The Week

Wheels of Justice
Grace Underpressure
Wheels of Justice
 

News

Trees in People's Park Can't Be Replaced

Terri Wilde
Thursday June 09, 2022 - 01:14:00 PM

The trees in People’s Park are irreplaceable and crucial for the health of Berkeley. So many studies are now showing the importance of green spaces in urban areas for the health and biodiversity of cities. They keep temperatures down, clean air pollution and slow climate change. Studies show people who live close to green spaces are healthier in everything from heart rates, immune functioning, stress, and mental health to reduced pms symptoms, anxiety and cardiovascular mortality. People’s Park holds numerous large trees, plants, permeable soft soil and an ecological reprieve for city wildlife. This cannot be replaced if UC destroys it. -more-


A Berkeley Activist's Diary, Week Ending June 5

Kelly Hammargren
Tuesday June 07, 2022 - 01:43:00 PM

The June 2 special City Council meeting on the housing developments on the BART Station parking lots was the big event of the week. The North Berkeley Neighborhood Alliance let out a sigh of relief and celebration as the council voted unanimously after midnight in support of limiting the housing projects to a base of seven stories. -more-


Lack of Mental Health Support at BHS

Noah Rudolph
Tuesday June 07, 2022 - 02:01:00 PM

As a student at Berkeley High School, I can attest to the fact that it is a traumatic place for many this year, as for many years previous. Students are no more than a number at BHS, and we are all aware of this. Unless you possess positive contributive importance to your teachers and peers, such as humor or academic rigor, nobody will mind if you stop showing up. It is viewed to be a courteous act for teachers to inquire about well-being or call home when there is a dramatic shift in a student’s behavior. It takes nothing short of a student’s graphic death within a block of the school witnessed by many for there to be available school counselors during the day instead of a note that says “away!”, and even this was clarified to be only until the end of this year in an email from an administrator. -more-


Join Berkeley City Council Tomorrow Nght Regarding BART Zoning

Friends of Adeline
Wednesday June 01, 2022 - 09:50:00 PM

This Thursday, June 2nd, is the big one: the all-important City Council vote on zoning the BART stations. On Thursday, please be a part of it - it's our last chance to influence the council’s vote. Here's what to do: -more-


The Final Environmental Impact Report for Berkeley Bart Stations is Fatally Flawed

Thomas Lord
Wednesday June 01, 2022 - 09:14:00 PM

The Final Environmental Impact Report (FEIR) for Ashby and North Berkeley Stations Transit Oriented Development Zoning fails to apply its own methodology correctly and violates the CEQA guidelines regarding the emissions associated with construction, especially at the proposed heights. As a result, the FEIR falsely claims that the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with the proposed zoning do not pass a threshold of significance. -more-


Berkeley Teen Allegedly Planned Attack

Bay City News
Wednesday June 01, 2022 - 07:49:00 PM

A teen suspected of trying to recruit other students to participate in a school shooting or bombing at Berkeley High School was arrested this week after turning himself in, police said Wednesday. -more-


Don't Let the Shattuck Cinemas Be Demolished by a Chicago Developer

Charlene Woodcock
Wednesday June 01, 2022 - 07:31:00 PM

The Shattuck Cinemas are a cultural treasure for Berkeley residents and the wider East Bay. Pre-COVID, the Cinemas were drawing 275,00 to 300,000 ticket-buyers per year. In 2017, members of Save the Shattuck Cinemas gathered well over 4,000 signatures of movie goers with addresses from all over the East Bay—people attracted to spending time and money in our downtown thanks to the breadth and high quality of films to be seen at the Cinemas, unmatched by any other East Bay theater. -more-


June Primary Election Recommendations from Progressive Sources--Ballots Due June 7th

Linda Franklin, BCA
Tuesday May 31, 2022 - 12:29:00 PM

Have you filled out your ballot? Berkeley Citizens' Action (BCA) did NOT do endorsements for this year's primary. Instead, we are sharing the endorsements and recommendations from the following sources. At the end of this email, you can find information about these sources. -more-


Open Letter to Mayor Arreguin and Berkeley Councilmembers Re November Bond Issues

Michael Katz
Monday May 30, 2022 - 05:17:00 PM

Dear Mayor Arreguin and Councilmembers:

As you consider bond measures to place on the November ballot (May 31 agenda, items 37 and 39), I have one plea: Please give me at least one clean measure that I can vote for in good conscience.

