Public Comment

A Berkeley Activist's Diary--week ending June 4

Kelly Hammargren
Monday June 05, 2023 - 01:39:00 PM

In some ways, things feel a little more sane now that the country is not going into default, but the book bans continue as do anti-trans laws, abortion bans, and mass shootings. There are the warnings that global temperature rise will hit 1.5°C at least one year by 2027, the jet stream is loopy, crazy weather is threatening the world food supply and the ocean conveyer has slowed by 30%, according to David Wallace-Wells author of The Uninhabitable Earth.

There is another wake-up call from the scientists that we are in the middle of the 6th mass extinction and the cause is us.

In the book A Wing and A Prayer: The Race to Save Our Vanishing Birds by Anders and Beverly Gyllenhaal, they introduce us to the crisis this way, “Birds are the most visible branch of wildlife found in every corner of the globe and all too easy to take for granted…But a series of advances in the science and technology of bird research leads to a startling discovery. In the past fifty years nearly a third of the population in North America has withered away up against the loss of habitat, shifting climate, and growing hazards of an urban world…” [emphasis added] -more-


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces:SmitherSnippetsQuips&Chips

Gar Smith
Tuesday June 06, 2023 - 11:47:00 AM

Enjoy the "Super Bloom"—It Could Be the Last

The media has been celebrating a "super bloom" of poppies that has cloaked California's slopes and valleys in mile-long robes of orange blossoms. But it's not just poppies that are popping. The overabundance of rain (after a half-decade of crushing drought) has nourished an explosive "super boom" of boughs and blossoms in the state's forests and woodlands. At the same time, all over the city and well into the hills, neighborhood bushes and trees are bursting with foliage—leaves, flowers, and fruit are bigger and more plentiful.

But it won't last.

Statewide drought is certain to return. It is the "New Abnormal." When this year's vegetation feels the heat of a planet that recently passed the critical tipping-point temp of 1.5 degrees Celsius, the abundance of greenery will begin to bake and brown, forming a feedstock for wildfires. And when the next cycle of drought returns, the firestorms will only rage hotter and higher.

So let's enjoy the sights of this what-may-be-a-special year. Photograph the foliage. Run barefoot through the ankle-high grass. Plant vegetable gardens. Take a good look, because this may be the last season that flaunts the supercharged beauty of Mother Nature at her best. This could be a fitting time to recall a haunting dirge that was written long before humanity woke up to the calamity of climate change: -more-


ON MENTAL WELLNESS: Psychiatric Illness and Substance Abuse: Similarities and Differences

Jack Bragen
Monday June 05, 2023 - 02:28:00 PM

In 1988 and 89, I made a meagre living working for a pizza shop. After my first month, the owner confronted me that I appeared "on drugs", and his manner was harsh and accusatory. At that point I had to "come out" and explain that I am schizophrenic and must take psych meds. If I remember right, he may have demanded a doctor's note to prove this. He did not believe a mentally ill person was a bad person, but he felt strongly about not employing someone addicted to street drugs. -more-


Release Julian Assange

Jagjit Singh
Tuesday June 06, 2023 - 12:15:00 PM

Former British Labor leader Jeremy Corbyn, Pentagon Papers whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg and famed linguist and dissident Noam Chomsky joined others earlier this year calling on President Biden to drop charges against Julian Assange. The WikiLeaks founder has been languishing for over four years in the harsh Belmarsh prison in London while appealing extradition to the United States. -more-


Abuse by Clergy

Ralph E. Stone
Tuesday June 06, 2023 - 12:18:00 PM

On May 23, 2023, the Illinois Attorney General issued a report that 1,997 children in Illinois were sexually abused by 451 Catholic priests as well as religious brothers, a pattern of the church failing to support survivors, ignoring or covering up reports of abuse and the church revictimizing survivors who came forward. This troubling report follows similar reports of sexual abuse by clergy of the Archdiocese of Baltimore; and a grand jury report of child sexual abuse and church coverup in six of the eight parishes in Pennsylvania. -more-


Editorial

Choosing the Chief Isn't
Berkeley Voters' Only Gripe

Becky O'Malley
Monday May 15, 2023 - 04:49:00 PM

Even though I watched the Berkeley City Council’s last meeting on Zoom , I appreciate Councilmember Kate Harrison’s post-session explanatory letter to her constituents and supporters, which she has given the Planet permission to reprint here. It was about an issue I hadn’t really been following very well, and as I watched I found it truly hard to believe what I was seeing.

