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New Mural is Berkeley's Biggest
Gar Smith
New Mural is Berkeley's Biggest
 

News

UC Data Attack Risks Personal Information

Bay City News Service
Thursday April 08, 2021 - 10:47:00 PM

Staff and students at the University of California at Berkeley and other UC campuses statewide are being advised to take immediate steps to protect their personal information, including credit and identity theft monitoring, in the wake of a national cyberattack announced last Wednesday.  

The entire University of California system was included in those victimized in the breach, and emails soon started arriving at university-related accounts threatening to release information. 

"This was part of a national cyberattack involving several hundred institutions across the United States," the university's Office of Emergency Management said in an advisory Tuesday, noting that Social Security numbers and bank account information "may be at risk."  

The data breach involves the technology company Accellion, contracted by UC and others to transfer information.  

"Accellion was the target of an international cyberattack where the perpetrators exploited a vulnerability in Accellion's program and attacked roughly 100 organizations," the university said. "The attackers are now attempting to get money from organizations and individuals" by threatening to publish the information on the dark web.  

"We are working with local and federal law enforcement and third-party vendors to investigate this incident, to assess the information that has been compromised, to enforce the law, and to limit the release of stolen information," the university said.  

"To help you protect your identity, we are offering the entire UC community complimentary credit monitoring and identity theft protection for one year through Experian IdentityWorksSM," officials said. 

Anyone in the university community receiving suspicious emails is asked to report them to campus IT staff and not to click on any links or reply to the sender.


The American Dream is dying a slow death in California

Bob Silvestri
Monday March 29, 2021 - 03:23:00 PM

It’s easy to become numb to warnings about the future, these days. Every minute of every day the mainstream media bombards us with shrieks about some new “crisis” or another “war on…” whatever, to the point of exhaustion. However, every once in a while, the fire drill is for real.

This week, I watched an extraordinary analysis of two new California housing laws coming up for a vote in Sacramento: SB-9 and SB-10. The presentation was the work of Maria and Jeff Kalban, the founders of United Neighbors in Sherman Oaks, California. It would be an understatement to say that, if passed, this legislation will bring about the biggest changes to zoning law and city planning in California, in the past 100 years… and none of it for the better. 

For the rest, click here.


Help Save People's Park

Sunday March 28, 2021 - 11:32:00 PM

Please help save People's Park! Please sign the open letter below! (And if you'd like to read a short history of People's Park in the 1960s, please see: Unforgettable Change: 1960s: People’s Park Fights UC Land Use Policy; One Dead, Thousands Tear Gassed | Picture This (museumca.org) ).

So, if you're okay with signing, please let the People's Park Committee know by emailing them ASAP, at: peoplesparkhxdist@gmail.comPlease include your "affiliation" -- and if you're a Berkeley resident, UC alumnus, or hold an advanced degree, please include that too. Also, if you can forward this message to others who might consider signing, that will also be a great help! (Especially Berkeley residents, those who hold advanced degrees, and UC alumni or faculty). 

Thank you so very much!, 


Open Letter to: The Chancellor, Mayor, State Legislators, the Regents and the Governor 

No northern city was more affected by the great social and cultural movements of the ‘60s than Berkeley and no event in Berkeley history brought together more of the diverse forces of that era than the conflict over People’s Park in 1969. That is why the park is designated as a landmark by the City of Berkeley and the State of California and is deemed eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places. 

And that is why the People’s Park Historic District Advocacy Group and the undersigned call upon the University of California to work with the Berkeley community to protect and enhance People’s Park. Just as the nation preserves the great battlefields of the Civil War of the 1860s, so should it preserve places like People’s Park that commemorate the great social and cultural conflicts of the 1960s. 

Instead, the university proposes to destroy the park in order to build a 17-story student housing structure. UC argues the destruction of the park is necessary to respond to its housing shortage, yet the university has identified several other possible sites for student residences. Of all the jurisdictions dealing with the Bay Area’s regional housing crisis, only UC Berkeley proposes to destroy a public park of national historic importance. UC’s development plan would also destroy the view from the park and overshadow the surrounding other distinguished local, state and national landmarks, e.g., Maybeck’s Christian Science First Church. 

In destroying the park, the university is eliminating the only public open space in Berkeley’s most densely populated neighborhood. Over the past several years, UC has over-enrolled the number of students, violating its own plans and increasing the number of budget-padding out-of-state enrollees. This greatly increases the population density of the area. Doesn’t the university have a responsibility to maintain and enhance the one piece of restorative nature still open to the public in this over-crowded neighborhood? 

The university argues the park is a place of great crime and violence, a claim vehemently denied by park users and their supporters. The university’s unacceptable “solution” is to displace the poor, the unhoused and other park users by paving over the park. UC has clearly allowed the park to deteriorate; however, maintaining it as well as other city parks could ensure that People’s Park could be a safe, well-used public space frequented by all. 

Shouldn’t a great university, with a brilliant faculty and immensely talented students, use its resources to work with neighbors and park supporters to create an inclusive public open space welcome to all? Shouldn’t the university’s architecture faculty help design truly affordable low-income housing projects in other Berkeley locations? Such efforts would be consistent with UC’s mission of public education and service and consistent with the best values and ideals of the ‘60s. 

Please join with us not just to preserve People’s Park, but to make it a place that respects and commemorates its history and celebrates and serves its diverse surrounding community. 

For more background, go to www.peoplesparkhxdist.org. If you want to add your name to this statement, send name and affiliation to peoplesparkhxdist@gmail.com

Signed: 

David Axelrod, attorney 

James Chanin, civil rights attorney 

Carol Denney, writer, musician 

Annie Esposito, retired Community News Director at KZYX 

Emil de Guzman 

Kristin Hanson, Berkeley resident and professor of English at UC 

Berkeley 

Sheila Jordan, Alameda County Superintendent of Schools Emerita, 

Youth and Justice Advocate 

Paul Kealoha Blake, activist 

Joe Liesner, activist 

Doug Minkler, printmaker 

Martin Nicolaus, Berkeley Law alumnus, Berkeley parks advocate 

Marty Schiffenbauer, Berkeley resident 54 years 

Bob Schildgen, writer 

Harvey Smith, public historian, educator 

Zach Stewart, landscape architect for Berkeley Shorebird Park and 

Willard Park 

Lisa Teague - People's Park Committee and Berkeley Outreach Coalition 

Maxina Ventura, mother, activist, musician 

Richard Walker, former department chair UCB Geography, professor 

Emeritus 

Pat Welch, graphic designer 

Charles Wollenberg, California historian, writer 

Lope Yap, Jr., filmmaker 

Becky O'Malley '61, editor and writer 

 

As of March 26, 2021, 5:00 p.m. 


Opinion

Editorials

Happy Spring

Becky O'Malley
Saturday April 03, 2021 - 07:47:00 PM

The calla lilies are in bloom again. It's hard to believe that a whole year has drifted past us since last they bloomed, and that it might soon be possible to get on with our lives. Young people will soon be eligible for vaccinations, and then we can all finally breathe a sigh of relief. The Spring holidays in many religions which celebrate renewal, rebirth, rescue and resurrection are upon us, and many families are gingerly rejoining one another (with proper precautions of course). In light of all this, we taking Easter mostly off, though I will try to find time to post the submissions which have come in from our esteemed contributors. Happy Spring Days to everyone, religious, spiritual and cynical alike!


Public Comment

Spare People's Park: an Open Letter to the UCB chancellor, the mayor of Berkeley , State Legislators, the Regents of the University of Californa and the Governor of California

Sunday April 04, 2021 - 05:45:00 PM

No northern city was more affected by the great social and cultural movements of the ‘60s than Berkeley and no event in Berkeley history brought together more of the diverse forces of that era than the conflict over People’s Park in 1969. That is why the park is designated as a landmark by the City of Berkeley and the State of California and is deemed eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places.

And that is why the People’s Park Historic District Advocacy Group and the undersigned call upon the University of California to work with the Berkeley community to protect and enhance People’s Park. Just as the nation preserves the great battlefields of the Civil War of the 1860s, so should it preserve places like People’s Park that commemorate the great social and cultural conflicts of the 1960s.

Instead, the university proposes to destroy the park in order to build a 17-story student housing structure. UC argues the destruction of the park is necessary to respond to its housing shortage, yet the university has identified several other possible sites for student residences. Of all the jurisdictions dealing with the Bay Area’s regional housing crisis, only UC Berkeley proposes to destroy a public park of national historic importance. UC’s development plan would also destroy the view from the park and overshadow the surrounding other distinguished local, state and national landmarks, e.g., Maybeck’s Christian Science First Church. 

In destroying the park, the university is eliminating the only public open space in Berkeley’s most densely populated neighborhood. Over the past several years, UC has over-enrolled the number of students, violating its own plans and increasing the number of budget-padding out-of-state enrollees. This greatly increases the population density of the area. Doesn’t the university have a responsibility to maintain and enhance the one piece of restorative nature still open to the public in this over-crowded neighborhood? 

The university argues the park is a place of great crime and violence, a claim vehemently denied by park users and their supporters. The university’s unacceptable “solution” is to displace the poor, the unhoused and other park users by paving over the park. UC has clearly allowed the park to deteriorate; however, maintaining it as well as other city parks could ensure that People’s Park could be a safe, well-used public space frequented by all. 

Shouldn’t a great university, with a brilliant faculty and immensely talented students, use its resources to work with neighbors and park supporters to create an inclusive public open space welcome to all? Shouldn’t the university’s architecture faculty help design truly affordable low-income housing projects in other Berkeley locations? Such efforts would be consistent with UC’s mission of public education and service and consistent with the best values and ideals of the ‘60s. 

Please join with us not just to preserve People’s Park, but to make it a place that respects and commemorates its history and celebrates and serves its diverse surrounding community. 

For more background, go to: http://www.peoplesparkhxdist.org If you want to add your name to this statement, send name and affiliation to peoplesparkhxdist@gmail.com 

 

Signed: 

David Axelrod, attorney 

James Chanin, civil rights attorney 

Carol Denney, writer, musician 

Annie Esposito, retired Community News Director at KZYX 

Emil de Guzman 

Kristin Hanson, Berkeley resident and professor of English at UC 

Berkeley 

Sheila Jordan, Alameda County Superintendent of Schools Emerita, Youth and Justice Advocate 

Paul Kealoha Blake, activist 

Joe Liesner, activist 

Doug Minkler, printmaker 

Martin Nicolaus, Berkeley Law alumnus, Berkeley parks advocate 

Marty Schiffenbauer, Berkeley resident 54 years 

Bob Schildgen, writer 

Harvey Smith, public historian, educator 

Zach Stewart, landscape architect for Berkeley Shorebird Park and Willard Park 

Lisa Teague - People's Park Committee and Berkeley Outreach Coalition 

Maxina Ventura, mother, activist, musician 

Richard Walker, former department chair UCB Geography, Professor Emeritus 

Pat Welch, graphic designer 

Charles Wollenberg, California historian, writer 

Lope Yap, Jr., filmmaker 

Becky O'Malley, journalist and editor, 11years City of Berkeley Landmark Preservation Commissioner 

 

As of March 26, 2021, 5:00 p.m. 


UC’s Plan for Berkeley Gridlock

Charles Siegel
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 05:26:00 PM

University of California Long-Range Development Plan (LRDP) increases the number of employees and students dramatically but does nothing new to shift them out of their automobiles. The result will obviously be gridlock, but UC’s Environmental Impact Report (EIR) takes advantage of a technical change in California environmental law that lets it ignore the congestion that the plan will create.

According to the EIR, the number of UC students and employees will increase by a bit more than 20% (Table 15-7), and the amount of automobile traffic generated will also increase by about 20% (Tables 15-4 and 15-9). All the added cars would obviously make Berkeley’s streets more dangerous for everyone, would worsen traffic congestion throughout the city, and would create gridlock at a number of intersections in downtown,

Until recently, the EIR would have had to analyze the effect of all these extra trips on congestion, which planners call the Level of Service (LOS) of intersections. But a recent law, SB743 passed in 2013, says that EIRs must now analyze the Vehicle Miles Traveled (VMT) that projects generate rather than the Level of Service at nearby intersections.  

Environmentalists supported this change, because developers used to analyze Level of Service and then mitigate traffic congestion by widening streets. It would be much better for them to analyze Vehicle Miles Traveled and mitigate traffic with policies that reduce automobile travel.  

Unfortunately, the law that was finally passed includes a huge loophole. If a project has per capita VMT that is 15% less than the regional average, VMT is not considered a significant impact and does not have to be mitigated. The regional average includes remote suburbs with very high levels of per capita VMT, so virtually all projects in denser parts of the Bay Area, such as Berkeley and San Francisco, are bound to be more than 15% below the regional average. Even though UC’s Long Range Development Plan will generate a huge amount of added traffic, that traffic is not a significant impact as defined by law, so UC is doing nothing about it.  

Though UC is not analyzing it, it is clear to those of us who have looked at past EIRs that this added traffic will cause gridlock at peak hours at a number of intersections in downtown Berkeley. Traffic engineers call it “F level of service,” with frequent stops, with vehicles waiting for the vehicle in front of them to move before they can move, with traffic backing up to the point where it blocks cross-streets, and with unpredictable travel times, since people do not know how long they will be stuck in traffic jams.  

There are ways to mitigate this problem, called Transportation Demand Management (TDM). For example, commute allowances are very effective: charge more for parking, give commuters an extra cash allowance to pay for the higher parking cost, and let them keep the cash if they do not drive, to give them a financial incentive to carpool or shift to other modes. That is just one among many possible TDM measures. Yet UC is planning to keep its current TDM measures but not to add any new ones.  

UC is no longer required by law to mitigate congestion, but it could if it chose to. Environmental law has also changed so developers do not have to consider a project’s impact on parking; but even though they are not required to by law, UC has analyzed the impact of their plan on parking and will provide enough parking for all the projected new commuter automobiles. Yet they are oblivious to the fact that their commuters will have a miserable time crawling through gridlocked traffic to get to the parking they are providing, and will miss appointments and classes because of unpredictable travel times.  

Even if UC does not care about their plan’s impact on the state’s efforts to control global warming, even if they do not care about its impact on the safety of Berkeley’s pedestrians and bicyclists (including their own students), even if they do not care about clean air, even if they care only about the automobile commuters they are diligently providing parking for, they should have enough sense to realize that those automobile commuters will be miserable unless they do something to reduce traffic congestion.  

They are not required by law to reduce traffic. But they must reduce traffic if they want the transportation system to work.  

The greatest irony is that UC is calling this plan “green” because it will improve the campus environment by moving parking from campus to the city streets at the edge of campus. If they want to be green, they have to do something to reduce the amount of traffic they create, rather than protecting their own campus while they dump more traffic than ever on the rest of Berkeley.  

(UC is accepting comments until April 21. Send comments to planning@berkeley.edu and includeDraft EIR Comments: 2021 LRDP and Housing Projects #1 and #2” in the subject line.)  


Charles Siegel is a long-time Berkeley transportation activist. His most recent book is The ABCs of Global Warming: What Everyone Should Know About the Science, the Dangers, and the Solutions.


