Extra

Press Release: UC reaches tentative agreements with the UAW mediated by Mayor Steinberg

UC Press Office
Friday December 16, 2022 - 07:25:00 PM

The University of California today (Dec. 16) announced a tentative agreement between the University and the United Auto Workers (UAW) regarding contracts for UC Academic Student Employees (ASE) and Graduate Student Researchers (GSR). Under the tentative agreements, the University would provide minimum salary scales for Academic Student Employees, including Teaching Assistants, and Graduate Student Researchers, as well as multiyear pay increases, paid dependent access to University health care, and enhanced paid family leave. If approved, the contracts will be effective through May 31, 2025. -more-



Flash: Berkeley Hills Escape Route Put to the Test

Tuesday December 13, 2022 - 06:15:00 PM

As of 6:15 on December 13 there's a massive traffic jam on Arlington Avenue in Berkeley. A motorist on the scene, parked in the street since no cars can move, reports that a police officer attempting to direct the motionless traffic told her that a big semi has been blocking Arlington, a major artery. Cars have been diverted to the area's narrow twisting side streets, where they've been stuck, some for an hour and a half. Our reporter was marooned at Arlington and Yosemite. -more-



Page One

How Berkeley Voted in November’s Lower Turnout Election

Rob Wrenn
Sunday December 11, 2022 - 05:03:00 PM

Measure L The big news in this year’s local election is the defeat of Measure L, the $650 million bond measure. It needed two thirds to pass and only received support from 59.4% of those who voted pro or con. This is the lowest percentage a city bond measure has received since 2004.

Measure L failed to win 2/3rds support in every Council district except in District 3 in South Berkeley ( 67.1% YES) and District 7, the student super-majority district, where the few who bothered to vote favored a bond, that few of them will have to pay for, by a 84.4% to 15.6% margin.
Measure L did worst in Districts with the largest percentage of homeowners. In District 5, represented by the bond measure’s principal author, council member Sophie Hahn, the measure won only 51.7%, its worst performance in any district. In one large consolidated precinct in the Northeast Berkeley hills in District 6, and in one District 5 consolidated precinct bounded by Hopkins on the south, the measure also fell short of 50% support. Measure L also did relatively poorly with 56.5% in District 1, a majority of whose voters are homeowners.
Turnout and % Yes on L by Berkeley City Council District -more-



Public Comment

No Democracy in Sight - the Tale of the Electronic Cellphone-Siphoning Kiosks

Carol Denney
Sunday December 11, 2022 - 05:34:00 PM

I disvcovered only four days ago that the city plans to install egregiously ugly electronic kiosks in front of our businesses and homes despite years of attending hearings making objections. These "wayfinding" kiosks, flash advertising, obstruct views, siphon cell phone information without permission, distract traffic, create a health hazard by encouraging communal touch screens, and make no sense in a world with cell phones.

The hearing on these electronic billboards is Tuesday night (Dec. 13th, 6:00 pm) at the Berkeley City Council meeting. And sure, you write to the council ( clerk@CityofBerkeley.info ), a few of whom might be embarrassed by the fact that they let the 4th Street merchants decline similarly proposed kiosk installation.

San Pablo Avenue at University is a much older, more historic area, and despite our intersection having beautiful, historic landmarked properties laced throughout, we're about to be offered no such opportunity despite generating more to the tax base than downtown and Telegraph combined. Councilmembers Taplin and Kesarwani found a couple of merchants happy to sell out the rest of us. One of them is the Berkeley Patients Group, according to Kesarwani's office.

The University Avenue Association, initially agreeable to these electronic billboards, has reversed itself after discovering that the majority of area businesses and business associations opposes them, including: -more-


ON MENTAL WELLNESS: If Dealing with A Mentally Ill Person, Some Advice on Closure

Jack Bragen
Sunday December 11, 2022 - 06:05:00 PM

I'm writing this week's column as "me," a mentally ill person, giving you my perspective on what works when "you" someone who is "neuro-typical" AKA "normal" wants to disconnect. I am addressing people who aren't mentally ill yourselves, yet [the premise of this essay is] a mentally ill person or persons are in some capacity in your lives.

In my past, including both distant past and recent past, I've known people who don't want me in their lives anymore, or who perhaps never did. They may consider me a nuisance, or they may perceive me as though I'm a monstrosity from whom they want to get away. They may feel I'm "Inappropriate." They may not perceive me as a real person. Or they may believe I'm just fine, I'm a real person and they wish me well; they just don't want to be connected any more. Either way, there may be some do's and don'ts--for both parties. -more-


Hopkins Transportation Consultant Brings Baggage to Assignment

Zelda Bronstein
Sunday December 11, 2022 - 05:28:00 PM

Nelson\Nygaard, the transportation consultancy hired by the city to study parking and customer access at the Monterey-Hopkins commercial hub in connection with the protected bike lane project, has added an academic consultant to its team: Justin de Benedictis-Kessner, an assistant professor of Public Policy at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.

His c.v. includes a white paper he co-authored that was presented to the city of Boston in August 2021, “What the Next Mayor Needs to Do About Boston’s Transportation Crisis.”

Its recommendations include: -more-


The Latest Developments in Iran

James Roy MacBean
Friday December 23, 2022 - 10:31:00 AM

In a rapidly changing situation, last week there were unconfirmed reports that the Iranian regime had decided to abolish the Morality Police and lessen restrictions on women appearing in public without the required hijab or head scarf. However, these reports were soon denied by the regime; and to make matters worse, the regime began to execute the first, and now the second, protester sentenced to death for participating in the protests. