Extra

Berkeley Together Misunderstood the President's Opinion on Zoning

Darrell Owens
Wednesday June 09, 2021 - 06:22:00 PM

I just wanted to correct an implication in the public comment to BDP by "Berkeley Together" which made the following claims about SB 9:

"The bill’s rationale for this is based in trickle down economics, the theory that helping those at the top will help those at the bottom, a theory that has not panned out over time. In his address to Congress last month, President Biden said, "trickle-down economics has never worked", and "It's time to grow the economy from the bottom and the middle out", highlighting the need for progressive housing policies that benefit the underhoused and unhoused citizens of our communities." -more-


SB 9: the Devil is in the Details

Rob Wrenn
Thursday June 10, 2021 - 11:25:00 AM

In his response to the Berkeley Together opinion piece Why We Oppose SB 9, Darrell Owens fails to address any of the specific arguments made. Instead, he attempts to link opposition to SB 9 to Donald Trump, and support for SB 9 with Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders.

When it comes to legislation, especially legislation related to zoning, the devil is in the details. General opposition to “exclusionary zoning” is one thing; support for the specific zoning changes in SB 9 is something else entirely. -more-


Don’t Be Fooled by YIMBYs

Thomas Lord
Thursday June 10, 2021 - 01:39:00 AM

Berkeley Together’s opinon piece in the Berkeley Daily Planet (“Why we oppose SB 9 [Senate Bill 9]”, in the May 30 edition) opposes a state bill that would blindly upzone most residential parcels throughout California, with effectively no concern for site-specific concerns. A few of Berkeley Together’s key points can be summarized this way: -more-



Public Comment

U.S. Should Halt Military Aid to Israel

Jagjit Singh
Sunday June 06, 2021 - 05:52:00 PM

Following the last Israeli-Palestinian conflict, America’s “unshakable commitment to Israeli echoed by Biden and all prior US presidents, is beginning to unravel. The images of wholesale destruction of Gaza and the slaughter of so many innocent Palestinians beaned unto our livings rooms has shaken many Americans and citizens world-wide. More and more Americans are asking why their country, rooted in fairness and democratic ideals, is propping up apartheid Israel? Why are we sending economic and military aid to subjugate and terrorize indigenous Palestinians from their homeland, much like the genocide of native American Indians? -more-


The Lies Get Bigger and Bigger

Bruce Joffe
Sunday June 06, 2021 - 05:50:00 PM

Ralph Stone's "Big Lie" rant missed the most recent and ironic iteration of the Lying Liar's Big Prevarications. He is feeding this to his hungry chumps: "the Big Lie is the Democrats' saying that I lost the election is a big lie." And those suckers just eat it up and ask for more. -more-


Tell Council to Oppose SB 9 June 15

Rob Wrenn
Sunday June 06, 2021 - 06:47:00 PM

On June 15, the City Council will discuss a recommendation from councilmembers Harrison and Wengraf to send a letter to state representatives opposing SB-9 as currently written.

Please send an e-mail supporting this recommendation and opposing SB 9 to the Council at: council@cityofberkeley.info

SB 9 would allow speculators to buy up single family homes, demolish them and replace them with up to 6 market rate units. While SB 9’s upzoning of single family zoned property would greatly increase the value of the property, there is no requirement that any of the units replacing the demolished home be affordable. Some cities like Cambridge Mass allow greater density if the developer builds affordable units on a site. But SB 9 gives away density while bringing no benefit to the community; just more units that only people with high incomes can afford.

SB 9 also lacks adequate tenant protections. Some older single family homes are being rented. If a speculator can get rid of the tenants, he only has to wait three years to develop the property and he can develop six units with no public input; projects would be approved ministerially by city staff. Parcels as small as 2400 sq ft can be split with two units on each, all of them market rate. In addition, an ADU and Junior ADU can also be built for a total of six units.