GITMO Prisoner Released After 14 years

Tejinder Uberoi
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 12:52:00 PM

The U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, the graveyard of empires, is a tragic tale. Sadly, our politicians are not students of history and their actions invariably play to their domestic audience. Following the attack on 9/11, the U.S. military and the C.I.A followed the playbook of previous wars and used overwhelming force to catch and kill their illusive enemy, Osama Bin Laden and his followers. America even pressured our NATO allies to join the fight. Twenty years later the new Biden administration understands there is no easy path forward. The Taliban are convinced they have the upper hand. If America withdraws its forces it will be yet another humiliating defeat for the “great Satan” and red meat for the Republicans. If U.S. forces stay, more Americans and Afghans will surely die. 

One unfortunate detainee who got caught up during the initial US military dragnet, was a young Muslim, called Slahi. He and other detainees were sold to the U.S. for bounties by other Muslims wishing to settle scores or augment their salaries. Slahi was kidnapped from Karachi in 2002 and sold to the C.I.A with a false story that he was a terrorist called Hassan Ghul. Earlier, he travelled to Germany on an Engineering scholarship from his native Mauritania but like many other young Muslims he responded to the call for Jihad to fight the Soviet forces in Afghanistan.Shortly before his arrest he was ecstatic to learn his wife had given birth to a baby boy. 

The first eight years of Slahi’s imprisonment included multiple forms of brutal torture in four different countries. He had been locked up for the entire duration of his son’s childhood without charges or a trial. Throughout his long ordeal he was told his wife was in the next room and would be raped if he did not talk. In 2009,Barack Obama promised on his second day in office to close “Gitmo” for good. He failed. The Senate Intelligence Committee report on CIA torture was completed in 2014. It’s a report that Slahi features in. It confirms he was tortured for 540 days in the ‘Dark Prison’ in Afghanistan “without authorization”. Slahi recalls the days and nights blended into one while he was hung from a bar in a black pit, in agony as his shoulders dislocated. The U.S. military and the C.I.A never apologized and were well aware they had captured an innocent man. 

Slahi documented his days in captivity in what would later be called the “Guantanamo Diaries” which was widely published throughout the world. His experience and eventual release are featured in the film “the Mauritian”. The U.S. is currently paying $13.8 million a year just to keep detainees at Guantanamo, an obscene amount of money to hide the horrors of America’s war crimes. The C.I.A. even captured the real Hassan Ghul, but after interrogating him they let him go rather than admit Slahi’s arrest was a victim of mistaken identity. None of the torturers have been punished or fired for their brutal Gestapo tactics. American ever apologizes for its appalling mistakes. Former President GW Bush and VP Cheney, who gave the order for “enhanced interrogation” are guilty of war crimes.  

Nancy Hollander, was Slahi’s lawyer who worked for years, without pay to secure his eventual release. He is now reunited with his family in his native Mauritania. Incredibly, Slahi harbors no resentment towards his torturers. One of his guards who bonded with Slahi flew to Mauritania to see him.


The US Military’s Bloated Budget

Jagjit Singh
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 12:48:00 PM

While our politicians continue their routine diatribe against the Chinese military threat, a recent report revealed the United States has nearly 20 times the number of nuclear warheads than China. It dwarfs China’s tonnage of warships at sea including 11 nuclear-powered aircraft carriers compared to China’s less sophisticated, two. It has 2,000 modern jet fighters than China’s 600. The US deploys its vast military power across some 800 overseas bases compared to China’s three. The US triples China’s military budget of $250 billion.

The former British colonial power adopted a two-tier standard at the height of its power when it ruled a quarter of the world’s population. The government mandated that its Royal Navy had to be twice as large as its next two competitors to ensure dominance at sea.

U.S. military spending remains larger than the next 10 countries combined, six of which are close American allies. Makes sense? America's intelligence budget alone around $85 billion, is much larger than Russia's total defense spending and has a long history of insidious, destabilizing covert operations.

So what does America show for its outsize military spending? It suffered a humiliating defeat in Vietnam poisoned Vietnam, and neighboring Laos and Cambodia with millions of gallons of the dioxin, Agent Orange and littered the landscape with landmines. Unexploded ordinances are the major cause of devastating injuries to children. Multi-general birth defects have occurred in all three countries. The US offered no apologizes or reparations. Many US vets complained of serious illnesses returning home from Vietnam.
Vice-President Cheney and his “junior partner”, President GW Bush “the decider” invaded Afghanistan in 2001 after the 9/11 attacks and are still hunkered down in the mother of all quagmires facing another humiliating defeat in spite of spending at least 10,00 percent more than the Taliban. If they quit they will invariably face the wrath of Republicans, if they stay more Afghans and Americans will surely die. Meanwhile prisoners languish at GITMO without trial, brutally tortured in black sites, victims of Bush-Cheney’s war of terror. Each prisoner costs the US taxpayer $13million each year. Why? Because America never admits it’s appalling mistakes.

Buoyed by his “success” invading Afghanistan the Cheney-Bush duo invaded Iraq accusing Saddam Hussein of hiding weapons of mass destruction (WMD). Saddam’s elite guard were dismissed without pay and seething with anger coalesced and formed ISIS. Well done George and Dick! In a perfect world you would be charged with war cries. Meanwhile the US military and the CIA continue to be rewarded with obscene budget increases. They now swallow 64.5 percent of discretionary spending! A new cold war is rapidly emerging with China and Russia which will be used to justify $trillions more $’s being squandered. Meanwhile, cyber-attacks have caught America totally unprepared and will take months and $billions to recover.

Defense contractors will continue to manufacture their killing machines and through their armies of lobbyists in Congress will ensure sales to despotic regimes like the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Egypt will continue. The spiritual law of karma is rapidly descending on America. Democracy is under great threat and mass killing continues to be hostage to the archaic Second Amendment.

Christians have long abandoned their savior and replaced him with the new messiah, Donald Trump who still continues to snarl and growl, even in defeat. Good Samaritan Acts of kindness such as handing water and food to voters standing in line are outlawed in states like Georgia. America has long lost its moral compass and is rapidly descending into darkness.


Twisting the Law

Steve Martinot
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 12:08:00 PM

The trial of Derek Chauvin is getting started. The press writes articles searching for ways to say something unimportant about it. On Sunday, 3/28, an article in the SF Chronicle wonders if a “snap decision” defense would work, or would the defense be better off with a “trying to do his job well” approach. Six paragraphs go by that way, without ever mentioning that Floyd had already been arrested and was in handcuffs when killed. He was killed in custody. After a decade of massive demonstrations against police brutality, they continue to kill people in custody in the open. How blind does one have to be to suggest one should trust the police? Wouldn’t that be the height of irrationality? 

Yet that is actually only a distant tip of a huge iceberg. When we study the incidents of police operations (in which killing is too often a result) over the past few decades, we find several levels of irrationality, for which law enforcement remains extraneous. From a civil society perspective, they go so far beyond what could be considered training that, as behavioral traits, they could only be considered cultural. Here’s a brief window into what that means. 

§ On March 12, 2017, in an Atlanta suburb, Demetrius Hollins was stopped by two Gwinette County cops while driving. Hollins is black, a 21 year old university student. He questioned being stopped, and one cop started yelling. Hollins reached for his phone, and the cop yelled that there will be no phone calls. “Nobody is going to know about this.” He ordered Hollins out of the car. When Hollins stepped out with his hands up, the cop threw him to the ground, and began beating him. After being handcuffed, and while still lying on the ground, the second cop came over and kicked him in the face. [https://www.cnn.com/videos/us/2017/04/18/gwinnett-county-police-beating-demetrius-hollins-speaks-looklive-victor-blackwell.cnn

§ Rebecca Musarra was stopped by a cop for speeding on October 16, 2015 near Trenton, NJ. She refused to answer any of his questions, so he pulled open her door and dragged her from her car, throwing her against the car and handcuffing her – for having said nothing. As this cop arrested her, he read her her Miranda rights, among which are “you have the right to remain silent.” (SFC, 8/25/17, pA5) 

§ On June 15, 2015, in Austin TX, Breaion King, a black school teacher, was arrested after a traffic stop. There had been an exchange of words. She was dragged from her car and thrown to the ground. She was then handcuffed, arrested, and charged with “resisting arrest.” [https://heavy.com/news/2016/07/breaion-king-arrest-video-teacher-texas-austin-police-you-tube-officer-bryan-richter-patrick-spradlin-watch-art-acevedo/

§ On July 10, 2015, Sandra Bland was stopped for an alleged traffic violation in Waller County, TX (she had changed lanes to get out of the way of a police car that had come up behind her). The cop ordered her out of her car, and threatened to arrest her. She objected, and he got violent with her, throwing her to the ground. She was recorded as saying, “you just threw me to the ground for no reason; why did you do that?” After handcuffing her, he arrested her and charged her with “resisting arrest.” Sandra Bland later died in custody, in her prison cell. The police claimed she committed suicide. How does suicide match up with someone who asks sensible questions? And her family won a $1.9 million wrongful death judgment. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Sandra_Bland

To suggest that these incidents represent “an irrationality” in policing is to take a perspective on them. We watch from the side. A motorist is stopped by the police. There is an exchange of words, and the motorist is manhandled violently. Yet arrest is not for a criminal act, but for resisting arrest. Hence, there is a noticeable purposelessness to the violence committed. It appears to be violence for its own sake. What is striking is its consistency. For no evident reason, a traffic stop shifts to a deprivation of the driver’s liberty. Each reveals an irreality, a disconnect from an extant situation. 

These incidents happen in different parts of the country, yet tend to look alike. Their character diverges markedly from peace-keeping, and from civility, let alone from law. And their commonality suggests a common source. In effect, they present a form of institutional irrationality, something no longer located in either the individual cop nor his training manuals. What inhabits the individual cop, however, in each case, is a desire to fulfill something other than law enforcement. 

Indeed, in each case, there is an irrational use of the law itself. A motorist is arrested for “resisting arrest.” To charge a person with "resisting arrest" implies that there had been a prior cause and warrant for arrest in the first place, the execution of which warrant had been resisted. The underlying assumption is that such prior cause must have been a criminal act, and not a mere traffic violation. If there had been no antecedent crime, what warrant for arrest was the motorist resisting? To say they were arrested for “resisting arrest” (the only crime extant) means "resisting arrest" was the crime they committed for which they were then subsequently arrested. But that is judicially absurd and illogical. 

Without any previous cause for arrest, it could not have been "arrest" that the motorist was resisting, and for which they were charged. The only other factor present to these situations was the cop himself. Thus, it could only have been the cop himself they were resisting, not his enforcement of any law. That implies that when the cop threw each motorist to the ground, and then arrested them, it was not for violating the law. It was only for resisting the cop’s actions toward the motorist. They were assaulted for objecting to his actions, and then arrested for having resisted his assault on them. 

What glares out at us from these incidents is first, they are cases of violence imposed for its own sake. Second, in charging for “resisting arrest,” the cop had substituted himself for the law. Third, it was the cop as law that the motorist violated and not the law itself. (And that may explain why some cops, like Chauvin, find death in custody to be legitimate.) And fourth, all motorists in these examples were black. These commonalities all raise serious questions about policing in the US. 

According to a report in the SF Chronicle of April 29, 2015 (page A1), black people are 8 times more likely to be charged with resisting arrest in SF than white people. Black people account for 6% of the city’s population, but 45% of arrests for resisting arrest, even when suspected of non-felonies. 

That is serious enough, given the ethical requirement that the police be neutral and even-handed in enforcing the law. But we have seen that, in these minor cases of traffic stops, none of that holds. It is the presence of the police to the motorist that is responsible for an interaction leading to violence (brutality) committed against the motorist, not anything the motorist did besides speak (or not). No necessity for violence existed in the traffic stop. That means that the cause for the cop’s assault was the presence of the cop to the driver. Furthermore, given that only words were exchanged, it had nothing to do with standard law enforcement. Indeed, it is only the cop’s assault on the person that signifies that the person had violated some law. In short, it was the cop’s actions, and not any criminal act on the part of the motorist, that rendered the motorist subject to arrest. The cop’s action, and nothing else, was translated into a criminalization of the motorist. 

If this appears to be arbitrary on the part of these cops, its consistency throughout the country makes its arbitrarity institutional. Can an institution train its agents to be arbitrary? Or do these police officers obtain permission to act arbitrarily from a source other than their training? If so, and something beyond training procedure now legitimizes arbitrary acts of police assault on people (acts that normally would be considered criminal acts), then we have a serious problem. It is precisely these attributes of police operations that were illustrated in Berkeley Copwatch’s presentation (Feb. 3, 2021) about five acts of police brutality in that small town during 2020. [youtube.com/watch?v=ZDcHot1-DH4

From a lay person’s perspective, it goes without saying that beating or manhandling a person for whatever the person might have said (or not said) is unconstitutional. For that reason, a person might conclude that the cop’s actions (with respect to those motorists) amounted to criminal assault. In that sense, these drivers, to the extent they resisted, were arrested for defending themselves against a criminal assault on their person. And that implies that, in constitutional terms, a double violation of the law occurred. Not only was speech suppressed by being the cause for assault on the speaker’s person, but there was a withholding of due process, making the deprivation of liberty wrongful. Constitutionality, as well as law enforcement, have been thrown to the winds by the police. 

But law enforcement has already been abandoned in “racial profiling,” which is clearly in progress, according to the SF Chronicle article cited above, and thus including these incidents. The main thing to understand about racial profiling is that it is the inverse of law enforcement. In law enforcement, when a crime is committed, the police look for a suspect to charge with that crime. In racial profiling, there is first an act of suspicion, the production of a suspect, and then an attempt to discover (or invent) a crime with which to charge that suspect. 

Clearly, the raciality of the act of suspicion by the "profiling" cop reflects a deep-seated racism. But is the racism in the cop, or in the police profession, or in the department? Is there a difference? 

When Floyd was thrown to the ground by a team of cops after he was in custody, and Chauvin knelt on his neck, with others of the team holding him down, Chauvin knew that none of the other cops on his team would stop him. It is clear, from Chauvin’s face in the video, that he intends to kill Floyd. People can be heard yelling to let him go, to stop torturing him. An officer stands between the act of crushing Floyd’s life out of him and those on the sidewalk, to keep the people at bay. Was Chauvin acting out his individual racism, or the institutional racism of his police department as represented by his team’s cooperation? Is there a difference? Doesn’t this cop become the personification of the inseparability of individual and systemic racism? Indeed, acts of individual racism occur because an institutional racism exists that ensures a person can get away with it. 

Nandi Cain, a young black man in Sacramento, was jaywalking on April 10, 2017. A cop stopped him on the street. He questioned the cop’s motive for stopping him, and he was thrown to the ground, and beaten by the cop – “for some unknown reason,” says a department spokesperson. Cain was then charged with resisting arrest. [https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2017/04/12/video-shows-an-officer-slamming-then-pummeling-a-black-man-accused-of-jaywalking/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.b2caef7068fd

The full spectrum of elements of police violence and irrationality are present here, the profiling, the arbitrarity of the assault, the intention to cause pain. For what? To elicit abjection, compliance to the point of obeisance? The cop must know what he is doing. And he knows he can get away with it because Cain can’t defend himself without being charged with assault. What does this cop become if such brutality and irrationality (defense as assault) is ethical and permissible for him, not as a person but as a cop? Does the irrationality of his actions provide the rationale? 

