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Has Berkeley Forgotten the Legacy of Catherine Bauer?

Harvey Smith
Thursday January 28, 2021 - 04:42:00 PM

That the Bay Area and the nation are in the midst of a housing crisis is undeniable. Pre-coronavirus, the National Alliance to End Homelessness reported that more than a half million people were without shelter on any given night. Public officials seem to be at a loss to help the many thousands now sleeping in our parks and city streets.

This was not always the case. In his “Second Bill of Rights” speech in 1944, President Franklin Roosevelt articulated that every citizen has the right to employment, education, housing and medical care. These values took a hard right turn with the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980. His trickle-down, tax cuts for the rich philosophy has colored policy since that time, no matter if there was a Republican or Democrat in the White House.

Real estate investors recognize the Bay Area as a target of opportunity by erecting profitable market rate housing, in turn displacing residents who cannot afford ever higher rents and mortgages. Proposals to deal with the homeless are at best very temporary and inadequate measures like crowded shelters, a few tent cities, or a handful of tiny houses, or at worst coercive measures to break up and displace encampments.

However, the problem of housing is not insolvable. Just as the management of the coronavirus crisis should not be handled by politicians and corporations, but rather public health scientists and physicians, likewise the housing crisis should be managed by those with public housing expertise and sound, well-funded public policy. 

Very few recognize the names of Catherine Bauer, Garrett Eckbo, Vernon DeMars or Burton Cairns – all were builders and advocates of affordable public housing, all connected with UC Berkeley. Collectively they were referred to as “housers” – a term that since World War II is not part of our vocabulary and seemingly beyond our ability to even conceive. They were committed to raising the quality of urban life through improving availability of shelter for low-income families. 

Catherine Bauer’s major written work was Modern Housing, which was based on research done in Europe on post-World War I government supported housing projects. As an activist she worked on establishing public housing legislation during the New Deal and was involved with regional planning. She advocated for racially integrated housing. 

Garrett Eckbo worked for the Farm Security Administration (FSA) during the New Deal to design housing for migrant agricultural workers. Post-war, he was involved in designing an integrated cooperative housing project in Palo Alto that eventually was scuttled because the co-op refused to have restrictive racial covenants. 

Vernon DeMars worked with Garrett Eckbo on FSA projects that housed migrant agricultural workers, wartime housing projects for defense workers, and after the war on public housing in Richmond. He collaborated with Burton Cairns whose life ended prematurely in an automobile crash. 

Today building more market rate housing is touted as the solution for the housing crisis, yet it comes with little real support for affordable housing. The YIMBY “movement” has become the visible voice of Reaganomics in housing. These advocates of building anywhere and everywhere are lavishly funded by the same for-profit developers and landlords that fight rent control.  

Bauer stated back in 1940, “In actual practice, there is very little direct relation between the supply of dwelling available for the upper-income groups and those available at low rents. An all too frequent real estate phenomenon is so-called ‘overbuilding’ at the top (i.e., a large number of vacancies in the high-priced class) side by side in the same community with a severe quantitative shortage, few or no vacancies and extreme doubling up, at the bottom.” Sound familiar? 

UCB’s recent symbolic gesture of renaming Wurster Hall as Bauer Wurster Hall is welcome but a poor substitute for embracing the policies that Bauer championed. 

UC Berkeley, with support from Berkeley’s mayor and a few council members, plans to build housing on People’s Park, which will destroy irreplaceable open space – a bad idea made worse by the increase in urban-wildland fires and the ever present danger of earthquakes. Eliminating a natural sanctuary in an extremely crowded neighborhood is regretfully shortsighted, as is the destruction of a historical and cultural legacy. UC Berkeley also plans to destroy three historic buildings, including a rent-controlled apartment building, on another development site. These projects directly contradict the enlightened ideas of its past “houser” faculty members. 

Clearly cities can only work around the fringe of the homeless problem; they cannot solve it because it is a regional and national issue, which calls for redistributive policies from state and national government based on progressive taxation. The super-wealthy and mega-corporations need to pay those taxes. 

A hard left turn in public policy, recognizing housing is tied to the other rights FDR articulated, is unquestionably needed. Eliminating homelessness will only come with equity for all in employment, health care, education and housing. Intelligent leadership at the top coupled with sustained community activism can turn around the social disruption that plagues our country. 


Harvey Smith is author of Berkeley and the New Deal and a board member of the People’s Park Historic District Advocacy Group. 

 

 

 

 

 


LETTER FROM SANTA CRUZ: The City Manager's Homeless Folly

Chris Krohn
Tuesday January 26, 2021 - 04:25:00 PM

"...the CDC Guidelines before this Court are clear and specific: if there is no alternative housing available, leave the encampments to remain where they are because clearing encampments may increase the potential for infectious disease spread." (S.J. Federal Magistrate Susan Van Keulan)

On January 20th, Federal Magistrate Susan Van Keulan issued a ruling that allows homeless people to inhabit a public park near downtown Santa Cruz because "the length of the Covid-19 pandemic is unknown." In the past, City Manager Martin Bernal has repeatedly directed the police department to remove houseless people, forcibly when necessary, from areas where encampments have taken root. Both the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Santa Cruz County Health Director recommend not moving large numbers of homeless people during a pandemic. Their opinions are backed presumably by good science, but City Manager Bernal, armed with master's degree from the LBJ School of Public Affairs and a Stanford BA, presumes to know better. 

News Flash: It is hardly news that there is a housing crisis in Santa Cruz linked to a homeless crisis and located inside of a Covid-19 crisis. Yes, these three issues are related, and the Santa Cruz city bureaucracy led by Bernal seems to ignore the multiple calamities playing out not so harmoniously in his city. 

And I do mean his city. Bernal, like many city managers up and down the state of California, has been given extraordinary "executive" powers to go beyond the city council and dictate public policy. Until now. 

This city manager met his match in federal court on Jan. 20th. Even though he knows about the CDC recommendations, and he was alerted on Twitter by county health director, Gail Newel, both suggesting it’s unwise to move large numbers of campers during a pandemic for the sake of their own health and that of the greater community, Bernal moved forward anyway and ordered the forcible removal of campers in San Lorenzo Park. 

His "executive order" was promulgated on Dec. 17th and was to be carried out over a national holiday that is often depicted by a homeless family, a couple and their infant son, searching for shelter as they entered the city of Nazareth on a cold, clear night more than a millennium ago. 

On Dec. 28th, a confrontation occurred in San Lorenzo Park between police, campers, and community activists. Thank goodness cooler heads prevailed and the police stood down. 

On Dec. 30th, the Santa Cruz Homeless Union, partnering with Food Not Bombs, filed a petition for an emergency temporary restraining order (TRO), which was granted by US Magistrate Judge Susan Van Keulen. 

On Jan. 6th she heard arguments from assistant city attorney Cassie Bronson and Homeless Union counsel, Anthony Prince, and on Jan. 20th, she issued her decision. Because of Covid-19 concerns among a vulnerable population, the judge ruled that campers, currently numbering well over 100 and at one point near 200 (many having left fearing further police attacks) can stay in the park. 

The ruling represents a decisive victory for campers and homeless rights advocates. It is also a stunning blow to a politically tone deaf city bureaucracy. 

During the Jan. 6th court session (available on Zoom) what became most clear was the depth of the city's lack of sensitivity. Attorneys representing the city of Santa Cruz not only sought to evade science in their presentation to the court, they also showed themselves to be callous and disrespectful of a growing economically and housing-burdened population. Anyone watching the proceedings would likely squirm and might reconsider their own city residency. The judge certainly wasn't impressed. 

Most Santa Cruzans are simply not as heartless as was portrayed at the hearing by lawyers representing their city. Most residents I know want more resources channeled to assist those experiencing homelessness. They do not want them to be just moved around like cheap plastic chess pieces. 

Of course, in normal times, many might agree that San Lorenzo Park, the river levee, and the Hwy 1/9 intersection are not places where people should be camping. Not only are these spots not designed for it, camping interferes with other uses, notably recreation, sitting, strolling, jogging, or bird watching. 

But these are not normal times. Bernal is now in the role of the heartless banker, Mr. Potts, in the timeless movie, It's a Wonderful Life.  

What’s even more disheartening is the city manager's willingness to upend an encampment and put people at risk of getting Covid-19 in order to score political points with the likes of—Who? The anti-homeless and anti-progressive "Take Back Santa Cruz" organization? The Santa Cruz Police Department? The busy-body politically active trolls on Next Door? It feels a bit like a local TrumpLand where the city manager and city council blunder and must get beaten in court to do the right thing for the vulnerable. 

The city of Santa Cruz has yet to identify any available housing, so up to 500 people spend their nights in a patchwork of shelters while hundreds more are outside in tents. There has to be an alternative, but the Santa Cruz bureaucracy isn't offering any. 

The rains are bringing new evacuations. Forcing campers to simply move on is a recipe for disease spread and social unrest, and the judge saw it that way, too. Judge Van Keulen concluded: 

"The situation is fluid and the length of the COVID-19 pandemic is unknown. However, the administration of vaccines is now underway. As the COVID-19 crisis recedes, the preliminary injunction will need to be revisited." 

The parties are due back in court on March 9th. 