In her letter, Councilmember Harrison graciously proffers some possible explanations for the City Manager’s proposal that the acting chief, Jennifer Louis, be summarily promoted, less than two months before the conclusion of an outside investigation into charges of police misconduct by Louis and others. The manager's request had been endorsed by a council majority, but Harrison declined to vote for it, and explained why.

Let’s get this straight: I have had approximately no opinion on Acting Chief Louis herself. Her statements on her own behalf on Tuesday were overloaded with bureaucratese, but otherwise her qualifications seemed appropriate on paper.

However, last fall there was a series of expose-type articles in the Los Angeles Times and elsewhere regarding a couple of questionable incidents in her record. One, a sexual harassment charge against her from another woman on the Berkeley police force, was internally investigated and has been dismissed.

The other involved Louis only tangentially: misbehavior by a group of officers in a special bicycle unit: racist texting, use of impermissible quotas and other offenses. Louis’s defenders point out that she was not chief at that time and had no interaction with the accused officers.

The first time the City Manager tried to get council approval for promoting Louis to the regular chief appointment, the resulting uproar caused her to walk back that recommendation. In November she told the council she would not ask the council again to approve Louis’s appointment before getting an outside consultant to investigate the charges. But she didn’t do what she promised.

Instead, she persuaded the council’s agenda committee to add confirmation of Jennifer Louis to last Tuesday’s consent calendar. This is the part of the agenda is where councilmembers are asked to unanimously approve non-controversial items without debate.

What? There is no way that a decision which is opposed by the League of Women Voters, the ACLU and the NAACP belongs on the consent calendar. Even worse, a decision about the Berkeley Police Department which is questioned by the city’s newly chosen Police Accountability Board should never be brought to the council before the PAB completes its duties, as explained in this issue by Councilmember Harrison. At last Tuesday’s meeting Councilmember Ben Bartlett did an excellent job of explaining why as a Black man he must insist that charges like those brought against the bicycle unit be treated with the utmost seriousness, so the investigations by the outside consultants and the PAB should be completed before a chief is confirmed.

While I appreciate the analyses articulated at the meeting by the two councilmembers who refused to vote to confirm Louis, I think they didn’t really get to the root of the problem. What I see is a deeper-seated management question. Unless I’ve missed something, I think that City Manager Dee Williams-Ridley really dropped the ball on this one in a number of ways.

She (and the councilmembers who voted to endorse her motion to confirm Louis) did not deal in good faith with the impressive array of community members who relied on her November statement that she’d wait until the investigations were complete before bringing the appointment back to the council. After this, how can any of us (and I include myself here) rely on her promises on other matters?

Besides the question of the Manager’s credibility, there’s an important practical matter. As a hypothetical, consider that if further research turns up anything questionable in the two situations under study, there could be reasons that the city would want to terminate the chief’s employment.

It’s a lot more difficult and expensive to fire a confirmed employee than it is to decline to promote an acting one. As it should be. Just saying.

Anyone who’s been in a management position with HR responsibilities knows that. In such situations, there’s usually a termination payment sum agreed on, and this promotion would inevitably result in increased cost to the city if that happens.

Also, if said employee is the best that can be found after a real national search, there’s a good chance that the search was never necessary or that it was inadequate. It’s puzzling that the L.A. Times was able to turn up these old charges, though of course it seems that Williams-Ridley knew about them all along but chose not to mention them to the electeds.

The fact that Jennifer Louis has been enthusiastically endorsed by the police officers’ union is not necessarily a plus.