This cop had simply used his fists. But the police of the US have been given highly technological instruments, such as tasers (stun guns), tear gas, and pepper spray to use against people who are non-compliant. If the only purpose for these instruments is to cause pain, not only do they becomes instruments of torture, but they provide the rationale for an ethic of torture. The police explain these instruments as “non-lethal” possibilities for controlling people. That is patently absurd. There are no lethal means that can be used to control people. Once a person is killed, or wounded, the entire issue of control is thrown out. The purpose of lethal means (the act of killing), which is implied by the use of “non-lethal,” lies somewhere else, somewhere deeper in the psyche of this country.


Ricochet: An Invitation to Help Finish Jeff Adachi's Final Film

Gar Smith
Friday April 02, 2021 - 03:36:00 PM

The sudden, untimely death of San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi left a legacy of memories, achievements, and unfinished projects—including a half-finished documentary film. While Adachi was best known for his legal efforts he was also respected for his work as a filmmaker.

Adachi's film documentaries include: The Slanted Screen: Asian Men in Film and Television (2006); You Don't Know Jack: The Jack Soo Story (2009); Racial Facial (2016); and Defender (2017).

Defender documented Adachi's real-life struggle to defend a young African-American man charged with assaulting the police after he was falsely accused of a crime. The film also details the public defender's struggle to represent hundreds of poor immigrants caught up in deportation proceedings.

When Adachi died, he was wrapping up Ricochet, his latest film. Ricochet tells the story of a tragic killing that rocked San Francisco and became a national sensation. 

You know the story. A young woman named Kate Steinle was walking on Pier 14 with her father when she was struck by a bullet accidentally fired from a pistol found by an undocumented immigrant named Jose Garcia Zarate 

Now Adachi's co-director, Chihiro WImbush has teamed with Associate Producer Zachary Stickney in an effort to finish Adachi's last film. 

Wimbush and Stickney and no strangers to the local filmmaking scene. They both worked on Dogtown Redemption, Amir Soltani's transformative—and transcendent—immersion in the lives of several homeless Oaklanders whose only source of income is found in the trash they are able to collect and exchange at a community recycling station. 

Soltani is also part of the team that has committed to bringing Adachi's last film to the screen. As Soltani explains, Adachi's goal was to create films that would tell “the story of so many people who struggle and fight against injustice, and the public defenders that represent them.” So Adachi set out to create a series of films focused on the work of the San Francisco Office of the Public Defender. These included Defender and an award-winning short film called The Ride

According to Soltani, Adachi understood that "with Black Lives Matter, and the criminal justice reform movement in this country, the time is now to show the important work that public defenders do every day in fighting for the constitutional rights of everyday Americans.” 

RIcochet documents the divisive power of hate when it's employed by a master manipulator like Donald Trump. As Soltani recalls: Steinle's death "sparked a political and media firestorm—spearheaded by the anti-immigrant rhetoric of presidential candidate Donald J. Trump—that rattled the nation, exploited the tragedy of a family, and demonized an innocent man in the process. 

"Ricochet weaves Trump’s rise through the main narrative of the trial, led by a defense team featuring Chief Attorney Matt Gonzalez and Francisco Ugarte, Managing Attorney of their Immigration Defense Unit." They not only had to contest with the prosecution in this case, but also had to overcome a "court of public opinion warped by political agendas and false media narratives." 

Adachi began filming Ricochet in late 2017. The People of the State of California v. Jose Ines Garcia Zarate was the biggest case his office had ever undertaken. Filming continued through the spring of 2018, and the first edits were created that year as well. Sadly, with Adachi's accidental drug-induced death in February 2019, the film was placed on hold. Recently, with the blessing of Jeff's widow Mutusko, Wimbush, assumed the directing and editing challenges. 

"Now the long winding journey of this production is entering its final phase," Soltani wrote in a recent email. "We are now very close to a final cut, and we need to raise $50,000 in the next three weeks to get there." The remaining work sound mixing, color correction, music licensing, legal and insurance costs, and other post-production elements. "Additional funds beyond this goal will allow us to publicize the film in the way it deserves so we can share this story as widely as possible with impact." 

Here's a trailer for the nearly finished film: 

 

Team Adachi has set up a GoFundMe page to cover the final, wrap-up costs. The goal is to raise $50,000 over the next few weeks. According to Soltani, donors will have their names added to the film’s on-screen closing credits. "We deeply appreciate your help," Sotani says, "and we can’t wait to bring Jeff’s final film to the world." 

And, speaking of recommended viewing: Here's a glimpse at the raw and wrenching record of human-striving-against-all-odds that these filmmakers managed to capture in the award-winning documentary, Dogtown Redemption


Agent Orange Aftermath

Jagjit Singh
Monday March 29, 2021 - 02:45:00 PM

When Joe Biden called Putin a killer, it brought back memories of the Vietnam War. On arriving to the US in 1967 I was swept up in the drama of the mandatory draft and rioting on college campuses opposing the war. I must confess I was puzzled why America declared war on Vietnam which was just recovering from the yoke of French colonialism. In the communist hysteria at the time this struggle was interpreted by the American political elite as Vietnam’s embrace of communism and therefore presented an existential threat to the US and its allies. This was an easy sell to most Americans except many college students and the Rev. King who spoke eloquently against the war.

In attempting to bring a speedy conclusion to the war the US military, and the CIA used everything in its arsenal with no concern of the enormous collateral damage that would occur to the Vietnamese peasants, American soldiers and later to the people of Laos and Cambodia. B52 bombers continued their saturation bombing around the clock. Cluster munitions and chemical weapons, such as the dioxin Agent Orange, and napalm were used in large quantities on a predominately civilian population raising the spectre of war crimes and genocide. 

President Nixon secretly widened the war to neighboring Laos and Cambodia and prolonged the war for half a decade to frustrate President Johnson’s reelection prospects. Many historians have leveled charges of war criminals on President Nixon and his faithful National Security adviser, Henry Kissinger. 

Between 1961 and 1971, the U.S. sprayed 21 million gallons of Agent Orange over southern Vietnam, as well as Laos and Cambodia, to defoliate dense forests and improve visibility for US military pilots. 

Susan Hammond, a US researcher visited Laos in 1991 fell in love with the country and decided to stay. She soon heard disturbing stories of the devastating impact of Agent Orange and decided to document its impact on the local population. She co-founded the War Legacies Project (WLP) with her husband Jacquelyn Chagnon and an associate, Niphaphone Sengthong. They meticulously documented the severe health impacts of Agent Orange. Under orders from General Westmorland the US military and the CIA included Laos and Cambodia with Vietnam in its in saturating bombing campaign of Agent Orange. 

What followed was a textbook definition of genocide. 

Every family they encountered shared horror stories of severe birth defects, children unable to sit, stand or talk, others suffered chronic debilitating pain. 

A conservative estimate, of at least 600,000 gallons of herbicides rained down on Laos. The Laotians find themselves trapped in a hostile toxic environment for generations to come. US officials were under strict orders to remain silent lest they be liable for $billions in cleanup operations and reparations. 

Chagnon’s daughter, Miranda, was born with multiple birth defects, a stark reminder of the long term health effects of dioxin. 

One small 10 year old suffered intellectual disabilities and suspected arthrogryposis multiplex congenita, a condition that causes joints to permanently contract. 

Club feet are commonplace. So are cleft lips, sometimes accompanied by cleft palates. 

So, Mr. President when you accused Putin of being a killer I wonder how you would describe the “shining city on the ill” of poisoning innocent people in multiple countries for generations to come with devastating pain and misery. Does the US ever apologize for its horrific war crimes?


One Month Unanticipated Delay in Stimulus Payments for Seniors and Disabled is Potentially Devastating

Jack Bragen
Sunday March 28, 2021 - 06:15:00 PM

For millions of disabled Americans who do not file tax returns because we live on disability benefits, the third stimulus payment hasn't yet arrived in our bank accounts.

The federal government under the Biden-Harris Administration is in its early stages of being put together. They've probably had to rebuild many, many things from the ground up--this is because the Trump was too busy golfing and trying to stage a coup to attend to running the U.S. Government.

However, it was a relatively simple task for the Social Security Administration to hand over records to the IRS, so that the payments for disabled and seniors, which happen to be those in the most fragile positions, so that we could be paid. The one-month delay, when we were essentially promised otherwise, could have devastating effects on many, who may have banked on getting this much needed money.

I borrowed eighty dollars from my brother, and that's the limit of it. This is because I had my doubts of whether things would transpire as promised. Yet, there could be thousands of people living on Social Security and/or SSI who believed the government would deliver what was promised, when it was promised, and who may have banked on this. This could lead to falling out the bottom trapdoor built into society, a door that leads to homelessness and/or incarceration, and/or death. Is there an ulterior motive? It would be paranoid to believe that. But is there?

Our system seems to be designed with some built in boobytraps. For example, overdraft on bank accounts. If you do not keep a hawk's eye on banking, and if you are poor, it becomes a real possibility that your account could become overdrawn, leaving you without enough money to pay rent. This is because any overdraft invokes massive fees.

A generalized example: not knowing and following the various laws that can get you in trouble. As soon as you have an arrest record, you are unable to do a number of things. This is partial exclusion, and it may prevent being able to secure adequate employment.

There are many ways that society has for ejecting people. The one-month delay in the stimulus money qualifies as one of those ways.


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE:Whatever Happened to Personal Responsibility?

Bob Burnett
Friday April 02, 2021 - 03:32:00 PM

It may be hard to imagine but, a couple of decades ago, Republicans described themselves as "the Party of personal responsibility." The Grand Old Party imagined itself as the Party of rugged individualists, folks who clawed their way to the top with an unstoppable combination of ambition, perseverance, and moral rectitude. Republicans claimed the moral high ground. No more.

In the last year, we've seen Donald Trump, and his Republican cohorts, dodge responsibility for the Coronavirus pandemic and for the January 6th insurrection. Each of these actions was shameful and should be sufficient to tarnish the GOP for decades.

In every regard, Donald Trump mismanaged the pandemic. When he left office, at noon on January 20th, he was responsible for 25 million U.S. Covid-19 cases and 400,000 related deaths. It's an understatement to say that Trump did a terrible job; it's more accurate to say that he made a bad situation much, much worse. The prestigious medical journal Lancet (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(20)32545-9/fulltext) recently observed: "Trump's mismanagement of the COVID-19 pandemic—compounded by his efforts to dismantle the USA's already weakened public health infrastructure and the Affordable Care Act's (ACA) coverage expansions—has caused tens of thousands of unnecessary deaths. His elimination of the National Security Council's global health security team, and a 2017 hiring freeze that left almost 700 positions at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) unfilled, compromised preparedness... The number of people without health insurance had increased by 2·3 million during Trump's presidency, even before pandemic-driven losses of employment-based coverage increased the number of uninsured people by millions." 

It wasn't entirely incompetence. Trump politicized the pandemic. He had a chance to act responsibly and, instead, chose "the dark side." In a recent CNN documentary (https://edition.cnn.com/2021/03/29/politics/coronavirus-deborah-birx-donald-trump-joe-biden/index.html), Deborah Birx, coronavirus response coordinator for the Trump White House, said, "I look at it this way. The first time we have an excuse. There were about a hundred thousand deaths that came from that original surge. All of the rest of them, in my mind, could have been mitigated or decreased substantially." (In other words, Trump is responsible for 300,000 of the 400,000 deaths that occurred on his watch.) In the same CNN documentary, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government's top infectious diseases specialist, said: "Trump's demands for a reopening of the country in contravention of the advice of government health experts came as 'a punch to the chest.'" 

(On March 29th, Trump responded to the CNN documentary (https://www.politico.com/news/2021/03/29/trump-fauci-birx-cnn-documentary-478422) calling Birx and Fauci "self-promoters." "They had bad policy decisions that would have left our country open to China and others, closed to reopening our economy, and years away from an approved vaccine — putting millions of lives at risk.”) 

The truth is Trump made a political calculation that it was in his best interests to discount the pandemic. In the 2020 presidential election exit polls (https://www.cnn.com/election/2020/exit-polls/president/national-results ), Trump voters were much more likely to report that "the recent rise in coronavirus cases" was NOT a factor in their vote. Only 15 percent said the pandemic was "the most important issue" in their vote - most Trump voters said the most important issue was "the economy," because they trusted Trump to reopen the economy. Most Trump voters saw US efforts to contain the coronavirus as going "very well" or "somewhat well." Most Trump voters saw wearing a face mask as a matter of "personal choice" rather than a "public health responsibility." 

Trump set an example for his base: minimize COVID-19, refuse to wear a mask, and disavow social distancing. After being hospitalized with Coronavirus, Trump tweeted: "Don’t be afraid of Covid, Don’t let it dominate your life. We have developed, under the Trump Administration, some really great drugs & knowledge. I feel better than I did 20 years ago!” 

This reckless attitude has greatly influenced his base: A recent PBS/NPR/Marist Poll (http://maristpoll.marist.edu/npr-pbs-newshour-marist-poll-results-the-biden-administration-covid-19/#sthash.z0TLROd9.dpbs) found that 30 percent of respondents have no intention of being vaccinated for the Coronavirus: 49 percent of Republican men. (And of course, Red states are now rushing to reopen.) 

Trump has never taken responsibility for the pandemic. In an August interview (https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/510393-trump-on-coronavirus-death-toll-it-is-what-it-is) he claimed the Coronavirus was "under control as much as you can control it." When asked about the rising Coronavirus death toll, Trump responded: "It is what it is." 

My point is not to belabor Trump's incompetence or his lying. I want to emphasize Trump's absolute failure to take responsibility for the mistakes of his Administration. Thousands of deaths and millions of illnesses are his fault. 

Since the beginning of the 21st century, we've seen remarkable evidence of Republican incompetence: the 9/11 attacks, the unnecessary war in Iraq, and the 2008 financial crisis -- to mention only a few. Trump's failure to handle the Coronavirus pandemic stands alone as a testimony to GOP self-serving greed. 

Trump may be gone. (I hope.) But, the appalling failure of the Republican Party must not be forgotten. They can no longer claim the moral high ground. The GOP is not the party of personal responsibility. At best they are incompetents; at worst, traitors. 


 

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


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Equality and Care for Mentally Ill People

Jack Bragen
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 12:44:00 PM

We with psychiatric disabilities have some of the hardest lots in life. These diseases will attack a person from deep within. When consciousness is compromised from the ground up, you should know life can't be easy. At the same time, mentally ill people don't get treated well by most of the public. Most people do not have empathy for mentally ill people, and view us as sick, dangerous, and/or dishonorable. 

The lives of mentally ill people are not enviable. The diseases we face are serious, and they interfere with nearly every aspect of living. Most of us have a much shorter life expectancy than a non-afflicted person. We often lack any real career prospects. Often, we are predestined to living under poor, deprived conditions for our entire lives. And our lives often lack anything that will provide meaning, fulfillment, and/or happiness. 

We are not cute like the stereotypical TV portrayals of people with Down's Syndrome. We are not good to put on television in a commercial for a children's hospital. Instead, mental illness conjures up images of clusters of poorly dressed, poorly groomed adults, smoking cigarettes and talking among ourselves. (It is called "milieu therapy.") 