Please don’t even think about combining essential and prestige projects into “one big bond” that voters will be forced to vote down (The staff report’s “Option 1”). Please don’t even think about staff’s “Option 2,” nor about the potential combinations that Councilmember Droste helpfully listed in her May 27 newsletter: “repaving and street safety,” or “housing and disaster/climate resiliency.”

Please offer voters at least four separate bond measures, allowing us to vote for things we believe in: -more-


Opinion

The Editor's Back Fence

Growth Challenged

Becky O'Malley
Tuesday June 07, 2022 - 11:17:00 AM

Don't miss this: an excellent article analyzing the "grow, grow,grow" theory::

California loses population: Communities push back against growth mandate madness

-more-


Boring Boxes in Berkeley's Downtown:
Why They're All Made of Ticky-Tacky and All Look Just the Same

Becky O'Malley
Wednesday June 01, 2022 - 12:48:00 PM

Well, it looks like the Chron has finally gotten the memo. Perhaps someone there even reads the Planet.

On Tuesday of this week, their resident "urban design critic" John King, who lives in Berkeley for his sins, took official notice of the fact that the city is being overrun with Ugly Boxes. Well, he didn't quite admit that, but the net sentiment he expressed is close. Here's his take on what's happening, such as it is:

Berkeley has a downtown housing boom right now. It’s going to transform the city’s character

Yes. As usual, the comments (hard to find) tell the story. Two of my faves:

"Witness Neoliberal crony capitalism's version of Stalin's Five Year Plans", That''s undoubtedly from a genuine Cal graduate.

And another good one called the prevailing style "applique architecture", which I take to mean Ugly Boxes with Some Fancy Stuff Outside.

But here's the breakthrough: In the same issue the good old Chron actually ran an op-ed by someone who brings facts and analysis to the topic. We've told you before about Professor Davarian Baldwin, and here in print he spotlights the major culprit in the "transformation of Berkeley's character" to Boring Boxland.

Read it and weep.

How UC Berkeley has used public power to become a private developer

By the way, if these links don't get you through the Chronicle's pay wall, a Berkeley Public Library card will give you online access to that and many other publications.
-more-


Public Comment

Placebreaking on Hopkins: A Dossier
Part Three: The public engagement debacle

Zelda Bronstein
Sunday June 05, 2022 - 03:01:00 PM

The April 24 letter to Hahn

Speaking at the council’s May 10 meeting, Monterey Fish owner Paul Johnson concluded by stating that the merchants are “pretty much on the same side as the Hopkins residents.” He was referring to people living on or near Hopkins who had organized a protest over the bike lanes.

On April 24, Hahn received an open letter signed by neighbors, merchants, and customers of the shops in the area. Cc’d to the entire council and posted on the Planet, the letter was also included in the packet sent to the council on May 6. Johnson is the second of the letter’s 118 signatories. (A longtime resident of north Berkeley and patron of the Hopkins-Monterey businesses, I also signed.)

The letter argues that “[t]he two-way bike track should be flatly rejected as way too dangerous for cyclists, pedestrians and motorists alike,” citing the same factors as the ones noted by the dissident cyclists, most of whom also signed the letter. The letter, too, recommends repaving the street, “which by itself improves conditions for cyclists.” -more-


The Insanity of Gun Violence: Children’s Lives Matter!

Jagjit Singh
Friday June 03, 2022 - 04:40:00 PM

Are we insane? Has America fallen into a downward spiral of moral decay? Has excessive greed and lust for power replaced our basic sense of decency? Do we need terrifying assault weapons swung over our shoulders to bolster our collective insecurity? I write this letter with my hands shaking with anger and tears running down my face.

I write this scathing attack on lawmakers who remain unmoved while 10 beautiful African-American kids were gunned down in Buffalo New York? And an additional 19 beautiful children and two of their teachers were murdered at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas by a teenager filled with uncontrollable rage. Why did the social media company that witnessed the gunman’s death threats not alert law enforcement?

Why did law enforcement officers who were fully trained for a hostage situation not take immediate action but waited 78 minutes before a police officer defied orders, entered the classroom and shot the killer? Law enforcement had all the equipment to neutralize the assassin much sooner.

Did they really have to wait for a janitor to open the door of the classroom? Why were they paralyzed with fear? Many of the trapped 10-year-olds were feverishly calling 911 for help but were greeted by the police dispatcher who dismissed the grave urgency. Precious seconds passed while the gunman satisfied his insatiable lust for killing and another beautiful child breathed no more.

There is a special place in hell for manufacturers of weapons of war and their enablers in state legislators and Congress who put their careers and NRA profits over the lives of America’s most vulnerable school children.