According to the L.A. Times,

“The Berkeley Police Department was in turmoil … following the leak of text messages that allegedly show the president of the police officers’ union making racially charged remarks and calling for arrest quotas.

“The growing scandal resulted in the union president, Sgt. Darren Kacalek, being placed on administrative leave … city officials confirmed. He also stepped down from his position as union head..”

Berkeley’s city councilmembers should take a look at Antioch, where the police union is deep inside a scandal over racist texting. They should also take a hard look at the City Manager’s role in this debacle.

Seven out of nine of them voted to approve the Louis promotion. Five of the seven gushed over her. Two (Arreguin and Hahn) expressed reservations, but voted yes after counting the house. Probably the most noteworthy number in this whole analysis is the number of councilmembers reportedly angling for higher office: Arreguin for state senate, and for Berkeley mayor Hahn and Robinson.

Perhaps all these councilmembers think that backing Jennifer Louis will garner votes from what used to be called Berkeley’s “moderate” faction if they appear to be pro-police and anti-crime, but I doubt if they’re right. For other reasons, Wiliams-Ridley and Arreguin just don’t have a lot of fans in the Hills, and most Hills-dwellers have never heard of Robinson, who needed only a few hundred votes in the last election to win unopposed in his phony gerrymandered “student” district, where most of the eligibles don’t bother to vote in local races.

Hill folk, and also many of the rest of us, do have a number of major beefs with Berkeley’s city management, both elected and employed, however.

Current number one is the catastrophic Hopkins Street rerouting scheme in North Berkeley, now probably sunk, hopefully without trace. Whose idea was that? -more-


The Editor's Back Fence

Slow Posting This Week

Monday June 05, 2023 - 02:26:00 PM

Because the editor broke her current glasses, and Kaiser will take a week and a half to replace them, posting of new articles using her older glasses will take longer than usual. I'm sorry--please be patient and keep checking. -more-


Arts & Events

A New Production of MADAMA BUTTERFLY, And the Ugly American Gets Uglier

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Tuesday June 06, 2023 - 12:07:00 PM

Under the reign of Matthew Shilvock as General Director of San Francisco Opera, our local company has shown a disturbing tendency to present off-putting, highly meddlesome productions of opera’s classic repertory. A notable case in point was SF Opera’s multi-year project of mounting all three Mozart and Da Ponte operas in new, woefully misbegotten stagings by Canadian director Michael Cavanaugh. Setting these three great operas in a single American house over a period ranging from just after the American Revolution for his 2019 Le Nozze di Figaro, then setting in the 1930s his 2021 Così fan tutte, and setting In a vague future of American decline and decay his 2022 Don Giovanni, Michael Cavanaugh displayed many misguided, indeed, woefully wrong-headed measures in staging these Mozart and Da Ponte classics. Now San Francisco Opera presents a drastically meddlesome staging by Amon Miyamoto of Giacomo Puccini’s Madama Butterfly, the opening night performance of which I attended on Saturday, June 3. -more-


Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, June 4-10

Monday June 05, 2023 - 02:08:00 PM

Worth Noting:

The vote by City Council on the Bird Safe Ordinance is Tuesday, June 6 at the 6 pm regular City Council meeting. Register your opinion in Berkeley Considers and send an email by Monday. The Toolkit by Erin Diehm contains information and links. -more-


Back Stories

Opinion

The Editor's Back Fence

Slow Posting This Week 06-05-2023

Public Comment

A Berkeley Activist's Diary--week ending June 4 Kelly Hammargren 06-05-2023

SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces:SmitherSnippetsQuips&Chips Gar Smith 06-06-2023

ON MENTAL WELLNESS: Psychiatric Illness and Substance Abuse: Similarities and Differences Jack Bragen 06-05-2023

Release Julian Assange Jagjit Singh 06-06-2023

Abuse by Clergy Ralph E. Stone 06-06-2023

Arts & Events

A New Production of MADAMA BUTTERFLY, And the Ugly American Gets Uglier Reviewed by James Roy MacBean 06-06-2023

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, June 4-10 06-05-2023