Mentally ill people do not have good P.R. Our images are tarnished with incidents recorded in the mass media in which a mentally ill person is deemed responsible for a mass shooting. Or, in some instances in the media, a mentally ill person is shown being apprehended by police and in the process of this, being treated in a violent, inhumane manner, and in some instances being killed. 

Yet, few people have sympathy. Even most American Buddhists put mentally ill people in a category of "different." I've been among American Buddhists who have attributed "bad energy" to me. Do I have bad energy? I don't care whether I do. Human beings should not be judged based on such impressions. The American enlightened crowd consists to a large extent of psychologists and others who work in the mental health field--I can't say it is a majority, but it is a large percentage. That predisposes them to turn up their noses at mentally ill meditation practitioners. 

People with mental illness are rejected. We are not considered for any of the good jobs in which we'd have the potential to earn a good living. We are not considered worth conversation or social interaction. We are blacklisted automatically from numerous opportunities. 

Yet, Disability Insurance does not provide enough money to live on. If we are to be rejected by society, then society must provide for us, which it does not. As a mentally ill man trying to create a decent living situation for myself, I find I am stymied and sabotaged in my efforts, repeatedly. And this is not coincidental. 

If people believe we are a potential nuisance and/or threat, and we are put under social restraint via outpatient institutionalization and poverty, then people owe us a living. Since we can't fend for ourselves, either because of being excluded from financial and thereby housing opportunities, or because we just can't work competitively due to disability, then it is only fair that we are provided unconditional housing and unconditional income. If you broke it, you bought it. 

We do not deserve the rough treatment that people give us. We do not deserve being excluded from opportunities, which we are. We deserve to be taken care of, and this ought to be done in a manner that is not humiliating and controlling, and in a manner wherein we feel safety in our lives. Safety from homelessness, from jail, and from being regarded as idiots and as worthless human beings. 

I call on the Kamala Harris and Joe Biden Administration to produce legislation that will make the lives of mentally ill people livable. 


Jack Bragen is a fiction, commentary and self-help author and lives in Martinez, California.


ECLECTIC RANT:The Latest But Not the Last Mass Shootings

Ralph E. Stone
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 12:40:00 PM

On March 16, eight people were killed, including six Asian-Americans, at three massage parlors in the Atlanta area. The shooter purchased the handgun legally the same day as the shootings. On March 22, ten people were killed, including one police officer, at a supermarket in Boulder, Colorado. The shooter used an assault weapon he purchased less than a week earlier. On March 28, a gunman killed his parents, two others at a convenience store, and then himself near Baltimore. On March 31, four people, including a child, were killed at an office complex in Orange, California.  

These attacks were the sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth mass shootings in 2021 of four or more dead, not including the shooter. That's a record Americans should be ashamed of. And we are only in the fourth month of 2021.  

Unfortunately, gun violence has become as American as baseball, hot dogs, and apple pie. I fear that after all the sound and fury is over, the cycle of killings, hand wringing, and mourning will continue ad infinitum.  

Anyone for federal gun control legislation starting with the two House-passed bills to require expanded background checks for gun buyers and would give authorities 10 business days for federal background checks to be completed before a gun sale can be licensed.  

In addition, Congress should enact a ban on assault weapons. The Second Amendment does not protect assault weapons—precisely because they are meant for the battlefield and are not in common use at the time for lawful purposes.” ( District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 624-25, 627-28 (2008). In other words, banning assault weapons does not contravene the Second Amendment.


Smithereens: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 12:00:00 PM
New Mural is Berkeley's Biggest
Gar Smith
New Mural is Berkeley's Biggest
Desi Mundo is the artist.
Gar Smith
Desi Mundo is the artist.
This PGE power pole is still a hot mess after "repairs".
Gar Smith
This PGE power pole is still a hot mess after "repairs".

Now in the Works: Berkeley's Biggest, Block-long Mural

A majestic new mural is being created in West Berkeley on the north wall of the Community Energy Services Corp—near the intersection of Carleton and Ninth. The block-long expanse provides the backdrop for a huge parking lot built to serve Kaiser Permanente's new Berkeley facility, which is set to open in May.

Since the mural is near my West Berkeley office, I've watched it slowly evolve from a vast, black-and-white sketch into a blossoming montage of spray-painted images depicting messages of health and healing. Although I drive by the project every morning and evening, I never spotted the crew of painters responsible for the work.

On Wednesday, I got lucky. I met the entire crew. His art-world name is Desi Mundo.

Mundo explained that he's been working on the wall—all alone and without assistants—for several months and hopes to be finished sometime in May.

The project is being sponsored by KP and the message behind the art is appropriately "Thrive-worthy." As Mundo explained, the images depict the world's fundamental healing sources—sunshine, clean air, clear water, trees, food, music, dance, companionship, natural medicine, traditional healers, and modern doctors.

Mundo was relaxed and affable, referring to detailed illustrations on an electronic tablet before reaching for various cans of spray paint and adding six-inch-long updates to the 30-foot-tall canvas. He revealed that he is a teacher at the Oakland Unity Middle School and is Artist-in-Residence at Freemont High. Mundo kindly agreed to be photographed—but only while wearing his protective breathing apparatus.

While Michelangelo had assistants who helped paint the Sistine Chapel, Mundo is going it alone. But he has one advantage Michelangelo lacked—his own mechanized cherry-picker crane to lift him into position to paint the upper reaches of his monumental mural. 

How to Tell When a Tragedy Becomes a Media Event 

For months, America has been convulsed over the repulsive video of a police officer pinning a fellow citizen to the ground until he stops breathing. 

Finally, the wheels of justice have driven the tragic incident before a judge's bench in a court of law. And, like the OJ Simpson Trial, the tragedy of George Floyd's death has become a national media event, with glaring, day-to-day coverage. 

So how do we know that the court case is now a certified Media Event? On April 2, the Associated Press reported the trial had entered "day four." But the AP dispatch capitalized the phrase as "Day Four." Stay tuned for the next gripping episode in America's latest "celebritization" of inhumanity. 

When Slavery Was Simply a Vocation 

The discovery of some Arabia coins in the soil of a Rhode Island orchard has lead to the revelation that a notorious British pirate and his crew once sought shelter on what would become known as the United States. 

According to the Associated Press, sometime around 1695, Captain Henry Every and the good ship Fancy, dropped anchor off the East Coast to enjoy some down time in a safe hideaway. 

The AP story described Capt. Every as "the world's most wanted criminal" and mentioned that he once "eluded capture by posing as a slave trader." 

"You say you're a slave trader? Our apologies, captain. We mistook you for a brigand. Please go about your business." 

Opps, They've Done It Again: PG&E Botches Another Powerpole Repair 

In June 2020, I warned the California Public Utilities Commission that three wooden utility poles in my North Berkeley neighborhood were tilting and appeared to pose an imminent hazard. The CPUC agreed that two of the poles needed to be repaired or replaced and that PG&E would do the job in December 2020. The first pole (at the corner of Ada and Miramonte) didn't receive attention until March 2 and—as a previous column reported—the old pole was cut into several portions but, instead of attaching the old wiring to the new pole, the workcrew simply took the old section—with wiring attached—and bolted it to the side of the new pole. The grotesque cut-and-paste "repair" resulted in an unsightly half-assembled (you can shorten that to read "half-assed") spectacle that resembled a crucifixion. 

Last week, PG&E's contractors returned to tackle the second pole—a transformer-topped tower on California Street that was tilting to the south, five degrees off vertical. An adjacent pole (leaning about five degrees to the east) was also targeted for replacement. 

PG&E workforce (from Alvah Contractors) descended on the neighborhood like an Asphalt Armada, deploying more than 20 vans and hulking trucks, many sprouting cherry pickers designed to lift pole-workers up off the pavement and high overhead where there were wires to detach and reassemble. 

One of the helmeted engineers informed me through his facemask that several teams—including more than 40 workers—would be replacing 6-7 poles over several blocks on California and Rose streets. 

When I showed him a photo of the Dangling Dingaling that workers left behind on Ada Street, he explained why they didn't take the time to reconnect the dozens of old wires to the new pole. "PG&E only repairs the electric power cables at the top of the poles," he said. "Those lower wires belong to AT&T and Comcast so we don't touch them." 

Interesting situation. Sounds something like renting out part of your house, losing it in a wildfire, and rebuilding the house minus the rented room and expecting the renter to tackle the rest of the renovation. 

So how did Alvah do on the California pole? Not so hot. 

They left the major portion of the old, tilting pole in the ground and simply moved the heavy transformer to the top of the new pole planted alongside. The truncated older pole still carries the weight of scores of wires—but these are "legacy" AT&T and Comcast cables, so they remain securely attached to the adjacent, old, tilting, weathered pole. 

Publishers Clearing House Redux 

The folks at PCH are relentless. Last week, another paunchy pouch of promotions landed with a thump in my mail box. 

In order to maintain the attention of over-taxed recipients who may be tiring of all the invites to buy kitschy kitchen-mitts, salty snacks, tableware, and second-tier magazines, the latest PCH bundle bore an outer announcement that the promised prize of $7,000-a-week-for-life had been doubled to $14,000-weekly-bucks-forever—aka the "Double Upgraded Superprize." 

PCH added to the pressure by warning that it was time for a "Final Decision," warning recipients that it was time to "Claim or Forfeit" any chance of winning. The mailer actually included a removable sticker designed to be placed on a serious-looking document that formally announced one's decision to "forfeit" a chance to increase one's taxable income by $728,000. 

The mailer also raised the ante by continuing to pit neighbor against neighbor. "Act Fast!" the envelope warned: "Someone in your area is hoping you don't respond!" The previous dispatch actually listed the full names of five "Berkeley residents" who were also vying for "my" claim to the coveting "Superprize." The latest mailing included a document titled "Ownership Report" that narrowed my list of competitors down to a single Berkeley resident identified as CXXXXXXXX WXXXXXXXXX. (Curse you, Christian Wellington!) 

Now here's the odd thing: While I am identified as the Primary Owner of the Special Number and "Christian" is the designated Alternate Owner, the accompanying "participation report" notes that I only became a "Friend of PCH" in July 2020 and had mailed in six responses. Christian, on the other hand, was identified as having been a PCH Friend since February 2014 and has sent in 43 responses over the past eight years. 

(C'mon, PCH, that's no way to reward a loyal friend like Chris!) 

PCH also seems to be a bit off it's game when it comes to personalized shopping. One of the scores of their mass-mailed mini-leaflets is topped with the statement: "We know what you like and want, Gar Smith." Sorry, PCH, but I really have no interest in a plastic see-through Battery Organizer that can hold—and test—"up to 180 batteries." Nor do I covet your "10-inch Blue Non-stick Fry Pan," your Aluminum Ruler With Handle, nor the American Flag Folding Knife With Fire Starter & Carabiner. 

The April 30 Prize Day looms ever closer. How many more PCH "please-purchase!" pitches will I have to endure? 

The Ongoing 5G Debate 

A March 26 press release from Americans for Responsible Technology (ART) reports that the New York state legislature has introduced a bill to require an independent investigation into possible health risks from exposure to 5G wireless radiation. In 2020, New Hampshire released a related commission report that contained 15 recommendations designed to monitor levels of wireless radiation and reduce public exposure. The last paragraph of the ART press release contained a zinger:
"To date, no studies have confirmed claims by the telecom industry that exposure to wireless radiation emitted by 5G wireless devices, as well as earlier generations of wireless technologies, is safe. As a result, Lloyd's of London, and other leading insurance companies, have declined to insure the telecoms against personal injury claims and class-action lawsuits related to exposure to electromagnetic fields, including wireless radiation." 

Act Now and THRIVE to Survive 

Zack Gerdes, a campaign organizer for the Sierra Club's Living Economy project, writes:
Congress goes on their Spring Recess—from March 31- April 11—and we have our first big chance to push for the bold, transformative recovery plan that we need: the THRIVE Act—a visionary plan to create 15 million good jobs to address unemployment; invest in Black, Brown and Indigenous communities to address racial injustice; and address the climate crisis by cutting pollution. Now is the time to show our movement's support for an ambitious and justice-oriented recovery plan and to help drive momentum so we can pass it later this year. 

For more info on the THRIVE (Transform, Heal, and Renew by Investing in a Vibrant Economy) Act, you can click here

Jolly Moments of Internet Misfires 

Accidents happen, so web-servers need to be ready with quick responses. A few days ago, I attempted to link to a petition on The Action Network and the connection failed. Instead, I found myself looking at a page with a huge bold-faced message that read: "Don't Panic." 

"It looks like you've stumbled onto an error on our site," the alert continued. "Our team has been notified and will look into it." 

To make amends, the page offered an apology that read: "We're so sorry! How about we show you two of our cats?" And, sure enough: photos of cats. 

The Superrich Belong to the United Estates of America 

Senator Bernie Sanders and Congressman Jimmy Gomez are introducing the 99.5 Percent Act, which would redirect hundreds of billions from the superrich that to address critical social and environmental emergencies. If you would prefer more populism and less plutocracy, here's a petition Bernie and Jimmy would like you to sign:
As your constituent, I urge you to cosponsor and support and promote the 99.5 Percent Act. The richest 1 percent of people in the United States own nearly 32 percent of the nation’s wealth, while the bottom 50 percent (half the country!) own just 2 percent of the wealth, according to the Federal Reserve. The 99.5 Percent Act would tax only a fraction of the wealthiest 1 percent, and only after they were dead, only at a very reasonable rate, and taxing wealth that had mostly never been taxed as income. We do not need royal dynastic power. We do need funding for human and environmental emergencies. 

Black Rep. Shackled for Seeking Open Government Now Faces Five-Year Sentence 

This is worse than Jim Crow. With more than 300 voter-suppression bills proposed in GOP-dominated states, the Republican Party has started attacking democracy with the intensity of Jim Vulture! 

As Robert Weissman, President of Public Citizen reports: "This is happening in America right now:
A representative in the state legislature—a Black woman named Park Cannon—was arrested in the Georgia Capitol last week and has been charged with two felonies. She is facing up to five years in prison. Her supposed “crime”? Knocking on a door in the Georgia Capitol.
Why did knocking on a door get this Black woman manhandled, shackled, and dragged into the street by white state troopers, then charged with multiple felonies that could land her in prison for years? Because behind that door, Georgia Governor Brian Kemp was signing into law a flagrantly anti-democratic and racist voter suppression bill that was rammed through the state legislature by flailing Republicans who have given up on trying to win elections on the merits of any actual policy positions and have instead chosen to cling to power by opposing the very concept of democracy itself.
Rep. Cannon was calmly knocking on the door Kemp was hiding behind so she could—as an elected representative of the people of Georgia—at least witness his disgraceful signing of the bill. Ridiculously, the white trooper who arrested Rep. Cannon says he was worried about a January 6-type riot."
Public Citizen has posted a petition addressed to "law enforcement and prosecutors in Georgia":
Drop all charges against State Rep. Park Cannon. Arresting her in the first place, much less prosecuting her, for knocking on a door in the Capitol—where she is an elected representative—so she could witness Governor Brian Kemp’s signing of Georgia’s new anti-democratic, racist voter suppression laws is a disgrace. 