The American Muddle: Notes from a Podcast

Gar Smith
Sunday January 24, 2021 - 03:05:00 PM

Several weeks ago, I was invited to participate in my first podcast—an event hosted by World BEYOND War. WBW is a global organization devoted to promoting peaceful alternatives to local and geopolitical conflicts. WBW's concerns have been voiced by none other than Martin Sheen, who appears in a number of WBW videos. Here's one example: 

Martin Sheen Talks to World Beyond War 

 

The participants (myself included) were all members of the WBW board. They included: Donnal Walter (Arkansas), Odile Hugonot Haber (Michigan), John Reuwer (Vermont), Alice Slater (New York) and our host, Marc Eliot Stein. We were invited to discourse on matters including "Trumpism, cultural divides, the Green New Deal, deeper issues and hopeful solutions."

The topic was an assessment of the current and imminent state of the USA. (You can listen to the podcast here.) 

There were five large topic areas on the discussion list but, as it turned out, the panel generated so many thoughts and ideas that we never got past the second question in the hour-long session. 

Since I put a good amount of time reflecting on responses to the five major themes, I'd like to put these thoughts on record. With your kind forbearance, here are my talking points from WBW's "This Is America" podcast: 

Episode 20: This Is America 

By way of introduction, I'm a long-time activist and journalist based in Berkeley, California. I'm the founding editor of Earth Island Journal and a co-founder of Environmentalists Against War, a global coalition of more than 100 peace organizations founded in 2003. 

In 1964, I was one of the 800 students arrested during the Free Speech Movement sit-in sit-in at the University of California. The next year, I stood in front of the first troop train to come through Berkeley, carrying soldiers to Washington's Vietnam War. 

The first train barreled through without stopping as protesters (and police) jumped from the tracks. Other trains followed, but each time a train appeared, the size of the protests continued to increase until, after the fourth attempt, the Pentagon was forced to surrender. 

We literally derailed part of the War Machine. 

• • • 

I became a member of the World BEYOND War board because WBW combines the tools of action, witness, and problem-solving—a powerful triad that, as I know from personal experience, actually works. 

• • • 

Over centuries, armies large and small have demonstrated that war doesn't work. This leads to the question: "If war doesn't work, why do we keep employing it?" 

World BEYOND War offers a different path—a Global Security System: An Alternative to War built on creating "cultures of peace" and nonviolent conflict management. 

• • • 

What is the historical significance of our current constitutional crisis? Is USA becoming a failed state?  

The crisis is institutional. We are not a real democracy. Five of 45 presidents have assumed power without winning the popular vote. The Electoral College is an anti-democratic institution. We need to abolish the college and honor the national popular vote. It doesn't take a Constitution Amendment. Sixteen states and the District of Colombia have already joined the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact. The NPV would become active once enough states have joined to consolidate 270 state electors. 

• • • 

Even before the pandemic struck, the US had become a Failed State. Donald Trump rode to power by leveraging the Failed State meme and promising to "Make America Great Again." Instead, he's made America Hate Again. 

• • • 

In Trump's world, things are either "tremendous" or "disgraceful." But these extremist terms are never defined. 

Let's try a definition. The US makes a claim to "Exceptionalism"—to being "the one, indispensible country." Many people in the world would agree that the US is exceptional—exceptionally dangerous, murderous, greedy, imperialistic, and heartless. 

• • • 

Consider some examples of American exceptionalism: Among industrialized nations, we have the greatest income inequality, highest poverty rate, greatest number of children in poverty, lowest social mobility, highest healthcare costs, highest obesity rates, highest dependence on anti-depressant drugs, abiding gender and racial inequality, largest number of jailed prisoners, epidemic gun violence, soaring murder rates, and highest rate of military spending. 

• • • 

America's wealth is a myth, maintained by the printing presses of the Federal Reserve. In FY 2020, the federal deficit topped $1 trillion, compared with $600 billion during President Obama’s last year in office. 

• • • 

Are the Black Lives Matter movement or the climate change movement or the antiwar movements in the USA making a positive difference? 

Both movements have raised an abundance of what the late John Lewis called "good trouble." 

• • • 

The Environmental Movement has been more successful in blocking harmful laws and passing progressive legislation. In part, this is because the environment is an issue that concerns everyone—even the people who profit off climate-changing pollution. 

• • • 

The racial issue is, unavoidably, more divisive, and appeals to some peoples' worst instincts in the name of White Supremacy. 

White Supremacy was responsible for the genocide and removal of Native Americans and continues to feed the historic oppression of slavery and persistent racism against people of color, from California's Chinese Exclusion Act to Donald Trump's Muslim Ban, to the separation of hundreds of immigrant families detained at our borders. 

• • • 

Trump has used the Black Lives protests to divide the country. Instead of addressing the root causes of the protests—institutional racism and police brutality —he has resorted to calling the protesters—and their Democratic and progressive supporters—"socialists," "communists," "terrorists," "anarchists," and "rioters," out to "destroy America." He has openly called on his armed supporters to "stand by" and prepare to "Liberate" Michigan, Minnesota, and Virginia—and other states governed by Democrats. 

• • • 

Is there a reasonable hope that a Biden/Harris administration with Anthony Blinken as Secretary of State will make good decisions? 

I like the fact that Tony Blinken did a Sesame Street sketch with Grover. I think it's cool that he plays guitar and sings in a band that performs classics like "Hoochi Coochi Man." But Blinken's history shows him to be a member of the warmonger tribe. He supported the destruction of Libya, the invasion of Iraq, the US-backed arming of Saudi Arabia, and the Saudi's horrific and continuing war in Yemen. The Quincy Institute has described Blinken as being "more of an interventionist" than either Barack Obama or Joe Biden. 

• • • 

We need a Secretary of Defense who will compel the Pentagon to submit a credible audit—after decades of wasteful, unaudited spending. We need leaders who will cut the Pentagon's budget and use the savings to fund human needs not human greed. Year after year, the military routinely burns through more than half of the country's discretionary budget. Half of the Pentagon's massive budget flows directly into the pockets of corporate war contractors. We need leaders who will stand up to the Military-Industrial complex. And talk about closing some of the 800 military bases we have built around the world—including eleven active bases and "military points" inside Syria! 

• • • 

Over our entire history, there have only been 16 years during which the US has not been actively waging wars against people in other countries. There are 193 members of the United Nations. Over the past two centuries, the US has attacked, invaded, policed, overthrown or occupied 62 of them. If the military's goal was to "spread freedom and democracy" the most democratic countries on Earth would be Panama and Colombia, both of which have been invaded by US troops more than nine times each. 

• • • 

Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke the truth when he called the US the world's "greatest purveyor of violence." In 2019, Jimmy Carter responded to Donald Trump's anti-China rants by pointing out that the US has been "the most warlike nation in the history of the world. . . . Since 1979, do you know how many times China has been at war with anybody? None. And we have stayed at war." 

• • • 

Is it reasonable to hope that Biden might exercise better judgment than to rely on former staffers who promoted the concept of the US as the "World's Policeman"? Well, it's going to take more than hope. It will take a sustained howl of protest from constituent Democrats and Green Deal progressives to promote candidates who will break from the party's corporate business-as-usual players and create some breathing room for candidates who will hold big business and the War Machine to account. 

• • • 

Leaving Washington DC politics aside, what is going on all over the USA? Tell us what you observe in your own region, and among your own friends and relatives. 

My home state, California, is best known for its scenery and its leading-edge industries—from Hollywood to Silicon Valley—so it may come as a surprise to learn that California is also one of the world’s most militarized states. California hosts 32 major military bases with facilities covering nearly 6,000 square miles.  

• • • 

We host nearly eight percent of the country’s 420 domestic military bases. One base, the China Lake Naval Air Weapons Station, occupies more than 1.1 million acres—a stretch of land larger than the entire state of Rhode Island. 

• • • 

California is home to nearly 190,000 active duty and reserve troops—the largest concentration in the country. California is also home to more than 30,000 weapons contractors including Lockheed-Martin, Northrop-Grumman, Raytheon, and General Dynamics. 

• • • 

According to the Governor's Military Council (yes, there really is such a thing), in 2018, the Pentagon, Homeland Security, and the Department of Veterans Affairs accounted for nearly 800,000 in-state jobs and contributed $167 billion to the State's economy. 

So it looks like the Golden State could be called the Olive Drab State. 

• • • 

Impediments to a Peaceful Society 

If we want to demilitarize our culture we've got to start demilitarizing our vocabulary. 

Every week I get messages from anti-war groups that include phrases like:
"We're fighting for you." "We're spearheading the charge for nonviolence." "We're beating-back the forces of imperialism." 

We talk about high-caliber efforts on the battlefield of ideas to create media bombshells that are right on target. We salute straight-shooters who don't go off half-cocked but know how to target an audience and aim for total victory while mounting a resistance that rolls out the heavy artillery to blast holes in the opposition's strategy. 

• • • 

Here's another cultural impediment to sustained organizing: For generations, American cinema has promoted stories of combat and conflict—from soldiers to Superheros—and trained us to believe that, no matter how bleak the situation, there's no need to get up off the sofa and become an agent of change. It will all work out somehow thanks to the miracle of the "Hollywood ending." 

• • • 

The US economy is fueled by addictions. Capitalism has become an exercise in Addictionomics, with companies shamelessly profiting off of "habit-forming" products designed to enshrine the consumption of alcohol, tobacco, caffeine, sugar, and salt. 

• • • 

Television and social media keep human brains entrained by glowing screens, feed-back loops, visual eye-candy, addictive click-bait and doomscrolling. 

• • • 

The corporate medical establishment benefits from the illnesses and diseases caused by addictions—with "health maintenance" bringing in more money than "disease prevention." 

What solutions can we offer? 

I think it's fair to say that the fate of our country—and the fate or our entire planet—rides on the outcome of two Senate races in Georgia. 

If Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock win the seats now held by strident Trumpists Perdue and Loeffler, it could spell an end to GOP leader Mitch McConnell's destructive rule as "the Grim Reaper" of progressive legislation. 

If the two Democrats win, the Senate would be evenly divided and legislation involving the environment, the economy, health and foreign policy would be decided by Kamala Harris' tie-breaking Vice-presidential vote. [Note: Major legislation would require a 60-vote majority, necessitating a significant bipartisan effort.] 

If the Senate retains a Republican majority—by even the smallest of margins—the expressed goals of the Biden-Harris ticket and the hopes of the Berniecrats and the Green New Dealers will be forever dashed—along with any hopes to save the planet from war, pestilence, plague, hunger, annihilating global wars, and extreme, life-extinguishing climate change. 

• • • 

Ordinary Americans need to pay more attention to the world outside our borders. 

We should be prepared to answer the question painted on a banner held by survivors of a US bombing in the Middle East: "America! Ask why you are hated!" 

• • • 

We should be joining the European Union in condemning the ongoing political assassination of Iranian scientists. 

• • • 

We need to speak out in defense of peace treaties that Trump has abrogated—including the Iran Nuclear Deal, the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces Treaty, and the US-Russia Open Skies Treaty. 

• • • 

As Sharon Tennison of the Center for Citizen Initiatives recently observed: 

"Although we American citizens pay little attention to treaties, Russian citizens do. I remember when Ambassador Matlock stood in Washington, DC in 2016 and said, “Nothing will change unless many American citizens themselves get involved" (and push Congress and policymakers to act differently). So far this hasn’t happened." 

• • • 

America First! is really just another way of saying "Me First!" In addition to #MeToo we have to deal with #MeFirst and #MeOnly. We see this being played out whenever people gather in crowds to party without facemasks, insisting that it is their Trump-given right to do so. 

Thanks to Trump, we are no longer the United States. We have become the Divided States of America. Instead of USA! USA! Our chant should be DSA! DSA! Hopefully, a healing time awaits us. 

• • • 

We live inside a myth: The not-to-be-questioned belief that America is a uniquely god-blessed guardian of global freedom. 

We are told that, like our country, we are an exceptional people and it is our responsibility and duty to spread freedom and democracy around the globe. 

• • • 

The historical and present truth is the US has generally acted as a greedy and brutal empire. We are not a Popular Democracy. We are what I would call a Corporate Militocracy. 


Opinion

Editorials

Avante Popolo!

Becky O'Malley
Monday January 25, 2021 - 04:56:00 PM

The best inauguration comment I’ve heard so far was a stand-up comedian guesting on NPR.

“I fell asleep during the President’s speech” she said. “That’s the first really relaxing sleep I’ve had for months.”

She’s not the only one of us who desperately hopes to be bored by the Biden administration. Sadly, he’s got so many hard-to-swallow items left on his plate that boredom might not be an option.

The other hot post-inauguration topic is tears shed watching the guard change: “When did you cry?” Even the sainted Paul Krugman owned up to it, saying “ I know I wasn't alone in suddenly and unexpectedly finding myself tearing up. “

Me, it was just as Kamala was sworn in. A number of commenters have nodded approvingly at her purplish suit (on my screen purple tending toward blue). They, especially the young, white and male ones, have been guessing that it was meant to symbolize that unity between the red team and the blue team which is at the top of Joe Biden’s fantasy wish list, but those of us who can remember all the way back to 1970 have a different take.

The first documented assignment of red to Republicans and blue to Democrats, per Wikipedia, was by NBC in 1986. Even at the time that choice seemed odd to my cohort. We remember that The Left, especially the scary left of socialism and communism, was previously called The Reds, and still is in many places. There’s even a stirring song about The Red Flag still sung, in Italy at least, Bandiera Rossa: 

 

Way back in 1970, when the left still ruled the red, purple had another meaning. As Kamala Harris, one of the women who dressed in purple for the inauguration, has said, purple was Shirley Chisholm’s color. Congresswoman Chisholm was the first woman of color to seek the nomination of a major party and the first Black woman elected to U.S. Congress. 

Now almost a half-century later there are still some of us around who were part of the Chisholm campaign who were particularly moved by Harris’s achievement. One of us, Berkeley’s Congresswoman Barbara Lee, who ran the California campaign, wore a string of Shirley Chisholm’s pearls, a gift from her family, to the inauguration. Our Michigan campaign, almost all women, was proud of getting, what was it, 5% of the vote in the 1970 Michigan Democratic primary. The winning nominee, George McGovern, was a lot less colorful in all ways than Ms. Chisholm, and he didn’t do very well as it turned out. 

It’s only taken a half-century since then for a woman of color to get half-way to the top. Perhaps Vice-President Harris will be able to speed the path for those who follow. 

The other teary moment for many was Amanda Gorman’s splendid poetry reading. She’s a poised young woman of 22, but from my advanced age she still looks like the girl she recently was. Her piece reminded me of the role young African Americans have played in recent decades of bringing poetry back into the center of life. Gorman’s poem was within the late 20th century free verse tradition, but it pleased the ear because it also reintegrated older rhetorical devices like alliteration, assonance and rhyme which now survive best in vernacular contexts with rap and other spoken word art forms. 

Seeing and hearing her reminded me of another campaign, one I worked on in the 60s, a doomed effort to elect a primary candidate who opposed the Vietnam War and supported civil rights. He lost, of course, because he was prematurely right, but it was a noble effort. 

At the time we lived in a historically Black neighborhood, in a period when the hottest local controversy was whether to pass an ordinance prohibiting racial discrimination in housing. Our block had lots of lively kids on it, particularly a bunch of little girls who spent their free time, in this pre-video-game era, playing in the street. 

They got wind of the campaign we were working on when we put up posters advertising an upcoming rally with our candidate, and they came to me with a proposal. They thought that the best way to attract a crowd was with performance, and they showed me how they could provide it. 

They were six girls, 11 or 12 years old. They’d taken their traditional jump rope chants (do girls still jump rope?) and written a whole new set of well-rhymed political verses complete with movement and a bit of hand jive which they proposed as the warm-up act at the rally. 

Of course I accepted immediately, and as they and I suspected, they were a tremendous hit. They were so good, in fact, that the candidate employed them for subsequent rallies, though they were not able to win the election for him in the end. 

But a decade or three later, when topical rap and its cousins became popular forms of what might be called social entertainment, I remembered that my groovy girls had pioneered the form. This week, seeing Amanda Gorman reminded me that what’s old can be new again, and is pleasing because it is so. 

Shirley Chisholm’s presidential campaign wasn’t successful, and yet it was. It was an inspiration for many effective women who worked for Shirley like Barbara Lee, and also for younger women like Kamala Harris who came later. 

Amanda Gorman is just a couple of years younger than I was when I worked on those varied campaigns with the general goal of saving the world. Oddly enough, the world still needs saving, and perhaps always will. That’s why I’m happy to be reminded that there are still young people like her out there who are working on it, and to remember that in the end it's not the triumph of the red flag or the blue one which counts, but the hope and enthusiasm that such people bring to the ongoing task which will keep the earth turning. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Public Comment

Trump the Pardoner

Jagjit Singh
Sunday January 24, 2021 - 03:49:00 PM

While many poor innocent African Americans (see GEORGIA INNOCENT PROJECT) languish in America’s dark dungeons while others serve long jail sentences for minor infractions of the law, the former (the word sounds delicious) President Trump has granted pardons to rich felons, are another example of the shameless influence-peddling on his watch. Predictably, Trump bypassed the vetting and approval process of the Justice Department. This monumental abuse of power screams for Congressional action.

Trump’s swamp was overflowing with notable felons Roger Stone, Paul Manafort, Michael Flynn, , ,but with a stroke of the pen he freed them from the clutches of the law, free to continue their sordid activities. One of the most egregious miscreants was former Trump strategist, Steve Bannon, indicted for fraud as part of crowdfunding campaign to build the border wall. But much to the dismay of his gullible donors Bannon used the stolen money to purchase a million-dollar yacht. Who said crime doesn’t pay?

What do the pardon beneficiaries have in common, - intimate knowledge of Trump’s political and business activities which could exacerbate Trump’s legal problems.

Selling indulgences (forgiving sins for donations) used to be common practice in the Roman Catholic Church. Modern day preachers in megachurches whip up emotions of guilt and redemption to exact donations from their congregations.

Monetizing pardons is nothing new. In Chaucer's "Pardoner’s Tale" the pardoner has hair “yellow as wax” as well as false credentials, and derives great pleasure in swindling his victims.


The Soil in People's Park

Carol Denney
Sunday January 24, 2021 - 03:38:00 PM

The university fenced off part of People's Park this week to "test the soil", or so they say, for their proposed sixteen stories of concrete. It's hard not to wonder what lab they will use that can tell them that the soil is Ohlone land. That it's full of the blood of those who fought for it and the tears of those who mourned them. That the patch of asphalt in the west end was left there deliberately to highlight its surrounding transformation into a garden worked by generations of hearts and hands.

What lab will tell them that the soil is laden with the ashes of many for whom the park was always home with a hearth full of welcome, and thus a perfect resting place. The soil is leavened with the petals of flowers that fell away from wreaths tangled in the long hair of dancing men and women and massaged with fifty years of native drums, African house music, and rock and roll. The soil is littered with the finest poetry charging like lions from the lips of hearts on fire.

