign. Event is free. Register https://www.eventbrite.com/e/electrify-your-ride-event-tickets-117596729985 

 

Sunday, September 27, 2020 

No City meetings or events found 

_____________________ 

 

Public Hearings Scheduled – Land Use Appeals 

1346 Ordway, 10/13/2020 

Notice of Decision (NOD) and Use Permits With End of Appeal Period 

1528 Berkeley Way 10/6/2020 

932 Delaware 9/29/2020 

1805 Eastshore 9/29/2020 

2327 Fifth 9/22/2020 

1235 Josephine 10/1/2020 

2800 MLK Jr Way 10/8/2020 

2526 MLK Jr Way 10/1/2020 

2526 Mathews 10/6/2020 

1229 Neilson 9/29/2020 

2523 Tenth 9/16/2020 

2121 Woolsey 9/29/2020 

2412 Woolsey 10/7/2020 

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___________________ 

 

WORKSESSIONS 

Sept 29 –Vision 2050 

Oct 13 - Ohlone History 5 pm 

Oct 20 – Update Berkeley’s 2020 Vision, 

Jan 12 - Zero Waste Priorities 

Feb 16 - BMASP/Berkeley Pier-WETA Ferry 

March 16 – date open for scheduling 

 

Unscheduled Workshops/Presentations 

Cannabis Health Considerations 

Presentation from StopWaste on SB 1383 

Berkeley Police Department Hiring Practices (referred by Public Safety Committee) 

Systems Realignment 

Digital Strategic Plan/FUND$ Replacement Website Update, 

 

Unscheduled Workshops/Presentations 

Cannabis Health Considerations 

Vision 2050 

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