Extra

Press Release: Senate Bill 118 is No Solution to UC's Excess Enrollment Woes

Save Berkeley’s Neighborhoods
Friday March 11, 2022 - 01:18:00 PM

Save Berkeley’s Neighborhoods says SB 118 is poorly drafted and confusing, and wouldn’t solve the dire situation that UC has created for students in California.



SB 118, introduced today in the California State Legislature, is poorly drafted and confusing, attempts to admit a small number of additional students to the UC Berkeley campus in 2022, but does nothing to solve the dire situation that UC has created for students in California.

Despite overwhelming evidence that UC has failed to house and support students, and increased campus crowding to the point that many students can’t graduate in four years, the bill would allow UC to continue rapid enrollment growth with no mitigation for least for 18 months after a court finds that UC has failed to analyze or mitigate growth impacts.

“We are very disappointed to see that the legislature is reacting in such an ill-considered way to UC Berkeley’s cynical use of students as pawns,” said Phil Bokovoy, President of Save Berkeley’s Neighborhoods. “Instead the legislature should be focusing on the dire situation of students who face often insurmountable problems with housing, crowded classrooms and the inability to graduate in 4 years. Low income students have suffered the most from UC Berkeley’s 50% enrollment growth since the early 2000s.”

The bill attempts to allow UC to continue to increase enrollment far beyond current levels, even if that enrollment has severe impacts on the local community. For example, in the last 18 months, UC Berkeley increased enrollment by over 2700 students. Those 2700 students have likely displaced additional low income households in Berkeley. Further increases for the Fall of 2022 will only accelerate the local housing crisis. -more-



Public Comment

It's Time to Burn Your Sierra Club Membership Card, or It's A Sad Day When the Courts Stand Up for Redwoods But the Sierra Club Takes a Pass

Carol Denney
Sunday March 06, 2022 - 06:06:00 PM

People's Park advocates spent over a year providing information to the East Bay Sierra Club appealing for their support for People's Park remaining public open space in the densest, most under-parked area in town. One of the sympathetic members prepared a letter of support to present at their meeting, but pulled it from the March 1, 2022, agenda when "advocates" objected that they might look like NIMBYs, or "not in my backyard" people.

In the meantime, the University of California's Capital Strategies just unveiled a new plan not just to demolish a public park, an underground creek, and a community garden (People's Park) in favor of 12 stories of high-end, student-only housing --- they plan to demolish a twelve-story building on campus and replace it with open space.

The Sierra Club Executive Committee is not unaware that People's Park is full of redwoods and sequoia, pollinators and native plants. They are not unaware that retrofit and re-use is the greener alternative to demolition, or that demolishing parks is abhorrent. They include Berkeley City Council member Sophie Hahn and former Rent Board Commissioner Igor Tregub, neither of whom offered any objection to the default position the Sierra Club's Executive Committee is now taking: having nothing to say about sacrificing parks for housing when alternatives exist. -more-


THE PUBLIC EYE:Going Rogue: The New World Order

Bob Burnett
Monday March 07, 2022 - 02:10:00 PM

The February 24th invasion of Ukraine has ushered in a new world order. Remarkably, it's like that predicted by George Orwell in his book, 1984: three perpetually warring superstates. (In 1984, these states were "Oceania," the english-speaking world and South America, "Eurasia," Europe and Russia, and "Eastasia," China and southern Asia.) Putin's act of war has created a wall between Russia and most of the western world, with Ukraine, Moldava, and Georgia as disputed territory. -more-


Press Release: Settlement Offer Benefits In-State Students at UCB

Phil Bokovoy
Saturday March 05, 2022 - 06:01:00 PM

Save Berkeley’s Neighborhoods offers partial relief to UC Berkeley from enrollment pause; 1,000 more deserving California high school students could attend UC Berkeley in person -more-


Un-armed Berkeley Drop-In Center Manager Detained at Gun Point by BPD: Letter to Berkeley Mayor Arreguin

Katrina Killian, Executive Director, Alameda County Network of Mental Health Clients
Sunday March 06, 2022 - 08:19:00 PM

Honorable Mayor Jesse Arreguín –

We are writing to you, as we have received no response from the city thus far concerning the traumatic event that took place a month ago, on February 2, 2022. First to our representative, Honorable Ben Barlett, who joined us via Zoom to offer his sympathies. We also contacted Dr. Lisa Warhuus, Director of Health, Housing, and Human Services, who we are currently negotiating the Specialized Care Unit Bridge Services contract (Specification No. 22-11472- C) to provide Peer-Run non-police crisis response.