What lab will tell them that the soil is dense with the powerful prayers of thanks as strangers bent to lend hands to strangers and cooks reached to offer hot plates of steaming food. That the soil is full of the alchemy of musicians who invented joy out of thin air and artists who wove sunlit moments into mass, accidental epiphanies.

The lab will surely find the seeds of the next rebellion, and the next, and the next, and the next. And see the necessity most of us hope never to mourn that the park remain magical, irreplaceable open space, a crucible of the historic forces that stopped a war and built a garden. 


Police Obedience and Racialization

Steve Martinot
Monday January 25, 2021 - 05:36:00 PM

What good is a constitution if you can’t use it? What good is it if it tells you how to govern and you say: “we can’t govern that way.” What good is it if it proclaims democracy and you use it to dominate people? When the cops enact their brutality toward black people, are they making themselves a “role model”? Is that the source of their constitutionality? 

In the previous article about “Police Use of Force,” the following was established: 

§ When the public calls for minimum use of force by the police, the police not only resist, but increase their violence against the people. 

§ The police have the (court-given) right to demand obedience from the people. 

§ There are three institutions in which obedience can be demand: the military (enlistment), the prison (conviction), and the corporate bureaucracy (employment). Civil society is not one. 

§ To be forced to obey a command in civil society is to be placed within a military-type institution without consent. 

§ To be forced to obey the pedestrian commands of anyone without consent is a violation of the 5th Amendment. It is a deprivation of liberty without due process of law. 

§ "Civilians" are people who have neither enlisted nor consented to membership in a military institution, nor to its obedience structure. They belong to “civil society.” 

§ To use force against a civilian to make them obey is a violation of the Constitution. 

§ To demand pedestrian obedience from a civilian (not under arrest) is to change their civil status. They become part of a military organization without consent. 

§ The police have been given the power to determine the legitimacy (and relevance) of their pedestrian commands. 

§ To adopt a “commanding officer” stance toward a civilian is an act of violence against them. 

§ To change a person’s civil status without consent or due process is an act of state violence. 

§ For "militarized" command-giving police, there is no “zero-level” force to which to reduce their violence. 

§ To use force against a non-compliant civilian is a violation of their human rights. 

§ To punish pedestrian non-compliance is already excessive force, in excess of militarization. 

§ Police violence, when accompanied by racial profiling, is an act of white supremacy. 

§ The courts have ruled that a person must obey a “lawful order,” but nowhere have the courts or legislature defined what juridically constitutes a lawful order in a pedestrian context. The "legal" concept of a “lawful order” is thus provided to the police as a "wildcard" to use for social control. 

https://www.counterpunch.org/2021/1/07/the-police-use-of-force-and-berkeleys-use-of-farce/ 

Obedience and militarization

What does all this mean? 

The militarization of interactions between the police and civilians (persons of non-military status) produces a disparity of rights. It is a disparity produced by the absoluteness by which the police can expect obedience to their commands, and in terms of which they can punish non-compliance. Both police and civilians allegedly have the same rights granted them by the Constitution, since both groups belong to constitutional society. However, the police have a right that civilians do not have, the right to deny or curtail the rights of civilians. Their right to do that through an expectation of obedience translates into the power to do so. 

We are not speaking of the level of obedience to social agreements or understandings of social solidarity or organizational esprit de corps. This absoluteness legitimizes responding to the least disobedience (such as a person walking or running away) with lethal force. The list of people shot in the back by police is long. 

This disparity in rights generates a cultural difference between the police and civilians. It is not just a difference in social standing or occupational necessity, it is a difference of power. As a power relation, it engenders a difference in ethics, a vast disparity in what each culture considers reasonable, and a discrepancy in the social logic by which events are comprehended and interpreted. As a cultural difference, it represents divergent consciousness toward the world. Example: a cop hits a man with a baton; the cop can then charge the man with “assaulting an officer.” 

As a power relation, this cultural difference produces a hierarchy between the police and the people. The police not only have rights that civilians do not have. The hierarchy of those rights translates in forms of social control. People are no longer simply "people" governed by the same constitutionality. They become "subjects" with abrogated civil rights. In other words, the rights to which civilians could lay claim have become contingent rights. The Constitution may present "life" and "liberty" as human rights, but the police power to kill in the name of obedience (“I felt threatened”) subordinates them to police power. 

An inherent corollary to hierarchical control is unquestionability. To question why a cop has stopped a person, and to even indicate the absence of "probable cause," is to risk restraint or beating – especially if one is a person of color. Yet questioning is only a form of petitioning for redress. The right to petition for redress of grievance is abridged. The police decide when and where a person cannot make such petition. To bar questioning is to insulate the police themselves from such grievance. Thus, the perspective and reasoning articulated in any such petition is squelched by those it is about. Nothing in the 1st Amendment restricts when and where such a petition can be submitted. To bar questioning, to refuse a civil response, or to get violent against questioners is to commit a criminal violation of the Constitution. 

On the other hand, the power bestowed by the militarized demand for obedience includes the power to criminalize whoever the police wish. The cop has simply to give a command that the person will find humiliating or disrespectful. For the person to refuse out of self-respect is then to commit a crime. To thus criminalize self-respect is to substitute criminalization for the law. It renders questions of law enforcement secondary and irrelevant, insofar as they are replaced by social regimentation. Regimentation, the degree of control based upon routine social violence, implements the real disparity in social logic between society and police. 

The right to due process

There is yet another right that the police routinely deny the people; the right to due process of law. This right protects individuals from the power imbalance between civilians and institutions such as corporations, governments, and police departments. For that reason, it is generally withheld, ignored, and thrown into the dark corners of judicial processes. 

Due process of law means that before any attempt to deprive an individual of life or liberty, a hearing must be held in which both parties, depriver and defendant, have equal voice, and can present their case (for and against deprivation) before a third party. This third party, which must be mutually acceptable to those in contention, would judge the propriety or legitimacy of the proposed deprivation. And that deprivation could proceed only if the neutral third party accepted its reasonableness. 

It is essential that due process precede deprivation. The temporal or sequential aspect is critical. If the deprivation occurs first, the person is only left with appeal, which is not due process. To grasp the enormity of withholding due process, think of how many people would be alive today if that constitutional guarantee had been implemented. Appeal is not a judicial process available to a person who has been shot dead. But with due process, a cop couldn’t even handcuff a person without some legal discussion saying it was okay, in which the person facing restraint had an equal voice. For cases of police approaches to people on the street, community members on the block could provide the personnel to hear both sides and judge the necessity and relevance of what the cop proposed to do. A traditional court proceeding would not be necessary. And indeed, the Constitution does not specify what kind of venue would serve for facilitating due process and an equal voice. On the other hand, what the police have shown through their impunity is that ignoring the right to due process leads to a form of police state. It renders the police a governing body beyond regulation. 

Ultimately, the police dispensing with due process, which negates the human right of having an equal say in one’s own destiny, affects a structural disconnect between the people and the law. It is this disconnect that is expressed in police refusal to curb their brutality even in the face of massive demonstrations against it. If social outrage on the streets is necessary for justice and accountability to occur, and for law enforcement to obey the law, then there is no law. There is only administration and executive discretion. 

The racialization of obedience

In sum, under militarized obedience, the police have the ability to criminalize at will, to substitute themselves for the law itself, to deny or abrogate a person’s human rights, and to approach and command persons on the basis of whim alone (whose legal name is “suspicion”). These powers divide society into a hierarchy of cultures. Insofar as these powers get expressed through profiling, which implies that the police pick their targets on the basis of appearance rather than deed, they impose a form of racialization on society. 

To pick out people on the street based on appearance is to make a subjective selection. It is not a selection that redirects people to one prison camp or another, such as during the 1930s. But it is a selection nevertheless, out on the street. It amounts to a decision process that produces a new "color" line, one which forms between those who will be treated gently and with respect, and those who face being criminalized. It divides people into those whose humanity will be respected and those for whom it won’t. This ability to construct a new color line is another special right that the police have constituted for themselves. 

As a color line, it is built person by person, selecting who to harass, who to treat arbitrarily, and finally who to injure or kill in a self-justifying manner. It doesn’t matter that not all police engage in such activity. The fact that it occurs at all is sufficiently atrocious to be unignorable – ultimately by all other cops (who become complicit in ignoring it). The trauma of police impunity is and has been disruptive of local community at the hands of cultural hierarchy. It takes control of the destiny of the people selected, and changes their future, their hopes, the integrity of their community, etc. 

iAs a color line, the police become the immediate practice of racism. Their construction of this color line provides the role model for individual racism. It gives white people a choice. They can choose which side of the color line they will stand with, whether that of militarization or that of human rights. They can signal their attitude toward police militarization by how willingly they obey or not. But mostly, they choose to categorize police actions, however brutal, as simply “law enforcement.” The support they offer through white obedience is an acceptance of the white racialized identity that police racializing processes construct for them. 

For most people of color, the choice they face is what kind of statistic to become. What the color line does is conflate individual racism with institutional racism. When the white cop knelt on George Floyd’s neck, it represented a clear intention to kill him. You could see that in the cop’s face. The cop knew the other three on his team would not stop him. Was he therefore acting as an institutional agent or an individual? In reality, he embodied the fact that individual racism and institutional (systemic) racism are inseparable. He demonstrated that the ability of white people to be racist is always in relation to the institutional. The institutional is what guarantees that a white race-identified person can get away with it (that is, not be criminalized for it). 

Because police racism exists, race itself is made to exist. It is constructed out of the single “material resource” that has always been its foundation, namely, violence. Official social violence. The fact that this occurs through the construction of a police color line and a selection process that is part and parcel of legitimized militarization (“commanding officer” impunity) indicates that this process of racialization is itself a government project. That is what it has always been, from the first kidnaping of people who got loaded into boats to the profiling of people on the street who got thrown behind iron doors by the signing of plea bargains. 

The color line repeats the original creation of “people of color.” It doesn’t set them opposite a “colorless people.” It creates the “white racialized identity” that then sees the others “of color” through the haze of hierarchy. "Race" is something that one group of people does to others. It is a verb: “to racialize.” 

There are those who understand that the white mind, white consciousness, is anti-democratic because it relies on exclusion rather than inclusion. And that extends to the granting of militarized power for social control.


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE:In Defense of Civility

Bob Burnett
Sunday January 24, 2021 - 03:42:00 PM

In the seventies, I was working in Silicon Valley when email became ubiquitous on business' campuses. Although email simplified office communication, I noticed two negative aspects: email discouraged face-to-face interaction and it facilitated uncivility. On January 8th, Twitter—email's progeny—suspended Donald Trump's account. This was a welcome, although belated, defense of civility. 

As a computer technologist —since the sixties— I've become used to the dual-edge of technological progress: Each new advance, in some regard, makes our life easier; on the other hand, each advance has unsavory side effects. The first computers simplified the keeping of financial records but also eliminated the jobs of many bookkeepers. In business, the invention of email made day-to-day communication easier, but email made these conversations less personal and, in some cases, more abrasive. (It wasn't long after I started using email that I first became aware of the email "flamer;" an angry, accusatory, or disparaging email—someone saying something digitally that they would never say in person.) 

Often, technological progress has political consequences. Political historians note that Adolph Hitler's rise was facilitated by his use of the (then) new technology of radio. Donald Trump's political rise was facilitated by his use of Twitter. 

There's nothing inherently wrong with Twitter—a quick, convenient form of social networking. Unfortunately, like email, it facilitates uncivility. 

Twitter was the perfect social media outlet for Trump because he has a short attention span and is (famously) uncivil. The dictionary definition of "civil" is to be cultured, courteous, and polite. Donald Trump is none of these things. Donald doesn't thank people or give them compliments; he criticizes and disparages. Trump disdains conciliation and compromise; his idea of negotiation is "my way or the highway." 

Donald Trump loved Twitter. When irritated by something, Trump used Twitter to instantly respond; from July 20, 2020, until January 8, 2021, Donald sent 5993 tweets. Many flamers. Many lies. (In October, the Washington Post (https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/10/22/president-trump-is-averaging-more-than-50-false-or-misleading-claims-day/ ) noted that Trump was averaging 50 lies per day.) On a daily basis, Donald broadcast his uncivility. 

The lie that the 2020 election was "stolen" was facilitated by Trump's tweets. On January 6th, the insurrectionists that stormed the US Capitol were egged on by Trump's tweets. The nature of American political dialogue has been been massively influenced by Trump's tweets; this discourse has become coarser and more partisan. 

Civility matters. (Truth matters.) Civility is the moral framework for "civil society," without which Democracy cannot function. Civility is the heart; civil society is the circulatory system. 

Twitter amplified Trump's uncivility. Therefore, I support Twitter's suspension of Donald Trump's account. Of course, there is a "free speech" aspect of their decision. Nonetheless, Trump's recent conduct -- particularly his lies about the 2020 election -- meet the constitutional definition of prohibited speech: "that which would be directed to and likely to incite imminent lawless action." Equally important is the notion that, as President of the United States, Donald Trump should not have been using his "bully pulpit" to foment uncivility -- he should not have been undermining democracy. 

Donald Trump's preferred style is to be uncivil. Trump's presidency was an expression of the insurgent wish to "blow up" Washington. Donald railed against Washington "elites" and promised to "drain the swamp." He bragged about not being a politician, of bringing a different perspective into the oval office. Trump advertised himself as a political insurgent. 

Of course, there's nothing wrong with looking at national politics from a different point of view. It's true that there are Washington elites, who often do not promote the best interests of the American people but rather the power and fortune of the wealthy. Many Trump supporters voted for Donald because they truly believed that he would shake up Washington; that he would foment a populist revolution that would improve the life circumstances of his supporters. He didn't do that during his term in office. 

Donald Trump was unsuccessful because he was pathologically self absorbed. The Trump presidency was not an era of finding new ways to promote the people's best interests but rather finding ways to promote Trump's interests. Donald practiced the ultimate "bait and switch." He promised to "drain the swamp" but instead became the swamp; raised self-dealing to an art form. Trump promised to "end American carnage" but instead promoted violence with attacks on the press, people-of-color -- most everyone other than white men -- and political dissidents. Ultimately, Trump's rhetoric promoted the January 6th insurrection. 

With his uncivility, Donald blew up "political correctness" and replaced it with anger, insults, and lies. He demeaned gentility. He normalized what had previously been viewed as unacceptable behavior. 

Now is the time to step back from the abyss. Now is the time to defend civility. 

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


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Why Noncompliance?

Jack Bragen
Sunday January 24, 2021 - 01:44:00 PM

Antipsychotic medications and their potential to help people with schizophrenia get well, and remain well, present an enormous hope that humanity once did not have. Before antipsychotics, mentally ill people may have been the "town crazy" or the "town drunk." Before these drugs came about, (Thorazine was the first, and it was discovered in 1950), there was no effective treatment for people with schizophrenia. Sometimes people were given frontal lobotomies, which may have allowed some to become minimally functional, or it may have done no good whatsoever. People died horribly in primitive mental hospitals or on the street. 

Once antipsychotics were discovered, they became the front-line treatment for people with psychosis. As soon as it was apparent that I had psychosis (delusions, hallucinations, bizarre content of speech), I was given antipsychotics. And ultimately, (once I was compliant or was forced to take these medications) these drugs made the difference for me. 

And, with the advent of "second generation antipsychotics" treatment became more effective. At first, they were called "Atypical antipsychotics" because it was falsely believed that this class of drugs did not have the same awful side effects as the earlier medications. 

Many people given a schizophrenic diagnosis are uncooperative with treatment. Why is this? Do they resist the official diagnosis that they have a serious mental illness? Do they lack the insight that something has gone wrong with their mind? These, of course, are two big reasons that would lead people to refuse treatment. 

Many people with schizophrenia become noncompliant because they cannot face the concept that something has gone wrong with their brain. Acknowledging a brain illness is a hard thing to do. It affects self-esteem, and it affects perceived and actual prospects of having an acceptable future. 

Many with schizophrenia resist treatment because they continue to have a significant level of delusions, and this prevents having the insight needed to realize they are ill and came out of many of their delusions through medication. Some do not remain medicated long enough or with enough of a dosage to initially track reality, and this blocks all insight including that of needing medication. 

But there is something else, and it is big. However, before I hit on the main issue, (which you could guess is about medication side effects) I need to say something else. 

I recently refused a refill, temporarily, of one of my antipsychotics, because the pharmacy had been dispensing excessive amounts, and I had developed a stockpile. The result: apparently some kind of record has been generated that I may be noncompliant with medication. This is the sort of thing that peeves me immeasurably. I phoned the pharmacist about it to clear things up, but I don't know if this has any effect. On some computer somewhere, I may have shown up as possibly noncompliant. 

The above assertion is based on this: I received an automated call confirming that I was refusing one of my antipsychotics. It was an unusual phone call, because of how the automated speech was worded, and in the way I was prompted by the automated system to respond. 

Apparently, government is involved in this. Some county agency is probably tracking me and making certain of my compliance. This is in the absence of any court order. Agencies track mentally ill people--that is the only conclusion I can draw. It is not necessarily a bad thing, since the community does not want any incidents. However, I question the authoritarian approach and the invasion into my life. 

Now this: 

The side effects of antipsychotics, for the first few years that you take these drugs, are hell. I cannot put into words the suffering I felt in the early nineteen-eighties, when I began antipsychotics. 

Side effects can include a horrible, drugged sensation in the body. They can feel like a chemically induced straitjacket. They restrict the mind and body, and they cause suffering that cannot be evaded. You can't run away from it. 

The first job I obtained when I was put on meds and released, at age 18, involved physical work. (Doctors had recommended I do the same kind of work that I'd done before hospitalization. This may have been a bad idea.) And when trying to make the ibody work while medicated, you are in a physical battle against the shutting-down effects of antipsychotics. This increases the magnitude of the suffering. 

With typical side effects, it requires an overriding imperative in our minds to get us to commit to taking meds. Sometimes, mindfulness can help with side effects. Sometimes you just have to endure the suffering, because there is no better choice. And making such a decision, to go along with the suffering of antipsychotics, requires a lot of bravery. And readers other than those with mental illness should try to understand these reasons behind noncompliance. 

For readers who have never taken antipsychotics and who are not the designated ill person, you should realize that the commitment to being compliant takes a lot of resolve. And you can offer any support possible, and not criticism, because you yourself probably could never imagine taking these meds, and enduring the diagnosis, the prognosis, and the side effects. A mentally ill person who has stabilized through voluntary compliance is a very brave individual. 


Jack Bragen is author of "Instructions for Dealing with Schizophrenia: A Self-Help Manual," and other books.  


Smithereens: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Sunday January 24, 2021 - 01:30:00 PM

Happy Blue Year!

What a difference a day makes—as long as it's an Inauguration Day.