SB 9 targets backyards; cities would not be able to require a rear setback greater than four feet. Rear setbacks (i.e. backyards) often have trees, tree canopy, gardens, and greenery and provide play space for children. This will be lost when developers take advantage of SB-9 to maximize their profits by filling as much of two lots as possible with market rate units. Trees can play a significant role in addressing climate change and their removal should not be encouraged by poorly thought out speculator-friendly legislation. -more-


ABAG's 9000 - Part 2 - The Housing Racket

Steve Martinot
Sunday June 06, 2021 - 06:04:00 PM

In the previous article entitled “ABAG’s 9000”, we dealt with the underlying political economy of a recent state "requirement" that Berkeley build 9000 new housing units in the next 8 years. But a number of issues were revealed that need greater discussion. One is the real nature of the law driving it. Another is its constitutionality. And finally, there is the issue of housing as a human right. How do we make that idea real, today?

You’ve probably heard of MS-13 (it gets a bit of play once in a while on cop shows). The "MS" stands for Mara Salvatrucha. It is a Salvadorian gang that formed among Salvadorian immigrant and exile communities in California during a "proxy" civil war in El Salvador in the 1980s instigated by the US. Like any gang, it had its needs, and it imposed those needs on those it thought could possibly fulfill them.

Another one has appeared in California. The name it uses for itself is “SB-35.” It too is a political offshoot of a proxy war, a war between a landlord-financial corporate collaboration (see part 1 of this series) and communities of working people and low income families struggling against exile from their homes in the Bay Area. The economic issue of this conflict is the unaffordability of housing, an unaffordability created by rent increases and the corporatization of real estate. In a city like Berkeley, though renters are the majority, rent levels remain beyond regulation because of state laws. The political issue is that of local autonomy. The landlord-financial cabal has transformed housing into an “impoverishment machine.” And into this field steps SB-35. It is the driving force behind “ABAG’s 9000.” -more-


June Pepper Spray Times

By Grace Underpressure
Sunday June 06, 2021 - 04:17:00 PM

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

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

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

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


Editorial

Updated: Keeping Berkeley Livable

Becky O'Malley
Sunday June 06, 2021 - 06:53:00 PM

Recently the UC Berkeley student newspaper, the Daily Californian, had an excellent editorial pointing out that “Berkeley should take steps to mitigate the urban heat island effect.”

Sarah Siegel, writing for the paper’s editorial board, noted that:

“People of color are more likely to live in urban heat islands — one of the underlying causes could be Berkeley’s past discriminatory housing policies. In the 1930s and 1940s, the federal government redlined specific neighborhoods, denying mortgages and the possibility for homeownership to Black residents — these communities continue to be marginalized today. Efforts to map the trees in Berkeley reveal that tree density throughout the city is eerily reminiscent of redlining maps. The formerly redlined communities of South and West Berkeley have sparse trees and foliage compared to wealthier areas of the city.”
The piece does a great job of pointing out the twin causes of urban heat islands: too much concrete, too little greenery. It suggests that the City of Berkeley budget, originally scheduled to be finalized on June 15, should fund measures to correct these problems.

As well it should. But there’s another even more pressing equity issue which the Berkeley City Council should also take have taken a stand on at their June 15 meeting. The council’s consent agenda contained a resolution to condemn SB 9, the latest salvo in Senators Scott Wiener, Toni Atkins and Nancy Skinner’s ongoing campaign to ultra-densify already hyper-urban heat island zones like South and West Berkeley. If SB 9 passes into state law, this measure would allow six units with no yard on every single-family lot in California.

This proposal, and numerous others in a similar vein, would effectively paint a bull-eye on Berkeley’s diminishing stock of relatively inexpensive small homes with yards, most of which are in the South and West flatlands. Developers would be strongly motivated to cut down trees in order to cover now single-home lots with buildings, dramatically impacting the quality of life of current residents, both owners and renters, many of whom in Berkeley are, yes, people of color descended from families who moved there when they couldn’t find homes in other neighborhoods because of discrimination and red-lining. Urban heat would be only one of the problems up-zoning these Berkeley neighborhoods would cause.

Opposition to the Wiener/Skinner/Atkins proposals is already strong in Southern California’s historically Black and Brown neighborhoods.

Madalyn Barber, who lives in a single family home in Altadena, explains how this would happen in a good op-ed in Cal Matters.