When Earth Day Is Not Enough 

A timely dispatch from the Sierra Club declares all of April to be "Earth Month." Noting that "2020 was the end of the hottest decade on record, according to the UN," the Club observes: "We’re in a climate crisis. We must keep global temperature increases (from pre-industrial levels) under 1.5 degrees Celsius in order to prevent the worst impacts, from extreme weather to food scarcity and beyond. So, on April 1, we’re kicking off Earth Month! Earth Day (4/22) is the largest civic event with over 1 billion people participating worldwide." So how does humanity plan to spend what may be our final days on Earth? Team Sierra will be celebrating Earth Month with a number of "virtual activities" including the following

APRIL 1: Fermentation 101: From Cabbage to Sauerkraut with Anne-Marie Bonneau  

APRIL 6: Drawing Class with MasPaz  

APRIL 8: Learn About Monarch Butterflies with Jen and Milo the Toller 

When Mattt Gaetz Is Standing There 

A Beatles Parody by Founders Sing 

 


A Berkeley Activist's Diary

Kelly Hammargren
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 05:25:00 PM

“Life is lived looking forward and understood looking backward,” Reverend James Reynold Anderson.

Tuesday evening was the Berkeley City Council’s meeting, and this is where history gives insight to the action taken by Mayor Arreguin.

On November 12, 2019, the city council passed the Bird Safe Berkeley Requirements Ordinance as a referral to the Planning Commission and the City Manager to consider-and that is where it has been sitting for sixteen months, sixteen months of inaction while construction of multi-story mixed-use buildings continues at a feverish pace, buildings that need bird-safe glass to protect a bird population in decline. Consider this; North America has lost 2.9 billion birds since 1970. Birds crashing into glass causes the death of an estimated 600 million birds annually nationwide.

The work to get the Bird Safe Ordinance into the November 12, 2019 council agenda began with a presentation by the Audubon Society February 14, 2019 at the Community Environmental Advisory Commission (CEAC). This was followed with five months of committee work at CEAC to develop the Bird Safe Berkeley Ordinance. The proposed ordinance was passed by CEAC June 13, 2019 and sent to council to sit another five months before making it into the council November 12, 2019 agenda.  

The council can pound their chests for being progressive by passing the Bird Safe Berkeley Ordinance. But did they really do anything by making a referral that lets it languish out of sight at the Planning Commission never to be enacted? The Bird Safe Berkeley Ordinance is listed second from the bottom in the commission workplan for 2021 and 2022. It is not ranked (no priority) under miscellaneous. Berkeley is far behind neighboring cities which passed bird-safe ordinances years ago.  

The Bird Safe Ordinance’s history provides insight into the maneuver to kill the resolution to Recognize the Rights of Nature, item 31 in the March 30, 2021 council agenda.  

The Facilities, Infrastructure, Transportation, Environment and Sustainability Committee (FITES) recommended passing the Rights of Nature resolution with a minor word change to place the responsibility on the city instead of the residents. 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2021/03_Mar/City_Council__03-30-2021_-_Regular_Meeting_Agenda.aspx  

Mayor Arreguin had already boxed himself in by stating his opposition to the Rights of Nature on March 15 at the Agenda Committee. There was a positive FITES recommendation and too much public response to outright kill the Rights of Nature resolution. Leaving the Rights of Nature Resolution in the action calendar to be discussed and voted on by the full council would risk its passage. Arreguin needed another path and this is where the lessons from attending past city meetings comes into play.  

Arreguin declared his support for the Rights of Nature at the March 30th Council meeting and then asked of the full council if there were any objections to moving item 31 to the consent calendar as a referral to the Peace and Justice Commission. Not a peep was heard. 

The Peace and Justice Commission is an odd referral. The mission statement of the commission is: Advises the Council and the School Board on issues of peace and social justice. Creates citizen awareness and develops educational programs. Igor Tregub, the mayor’s appointee, is the chair of the Peace and Justice Commission. Tregub was the chair of the Joint Subcommittee for the Implementation of State Housing Laws which met from April 17, 2018 until July 22, 2020 and was unable to reach agreement on objective standards.  

It certainly looks suspect that the mayor would refer The Rights of Nature to the Peace and Justice Commission, where he had a loyal appointee as chair, rather than to CEAC, with this mission: Develops a plan, prioritizes strategies and makes recommendations for environmental protection, hazardous materials and reduction, with outreach to and education of the public, small businesses and industry. Of course, leaving the resolution in the Council’s Action calendar for a vote would tell the public where every council member stood.  

Councilmember Harrison asked after the consent calendar was passed when the Peace and Justice Commission might resume meeting again. City Manager Dee Williams-Ridley responded that the staff person for the Peace and Justice Commission was assigned to the COVID-19 emergency and she didn’t have a replacement to support the commission. She didn’t know when it would be possible for the Peace and Justice Commission to meet again. 

If you are wondering why The Rights of Nature is important, and just why there appears to be a choreographed effort to kill it, look no further than the massive movement to deregulate zoning (aka zoning reform or upzoning). There’s a lot of money sliding around to gobble up land for development by greasing campaign wheels and selling an ideology to vulnerable 

30-somethings who see a secure future out of reach or slipping away.  

Passing the resolution to recognize the Rights of Nature would give standing to the place of urban habitat in sustaining and supporting the environment. The Rights of Nature would support leaving space for birds, pollinators, plants, and maybe a little patch of green for us too. Nature doesn’t fit with the big money to be made with lot line to lot line covered in concrete.  

There will be more. I’m working on a date and will arrange to cover the cost for a virtual screening of the film, Invisible Hand- Rights of Nature Documentary so it will be free to attendees.  

There are a few other meetings to be mentioned.  

The week started with attending Part 3 of the Equity Summit Series, Learning from Our Elders: Listening and Honoring the Past to Guide the Future. The host was former District 2 Councilmember Cheryl Davila in collaboration with the Friends of Adeline. As I heard descriptions of what South Berkeley used to be, I thought about the book I recently finished, The Devil You Know, A Black Power Manifesto by Charles M. Blow.  

Berkeley was, as I am told, at one time at least 25% Black. It is now maybe 7% Black. The Black population as a whole in the US is around 13.4% Black. Whether people leave or stay in a neighborhood is complicated, but one thing is for certain. South and West Berkeley, the formerly redlined neighborhoods, are already well into gentrification. It was interesting and sad at the same time to hear the stories of the loss of a cohesive Black neighborhood.  

Moving on, the Council Public Safety Committee met Monday morning with one agenda item, Adopt an Ordinance…Regulating Police Acquisition and Use of Controlled Equipment. The Berkeley Police Department (BPD) is continually complaining about the burden of reporting and the committee council members seem to have limited grasp of the difference between reporting use of force and reporting the use of controlled equipment. One would think with all the money the City spends on computer software somewhere along the line someone would have created a program that even BPD would find which would make reporting easier. I always feel leaving any of these meetings with BPD that the action of reporting isn’t the issue, it is the requirement to do so.  

The Monday afternoon Agenda Committee was also just one item, Officeholder Accounts. Officeholder accounts were a real surprise as I didn’t know that our Councilmembers and Mayor can have accounts consisting of public donations to use for “office expenses” and donations to nonprofit organizations. Of course, I wouldn’t be in the loop on the officeholder accounts since I personally do not have much discretionary income to throw around.  

The Fair Campaign Practices Commission recommended in February 2020 to eliminate Officeholder Accounts, but Councilmember Sophie Hahn proposed that the officeholder accounts should be allowed and offered a proposal for regulations. As the meeting progressed Councilmember Wengraf starting asking questions, really questioning if officeholder accounts were needed and how such an account could advantage certain electeds. 

Arreguin was quite clear in support of the accounts, and revealed what he thought of Wengraf asking questions when at 34.21 minutes into the meeting he stated that “ultimately two members constitutes a majority of the committee…” In other words, with the mayor and Hahn in agreement, he didn’t need Wengraf.  

Wednesday evening was the South Berkeley Community Safety Town Hall organized by Councilmember Terry Taplin. When I met up with my walk partner on Friday to share what I had learned, I came up empty. I couldn’t say that I had really learned anything. The interim Police Chief promised statistics, but I didn’t hear any. There just didn’t feel like there was anything solid,even though it was well intended, well attended and included Mayor Arreguin and Councilmembers Ben Bartlett from District 3, Dan Kalb from Oakland and John Bauters from Emeryville.  

I like to finish with what I am reading. A book review would add too much to this already lengthy diary. This week I finished Once I was You A Memoir of Love and Hate in a Torn America by Maria Hinojosa and The Violence Inside Us: A Brief History of an Ongoing American Tragedy by Chris Murphy. I am just getting into Twilight of the Elites: America After Meritocracy by Chris Hayes. It is our book club choice for April.


THE PUBLIC EYE: What’s Wrong With the GOP?

Bob Burnett
Sunday March 28, 2021 - 12:02:00 PM

A recent Gallup Poll found that Americans, in general, are happy with the Biden Administration. Except for Republicans. Another poll indicated that most of us want to get vaccinated against COVID-19. Except Republicans. What's wrong with the GOP? 

The most recent Gallup Poll (https://news.gallup.com/poll/339977/biden-approval-ratings-diverge-gender-education-race.aspx ) found that 56 percent of respondents approved Joe Biden's job performance -- versus 39 percent who disapproved. While 96 percent of Democrats viewed Biden favorably, he earned the support of only ten percent of Republicans (and 55 percent of Independents). (Not surprisingly, Biden polls worst with non-college-educated, rural, white men.) 

To determine the true level of Biden's support, it's useful to study national opinion regarding the Covid relief bill. A recent Pew Research poll (https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2021/03/09/broad-public-support-for-coronavirus-aid-package-just-a-third-say-it-spends-too-much/) found that 70 percent of respondents supported the Biden proposal -- including 41 percent of those who were "Republican/lean Republican." The poll indicates that roughly two-thirds of voters support Biden's policies -- as opposed to supporting Biden personally -- including a sizable chunk of Republicans, (That is, about one-third of Republicans support Biden's major initiatives even though they may not admit that in public.) 

This makes sense because two-thirds of Republicans believe the 2020 presidential election was "invalid." ( https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/540508-majority-of-republicans-say-2020-election-was-invalid-poll?) "[Former] President Trump's rhetoric seems to have had a profound impact on his base’s outlook on the election. Across all regions, our participants by and large opposed alternative voting methods, believed that those methods opened the election process to fraud, and felt that the 2020 election result was invalid.” At the moment, two-thirds of the GOP feel cheated and, therefore, aren't going to support Biden no matter what he does. In contrast, the one-third of Republicans who believe the election was "valid" are prepared to move on. They are prepared to consider the Biden-Administration agenda on an item by item basis -- in contrast to most Republican members of Congress who appear to be opposed to anything Biden or Democrats propose. 

A recent PBS/NPR/Marist Poll ( http://maristpoll.marist.edu/npr-pbs-newshour-marist-poll-results-the-biden-administration-covid-19/#sthash.z0TLROd9.dpbs) found that 60 percent of respondents approved of President Biden's handling of the Coronavirus while 30 percent disapproved. It was another indication that Biden has roughly a two-thirds level of support for his policies. 

Of interest was the PBS/NPR/Marist poll finding that 30 percent of respondents have no intention of being vaccinated for the Coronavirus: 49 percent of Republican men. Therefore, there is a "Trumpian" bloc of the electorate who believes the election was "invalid," will not support any Biden/Democratic policy initiative, and will not be vaccinated. (They are prepared to "eat worms.") 

There are three consequences of the current political reality. The first is that, at the moment, Joe Biden has the support of a substantial majority of the electorate and, therefore, can move a lot of legislation through Congress. (Obviously, the Senate's filibuster rule will determine how much.) That's a good sign. Democrats can't bank on it, but it does indicate that Dems, at the moment, have political momentum. 

The second consequence is that Republicans are fractured. In the 2020 presidential election exit polls: 37 percent of respondents identified as Democrats, 36 percent identified as Republicans, and 26 percent identified as Independents. Of the 36 percent that identified as Republicans, it appears that two-thirds are "Trumpians." In other words, at the moment about 25 percent of the electorate are hardcore Trump supporters. 

Trump retains his hold on these Republicans but his attraction to the general electorate has diminished. A recent Forbes poll (https://www.forbes.com/sites/carlieporterfield/2021/02/16/trumps-popularity-rebounds-among-republicans-after-impeachment-trial-poll-suggests/?sh=40575fcf237e) found that 54 percent of Republican respondents "said they would vote for Trump in a hypothetical GOP primary." The Forbes study concluded: "While Republicans appear to have moved past evaluating Trump’s role in the insurrection at the Capitol, the broader electorate has not let go so easily, the poll suggests: 64% of respondents said Trump is a least partially responsible for the Capitol Hill violence." (At the February Conservative Political Action Conference, "only 68 percent of those at the conference said they wanted [Trump] to run again in 2024." (https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/28/us/politics/cpac-straw-poll-2024-presidential-race.html ) ) 

There's early indications that in many 2022 Republican primaries, Trump will run his own slate of candidates; that is, back candidates that "fully supported" him in 2020. For example, in 2022, in Georgia, Trump will field a Republican candidate -- Jody Hice -- as an alternative to incumbent Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensberger. (https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/trump-endorses-challenger-against-georgia-elections-chief-brad-raffensperger

Heading into the critical 2022 midterm election, Republicans are fractured. While the majority of the GOP supports Trump -- and his policies -- there is strong support for other conservatives. Therefore, in many GOP contests there will be a "mainstream" Republican candidate and a Trump candidate. This will negatively impact Republican fundraising. (In email appeals, Trump is advising his supporters to send money to his PAC and not to the regular GOP outlets such as the Republican National Committee. (https://www.cnbc.com/2021/03/09/trump-tells-donors-to-give-him-money-not-republicans-in-name-only.html)) 

The third consequence is that Democrats are remarkably unified, at the moment. The Democratic National Committee's (DNC) fundraising is off to a strong start: "The DNC fundraised $8.5 million in February and $18.4 million since the beginning of the year, which is a blistering start for the Democrats in a non-presidential election year... According to the DNC, 67 percent of the funds it raised came from small donors, meaning people who gave $200 or less." 

At his March 25th press conference, President Biden was asked if he expected to run against Trump in 2024 responded: "Oh, come on. I don't even think about - I have no idea... I have no idea if there will be a Republican Party. Do you?" Perhaps Biden was musing that in 2024 the Republican Party will split and Trump will run on the MAGA ticket. The Grand Old Party is suffering from moral cancer and refuses to acknowledge this. 

 


 

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


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Post Election and Pandemic Symptoms

Jack Bragen
Sunday March 28, 2021 - 05:37:00 PM

Emerging from depression is an uphill battle. After a bout with psychosis, often a patient will experience depression. We may mistakenly believe the symptoms of depression are caused by being medicated with antipsychotics. However, this is mostly not so. When we return to tracking reality, the brain needs an extended recovery period, and part of that may include being depressed. The reader should realize that this depression will eventually clear up. 