What a healing ceremony. A parade of presidential couples. A physically distanced and face-masked crowd of congregants. A powerful pint-sized poet. Garth Brooks hobnobbing and hugging, J-Lo blazing through the octaves and issuing a platform-shaking shout for justice in Spanish, and Gaga turning her back on the audience to lift her hand toward the banner waving high atop the Capitol building as she sang "our flag was still there!"

Instead of a sea of red caps and MAGA shirts, we had the President-elect and First Lady alongside the VP-elect and the Second Gentleman, solemnly observing 400,000 lanterns lining the Reflection Pool at the Lincoln Memorial and reflecting on lives lost and the challenges ahead. 

Wonderful to see the plea for unity reflected in the garments of the attendees—specifically the predominance of purple hues over blatant reds or blues. 

And then the balm of Biden's Oval Office signatures authorizing a stack of healing Executive Actions: Reviving the Paris Accord; Rejoining the World Health Organization; Halting the Keystone oil pipeline; Reversing policies that targeted the Clean Water Act, National Environmental Policy Act, and Endangered Species Act; Reinstating the protected status of vast stretches of threatened wilderness on land and in the waters off the coast of Maine; Reviving energy efficiency guidelines; Protecting undocumented children raised in the US; Ending Trump's Muslim Travel Ban; Banning oil and gas drilling in the Arctic Wildlife Refuge. 

That's a pretty impressive stack of good deeds for any president's first days in office, so forgive my partisan glee, if I repeat the partisan greeting: "Happy Blue Year!" 

Some More Action Plans for Team Biden 

Jon Rainwater, Executive Director of Peace Action has some encouraging words for the new year: "There are several new pro-peace champions in Congress . . . . Congress will be younger and more diverse than ever, and some new members are taking bolder, more pro-peace stands on foreign policy. Let's rally them behind a pro-peace platform that will: 

• Replace the tragic war in Yemen with humanitarian aid and diplomacy 

• End a reckless new nuclear arms race and cut massive nuclear weapons funding 

• Engage in sustained diplomacy, not saber-rattling with Iran 

• Cut the bloated Pentagon budget and shift those resources to urgent needs like health care 

• End the borderless "forever" war on terror and bring US troops home 

Drain the Swamp 

According to the Progressive Change Campaign Committee PAC (aka Bold Progressives), "Corporate PACs are announcing they will stop donating to any of the 147 congressional Republicans—like Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley—who voted to overturn our democratic election." 

American Express has promised to never again donate to any of these "traitors," Hallmark is demanding their money back, and The Washington Post reports the “deluge of announcements” is creating pressure on others. This week, the country's top three music labels—Warner, Universal, and Sony—announced that they will halt future PAC donations to the GOP's would-be ballot pirates. 

Still on the political fence: AMC Theaters, Bacardi, Burger King, and Samsung. 

Click out the PCCC's #DrainTheTraitors page to see which corporations need pressure. And help push them to take a stand! 

Has This Happened to You? Yet? 

Walking across the parking lot to my office in the ActivSpace building in West Berkeley, I spotted another masked resident approaching. He waved and asked "How you doin' these days? Great to see you!" We began to exchange updates on work, health and all the usual et ceteras but, after two minutes of chatter (during which I desperately ransacked my memory to come up with his name), I finally had to confess: "I really don't have a clue who you are." 

To which he replied: "You mean you aren't Mike Kane, the famous racing car photographer?" 

My guess is that similar masked encounters are happening a lot these days. 

Street Scenes and Sidewalk Sightings 

Noted a note on a clear, plastic bag pinned to a wooden power pole on Hopkins Street in North Berkeley. "For the person that took the puzzle we left: we found a piece that you might need!" 

Sure enough, the missing part of the jigsaw puzzle was visible inside the bag. 

Poetic Licenses 

There's a green Jeep Wrangler that always seems to be parked in the same spot, day-after-day, without moving. Maybe the explanation is to be found in the license plate, which reads: H8CAMPNG 

Spotted on the streets of Berkeley: a big black Honda van with a plate reading "POLLN8R." Why, "Pollenator"? Maybe because the van is a bee-hemoth. (Apologies for the "dad joke.") 

A VW making a turn on Dwight flashed a plate reading: FOX4LOX. I snapped a photo and gave the driver a thumbs up. In return, he gave me a grin and a chin-nod. 

QAnon Q&A 

Question: In the bloody aftermath of the assault on the Capitol building, QAnon defender and Pro-Trump Congressmember Scott Perry (R-PA) demanded to know: “How does the president incite an attack that was pre-planned and already underway before his speech concluded?” 

Answer: On December 19, 2020, you send out a tweet with the following invitation: ""Big protest in D.C. on January 6th. Be there, will be wild!" 

The Great, Online QAnon Meltdown 

An article in the Huffington Post reports the QAnon community was devastated by Biden's successful inauguration. "For believers of QAnon—the far-right conspiracy theory that holds Donald Trump as a deity-like figure secretly battling a 'deep state' cabal of pedophiles who control the government—, things weren’t supposed to go down this way." The shadow community of QAnoners had been lead to believe that "on Wednesday, at long last, the Bidens, Obamas and Clintons would be rounded up and executed for child sex trafficking, treason and other crimes. Trump, having finally conquered evil, would remain in power." 

The 185,000-strong QAnon community on Gab and their 34,000 cohorts on Telegram, were looking forward to "THE GRAND FINALE" and, as HuffPo reported, salivating "over the idea of decapitations and sexual violence against prominent Democrats." 

Instead, as the inauguration unfolded with quite, calm, grace, the QAnon community began to collapse into angry confusion. When do the arrests start??” “NOTHING FUCKING HAPPENED!!!” “It’s over.” “I feel sick, disgusted and disappointed.” "Have we been duped???” “You played us all.” “So now we have proof Q was total bullshit.” “HOW COULD WE BELIEVE THIS FOR SO LONG? ARE WE ALL IDIOTS?” 

But conspiranoid thinking is resilient and, in some cases, invincible. HuffPo reports that some QAnoners merely posted new conspiracy theories to banish disbelief. "A few suggested that the video of Biden becoming president was a deepfake and that he was actually locked away behind bars as it played across the nation." Others simply repeated the mantra: “Q wouldn’t do this to us. He wouldn’t let us down. Don’t lose hope.” 

Taking the Needle 

I initially thought it quaint when the BBC reported Brits were rushing to protect themselves from COVID-19 by "getting their jabs." In the US, of course, we don't get "jabs," we get "shots." Wait a minute! Is this another case of America's "militarized language"? A pistol or rifle delivers "shots." A needle delivers pokes but I'm not sure "getting poked" is going to catch on. So I guess I'm stuck with "inoculation," which seems like a more pleasant substitute for "injection." 

Lesson: If You Run for Office, Don't Invested in Body Bags 

One of the reasons the Georgia Senate race flipped the state from red to blue was because of the corruption of the GOP incumbents, Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue—and because of opposition ads exposing their corruption. Case in point: the following Faux News ad from the political action group Bold Progressives, which racked up 250,000 views in the first 4 hours after it was posted. 

 

YouTube Satirists Serenade Donald Out the Door 

Randy Rainbow, take a bow! This may be the best Randy Rainbow Trump-trouncing tape I've seen to date. Epic in scope; epic in scorn. (And when Randy hits the high-octave range, there's nothing false about that falsetto.) 

 

It takes a good deal of talent to turn a song like "My Girl" into a tirade against Trump. Well done, Roy Zimmerman and crew! 

 

For more "Bye-Bye-Donald" songs, scroll to the end. And definitely seek out James Corden's Broadway-worthy rendition of "One More Day." 

The DoD Tries to Co-opt MLK 

On January 18, Martin Luther King Day, the Pentagon sent out a short Tweet acknowledging the slain civil rights leader: 

Today, we honor the life and legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. as a national day of service. It’s a day on, not off. #MartinLutherKingJrDay 

On January 18, Public Citizen president Robert Weissman, offered some of Dr. King's own words—is the Pentagon listening? 

From King’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail” (April 16, 1963):
I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro’s great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen’s Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to “order” than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: “I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action”; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man’s freedom; who lives by a mythical concept of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait for a “more convenient season.” 

From King’s “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence” speech at Riverside Church (April 4, 1967):
I am convinced that if we are to get on the right side of the world revolution, we as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of values. ... We must rapidly begin the shift from a thing-oriented society to a person-oriented society. When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights, are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, extreme materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered. 

From King’s speech announcing the Poor People’s March on Washington (December 4, 1967):
America is at a crossroads of history, and it is critically important for us, as a nation and a society, to choose a new path and move upon it with resolution and courage. ... Consider, for example, the spectacle of ... a nation gorged on money while millions of its citizens are denied a good education, adequate health services, decent housing, meaningful employment, and even respect, and are then told to be responsible. 

A Long-lost Song for Fred Trump 

In December 1950, folk-singer/activist Woody Guthrie took up residence in Brooklyn's Beach Haven Apartments. His landlord was Fred Trump, father of Donald. Guthrie was repulsed when he discovered that hundreds of African-American residents had lost their homes when the Federal Housing Administration helped Trump "gentrify" the neighborhood. Once established, Fred Trump would not rent Beach Haven apartments to African-Americans and was sued repeatedly for alleged racist housing discrimination. In 1954, Guthrie wrote (but never recorded) the following song. 

 

Old Man Trump
Words by Woody Guthrie 

I suppose that Old Man Trump knows just how much racial hate
He stirred up in that bloodpot of human hearts
When he drawed that color line
Here at his Beach Haven family project 

Beach Haven ain't my home!
No, I just can't pay this rent!
My money's down the drain,
And my soul is badly bent!
Beach Haven is Trump’s Tower
Where no black folks come to roam,
No, no, Old Man Trump!
Old Beach Haven ain't my home! 