What happened to local swat teams who are fully trained to rapidly neutralize such threats? There must be full accountability for this gross dereliction of duty. The police chief should be fired and the people of Texas must demand the immediate resignation of Governor Greg Abbot. He is an absolute disgrace to society.

The only hero in this horrific saga was a Border Patrol Tactical Unit officer who disregarded orders from local police not to engage, entered the classroom, and shot the gunman.

Colonel Steve McCraw, the director of the Texas Department of Public Safety, must resign. 50-plus extra state troopers waited in vain to engage but were ordered to desist.

Governor Greg Abbott, who’s undergone seven or eight mass shootings in his tenure, has done nothing but give greater access to militarized weaponry. His seminal attempt to fix things in 2019 was to provide greater access to AR-15’s in Texas than it is to buy baby formula. -more-


June Pepper Spray Times

By Grace Underpressure
Sunday June 05, 2022 - 03:48:00 PM

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

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

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

This is a Very Good Deal. Go for it! -more-


People's Park Matters; The National Register of Historic Places Says So

Carol Denney
Sunday May 29, 2022 - 12:18:00 PM

One thing is as clear today as it was in the earliest days of People's Park. People's Park is significant from every conceivable angle. It's as though the park is a historical, architectural, ecological, and cultural prism that insists on being more than a park can possibly be, a significance one hopes is beginning to dawn on the UC regents and the Berkeley City Council.

Even now the park is saturated with the people whose housing and human needs are ignored by the mayor and council's insistence that market rate projects will someday make room for the people dislocated from the low-income housing bulldozed to build them, and that inadequate, temporary shelter in humiliating circumstances is worth trading in one's autonomy and safety. These two chimeras are still waved aloft by local leadership just as clearly as People's Park demonstrates their bankruptcy.

People's Park set Ronald Reagan on his path to his presidency. People's Park is where August Vollmer's famed 1908 effort to professionalize policing met an equally powerful, now nationwide grassroots effort to make policing accountable. People's Park is where the first university accredited, participatory, community-run native plant garden brought together master gardeners, acolytes of Jim Roof, students, hippies, and anyone with a shovel and an interest. -more-


Part Two, Hopkins Dossier: Bike Lanes and Business

Zelda Bronstein
Saturday May 28, 2022 - 04:22:00 PM

The merchants protest

The conceptual redesign of Hopkins that the council approved on May 10 calls for adding two 4-to-5-foot bike lanes plus a 3-foot buffer between the lanes and parking on the south side of Hopkins between Monterey and McGee—in other words, right in front of Magnani Poultry, Gioia Pizza, Monterey Fish, and other popular shops.

At the May 10 council meeting, Paul Johnson, owner of Monterey Fish, said that all the merchants with whom he had spoken were fine with repaving Hopkins but opposed to bike lanes on the street. Calling the plan “a recipe for disaster” that’s “so dangerous, it’s unbelievable,” he recommended putting the lanes on side streets.

Johnson also warned that the construction process would not be “a three-to-four month” undertaking but rather a project that would likely go “right through the holiday season and into the following year. By the time you people get done with this, we’re all going to be out of business.” -more-


ECLECTIC RANT: Archbishop Cordileone bans House Speaker Pelosi on her Pro-Choice Stance

Ralph E. Stone
Saturday May 28, 2022 - 04:54:00 PM

First some caveats: I am not a Roman Catholic; I just voted again for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D.Calif) as my Representative; I support a womans right to an abortion; and I am certainly not a religious scholar. But I do take issue with San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileones directive to local priests to deny House Speaker Pelosi Holy Communion because of her support for abortion rights. -more-


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE: Everything is Broken: 5 Interventions

Bob Burnett
Sunday June 05, 2022 - 03:52:00 PM

The horrific Uvalde massacre, and the Republican non-response, confirms what many of us have thought: the U.S. political process is broken. Not "strained" or "damaged" but rather "rent asunder." America's political process can't be repaired by applying duct tape. It needs reconstructive surgery. -more-


ON MENTAL WELLNESS: Adapting to Change

Jack Bragen
Sunday June 05, 2022 - 02:46:00 PM

People with psychiatric issues have a harder time adapting to changes in life compared to the neuro typical. I have heard this said by a professional who worked with mentally ill people, and I've seen it in myself and in neuro atypical peers. Sometimes when we face a major life challenge, it is enough to bring back severe symptoms to the extent that we could wind up hospitalized again. One example of this is when we must deal with a death in the family. -more-


ON MENTAL WELLNESS: To Get Appropriate Help, We Must Make Our Best Case

Jack Bragen
Sunday May 29, 2022 - 12:24:00 PM

A tangential note:

One of the Big Fatal Mistakes of inexperienced persons who embark on self-employment is to undervalue oneself, and as a result, to undercharge. Customers do not respect this. When the price of something is too low, people invariably perceive that something is wrong with it. This detracts, and it is a reason that many entrepreneurships fail. Yet, there are many types of salesmanship applicable to many situations.

In the case of being a mental health consumer seeking help to move ahead in life, salesmanship may be needed to convince the appropriate people to go along with what you want. You may need to do some convincing that you are a viable person, one who can do very well in life with the necessary help. You may also need to explain exactly what is in your way, and in what ways you need a reasonable level of help. And here, it is also necessary that you don't undervalue yourself. This morning or yesterday morning, I forget which, I was on the phone with one of the many people responsible for my treatment, when I mentioned that I placed a classified advertisement in which I'm trying to offer copyediting services to the public. The mental health professional had a perplexing reaction. So, I said to him, in a chiding tone, that I have a life outside of just being a mental health consumer. -more-


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Saturday May 28, 2022 - 04:37:00 PM

A Memorial Day Column: The United States of Warmerica

The folks at Progressivememes.org have prepared a pictorial statement that does justice to the dark side of Memorial Day. Instead of honoring generations of dead American soldiers, the statement recognizes the victims of the Pentagon's deadly global adventures. The text reads as follows:

I stand with the millions of people murdered by US wars and proxy wars.

Native Americans. Africans (slaves). Vietnam. Cambodia. Honduras. Guatemala. Indonesia. Nicaragua. Iran. Syria. Afghanistan. Iraq. Libya. Yemen. Ukraine,

According to Brown University's Costs of Wars project, US wars since 9/11 have killed over 900,000 people and cost $8 trillion.

The statement includes this footnote:

Senior US diplomats warned that aggressive NATO expansion was unnecessary and would result in a war. The US went ahead with it to provoke and weaken Russia. The RAND Corp. study, "Overextending and Unbalancing Russia," specifically recommended arming Ukraine and warned of Russia's likely military response.

The Mental Illness of Pro-gun Demagogues -more-


A BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S DIARY: Week ending May 29, 2022

Kelly Hammargren
Monday May 30, 2022 - 11:34:00 AM

There were a lot of things wrong in the 1950s when I was growing up, redlining, classism, deep racism, segregation, poverty, little opportunity for Blacks or women, abortion was illegal, gays were closeted, McCarthy was ruining lives with his communist conspiracies, but one thing I never had to worry about was being so pulverized by a weapon of war that DNA would need to be used to identify who belonged to the mass of unrecognizable bloody flesh on the floor in a school classroom. And that is because no one could walk into a gun store and buy an AR-15, an assault weapon or similar gun or guns that hold high capacity magazines. There were not more guns than people. There were not weapons of war sold at your local store. There wasn’t an ad “CONSIDER YOUR MAN CARD REISSUED” to buy an assault weapon. https://www.motherjones.com/media/2012/12/gun-ads-bushmaster-mattel/

The problem is the guns and the answer is not turning teachers into marksmen with AR 15s on their desks or slung over their chests. When I hear the phrase, “they’re coming to take your guns away” all I can think is “I wish.”

In Australia in 1996 there was a firearm massacre in Tasmania in which 35 people died. The Australian government responded and united and did just that, they took the guns away removing semi-automatic and pump-action shotguns and rifles from civilian possession, roughly 650,000 guns and established strict laws on who could possess a gun. https://www.vox.com/2015/8/27/9212725/australia-buyback In 2019 after the massacre in Christchurch, New Zealand, New Zealand banned assault weapons.

Background checks, if even that measure could be passed is not enough. There needs to be a national ban on assault weapons and large capacity magazines and access to ammunition needs to be controlled too. That is what we need to be marching for. -more-


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activists' Calendar, June 5-12

Kelly Hammargren
Sunday June 05, 2022 - 03:26:00 PM

Worth Noting:

Monday morning at 10:30 am the Public Safety Committee will hear the City Manager’s request on Police Equipment. There are no documents attached revealing the content of the request. The entire nature of a request from the City Manager to a policy committee is highly unusual and has never happened previously at any council committee. This bears watching. P&J Commission meets at 7 pm.

Tuesday no meetings so we can finish turning in our ballots by 8 pm.

Wednesday evening all three meetings Homeless Commission, Parks, Recreation and Waterfront Commission and Police Accountability Board start at 7 pm. Homeless Commission will have Q &A on moving homeless to the Roadway Inn and shutting down homeless trailers/vehicles at 701 Harrison. The PAB will receive an update from the BPD on the mass shooting plot.

Thursday morning at 10 am the biennial budget for years 2023 & 2024 planning continues at the Budget Committee. The BART Board meeting starts at 9 am with Item 9.B. on agenda Authorize the Executive Decision Documents for the Ashby and North Berkeley BART developments.

Saturday the Berkeley Neighborhoods Council meets at 10 am.



Sunday at 5 pm is the production of ROE at the Brower Center by the Actors Ensemble of Berkeley. The staged reading of ROE is free (thanks to donations), seating is limited, reservations are highly recommended. A second final reading of ROE is at the Marsh, June 16th at 7 pm.



The June 14th City Council regular 6 pm meeting agenda is posted on the city website and included after the list of city meetings with key items highlighted and underlined.

Roe at The Marsh

Check https://berkeleyca.gov/ for late/short notice postings of city meetings -more-


Echos from Ukraine at Herz on Sunday. June 12, at 2:30

Monday June 06, 2022 - 12:52:00 PM

On Sunday afternoon June 12, from 2:30-3:30, Berkeley residents will have the rare opportunity to hear the music and poetry of Ukrainian culture voiced by some of the Bay Area's best choral singers and most celebrated actors: Peter Callender, Joy Carlin, and Patrick Russell. They will also be joined by the beloved vielle-player Shira Kammen. -more-


Daniil Trifonov & SF Symphony in A New Piano Concerto by Mason Bates

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Sunday May 22, 2022 - 03:50:00 PM

The Piano Concerto by Mason Bates was co-commissioned by the Philadelphia Orchestra and San Francisco Symphony, and it was written specifically for pianist Daniil Trifonov. It premiered with the Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin in January, 202. Currently, it is receiving its West Coast premiere in four performances at Davies Hall, Thursday through Sunday, June 2-5. Ruth Reinhardt, a highly touted young German conductor, is making her San Francisco Symphony debut in these programs. -more-


SF Opera’s Misguided Mozart-Da Ponte Trilogy Ends in Shambles with DON GIOVANNI

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Tuesday June 07, 2022 - 08:05:00 PM

The operatic collaboration of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Lorenzo Da Ponte brought into the world three immensely vital, dynamic works — Le Nozze di Figaro, Don Giovanni, and Così fan tutte. These three amazing operas have continued to grace the world’s operatic stages ever since their creation in the 1780s. Recently — let us say, in the past twenty to thirty years — many new productions have set these operas in periods other than their original settings. Often, as in Peter Sellars’ adventuresome Mozart-Da Ponte trilogy staged at SUNY Purchase in 1987-88, the settings chosen were contemporary ones. Peter Sellars set Le Nozze di Figaro in New York’s Trump Tower, Don Giovanni in a New York City ghetto like the South Bronx or Spanish Harlem, and Così fan tutte in a chrome-lined diner. Of these three Sellars productions, his Don Giovanni was boldly harrowing and magnificent, while his other two Mozart-Da Ponte operas were often gimmicky, though endlessly inventive. -more-


The Berkeley Activists' Calendar, May 29- June 5

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday May 28, 2022 - 04:58:00 PM

Worth Noting – Big Week Ahead after Monday off for Memorial Day Holiday:

Tuesday morning at 11 am the Police Accountability Board (PAB) subcommittee will continue work on police equipment policies and reporting. Tuesday evening is City Council the budget and with more budget referrals on the agenda.

Wednesday evening at 7 pm the Planning Commission will have a presentation on standards for middle size multi-unit housing. These are duplexes to eight plus units in projects up to three stories in height. The size of the packet is misleading as there is a lot to absorb in the 16 pages on middle housing.

Thursday at 6 pm is the special City Council meeting on the Ashby and North Berkeley BART housing projects. Be prepared for a long night as the two opposing sides make their case, the "build it tall 12 stories to twenty stories or more" and the "build it moderate size 7 stories with lots of affordable housing." The Planning Department staff recommended 7 stories as did the Community Advisory Group (CAG).

Bad news on tracking approved projects in the appeal period. Samantha Updegrave, Zoning Officer, Principal Planner wrote the listing of projects in the appeal period can only be found by looking up each project individually through permits online by address or permit number https://berkeleyca.gov/sites/default/files/2022-03/Online-Building-Permits-Guide.pdf

Tuesday, May 31, 2022 -more-