Emerging from depression, again, is an uphill battle. We must find ways to make ourselves happier, and at the same time, we may have responsibilities that we dread fulfilling. Returning to tracking reality includes that we no longer have a set of delusions that in some ways may have made us falsely happy. We may face a more difficult reality compared to how we thought it was going to be. 

I've had an extended period of very mild psychosis that heavy medication, therapy, and cognitive techniques together, were not enough to completely resolve. I haven't felt safe in my life circumstances. I've been uncomfortable with perceived uncertainty about my living situation. Now that I am calming down, I find myself depressed. Maybe I was depressed before but was unaware of it. 

The coronavirus is certainly part of the issue. Being deprived of social situations is hard. Now I'm at a lower level of adrenaline, and this means that my brain is no longer creating a natural "speed" to feed the synapses. In the long run, this is probably healthier. Yet for now, it seems more difficult. I've experienced my fair share of despair, an emotion that many Americans and people of other countries feel, from the effects of COVID. People who would ordinarily have no mental health issues, because of what the species is up against, are getting a taste of what it's like for us.  

There is such a thing as "post psychotic depression," just as there is "postpartum depression." When there is a major change in the body, this has a major effect on mood. People with heart disease frequently feel depression. I've resolved a part of my depression--in this way: on a deeper, transcendent level I am not depressed. However, my body and mind are still depressed. 

Because emerging from depression is an uphill battle, it can be incredibly hard to enact the changes we need to make so that things will be better. Emerging from depression can require a lot of effort. Yet, if we can't take a few steps to start making things better, then we fall back. And we endanger ourselves of going into a deeper pit, one that is even harder to get out of. Depression doesn't always go away unless we make it go away. And sometimes this is a call for action. And when depressed it can be awfully hard to act. 

In January of this year, the U.S. government was close to being decapitated in a deadly attempted coup. Russia is a grave threat to the U.S. now more than it ever was. Putin recently remarked he hoped our President is in "good health". This is clearly a threat to the President's life, issued by the head of Russia. How much more do we need to see? Russia likes Mr. Trump and would like to see him regain full Presidential power. 

Misinformation is a massively powerful weapon, and this weapon is being deployed by multiple people in multiple places. 

All of the above facts are terrifying, and they present difficulties if a person wants to feel safe. If we can manage to feel safe because we've dotted all of our "i's" and crossed all of our "t's", by that I mean we've dealt with all of the necessary details of life, that's when the depression begins to set in. Once we've dealt with survival, we then calm down and that's when the emotions begin to come up that we were too threatened to feel. 

Yet, the depression passes. We must find things that bring us joy or find the joy in things. Either of those will work. A book and a cup of coffee on a Sunday afternoon. Watching and listening to birds. The birds are watching you too. 

Those in a battle must eventually stand down. While my "battle" isn't physical, it is genuine just the same. Sometimes the battle is against a part of myself. In other cases, the battle becomes trying to survive when my efforts to be successful are repeatedly stymied--often because of the sabotage of others. 

If we fail to eventually stand down, we run the risk of running our bodies, minds, and souls "into the ground"--akin to excessive use and lack of maintenance of a good car. And some amount of depression comes with the territory. 

 


Smithereens: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Sunday March 28, 2021 - 06:10:00 PM

Teachable Moments at Trader Joe's 

Berkeley's TJ outlet is always adding small artistic updates to its walls and columns. Sometimes an entire aisle is dedicated to a respected celebrity. This week I noticed that one of the shopping aisles boasts a new street sign named after Notorious RBG. The column now bears the title: "Ruth Ginsberg Ct." (And that's "Ct" as in "US Supreme.") 

The shelves at the Berkeley Joe's also offer hidden tutorials in the form of hand-drawn snippets dealing with history, food, and culture. A recent example (sharing space with the posted prices for various bags of noodles) included a surprising historical correction. It read: "Though Marco Polo sometimes gets credit for bringing the first noodles from China to Italy, trade between the two countries was already centuries old." 

Exceptionally Rogue 

World Beyond War founder and prolific author David Swanson recently hosted a mini-webinar on US militarism. It contained some stunning stats, including: Since the end of WWII, the Pentagon "has killed or helped kill some 20 million people, overthrown at least 36 governments, interfered in at least 85 foreign elections, attempted to assassinate over 50 foreign leaders, and dropped bombs on people in over 30 countries. The US is responsible for the deaths of 5 million people in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia, and over 1 million just since 2003 in Iraq." 

More dreadful data: 95% of all foreign military bases are US bases; 50% of all military spending worldwide is US spending; The US is the world's biggest arms dealer and supplies weapons to some of the world's most oppressive regimes (including Saudi Arabia and The Philippines). 

If you think Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion CARES Act is expensive, consider that the Pentagon gets even more money to spend despite a long record of waste, corruption, and unaudited extravagance. 

And finally, Swanson askes: If wars are "inevitable" and "necessary," why are they repeatedly based on excuses that turn out to be lies? 

Diagnosing a Weakened Earth 

Every Sunday, the SF Chronicle's "weather page" features a weekly column called "Earthweek: A Diary of the Planet," in which Steve Newman reviews seven days worth of earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and random (and oft-times bizarre) disruptions to the biosphere. In the edition that appeared on March 21, Earthweek cited an outbreak of "seismic sinkholes" in Croatia, a potentially explosive "lava lake" building up steam in the Congo, the earliest appearance of cherry blossoms in Japan's history (linked to global warming), a blinding sandstorm that stretched from Mongolia to China and exposed millions to deadly dust that was 150 times higher than the health limits set by the World Health Organization. But the most wrenching item came from Australia where a native songbird known as the Regent Honeyeater "is slowly fading into extinction as it loses its mating song crucial for its survival." The young birds are imperiled because the parent birds are disappearing before they can pass on their mating tunes. A lead researcher's stark observation: "This lack of ability to communicate with their own species is unprecedented in a wild animal." 

The Fantastic Prize that Never Arrives 

The folks behind the Publishers Clearinghouse (PCH) Sweepstakes dollarpalooza are starting to look like scam artists who, once contacted, never let you go. Back on September 10, 2020, I received an unsolicited "Search Notice Advisory" letter from PCH notifying me that I had been chosen as part of a "nationwide search area for a prize authorized to be awarded soon." 

The award—"$1,000 A Day For Life"—was supposed to announced at an "October 31, 2020 Prize Event." There was no further mention of the October prize drawing. Instead, 2020 ended with the arrival of a new, coupon-stuffed PCH envelope containing a letter that declared "Prize Award Authorized for December 18, 2020." 

Instead of the promised December announcement, another large envelope (containing an "Important Notice") arrived on January 8, 2021. The mailing advised "a notice you'll receive from us in just two days will include a very important official entry form that could make you the winner of the February 28th prize award that pays $5,000 A Week 'Forever'!" 

On February 5, an "Official Dispatch" from the PCH "Department of Content Dispatch," arrived containing an "Imminent Winner Selection" notice that promised the February 28 winner would be "awarded real soon." 

February 28 came and went without a peep from PCH. 

Finally, in mid-March, another fat envelope labeled "Imminent Winner Selection" arrived to announce "you cannot win from this Notice" without undertaking a "Final Step" to gain "Compliance" to be "eligible" to be "selected" to win "fabulous prizes." 

There were two notable updates: the Sweepstakes Award was now upgraded to "$7,000 a week for life" and the "Prize Event" was now set to happen on April 30. Not a word about the ballyhooed February 28 whoop-dee-doo. 

As per usual, the oversized PCH packet was stuffed with scores of coupons advertising items that could be purchased in "five payments each." 

The items that caught my eye in the latest mailing included: a collection of 100-year-old Silver Barber Dimes (1892-1916; 90% silver); a Solar Powered Crucifix Garden Stake; a pair of "copper-infused, odor-resistant" Compression Socks designed to release "motion-activated menthol … into the sock" and; a 4 fl. Oz, bottle of Coyote Urine to repel skunks, deer, rats, groundhogs, voles "and more." The pictured bottle carried a label that advised the product could protect a 16-foot radius and was effective in "triggering the Flight or Fight Response in Small Animals." 

(The coupon didn't explain how to respond if the coyote pee triggered a Fight Response, causing the local chipmunks to go ballistic on your begonias.) 

Could Body Heat Heal the Planet? 

I just uncovered a 2013 press release about a 15-year-old Canadian girl who was honored by the Google Science Fair for inventing a revolutionary flashlight powered entirely from the warmth of a human hand. 

Ann Makosinski was troubled by the millions of single-use chemical batteries that go dead and get trashed every year. She knew that a device called a "Peltier tile" could turn a heat-differential into electric current. (Researchers had already begun exploring the use of human body heat to generate electricity to power entire buildings.) 

Given that a warm hand can produce around 57 milliwatts of electric power, Makosinsky designed a "thermoelectric flashlight" that operates on as little as half-a-milliwatt. She picked up some used Peltier tiles on Ebay and went to work. Since the output of the tiles increases depending on temperature differences, Makosinsky created an LED light that was hollow in the middle, allowing cool air to rub up against the hand-held exterior. The cooler the ambient air, the better the flashlight works, making the invention perfect for evening and nighttime use. In the following video, Makosinski demonstrates how well her invention performs—even at standard classroom temperature. 

--- 

So what became of this breakthrough invention? A Google search reveals that the last mention of Makosinski's "fleshlight" dates from 2014. A search of similar products currently on the market comes up empty. There are battery-free flashlights that are crankable and magnet-shakable but nothing with the convenience and performance matching Makosinski's marvel. On the other hand (so to speak), there are several flip-the-idea products on the market that use non-reusable batteries to heat plastic handwarmers! 

The history of invention is filled with examples of powerful, entrenched businesses conspiring to suppress competing inventions to assure they never reach the market. Could it be that Duracel and Rayovac conspired to pull the plug on Makosinski's revolutionary green-tech alternative? 

You Think the USPS Is Underfunded? Check Out the IRS!  

Public Citizen president Robert Weissman is back with another stunning critique about "the way Washington works." This time, Weissman is raging about "some infuriating new government data" that will rankle just about anyone who's not a millionaire. He writes:
"In 2012—not even a decade ago—the IRS audited most major American corporations but by last year, not even 4 out of every 10 corporate giants were audited. And audits of millionaires dropped 72% during the same time span. 

In fact, audits of millionaires—who are disproportionately white—dropped off way more than audits of working people claiming a tax credit meant to help low-income Americans—who are disproportionately people of color." 

And why is this? Well, you could take a cue from Trump-flunky Louis DeJoy's reign as head of the US Postal Service. (DeJoy has just announced a "10-year plan" that will increase postal fees while cutting staff, reducing hours, slowing service, and curtailing airmail delivery.) 

"In recent years," Weissman explains, "the IRS’s budget and staffing has plummeted—down 15% just from 2014 to 2019—so the agency can’t do as much auditing as it once did.  

"The IRS is using its diminishing resources to target working people while the super-rich and giant corporations get away with tax evasion on a colossal scale—to the tune of literally hundreds of billions of dollars every year!" 

This being Public Citizen, there's an action petition that's ready to sign. And here's the link. 

ACTION: Tell Congress to fully fund the IRS so it can make sure billionaires and Big Business pay what they owe. The IRS must be given the funding it needs to audit the super-rich and giant corporations and to crack down on widespread tax evasion.  

And, Speaking of Billionaires… 

Since the dawn of the Year of COVID, US billionaires have become $1.3 trillion richer—and another 46 well-endowed American millionaires actually graduated to billionaire status over the past year. Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of American families were losing jobs, healthcare, and housing due to the spreading contagion.  

In response, House Squadron member Rep. Pramila Jayapal has joined forces with Senator Elizabeth Warren to "level the paying field" by passing an Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act. The UMTA would apply an annual 2-3% wealth tax on the richest Americans and redirect trillions of dollars to serve the survival needs of America's majority. And, yes, there's a petition for that! 

ACTION: Sign the petition: Demand Congress support all families and pass the Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act to create an economy that works for everyone!  

"Agenda Framing" in the Aftermath of Tragedy 

Many organizations responded quickly and strongly to the horrific Atlanta killing spree that took the lives of eight people, calling for a National Day of Action on March 27 under the banner: "We Stand Against Anti-Asian Violence White Supremacy." 

But there was something about the response that raises concern. While eight people were killed, the political response focused on the six Asian women who were slain. When only some victims are recognized—on the basis of gender, ethnicity, politics, religion, or whatever—this serves to place an "agenda frame" around a tragedy, creating a narrowed focus that places the spotlight on some victims but leaves others in the shadows. 

A similar "agenda frame" was imposed in the aftermath of the January 6 Capitol Insurrection. The media consistently reports that five people died during the rioting but the only one victim is named—Capitol police officer Brian SIcknick, the only one of the five who died at the hands of Capitol attackers. Three other unnamed officers committed suicide (for unexplained reasons) while the fifth barely-mentioned fatality was Ashli Babbit, an unarmed 12-year Air Force veteran who was shot and killed by Capitol security guards trying to prevent the storming of the House Chambers. 

The Atlanta Killings: The Nexus of Religion and Sex 

In the Atlanta spa-shooting tragedy, what all eight victims had in common was that they all were engaged in the operation of local massage spas—a fact that aligned with the shooters' "sex addiction" excuse. 

As Judith Levine noted in an article posted by The Intercept, the accused killer, Robert Aaron Long was a fundamentalist Christian who hated the fact that he was addicted to porn and paid sex. Instead of acting out of hatred of Asian Americans, Long apparently turned to violence because he hated himself for being sexually attracted to Asian women. 

Referencing the foreign policy of the Trump administration and early echoes of sino-phobia from the Biden Bunch, CODEPINK warns that the rising incidence of Asian-targeted attacks "are a direct result of US foreign policy that included bipartisan aggression towards China." The xenophobia that CODEPINK references predates current US-China competition. It goes back to the WWII recruiting poster depictions of "Demon Japs" and, before that, to the "Yellow Peril" memes of the 19th Century. 

One issue that remains to be explored in this tragedy is the American system of employment discrimination that assigns certain racial and ethnic minorities to positions in the "sub-economy"—where women frequently find themselves forced into low-rung work as housekeepers, nannies, homecare workers, nail parlor attendants, and masseuses. Despite the attacker's claim that he was motivated by "sex addiction," the press has shown little interest in exploring the issue of Asian women forced to become masseuses and sex workers in order to survive in The Land of the Free. 

This Just In 

In the wake of the latest mass-shooter-super-spreader event, the New York Times undertook an investigation to find an answer to the question: "Why Does the US Have So Many Mass Shootings?" After a deep dig into existing records, stats, studies, and research, the NYT announced their conclusion: "Research Is Clear. Guns." 

And it's not that there is more crime in the US, there's just more gunfire. As the Times explained: "A New Yorker is just as likely to be robbed as a Londoner … but the New Yorker is 54 times more likely to be killed in the process." 

One of the Times' findings was that, while the US represents only 4.4 percent of the world's people, American citizens possess 42 percent of the planet's guns. 

For Pete's Sake! 

It's been great to hear Pete Seeger singing "Hard Times in the Mill" on TV recently but kinda shocking to hear this revolutionary balladeer's voice conscripted to serve as the soundtrack for a 30-second TV car commercial. Granted the product was a Volvo XC80 Rechargeable Plug-in Hybrid, but still…. 

Here's the rarely broadcast minute-long version of Volvo's ad. 

 

At least Pete's background soundtrack was more palatable than Bob Dylan's pandering and self-promoting ads for Cadillac (2007), and Chrysler (2014). 

 


The Activist's Diary, Week ending March 28

Kelly Hammargren
Sunday March 28, 2021 - 09:37:00 PM

From the week that is just ending, the big event was Thursday and not much else mattered. 

The March 25th special Council meeting called by Mayor Arreguin created a giant uproar with numerous phone calls in all directions, over 300 letters and 250 meeting attendees. As I wrote in the Activist’s Diary last week (March 20th) the special meeting was to cover the bungled attempt to push through Quadplex Zoning. Once the complaint was filed by former mayor Shirley Dean with the Berkeley Open Government Commission alleging that a violation of the State of California Brown Act had occurred, the Quadplex Zoning measure had to be rewritten to be considered by council. (The Brown Act is a state law which protects public access to meetings of California government entities. It prohibits behind-the-scenes discussions by a majority of members of legislative matters which they will vote on.) 

I predicted last week that the mayor would come in at the last minute with some supposed compromise that the public would not have had a chance to review before the meeting starts. He did one better. At 29 minutes into the meeting the mayor submitted his “supplemental” ((his own modifications of the original submission which had been authored by the mayor and councilmembers Droste, Kesarwani and Taplin) and then said to the full council they could read the supplemental while they were supposed to be listening to public comment. That should tell you everything thing you need to know about what the mayor thinks of the public—and that is the key difference between the proposal pushed forward by Arreguin and Droste and the proposal authored by Councilmembers Hahn and Harrison. 

The late revision from Arreguin substituted words like “consider”, “explore” and “study” for some mandatory language, but these words did nothing to change the original directive, which places the work to update the Housing Element to cover the years 2023 to 2031 in the hands of the Planning Department staff, consultants and the Planning Commission. Hahn, Harrison, Bartlett and Wengraf put the responsibility in the hands of the public with Planning, the Housing Advisory Commission, the Homeless Commission and other appropriate commissions, City Council and City staff with consultants to lead the Housing Element update. 

Both approaches are required to work within the same time frame. The new updated Housing Element, which is to plan how to adapt and accommodate the onerous volume of new housing, is due to be completed before January 2023. The actual allocation of housing to be built in Berkeley between 2023 and 2031 is 2446 units (27%) for extremely low and very low income households, 1408 units (16%) for low income households, 1416 units (16%) for moderate income households and 3664 units (41%) for above moderate income households (also known as market rate or whatever the owner choses to charge for rent). Those numbers total 8934 units. 

If you feel lost or any of these terms Housing Element, Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA), Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) are new to you or confusing read item 2. in the agenda, The Initiation of Participatory Planning for Berkeley’s Regional Housing Needs Allocation by Councilmembers Hahn and Harrison. The explanation starts on page 3. file:///Users/kellyhammargren/Downloads/Item%202%20Supp%20Hahn%20(5).pdf 

 

As the McGee-Spaulding Neighbors in Action learned from Councilmember Harrison during the Wednesday evening town hall, the projected population for Berkeley by 2050 is 163,000. And, if the drop in population in California in 2020 is not just a blip, but a trend, there will be no readjustment to the housing allocation that is supposed to be built. 

For those who hung on for the entire Council meeting (5 hours and 6 minutes) the mayor near the very end made a motion to accept his changes (the Supplemental) to item 1, the original Droste, Arreguin, Kesarwani and Taplin submission, and also to accept item 2, the Hahn, Harrison, Bartlett and Wengraf submission. Councilmember Wengraf signed on with Hahn, Harrison and Bartlettl. That looks to have been a very significant move in this meeting’s outcome. 

Letters and calls do matter, but in the end, it is going to mean showing up, signing on to Zoom and tracking this process until it is completed. The chair of the Planning Commission, Shane Krpata, already declared where he stands on Thursday evening in public comment, steadfastly endorsing item 1, the one which limits public participation. This doesn’t get us off to a very good start if the process is limited to the Planning Commission, consultants and city Planning staff. Right now, that looks too much like group think. 

The importance of broad community engagement through the entire process cannot be underestimated. Diverse groups come up with better solutions and that is the key benefit of following the method of Participatory Planning for Berkeley’s Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA) as proposed by Hahn, Harrison, Bartlett and Wengraf. 

In the past there was no punishment from the state for not building the assigned volume of housing, but all that is changed for the future. If Berkeley is unable to cough up 8934 new housing units, the threat looms of the State overriding any local zoning codes that restrict housing production. Already there are laws on the books to speed up the processing of mixed-used multi-unit buildings and limit local restrictions. From the laws I have read so far, I haven’t found exactly when overriding local zoning codes kicks in and what we will be forced to swallow with that 8934 unit gulp. The focus is existing transit corridors, which targets San Pablo, downtown, south and west Berkeley. I still have a list to finish. There will be more in the weeks ahead.  

We should not forget that the mayor, for all his declarations of concern about climate, has stated he is opposed to the Rights of Nature declaration, item 31 on the March 30 Council agenda. When I took a walk late this afternoon, the air was filled with the sounds of song birds. I wondered how many dead zones we will have if we cover what is left of open space in Berkeley with concrete. Living with and making space for nature is more than creating a pleasurable city to live in for our physical and mental health; urban habitat is gaining critical importance in the midst of ecosystem collapse. Well planned cities can and do support diverse species. 

Don’t forget https://calscape.org/ Restore Nature One Garden at a Time for spring gardening. 

As to the rest of the meetings I attended during the week, Monday afternoon was a special meeting of the Council Agenda and Rules Committee to discuss two items. The first was to temporarily limit significant new legislation to be considered by the council policy committees or the council as a whole during the pandemic unless it is time urgent, related to COVID-19 or already in process. This item was passed out of committee to be considered by Council in April. 

The second item, System Realignment, was discussed and then continued. Systems Realignment defines when and how a major item (i.e. anything that requires new or additional resources) may be submitted to Council for a vote. 

On Monday, it seemed like, “why now” when we are getting vaccinated and coming out of the pandemic darkness, but by Friday there was a big jump in the total of new cases in the US and California. The warnings of the B.1.1.7 variant hitting us this spring have been circulating for weeks. We are not out of the woods yet. 

I only caught the beginning of The Ashby and North Berkeley BART CAG meeting--enough to hear that 35% affordable housing at each station will be a push. That is a far cry from RHNA, which says that 59% is the need for affordable housing. 

I like to end with what I’m reading. I just finished Ten Lessons for a Post Pandemic World by Fareed Zakaria, 2020. It is well written and packed with information and much to consider. Lesson one: Buckle-up. We have created a world in overdrive. Lesson five: Life is digital. COVID is breaking down the last barriers to going digital and the changes are here to stay. Lesson Six: We are social animals, cities will endure. This is a book I’d like to read again and there are some things to pull out as we embark on RHNA like lessons one, five and six . 


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, April 4-11 2021

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday April 03, 2021 - 07:40:00 PM

Worth Noting:

The Agenda Committee is still meeting even though City Council is on spring recess from March 31- April 19. Please note that the link to the board/commission/committee webpage is at the end of the agenda instead of below the meeting title. This change is in response to a recommendation that it will make the zoom links to the meetings easier to read. Monday Agenda Committee meets at 2:30. https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89090619617

The deadline for completing the review of the Commission Reorganization is April 19. It is unknown whether the committee will take up the reorganization discussion during this council recess meeting, but it is best to be prepared and attend.

Tuesday – PRC Subcommittee on Warrant Service Policy meets at 6:30 pm. https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84233073529

Wednesday – Planning Commission meets at 7 pm. https://zoom.us/j/95984363204 Anyone who considers the ADU at 2915 Harper hideous (my walk partner’s one-word description) should plan on attending the hearing on Amendments to the ADU Ordinance at the Planning Commission. It is agenda item 9.

Thursday – Reimagining Public Safety Task Force meets at 6 pm. https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81983354907If you have a meeting you would like included in the summary of meetings, please send a notice to kellyhammargren@gmail.com by noon on the Friday of the preceding week.Sunday, April 4, 2021

Easter Sunday and last day of PassoverMonday, April 5, 2021

Agenda and Rules Committee, 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm, 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89090619617 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 Meeting ID: 890 9061 9617 

AGENDA: 2. Planning for 4/20/21, Recess item: 2. Contract add $250,000 total $2,495,726 for Police Substation at 841 Folger/3000 7th St, CONSENT: 4. T1 Loan $1,500,000 to complete Phase1 projects, 6. New temporary rules for Council committees during COVID-19 emergency, 7. Contact add $25,000 total $74,000 and extend thru FY2024 with Freitas Landscaping at Dona Spring Animal Shelter, 8. Contract add $110,000 total $231,600 and extend 6/30/2026 with Koefran Industries for Animal Disposal Services, 9. Add $4800 with Orsolya Kuti, DVM to provide free spay and neuter surgeries to pets of low/no income and homeless persons and authorize receipt of $40,000 in donations, 10. Add $9,936 total $219,936 for public art commission at San Pablo Park, 11. Approve (unspecified) bid solicitations $1,581,000, 12. Predevelopment affordable housing funding 2024 Ashby $1,198,960 and 1708 Harmon $1,056,400, 14. Receive grants for Shelter Plus Care Program Renewal HUD $4,124,485 6/1/2021-1/1/2022, COACH Project $2,411,026 1/1/20222-12/31/2022, and Co. of Alameda for tenant-based rental assistance $881,046 3/1/2021-2/28/2022, 15. Contract add $160,562 total $6,066,230 with Mar Con Builders for Live Oak Community Center Seismic Upgrade, 16. Contract add $125,000 total $2,094,056 with Suarez and Munoz Construction Inc for San Pablo Park Playground and Tennis Court Renovation, 17. Contract $542,032 plus 20% contingency $108,406 total $650,438 with ERA Construction for King School Play Area at 1700 Hopkins, 18. Contract $5,369,727 plus 15% contingency $805,459 total $6,175,186 with O.C. Jones & Sons for Berkeley Marina Roadway, 19. Grant application accept any amount up to $8,000,000 CA Proposition 68 Statewide Parks Program for selected Santa Fe Right-of-Way parcels, 20. Amend 1956 Maintenance Agreement with Caltrans and Transfer 2 portions of City right of way on Gilman to Caltrans for planned interchange facilities, 21. From Homeless Commission Refer to City Manager including Homeless Persons in hate crime reporting, 22. From Housing Advisory Commission Refer to City Manager release a Notice of Funding Availability (NOFA) of Measure O Bond funds allowing tenant incomes up to 120% of AMI reserve $15,432,000 for 2001 Ashby, 23. Refer to budget process from Taplin, Arreguin remediation for plan for Lawn Bowling Green at 2270 Acton and 1324 Allston (North Bowling Green at 1324 Allston contains elevated pesticides and metals and is protected from development under Measure L), 24. Taplin Support AB1401 eliminate parking requirements for housing and commercial buildings near transit, 25. Taplin Support SB 519 decriminalize controlled substances, 26. Bartlett Support AB 816 State and Local Agencies: Homelessness Plan, 27. Bartlett, Taplin, Harrison oppose FAA proposal to shift WNDSR Commercial Airliner Flight Corridor Directly over residential neighborhoods in Berkeley, Richmond, El Cerrito and Albany, 28. Harrison, Robinson Support SB 271 Sheriff Democracy and Diversity Act to allow for more diverse and democratic sheriff elections, 29. Harrison support AB 1199 creates a database of rental properties serving low-income tenants and levies a tax on holders of multiple rental properties, ( in packet pages 119 -174 from Hahn and Harrison not in agenda revitalization of Solano Ave) 31. Robinson support AB 455 Bay Bridge designate transit-only traffic lanes, ACTION: From Parks and Waterfront Commission adopt resolution that all Transient Occupancy Taxes (TOT hotel taxes) generated at Berkeley waterfront be allocated to the Marina Fund, 33. Davila Request CA State Legislature to introduce actions to value human life and condemn racial injustice and police brutality – Health Council Committee recommends refer to Public Safety Committee and f/u on pending bills on police reform, 34. Authorize CM to amend contract with Badawi & Assoc to perform audits of City’s financial statements for FY 2021, 2022 and include T1 adding $372,660, 35. Kesarwani refer to Planning commission to establish zoning overlay at Pacific Steel Casting Property to redesignate zoning as Manufacturing (M) to Mixed Use-Light Industrial (MULI), 36. Taplin Resolution to authorize CM to designate 15 MPH speed limit at all early childhood education facilities, 37. Taplin Refer to Parks Commission to allow developer options of public art on-site or paying an in-lieu fee to Private Percent Art Fund, 38. Taplin, Bartlett, Harrison Urge AC Transit to Restore 80-Ashby/6th Street bus line, 39. Harrison refer to CM prioritize shift to electric bicycles and other forms of zero-emissions mobility, 40. Hahn Personal Liability Protection for small businesses impacted by COVID-19, INFORMATION REPORTS: 41-44 Workplans from Civic Arts Commission, Community Health Commission Disaster and Fire Safety Commission and Measure O Oversight Committee, REFERRED ITEMS for REVIEW: 8. Impact of COVID-19 on meetings, 9. Commission Reorganization, 10. Systems Alignment Proposal, UNSCHEDULED ITEMS and Unfinished Business: 1. Kitchen Exhaust Hood Ventilation, 2. Surveillance Technology and Acquisition Report and use policy for License Plate Readers, 3. Objective Standard Recommendations for Density, Design and Shadows. 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/Policy_Committee__Agenda___Rules.aspxTuesday, April 6, 2021 

Loan Administration Board at 4 pm 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87009685521 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 870 0968 5521 

AGENDA: B. Program Review Revolving Loan Fund (RLF) - $171,000+ available to lend as of 3/20/2021, C. RLF review and act a. Berkeley Hospitality $180,000, b. Kidventurez $75,000 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Loan_Admin_Board.aspxBerkeley Rent Stabilization Board IRA / AGA Registration Committee at 5 pm 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/96424419586?pwd=SForbTRhcDdLRVVCOXMyMVRPNms3Zz09 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 964 2441 9586 Passcode: 703123 

AGENDA: 5. Initiation of Public Process and Zoning Concepts for 2023-2031 Housing Element (3/25/2021 Council meeting), 8. Tenant Occupancy Limits, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/rent/Police Review Commission Subcommittee on Warrant Service Policy at 6:30 pm 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84233073529 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 842 3307 3529 

AGENDA: 4. BPD Policy 606 Service of Warrants, revised/new language with focus on whether there should be complete ban on no-knock warrants, quick-knock entries, night/early morning service, data collection, compensation for damage done during searches, language for sanctity of life, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Police_Review_Commission_Homepage.aspxWednesday, April 7, 2021 

Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board – Buying and Selling Rental Property Webinar at 10 am 

Pre-register for links to Webinar 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/rent/Board of Library Trustees at 6:30 pm 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86042306505 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 860 42306505 

AGENDA: III. A. Library Tax Fund Reserve, B. Proposed Budget FY 2022, C. Trustee Recruitment 

https://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/about/board-library-trusteesHomeless Services Panel of Experts at 7 pm 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/92491365323 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 924 9136 5323 