We request an immediate meeting with you, Mr. Mayor, Madam City Manager, Police Chief Jennifer Louis, and Dr. Lisa Wuurhus. The reason for our request is that on February 2nd, 2022 Jorge, Program Manager of the Berkeley Drop-In Center, a young Black father, was detained at gunpoint by Berkeley police officers. He recounts the incident as, “brutalizing, shaming, traumatizing and completely unnecessary” He says it “felt like they wanted to kill me.” -more-


A Berkeley Activist's Diary, Week Ending March 6

Kelly Hammargren
Sunday March 06, 2022 - 07:23:00 PM

It was a very full week and the survival of Ukraine and the Ukrainians hangs over everything changing minute by minute and hour by hour. It looks like Putin has decided that since the Ukrainians didn’t lie down and welcome the invasion, he will rain down massive destruction until there is nothing left to save. The “Z” on everything Russian presumably representing Zelensky is chilling. -more-


Putin’s Insanity

Jagjit Singh
Sunday March 06, 2022 - 08:28:00 PM

The insanity and humiliation of Vladimir Putin, the former K.G.B. officer, has been festering ever since the collapse of the former Soviet empire. Buoyed by the sweeping success of Crimea where hardly a shot was fired, the messianic Putin made the tragic mistake of invading Ukraine shocking the world by its utter brutality but encountering a fierce opposition. Putin, 67, has run Russia, as president and prime minister, for 21 years, a feat surpassed only by Joseph Stalin. He is surrounded by highly corrupt political cronies who have used their enormous wealth and privilege to enjoy high-end European perks with massive real-estate investments. On the home front, Putin has repressed free speech with utter brutality. To quell any form of opposition the ex-KGB spy has amassed a terrifying array of assassination tools. Unfortunately, Putin has grossly mismanaged the economy which is in terrible shape suffering from chronic capital light. One eye-popping investment of $390bn was a major failure. -more-


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Mental Exhaustion and Rest

Jack Bragen
Sunday March 06, 2022 - 07:15:00 PM

The brains and minds of people are limited, and following sustained exertion, they need recovery time and rest. If you overextend the mind, in any way, shape or form, it can sometimes cause damage from which it is hard to recover. This is a type of damage that many people, including mental health professionals, would have a hard time understanding and/or measuring.

When I push too far beyond what I know to be my natural limits, I seem to incur damage to the operating systems that make my personality work. I was in such a situation in 2018, and it affected how I behaved; it also made me far less tolerant of any kind of demanding situation. The reversal to such damage took me a long time to do, despite my knowing some types of self-training that I utilized, that eventually fixed it.

So many people treat their minds as though machines that should always work for anything. This may be okay for some, but it doesn't work for me. When I am not at a hundred percent, I might refuse to do things that other people expect me to do. I will also postpone some tasks until such time as I am ready to do them.

People have not been pleased when I've refused to do as they expect. Often, I will refuse a task or series of tasks because I know my limitations and I know that based on those limitations, trying to do the thing(s) will be beyond what I can reasonably do. I don't ascribe to "no pain, no gain." Pain is an excellent signal provided by the body, giving us information that we must back off from whatever it is we're trying to do. -more-


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces (1500)

Gar Smith
Sunday March 06, 2022 - 07:05:00 PM

Running a Marathon — by Chance

There are just too many things to worry about these days. Climate change is worse than we thought. The Bay Area's overdue earthquake is still overdue. Ukrainian cities and civilians are being bombarded. Russia and Washington are making references to the "nuclear option." The Golden State Warriors squandered a 14-point lead in the fourth quarter....

I needed a distraction, so I took a break by running in the Berkeley Half-Marathon.

Actually, I couldn't avoid it. Part of the Marathon's course overlaps with my much-shorter Sunday jog—from the Monterey Market up to the Berkeley Rose Garden and back.

If anyone were to ask, I could honestly boast that I "easily passed hundreds of other runners."