I'm calling out my welcome to you and your man both
Welcoming you here to Beach Haven
To love in any way you please and to have some kind of a decent place
To have your kids raised up in. 

Goodbye to Donald J. Trump: A Video Archive 

Na Na Hey Hey Goodbye Trump

 

Goodbye Trump - John Tucker

 

Goodbye Donald Trump

 

Bye Bye Donny - A Farewell Song for Trump [Note: racy language warning]

 

'One Day More' of President Trump – James Corden

 

Loser in the Wind

 


ECLECTIC RANT: Trump's Legacy--Hate Groups

Ralph E. Stone
Sunday January 24, 2021 - 03:52:00 PM

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) defines hate groups as organizations who "vilify others because of their race, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation or gender identity – prejudices that strike at the heart of our democratic values and fracture society along its most fragile fault lines.” The FBI uses a similar definition of a hate crime

In 2019, the SPLC compiled a hate group list of 940 hate groups across the U.S. According to the SPLC, during Trumps presidency, white nationalist hate groups in the U.S. increased 55%. Why? Because Trumps racist rhetoric played a large part in encouraging violence in America, and there is substantial evidence that Trump has encouraged racism and benefitted politically from it. The January 6 pro-Trump riot at the U.S. capitol, or something akin to it, was inevitable.  

Trump's legacy — expanded and emboldened hate groups.


A Berkeley Activist's Diary--Week Ending January 23, 2021

Kelly Hammargren
Sunday January 24, 2021 - 03:08:00 PM

There was a stack of Berkeley city meetings this last week, but it was hard to hold my attention on anything until after Wednesday. I think it was an absolute first that Tuesday evening City Council moved the entire regular meeting agenda to consent and ended at 9 pm. We did hear at the earlier 4 pm Council meeting, on the adoption of ballots passed by the voters, that the application process for the Police Accountability Board will be starting soon, at least by February, and an executive search firm will be used for the Director of Police Accountability. 

The planned Civic Arts Commission Civic Center Visioning Subcommittee gave way to the inauguration and was rescheduled for Monday, January 25th

The council’s Facilities, Infrastructure, Transportation, Environment & Sustainability Committee did meet. They voted to recommend no action by council on the measures from the Community Environmental Advisory Commission to prohibit the sale of carbon-based fuels and use of city streets for operating combustion vehicles by 2045. They also voted to recommend no action on the measure “Just Transition to a Regenerative Economy”, also called “doughnut economy.” Interestingly Time Magazine published an article on the doughnut economy Friday, January 22, Amsterdam Is Embracing a Radical New Economic Theory to Help Save the Environment. Could It Also Replace Capitalism? https://time.com/5930093/amsterdam-doughnut-economics/

As for transportation and climate, Mayor Arreguin has embraced with enthusiasm the dirtiest and most inefficient mode of transportation as the path to pay for replacing the Berkeley Pier. The City is marching forward and held Community Meeting #1 Pier/Ferry Study Thursday evening https://www.cityofberkeley.info/parks/pier/. The meeting started with the presentation of several plans followed with breakout sessions to discuss and give input to which plan is preferred. This is the usual Berkeley procedure, do not provide full open disclosure, but instead declare overwhelming support, put forward several plans to reach the desired end and ask the public which one is preferred. 

We were divided into four breakout groups, and I fully expected to be the only attendee in group #4 lacking enthusiasm for ferry service and doubting the demand for it. Much to my surprise others were more outspoken in opposition to ferry service, addressing concerns about the impact on recreation and disturbing wildlife, questioning large boats and describing them as a poor solution when there isn’t a demand. 

John Tillolson described how he tried the ferry after the earthquake and it was so inefficient and time consuming that he gave it up. Another attendee called ferries a boutique service and said we shouldn’t be spending a lot of money subsidizing them. My question on fuel and greenhouse gas emissions was answered with this: WETA [Water Emergency Transportation Authority] has no electric ferries. In all, group #4 made no pier selection, i leaving the moderator Christina Erikson trying to dance around the complete lack of enthusiasm. 

A little history on how we got to this place of using WETA to pay for a new pier: On June 5, 2018 the voters narrowly (50.7%) approved Measure RM3 to raise bridge tolls to fund the Bay Area Traffic Relief Plan. This measure is supposed to relieve traffic and enhance public transportation in bridge corridors: (https://ballotpedia.org/Bay_Area,_California,_Regional_Measure_3,_%22Traffic_Relief_Plan%22_Bridge_Toll_Increase_(June_2018).} The Water Emergency Transportation Authority (WETA) is taking a chunk of the money to expand ferry service. Did any of us understand that RM3 would be used to expand the dirtiest and most inefficient mode of transportation? I doubt it. If we accept the ferry, WETA will pay for the pier for landing. 

Failing infrastructure seems to be the focus of a number of city and community meetings, and the Community for a Cultural Civic Center (CCCC) is another. Liam Garland (Director, Public Works) attended the Thursday CCCC noon meeting to lay out the next steps for assessing the water intrusion at the Maudelle Shirek Building (Old City Hall) and the Veterans Building. Garland reminded CCCC attendees that while the Veterans Building is in better condition, these buildings,k especially Maudelle Shirek, are in states of major disrepair and Berkeley has many unfunded needs, i.e. $250 million in street repairs. Allana Buick & Bers, Inc. will do the evaluation of the water intrusion and provide an estimate of the cost of repairs. 

The other “elephant in the room” is how will these buildings perform in a major earthquake and what is needed to stabilize them. Ann Harlow asked why we need another seismic study--haven’t there been enough studies already? Susi Marzuola, architect, who was on the Gehl team, said that the seismic question kept coming up and the team didn’t have the answer. As someone who was present when Council took the vote to assess Maudelle Shirek for future use after discussion of how unsafe the building was in the event of an earthquake, I have to wonder how Gehl spent $376,000 creating a plan and did not do the most fundamental part of it, a thorough seismic study? 

At least we finished the week with a new president, so as much as there are challenges at every turn, there is hope. 

I finished the book, The Road to Unfreedom by Timothy Snyder and now have an even deeper understanding of how close we really have been to losing what is left of our democracy and why Snyder wrote On Tyranny Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century. I’ve started reading Touching the Jaguar by John Perkins who wrote Confessions of an Economic Hit Man. It looks to be an easier read. 


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, Jan. 24-Feb.3

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Sunday January 24, 2021 - 03:32:00 PM

Worth Noting:

The coming week feels quieter despite 19 counted meetings including two community group meetings. City Council meetings fill Tuesday with the special meeting at 4 pm on amending (Berkeley Municipal Code) BMC 14 & 23 modifying off-street parking minimums and establishing maximums and regular Council meeting at 6 pm.

Thursday at 10 am the Council Budget and Finance Committee will take up the Tax Equity Measure. This measure is about property taxes and relates to properties in the formerly redlined areas being over charged, i.e, counting crawl spaces and other uninhabitable space as livable and properties in north Berkeley being undercharged by improperly under counting the sq footage of livable space.

There are two community meetings, one Wednesday at 6:30 pm and one Saturday at 10 am to present turning the former Santa Fe Right-of-Way from Ward to Blake into a park.

The first community workshop for the Berkeley Marina Specific Plan is Thursday at 6:30 pm

Sunday, January 24, 2021

No City meetings or events found

Monday, January 25, 2021 

City Council Health, Life Enrichment, Equity & Community Committee, 10 am, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Home/Policy_Committee__Health,_Life_Enrichment,_Equity___Community.aspx 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84977897399 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 (toll free) Meeting ID: 849 7789 7399 

AGENDA: 2. Service Animals Welcome Training, 3. Vision 2025 Sustainable Food Policies, 4. Create and Support an Adopt an Unhoused community program, 5. Request CA State Legislature actions to value human life and condemn racial injustice and police brutality. 

Civic Arts Commission Civic Center Visioning Committee, 12pm 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81923274095 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 819 2327 4095 

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

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84992094173 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 (toll free) Meeting ID: 849 9209 4173 

Agenda Planning for February 9, 2021 regular 6 pm Council meeting: 2nd reading 1. Amendment to FY2021 Annual Appropriations Ordinance, 2. Amend Berkeley Lobbyist Registration Act, 3. Exempt time for Parkletts and Sidewalk Seating, 6. Amend contract add $500,000 total $1,635,000 thru 12/31/2025 with Claremont Behavioral Services for Employee Assistance Services, 7. Install Banners marking Kala Bagai Way, ACTION: 8. Accept CARES Act Funds $891,121and Amendments to spending plan to support housing retention, eviction defense and rehab Rosewood Manor and Lorin Station Apt, 9. Amend Home Occupations Ordinance, 10. Vote of No Confidence in the Police Chief, 11. Support the Right to Boycott as a Tactic for Social and Political Change, 12. Right to Choose Communications Services Provider, 13. Referrals to CM, Measure P Homeless Panel of Experts, Health and Life Enrichment policy committee to establish priorities for Allocation Measure P Funds FY2022, REFERRALS FOR SCHEDULING: 8. Impact of COVID-19 on meetings, 9. Officerholder Account, 10. Relinquishments and grants from office budgets, 11. Amendments to BERA, UNSCHEDULED: Reorganization Commissions for Budget Recovery, (packet 192 pages) 