She says,“I am a Black grandparent, homeowner and member of the Altadena Town Council. I grew up in a single-family home, and my husband and I have lived in our house in Altadena for more than two decades. Homeownership helped my family build wealth and provide stable, quality housing, and gave us our piece of the American Dream. But state and local politicians are threatening homeownership among the Black community by damaging single-family zoning laws. “

Altadena was a thriving integrated community when my own family moved to the area in 1953, and it still is. If speculators are enabled by the Wienerite measures, this could change.

The negative effects of the laws proposed by SB9 and SB10 are also discussed here by Los Angeles area residents: -more-


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE:Polarization in California

Bob Burnett
Sunday June 06, 2021 - 05:21:00 PM

The most recent Quinnipiac Poll (https://poll.qu.edu/poll-release?releaseid=3810) illustrates how polarized the US has become: 66 percent of respondents do not want Donald Trump to (re)run for President. Nonetheless, 66 percent of Republicans would like him to run. (Not surprisingly, the same percentage of Republicans do not believe that Biden's 2020 victory was legitimate.) It's a dismaying and, somewhat, disheartening statistic that illustrates how divided the United States has become. To better understand this, it's useful to examine polarization in California. -more-


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Sunday June 06, 2021 - 05:31:00 PM

Honoring the Dead (But Only Some of Them)

On Memorial Day, Joe Biden followed in the footsteps of other presidents and laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier—and thereby promoted in a decades-long cover-up.

According to a Brown University study: "At least 800,000 people have been killed by direct war violence in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, and Pakistan." The casualties included "thousands of service members and… thousands of contractors" (read: "mercenaries") but "the vast majority of people killed are civilians. More than 310,000 civilians have been killed in the fighting since 2001." By some estimates, while 9.7 million soldiers have died in wars, around 10 million civilians have been recorded as "collateral damage."

If soldiers are "laying down their lives" (a phrase that makes a brutal death sound like an act of voluntary sacrifice) to "defend" human freedoms, why do we not also honor the majority of war's "fallen"—the innocent civilians whose freedoms are supposedly the justification for waging bloody conflicts?

What are the odds that a "Tomb of the Unknown Civilian Family" might be added to the architecture at the Arlington Cemetery? (It's more likely that Congress would fund construction of a "Tomb of the Unknown Military Contractor.") -more-


ECLECTIC RANT: Court Decision Sets Back Reasonable Gun Control Legislation

Ralph E. Stone
Sunday June 06, 2021 - 05:25:00 PM

I am very disappointed in U.S. District Judge Roger Benitez of the Southern District of California's ruling overturning Californias ban on assault weapons, and his 2019 decision overturning California's ban on large capacity magazines, calling such restrictions a violation of the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. This latter decision was affirmed by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals although the 9th Circuit agreed to rehear the case en banc on June 22, 2021. In my opinion, Judge Benitez misapplied Heller by mischaracterizing the killing power of assault weapons. -more-


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Human Dignity

Jack Bragen
Sunday June 06, 2021 - 05:26:00 PM

The antithesis of human dignity could be humiliation. Many persons with psychiatric illness experience numerous humiliating situations in our lives. Being physically restrained, being forcibly medicated, being put in a courtroom in handcuffs, and, upon a semblance of recovery, being put in a minimum-wage, brainless job, with a job coach to tell you how to sweep a floor, are humiliating scenarios to which mentally ill people are subject. -more-


A Berkeley Activist's Diary, Week ending June 5, 2021

Kelly Hammargren
Sunday June 06, 2021 - 06:16:00 PM

My husband and I were in Greece in August 1991 when we heard from a stranger on the street that there was a coup in the Soviet Union. The August coup failed, but by December 26, 1991 it was over. The Soviet Union was dissolved.

As I watch the reports of the ballot counts in Arizona, the entire spectacle is unsettling. No matter how ridiculous the conspiracy theories sound, there are masses that believe and cling to what is called the “big lie” : that Trump won the election. The results of the May 21, 2021 IPSOS/Reuters Poll were alarming. Even though the number surveyed was 2007, 30% of all respondents (53% of Republicans) believed Trump won the election.