AGENDA: 6. Staff to report on projected revenues, 7. Discuss Funding Priorities under Measure P, 8. Begin discussion of existing programs whether program meets Measure P funding priority and possible alternative funding sources, 9. Discussion on housing subsidy allocation, 10. Possible new programs that could be covered under Measure P, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Homeless_Services_Panel_of_Experts.aspxPlanning Commission at 7 pm 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/95984363204 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 959 8436 3204 

AGENDA: 9. Public Hearing - Amendments to ADU ordinance and related definitions to address Public Safety Concerns and make recommendation to Council, 10. Public Hearing - Consider amendments to Berkeley’s Sign Ordinance and make recommendation to Council 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Planning_Commission_Homepage.aspxPolice Review Commission Outreach Subcommittee at 6 pm 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82258644009 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 822 5864 4009 

AGENDA: 4. Determine and finalize outreach steps 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Police_Review_Commission_Homepage.aspxThursday, April 8, 2021 

Zoning Adjustment Board at 7 pm 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/93444335396 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 934 4433 5396 

AGENDA: 2. 1175 University – Permit Modification – construct 457 sq ft breakfast room and eliminate 2 parking spaces in 71 room hotel, on consent, 

3. 1241 Ashby – construct detached 1960 2-story rear yard dwelling unit with reduced rear yard setback behind existing duplex, staff recommend approve 

4. 1205 Peralta – eliminate two required off-street parking spaces by legalizing conversion of existing 18 ft x 20 ft garage to habitable space and Use Permit to legalize addition of berooms 6 thru 8 on parcel that is non-conforming for density, lot coverage, setbacks, usable open space and parking, staff recommend deny 

5. 2943 Pine – construct 729 sq ft addition to existing 1-story 1822 sq ft single family dwelling with average height 23 ft, add 5th beroom and legalize existing 10 ft fence at rear and left side on lot that is non-conforming for lot coverage, staff recommend approve, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/zoningadjustmentsboard/Reimagining Public Safety Task Force at 6 pm 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81983354907 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 819 8335 4907 

AGENDA: 1. Task Force Draft meeting schedule, roles and responsibilities, 2. Police Dept Overview, 3. Priority Dispatch Overview, 4. Draft Community Survey, 5. Special Task Force meeting dates, 6. Subcommittee discussion, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/RIPST.aspxQuit Smoking Class at 6-8 pm, free, use link to pre-register for series 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/CalendarEventMain.aspx?calendarEventID=17286Friday, April 9, 2021  

City Reduced Service DaySaturday, April 10, 2021 

Berkeley Neighborhood Council, 10 am – 12 pm 

Meeting links not posted, check the website later during the week. 

https://berkeleyneighborhoodscouncil.com/calendar/Container Gardening virtual workshop with Lori Caldwell, 11 am – 1 pm,  

Sponsored by the Ecology Center Price $10 - $15 

For more information email cynthiamurdough@gmail.com or call 925-421-9574 

https://ecologycenter.org/calendar/https://www.eventbrite.com/e/sustainable-gardening-for-renters-tickets-143207197583?ct=t%28BTU+March+2021+Newsletter%29 

 

Sunday, April 11, 2021 - No City meetings or events found 

_____________________Public Hearings Scheduled – Land Use Appeals 

2421 Fifth Street (construct two residential buildings) 6/1/2021 

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

1805 Blake 4/13/2021 

1511 Cedar 4/13/2021 

905 Contra Costa 4/20/2021 

1480 Dwight 4/13/2021 

1030 Euclid 4/1/2021 

1157 Francisco 4/13/2021 

1514 MLK Jr 4/13/2021 

1137 Parker 4/13/2021 

2111 Seventh 4/13/2021 

28 Tanglewoods 4/13/2021 

3031 Telegraph 4/13/2021 

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

___________________ 

WORKSESSIONS 

May 18 – 1. Systems Realignment 2. Bayer Development Agreement, 3. Affordable Housing Policy Reform (2 & 3 tentative) 

July 20 – nothing scheduled 

September 21 – 1. Housing Element (RHNA)Unscheduled Workshops/Presentations 

Cannabis Health Considerations 

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

Update Zero Waste Priorities 

Civic Arts Grantmaking Process & Capital Grant Program 

Measure FF and Fire PreventionThis 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.comTo Check for Regional Meetings with Berkeley Council Appointees go to 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/City_Council__Committee_and_Regional_Body_Appointees.aspxIf you or someone you know wishes to receive the weekly summary as soon as it is completed, email kellyhammargren@gmail.com to be added to the early email list. If you wish to stop receiving the Weekly Summary of City Meetings please 

forward the weekly summary you received to kellyhammargren@gmail.com.


The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, March 28- April 4

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Sunday March 28, 2021 - 05:30:00 PM

Worth Noting:

City Council spring recess starts March 31 and extends through April 19.

Sunday – 2 pm rally for Asian Americans at Aquatic Park organized by 7th graders. The Equity Summit is at 7 pm.

Monday – Deadline is at 5 pm to submit an application to be considered for the Police Accountability Board.

Tuesday – The Regular City Council meeting is at 6 pm. The last item on the agenda is The Rights of Nature.

Wednesday – The Homeless Commission meets at 6 pm. The South Berkeley Community safety Town Hall is at 7 pm.

Thursday – The UC Berkeley Long Range Development Plan is on the agenda at the Landmarks Commission. The Public Works Commission Agenda is not available until after Monday.

If you have a meeting you would like included in the summary of meetings, please send a notice to kellyhammargren@gmail.com by noon on the Friday of the preceding week.

Sunday, March 28, 2021  

Asian American Pacific Islander Youth Rising Rally with speakers at 2 – 4 pm 

Where: Aquatic Park – Meet at Aquatic Park, 84 Bolivar Drive 

What to Bring: masks, signs and love,  

Organizers: Berkeley 7th Graders 

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/aapi-youth-rising-rally-tickets-144730102633?aff&fbclid=IwAR2qiVWIf-St73FK9IwE296wk1SaZw2M-c8ROurNKfqbZx9UCBcQXxSUcJ4 (event is free) 

Equity Summit Series Part 3at 7 pm 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87087838028 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 870 8783 8028 

AGENDA: Learning From Our Elders: Listening And Honoring The Past To Guide The Future (Any trouble joining call 1-510-549-8790) Event led and organized by BIPOC 

Monday, March 29, 2021 

March 29 at 5 pm is the DEADLINE to submit an application to be considered for the Police Accountability Board 

https://content.govdelivery.com/accounts/CABERKE/bulletins/2c91b15 

City Council Public Safety Committee at 10:30 am 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88131245345 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 Meeting ID: 881 3124 5345 

AGENDA: single item 2. Adopt ordinance regulating police acquisition and use of controlled equipment and add BMC 2.64.170 (this has been in process since July 2020) 

Agenda and Rules Committee at 2:00 – NOTE TIME - MEETING STARTING EARLY 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88348188573 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 Meeting ID: 883 4818 8573 

AGENDA: single item listed 1. Amendments to the Berkeley Election Reform Act (BERA) to regulated officeholder accounts and proposed changes to City Council Office Budget Expenditures, discussion of future agenda items not numbered and Reimbursement Policies (officeholder accounts are contributions/donations to the officeholder, i.e. councilmember, mayor, which then can be used by the officeholder – details/explanation in packet pages 5-13) 

City Council Closed Session at 4 pm 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81680629249 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 Meeting ID: 816 8062 9249 

AGENDA: 1. Conference with Labor Negotiators, employee organizations IBEW, Local 1245, SEIU 1021, Community services and Part-time Recreation Activity Leaders, Public Employees Union Local 1 

Tuesday, March 30, 2021 

City Council Closed Session at 4:30 pm 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82173560000 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 Meeting ID: 821 7356 0000 

AGENDA: 1. Public Employee Appointments, a. City Attorney, Director of Planning and Development 

Regular Council Meeting at 6 pm  

Email comments to: council@cityofberkeley.info 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81872119058 

Teleconference: 1-699-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 Meeting ID: 818 7211 9058 

AGENDA CONSENT: 3. Police Accountability Board Ordinance amendment for member LOAs and council-approved alternative commissioner. 4. $24,063 Contracts extended to 6/30/2021 for Center For Independent Living, Pacific Center, & YEAH, 5. Amend Contract add $30,714 total $878,142 with Covenant House – YEAH, Mental Health Services Act Fund, 6. Designate City Labor Negotiators 1/1/2021-12/31/2021, 7. Aide Letter Agreement: Public Employee Union, Local 1/AFSCME Council 57 authorizing 80 hours of additional emergency paid sick leave (EPSL), 8. Amend and extend ERMA to 12/30/2021 $80,000, 9. Contract add $120,000 total $2,154,769 with ESI for IBM hardware and software lease 6/2/2003-6/30/2022, 10. Amend contract add $147,991 total $402,961 and extend to 6/30/2024 with Tyler Technologies for Open Data Portal’s Hosting Services, 11. Contract add $235,000 total $852,200 and extend to 6/30/2023 with TruePoint Solutions for Accela Professional Services, 12. Contract add $68,440 and extend 6/30/2023 with Verint Systems for Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Software Maintenance, 13. Contract add $76,906 total $141,906 to 6/30/2023 with NextRequest for Public Records Act (PRA) Response Software, 14. Contract add $25,000 total $100,014 extend 6/30/2022 with CBF Electric & Data for Wi-Fi Installation, 15. Contract add $200,000 total $249,500 extend 6/30/2023 with Gray Quarter, Inc. for Accela Professional Services, 16. P.O. $512,000 for Protiviti Government Services: Using GSA for Professional Services thru 6/20/2022, 17. Add $42,000 total $146,400 contingency $42,800 with Lind Marine to remove derelict and abandoned vessels from Berkeley Marina, 18. Utility Agreement $720,000 for sewer line for future fieldhouse restroom at Tom Bates Regional Sports Complex, 19. Add $70,000 total $295,400 and extend 12/31/2023 with Street Level Advisors for Development Fee Feasibility Analysis, 20. Budget Referral Police Foot/Bike Patrol in West Berkeley, Beats 11-16, 21. Budget Referral Stop signs at Dwight and California, 22. Letter to Google requesting inclusion of commercial truck routes on google maps platform, 23. Refer to Disability Commission Discussion on East Bay Paratransit and Transportation Needs of Berkeleyans with Disabilities, 24. Providing Unhoused with Fire Extinguishers Council Safety committee qualified positive recommendation to consider fire extinguishers and other fire prevention tools such as wool blankets, 25. Budget Referral New Project Coordinator to implement Electric Mobility Roadmap and Climate Initiatives, 26. Support AB 20 Corporate-Free Elections prohibits businesses from making campaign contributions to candidates for elective office, 27. Support AB 37 requiring vote-by-mail ballots to all voters for every election, 28. Support AB 854 Ellis Act Reform, ACTION: 29. Hearing Bond Financing for 2870 Adeline (Harriet Tubman Terrace Apt) 30. Ordinance permanently banning less lethal weaponry – Council Safety Committee forwarded with negative recommendation for Council to take no action, 31. Recognize the Rights of Nature qualified positive recommendation to place obligation on City not residents, Information Reports: 32. FY 2020 4th Quarter Investment report ending 6/30/2020, 33. FY 2021 1st Investment Report ended 9/30/2020, 34. Referral 2nd Dwelling Unit/ADU pilot program to house the homeless, 35. Report Worker’s Comp FY 2019-2020, 

Wednesday, March 31, 2021 

South Berkeley Community Safety Town Hall at 7 pm 

https://tinyurl.com/sberktownhall 

AGENDA: pre-register using above tinyurl for videoconference link, Mayor Arreguin, Councilmember Ben Bartlett, Interim Police Chief Jen Louis, guests Councilmembers Dan Kalb, Oakland and John Bauters, Emeryville 

Homeless Commission at 6 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/96645301465 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 966 4530 1465 

AGENDA: 6. Protocol for administering the COVID-19 vaccine to unsheltered homeless, 7. Placing vacancy tax on 2022 ballot with substantial revenue to go towards purchase of motels and hotels to house the homeless, 8. Unsheltered homeless in the downtown. 

San Pablo Tennis Courts Meeting at 5 – 6:30 pm 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/CalendarEventMain.aspx?calendarEventID=17314 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/99224389333 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 992 2438 9333 Passcode 210357 

Thursday, April 1, 2021 

Independent Redistricting Commission at 6 pm 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/redistricting/ 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88272906475 

Teleconference: 1-699-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 Meeting ID: 882 7290 6475 

AGENDA: 2. Training – Commissioner Role and Best Practices (Presentation by Redistricting Partners, City Redistricting Consultant) 

Landmarks Preservation Commission at 7 pm 

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/landmarkspreservationcommission/ 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/94799356196 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 947 9935 6196 

AGENDA: 5. 2246 Fifth Street – review and provide advisory comments on design of proposed rehabilitation project, 6. Annual Report (CLG) to State office of Historic Preservation, 7. Archaeological Resources and Native Cultural Heritage in Berkeley, 8. UC Long Range Development Plan (LRDP) and associated EIR discussion, https://lrdp.berkeley.edu/, 9. Resolution to End Exclusionary Zoning in Berkeley, 10. Potential initiation consideration 2501, 2510, 2514 & 2530 San Pablo Ave. 

Public Works Commission at 7 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84312916787 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 843 1291 6787 

AGENDA: No Agenda posted check after Monday 

WETA – Water Emergency Transportation Authority at 1:30 pm 

https://weta.sanfranciscobayferry.com/sites/weta/files/weta-public/currentmeeting/b040121a.pdf 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89718217408 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 897 1821 7408 Password: 33779 

AGENDA: (for those tracking WETA – Berkeley Pier/Ferry not listed in agenda) 

Friday, April 2, 2021 & Saturday, April 3, 2021 & Sunday, April 4, 2021 

No City meetings or events found 

_____________________ 

Public Hearings Scheduled – Land Use Appeals 

2421 Fifth Street (construct two residential buildings) 6/1/2021 

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

1805 Blake 4/13/2021 

1511 Cedar 4/13/2021 

800 Dwight 3/30/2021 

1480 Dwight 4/13/2021 

1030 Euclid 4/1/2021 

1157 Francisco 4/13/2021 

1336 Gilman 3/30/2021 

1514 MLK Jr 4/13/2021 

1137 Parker 4/13/2021 

2102 San Pablo 4/1/2021 

2111 Seventh 4/13/2021 

28 Tanglewoods 4/13/2021 

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 

May 18 – (tentative) – 1. Bayer Development Agreement, 2. Affordable Housing Policy Reform 

July 20 – nothing scheduled 

September 21 – 1. Housing Element (RHNA) 

Unscheduled Workshops/Presentations 

Cannabis Health Considerations 

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

Update Zero Waste Priorities 

Civic Arts Grantmaking Process & Capital Grant Program 

Systems Realignment 

Measure FF and Fire Prevention 

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 

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 

If you wish to stop receiving the Weekly Summary of City Meetings please forward the weekly summary you received to kellyhammargren@gmail.com, If you wish to receive the weekly summary as soon as it is completed, email kellyhammargren@gmail.com to be added to the early email list.