If anyone were to cast a doubtful look, I would have to confess: while the half-marathoners were all running west, I was heading east, uphill to the Marin Circle Fountain. Once there, I reversed direction and joined the flood of marathoners for the downhill trot back to Hopkins Street.

It was a kick, running past the residents gathered along the curb, banging bells, clapping hands, and shouting words of encouragement: "Looking good!" "Way to go!" "You're gonna make it!" "Suck it up, slowpoke!"

I figure I only ran a half-of-a-half-of-a-half-of-a-Half Marathon but my legs are still sore. -more-


An Open Letter Re: Shattuck Cinemas / Proposed development at 2065 Kittredge Street, Berkeley

Charlene Woodcock
Monday February 28, 2022 - 09:53:00 PM

Bill Schrader
The Austin Group
164 Gale Road
Alamo,
CA 94507

Dear Mr. Schrader,
When I first learned of this proposal I was concerned about its effect on the Shattuck Cinemas, but then I heard that you had expressed the intent to keep the theaters intact. However, when I examined the sketch on the City of Berkeley Planning Department poster on the side of the building, I could find no indication of the presence of the theaters. This could simply be due to the fact that the entrance to the Shattuck Cinemas is on Shattuck Avenue. However, I write for confirmation that you appreciate the cultural and economic importance of the 10-screen Shattuck Cinemas and have no intention of harming them. -more-


Obituaries

Daniel Dean
1928 - 2022

Shirley, Daniel and John Dean
Monday March 07, 2022 - 09:46:00 PM

Daniel Dean, known simply as Dan, of Berkeley, passed away at the age of 93 on February 17, 2022 from COVID related pneumonia.

While born in Oakland, he lived 86 years of his life in Berkeley during which he was deeply involved in improving the lives of children and their families through counseling and education. For 56 years he was the beloved husband of former Berkeley City Council Member and Mayor, Shirley Dean, loving father of Daniel and John, and grandfather of two.

Dan had a life-long commitment to education and counseling. He attended Hillside Elementary School where he was a member of the fledging Junior Traffic Control, attended then called Garfield Jr. High and Berkeley High School and on to UC-Berkeley where he was a member of Theta Xi fraternity. As his life goals began to become more focused, he went to work as a counselor in the California Youth Authority facility, Fricot Ranch School in San Andreas, California. At that time, Fricot housed boys as young as eight years who had been committed to the CYA for crimes as serious as murder. He worked there for about two years when he decided he wanted to do more to prevent children from entering a life of crime, so he enrolled at San Francisco State University where he obtained a Master’s Degree and met the requirements that enabled him to work as a teacher and as a State Certified Guidance Counselor. -more-


Editorial

Stack'm 'n' Pack'm Does not Add Up to Education in Berkeley

Becky O'Malley
Saturday February 26, 2022 - 05:12:00 PM

Ran into an old friend not long ago. He’s been teaching at UC Berkeley in a technical department for a long time, maybe 40-50 years. He’s also made very good money with his side hustle at a techy start-up that went public at the right time. He’s still teaching, presumably because he likes it, not because he needs the income. He told me he’s been delivering his lectures online, even pre-pandemic, and he plans to go on doing that, though in-person is back.

He told me that his remote class is now 1500 undergraduates, so he has approximately a hundred teaching assistants. I gathered from what he said that he never meets with students himself, and really, why should he?

Why indeed? When I was a student at Cal, way back in the dark ages before it became generically “Berkeley”, I took a couple of entertaining English classes taught in biggish lecture halls in Dwinelle and in Wheeler Hall—maybe a one or two hundred students. My classes in the French and Slavic departments never exceeded thirty or forty. The instructors in all three departments were almost all professors.

It’s funny that with all the sanctimonious chitchat we’ve seen lately in the corporate press regarding the effects of UCB’s desire to offer admission to about 5,000 additional students next year, no one says anything about the effect it might have on the students’ learning experience. Mind you, those 5000 new bodies (actually ~3000 would accept) are over and above the ~11,000 extras who have already been added to the student body since 2005 in defiance of putative limits under the university’s long range development plan.

When there are 1500 students in a small-screen class, it’s hard to imagine what they can be learning. Before the pandemic lockdown, classes were extremely overcrowded, and if thousands more students are admitted next year it could only be worse. A total of 42,000 is bruited about.

I seem to remember that Chancellor Clark Kerr (after whom the Clark Kerr Campus is named,ironically) suggested 12,500 as a good number for each UC campus, but what’s 30,000 more, give or take?

Honest figures are hard to come by, but anecdotally I can report that a guy named Jack, who said he works for UCB, called into the KQED Forum radio show on Wednesday morning, estimating that while student enrollment has increased by a third, the number of faculty and staff members has remained the same. Another caller, Janet, who sounded like a middle-aged African American woman, scoffed at UC’S veiled threat that restricting enrollment would harm disadvantaged students, particularly people of color. She pointed out that as enrollment has grown, the percentage of such students has decreased.

Can these numbers be verified?

Setting the question of available housing near campus aside for the moment, since that’s become a political football, someone needs to ask whether it’s in the best interest of young Californians to cram as many of them as possible into a single campus. The name “Berkeley” for sure has brand advantage, particularly in Asia, and the university has the best researchers money can buy, but are today’s undergraduates getting the excellent overall education my cohort got? An increasing percentage of their classes are taught by non-tenure-track lecturers or adjuncts.

A young friend, a sophomore who did her first year remotely from a bedroom in her parent’s home, told me she was being taught by only two professors out of five. Her other three classes are led by lecturers, though she did describe them as “super distinguished” (even if underpaid). Some of her classes are in person, but the rest are still online, though she’s living in Berkeley now and could attend in the flesh if it were allowed.

Because COVID? Maybe, or maybe not. No classroom on campus holds 1500 of those paying customers.

The role of all the varied learning institutions which are characterized as “highly selective” needs examination. Somewhere, sometime, there comes a limit on the number of carefully curated young persons who can be educated at once in a given venue. My observation of three generations of students over more than a half-century is that every educational opportunity which is perceived to be excellent is de facto oversubscribed. No matter where the limit is set, someone’s left out. That includes “gifted and talented” in elementary school, advanced placement classes, elite high schools like Lowell, and yes, UC Berkeley. It doesn’t make much sense to try to respond to the demand by expanding the number of students admitted to a particular class or school instead of creating more good classes or schools to meet that demand.

A major problem adding to Berkeley’s enrollment bloat is that the state of California (overwhelmingly Democratic with a budget surplus) is no longer willing to meet its obligations to educate the next generation. Just a fraction of university costs (~14%, depending whom you ask) are paid by the state. Much of the balance is raised by shilling for lucrative out-of-state and foreign students lured by the Berkeley brand, or by sucking up to very rich donors who want to see their names on buildings.

In-state fees are non-trivial, of course, as compared to the $60/semester my father paid for me to attend Cal, but less than at most other elite schools. And no, I never had campus housing, so I lived in seedy rooming houses with the bathroom down the hall.

But now state legislators choose to pretend that the only crisis for today’s students is finding housing. Housing prices everywhere in the Bay are experiencing a big bubble. Some politicians find it convenient to blame everything on the cost of requiring big projects to be reviewed for environmental impact, but there are many more factors at work, and few magic bullets. It’s hard for many people, including students, to afford housing, given the wealth disparity which the tech boom has brought.

The all-time worst simple snake oil remedy for a complex problem has just been proposed by San Francisco State Senator Scott Wiener, a slippery fellow bought and paid for by the development industry and its YIMBY groupies.

Wiener claims, without a shred of evidence, that the reason that Berkeley students are having trouble finding a place to live is just because big new projects, including dormitories, must be reviewed under the California Environmental Quality Act. He proposes legislation to exempt projects described as student housing from environmental law.

He’s scooped up a bunch of gullible young people and the odd YIMBY lobbyist to make his case. Sample quote, from a Wiener press release which is full of fake facts:

“For far too long, CEQA has been misused to prevent students from having access to housing on our own campuses under the facade of protecting the environment,” said Michelle Andrews, Legislative Director for the Associated Students of UC Davis. A prize ribbon will be awarded to anyone who can prove that assertion.

The California Environmental Quality Act does not prevent anything. It simply requires full disclosure of what’s planned and what effect it will have—developers, including corporate universities, can and do override negative environmental impacts in order to build as they please. And anyone who thinks they don’t make mistakes should investigate the history of Evans Hall, -more-


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Sunday March 06, 2022 - 07:19:00 PM

Worth Noting:

A packed week ahead that closes with daylight savings time.

Policing in Berkeley starts Monday with a policing proposal, followed with an ordinance to prohibit discriminatory reporting to law enforcement at the Public Safety Committee at 10:30 am. Monday afternoon at 2:30 pm the Agenda Committee will review the draft agenda for March 22 which contains item 40 undoing protections from no cause search and seizure of persons on parole/probation. Monday afternoon at 4 pm is the Press Conference following Berkeley Police holding the Program Manager of the Berkeley Drop-in Center at gunpoint, handcuffed and on the ground who was at work doing his job completing decorations in observation of Black History month. Monday evening at 7 pm the Personnel Board will review a revised job description/classification for the investigator of police misconduct. Tuesday evening at City Council is the report of the implementation of Fair and Impartial Policing in Berkeley and the Crime and Collision report. Wednesday is the Police Accountability Board at 7 pm. Thursday morning at 9 am the Budget Committee will take up the report from the auditor citing improvements needed in managing police overtime and the absence of contracts with outside entities. Thursday evening is a special council meeting to receive the reports on the Reimagining Policing work at 6 pm. If all three reports are read the total is 754 pages.

BART Parking, Parking enforcement and reconfiguring Hopkins starts Monday morning at 10:30 am the Public Safety Committee will review the recommendation from the Disaster and Fire Safety Commission to enforce existing parking code in high fire zones. The Hopkins Traffic Corridor study and recommendations is Monday evening at 6 pm. The BART meeting on parking at the BART stations is Wednesday at 6 pm. The BART housing developments will be built on the Ashby and North Berkeley BART parking lots.

Toxic Contamination, groundwater and sea level rise (SLR) presentation by Kristina Hill is Tuesday at 3 pm. The impact on groundwater and toxic sites is the piece of SLR that never gets attention. This is important as it changes the assumptions of SLR impacts.

Saturday March 12th the Berkeley Neighborhoods Council will take up Berkeley issues, the agenda isn’t posted yet, but the above makes it look like a full plate. -more-


Jordi Savall & Le Concert des Nations Offer Music from the film TOUS LES MATINS DU MONDE

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Sunday March 06, 2022 - 07:10:00 PM

Perennial favorite Jordi Savall returned to Berkeley on Friday evening, March 4, 2022, under the auspices once again of Cal Performances. This time, Jordi Savall was joined by the ensemble he and his late wife, Montserrat Figueras, founded many years ago, Le Concert des Nations. For this concert the music offered came from the 1992 film by Alain Corneau Tous les Matins du Monde. This beautiful film, with an imaginative scenario by Pascal Quignard, dealt with the relations between the reclusive master viola da gambist Monsieur de Sainte-Colombe (ca. 1640-ca.1701) and the young Marin Marais (1656-1728), whom Sainte-Colombe reluctantly agreed to tutor. So gifted was the pupil that Marin Marais quickly rose to become principal violist in the court orchestra of Louis XIV at Versailles, under the direction of Jean-Baptiste Lully. For this film, Jordi Savall directed and performed the music of Sainte-Colombe, Marais, Lully, Couperin, and others. Quite remarkably, the film Tous les Matins du Monde enjoyed huge international success. Moreover, a recording of the original sound track of this film became a hit among music buffs, thus expanding interest in early classical music. For the March 4 concert at Berkeley’s First Congregational Church, Le Concert des Nations was comprised of director Jordi Savall on seven-string viola da gamba; Manfredo Kraemer on violin; Charles Zebley on flute; Marco Vitale on harpsichord; Lucas Harris on theorbo and guitar; and Philippe Pierlot on seven-string viola da gamba. Opening the concert the musicians performed a Suite from the opera Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme by Jean-Baptiste Lully, composed for the play by Molière. Featured was ceremonial music for the Turks, and for this music, Lucas Harris played guitar, and Philippe Pierlot offered frequent pizzicato accompaniment to the ensemble. Next came the work entitled Le Retour, from the Concert XLI for two violes by Sainte-Colombe. The burnished tones of the two violas da gamba melded beautifully as they exchanged musical motifs in lively interaction. -more-