The more centrist Democratic-leaning pundits started shifting their comments this last week to a much stronger cautionary message, a warning of being at a crossroads: democracy or authoritarianism. Thankfully, on Friday Facebook suspended Trump for two years, but that doesn’t stop the rumors that Trump and his followers believe he will be restored to the presidency in August. There is nothing that should be reassuring. I would argue that the reported trips of Republicans to Mar-a-Lago to “kiss the ring” of Donald Trump is to say “I am with you” not from some level of “fear” of Donald Trump.

Moving on from this unsettling picture: What has our local government been up to this last week?

At the Agenda and Rules Committee meeting this week with an expected return to some level of pre-pandemic normalcy, the discussion ensued about how to manage meetings: in-person, continue Zoom or some hybrid model? The City Manager said the technology is available for a hybrid model for council meetings at 1231 Addison (the school district board room), but not at the locations where commissions meet. Many of the rooms are small and all lack the technology for a hybrid model. -more-


Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, June 6-13

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday June 05, 2021 - 05:12:00 PM

Worth Noting:

Sunday June 6 and 13 at 10 am – 1 pm are the virtual East Bay Green Home Tours – pre-register with Eventbrite. Six homes (12 total) are featured each Sunday.

Monday at 5 pm deadline to submit questions for the Budget Town Hall on Tuesday.

Tuesday at 5:30 pm is the Town Hall with Mayor Arreguin on the City Budget. Council votes on the budget on June 29 which will go into effect July 1.

Wednesday the Redistricting Commission meets at 6 pm. The Homeless Commission, Parks and Waterfront Commission and Police Review Commission all meet at 7 pm.

Thursday the Council Budget and Finance Committee meets at 10 am. Reimagining Policing meets at 6 pm and the Zoning Adjustment Board at 7 pm has only one item on consent the new expanded location for ACME Bakery on San Pablo.

The Reorganization of Boards and Commissions is now scheduled as a special meeting at 4 pm on June 15. Both the City Council special meeting at 4 pm and regular meeting at 6 pm are available for comment email council@cityofberkeley.info. The agendas, reorganization of commissions charts and links follow the list of daily meetings.

The comment period to (Bayer Projects) the Bayer Healthcare LLC Development Agreement Draft Subsequent Environmental Impact Report (Draft SEIR) ends July 6, 2021.

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Planning_and_Development/Zoning_Adjustment_Board/Bayer_Development_Agreement.aspx

Sunday, June 6, 2021

East Bay Green Home Tour 10 am – 1 pm

Tour schedule: https://www.eastbaygreenhome.com/schedule

Register Eventbrite: https://www.eastbaygreenhome.com/register

AGENDA: Features short video tours of 12 homes 6 on June 6 and 6 on June 13 with each tour followed by live Q&A with the homeowner/tenant. Extras include induction cooking, heat pumps, air quality, solar storage, power outages, rebates

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/electrification/

https://content.govdelivery.com/accounts/CABERKE/bulletins/2e283bb -more-


Back Stories

Opinion

Editorials

Updated: Keeping Berkeley Livable 06-06-2021

Public Comment

U.S. Should Halt Military Aid to Israel Jagjit Singh 06-06-2021

The Lies Get Bigger and Bigger Bruce Joffe 06-06-2021

Tell Council to Oppose SB 9 June 15 Rob Wrenn 06-06-2021

ABAG's 9000 - Part 2 - The Housing Racket Steve Martinot 06-06-2021

June Pepper Spray Times By Grace Underpressure 06-06-2021

News

Berkeley Together Misunderstood the President's Opinion on Zoning Darrell Owens 06-09-2021

SB 9: the Devil is in the Details Rob Wrenn 06-10-2021

Don’t Be Fooled by YIMBYs Thomas Lord 06-10-2021

Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE:Polarization in California Bob Burnett 06-06-2021

SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces Gar Smith 06-06-2021

ECLECTIC RANT: Court Decision Sets Back Reasonable Gun Control Legislation Ralph E. Stone 06-06-2021

ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Human Dignity Jack Bragen 06-06-2021

A Berkeley Activist's Diary, Week ending June 5, 2021 Kelly Hammargren 06-06-2021

Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, June 6-13 Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition 06-05-2021