Special Closed Session City Council, 4:30 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84662339508 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 (toll free) Meeting ID: 846 6233 9508 

Agenda: 1. Appointment City Attorney, 2. Conference Labor Negotiators IBEW, Local 1245, SEIU 1021 Community Services and Part-Time Recreation Activity Leaders, Public Employee Union Local 1,  

Peace and Justice Commission, 7 pm 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/ContentDisplay.aspx?id=13054 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83506819543 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 835 0681 9543 

AGENDA: 7. FY2022 Workplan 

Tuesday, January 26, 2021 

Solano Avenue Business Improvement District Advisory Board, 10 am 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86475480085 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 864 7548 0085 

AGENDA: 5. Projects/Goals for 2021, 6. Coordination & communication with Solano businesses as COVID restrictions continue 

City Council, (3 meetings, 3 pm, 4 pm, 6 pm) 

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

Special Closed Council Session, 3 pm 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82899714502 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 (toll free) Meeting ID: 828 9971 4502 

Agenda: Pending Litigation Stahschmidt v. Berkeley RG 20069713 

Special Council Meeting, 4 pm 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87354849181 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 (toll free) Meeting ID: 873 5484 9181 

Agenda: Zoning Ordinance Amendments that Reform Residential Off-Street Parking, BMC 14 and 23, modify off-street minimums, impose parking maximums, amend Residential Permit Program (RPP), Institute Transportation Demand Management (TDM) 

Regular Council Meeting, 6 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87354849181 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 (toll free) Meeting ID: 873 5484 9181 

Agenda: CONSENT: 1. Contract add $49,000 total $97,850 thru 1-31-2022 for Mental Health Services Act (MHSA) Innovation (INN) Planning and “Help@Hand” Technology Suite Project Coordination Services with Resource, Development Associates for Planning and Project Coordination Services, 2. Contract $150,000 4/1/2021 – 6/3-/2023 with Easy Does It for Wheelchair services for Seniors and Disabled, 3. Accept Surveillance Technology Report for Automatic License Plate Readers, GPS Trackers, Body Worn Cameras and Street Level Imagery Project, 4. Contract $3,477,475 with Sposeto Engineering for Central Berkeley Transportation & Infrastructure Improvements Project, 5. Contract $2,074,469 (includes 10% contingency $188,588) Sanitary Sewer Rehabilitation, 6. Contract $979,349 2/1/2021 – 3/31/2024 with Toole Design for Planning, Design and Engineering of Southside Complete Streets Project, 7. Resolution 2nd addendum to Berkeley Strategic Transportation Plan (application for funding grant from Alameda Co FY 2022-2026), 8. a&b, People’s First Sanctuary Encampment, 9. Confirm Community Appointments to Reimagining Public Safety Task Force, 10. Budget Referral to reinstate partial funding for Gun Buyback, 11. Short Term Referral to City Manager, Disaster and Fire Safety Commission, Planning Commission to Amend ADU Zoning ordinance and Berkeley Fire Code, ACTION: 12. ZAB Appeal 1850 & 1862 Arch removed & rescheduled 2/23/2021, 13. Berkeley 2020 Pedestrian Plan, 14. Public Works Commission Recommendation for the Five-Year Paving Plan, 15. Authorize goBerkeley Parking Program at all Parking Meters, 16. $8000 to Support Community Refrigerators for homeless, 17. Declare Juneteenth as City Holiday, INFORMATION REPORTS: 19. Phase 3 to Underground Utility Wires, 

Wednesday, January 27, 2021 

Civic Arts Commission, 6 – 8 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86147520326 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 861 4752 0326 

AGENDA: 6. Presentations: William Byron Rumford Statue, b) BART Plaza Sound Installations, c) Workplan, 7. Action a) Muralist for James Kenny Park, b) Panelists for FY22 Grant Application Reviews, e) Funding of $14,000 for Veterans Building, f) Endorsement of Turtle Island Monument Project, 

Disaster and Fire Safety Commission, 7 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/94783105184 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 947 8310 5184 

AGENDA: 4. Annual Workplan, 5. Presentation Measure FF Budget Priorities, 6. Presentation Prioritized Dispatch for Re-Imagining Public Safety 

Energy Commission, 4:30 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/98207287340 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 982 0728 7340 

AGENDA: 4. Presentation draft Berkeley Existing Building Electrification Strategy (BEBES), 6. 2021 Workplan, 

Santa Fe ROW potential new park – a Prop 68 grant community meeting, 6:30 – 8 pm 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Parks_Rec_Waterfront/Home/PRW_Capital_Improvments_Program_(CIP).aspx 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/93485975787 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 934 8597 5787 

AGENDA: potential park 4 blocks Ward – Blake at Santa Fe Right of Way 

Police Review Commission, 7 – 10 pm, 

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

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

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

AGENDA: 3. Public comment on agenda items, 9. a. Proposed Acquisition & Use of Controlled Equipment Ordinance, b. Update transition to new Police Accountability Board and Office of Director of Police Accountability, 10. a. ask BPD to issue written policy containing instructions to inquiring about supervised release status of detainees and when searches of such persons are allowed, b. election 

Thursday, January 28, 2021 

City Council Budget & Finance Committee, 10 am, 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82133890701 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 (toll free) Meeting ID: 821 3389 0701 

AGENDA: 2. Amend Berkeley’s Property Tax Measures and Restore Tax Equity by changing the square footage through comprehensive verification process, 3. Step Up Housing allocation of Measure P Funds to Lease and Operate Housing Project at 1367 University, 4. FY 2022 Budget Development Process, 

Community for a Cultural Civic Center (CCCC), 12 - 1 pm 

A website is in process. Email Johncaner@gmail.com to receive meeting announcements and agendas or join BerkeleyCCCC@googlegroups.com to receive meeting notices and documents. 

Zoning Adjustment Board, 7 pm 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/zoningadjustmentsboard/ 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/99073264156 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 990 7326 4156 

2. 1720 Delaware – legalize elimination of dwelling unit thru combination with another and convert attic storage to habitable to add 8th and 9th bedrooms to parcel - on consent 

3. 2113 Vine – establish service of wine at existing wine retailer & to include outdoor areas, complete landscape improvements – on consent 

4. 2421 Fifth St – demolish single-family dwelling and construct two residential buildings, 3-story triplex and 3-story single-family dwelling total 4 new dwellings – on consent 

5. 2015 Blake – PREVIEW - merge 7 parcels into 2, demolish 4 existing buildings, relocate and restore 2 existing residential buildings with 7 dwelling units, construct 2 new residential buildings, 3-story 6 unit building with 2 units affordable to low income and 7-story 155 unit with 9 units affordable to very low income and subterranean garage with 93 spaces, 

Berkeley Marina Specific Plan (BMASP), 6:30 pm  

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/BMASP/ 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/93373467062 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 933 7346 7062 

AGENDA: Community Workshop #1, email comments to BMASP@cityofberkeley.info 

Wellstone Democratic Renewal Club, 6:30 pm (sharp) 

http://wellstoneclub.org/ 

Videoconference: 

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81455464543?link_id=0&can_id=57822f7b96c5dc64caaf64f6b86b558e&source=email-our-next-meeting-january-28-645-pmmeeting-feat-congresswoman-barbara-lee-2&email_referrer=email_1049239&email_subject=congresswoman-barbara-lee-is-joining-us 

AGENDA: Featuring Barbara Lee to speak on the progressive agenda 

Friday, January 29, 2021 

No City meetings or events found 

Saturday, January 30, 2021 

Santa Fe ROW potential new park – a Prop 68 grant community meeting, 10 – 11:30 am 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Parks_Rec_Waterfront/Home/PRW_Capital_Improvments_Program_(CIP).aspx 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/96543653982 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 965 4365 3982 

AGENDA: potential park 4 blocks Ward – Blake at Santa Fe Right of Way 

Sunday, January 31, 2021 

No City meetings or events found 

_____________________ 

Public Hearings Scheduled – Land Use Appeals 

1850 Arch (add bedrooms) ZAB – 2/23/2021 

1862 Arch (add bedrooms) ZAB – 2/23/2021 

1200-1214 San Pablo 2/23/2021 

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

1 Orchard Lane (LPO) 2/9/2021 

2300 College 2/2/2021 

2980 College 2/2/2021 

12 Indian Rick Path 2/4/2021 

1549 Shattuck 2/2/2021 

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 

Feb 16 - BMASP/Berkeley Pier-WETA Ferry, Systems Realignment, Presentation: Report on Homeless Outreach during COVID 19 Pandemic 

March 16 – Capital Improvement Plan (Parks & Public Works), Digital Strategic Plan/FUND$ Replacement Website Update, FY2021 Mid-Year Report and the Unfunded Liabilities Report (tentative) 

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

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 

_____________________ 

This Summary of City of Berkeley meetings is the available published public meetings that could be found and they are important. If anyone would like to share meeting schedules including community meetings to be included in the weekly summary so we can be better-informed citizenry, please forward the notices to sustainableberkeleycoalition@gmail.com before Friday noon of the preceding week. 

To Check For Regional Meetings with Berkeley Council Appointees go to 

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

To check for Berkeley Unified School District Board Meetings go to 

https://www.berkeleyschools.net/schoolboard/board-meeting-information/ 

_____________________ 

This meeting list is also posted on the Sustainable Berkeley Coalition website. 

http://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/whats-ahead.html and in the Berkeley Daily Planet under activist’s calendar http://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com 

If you wish to stop receiving the Weekly Summary of City Meetings please forward the weekly summary you received to kellyhammargren@gmail.com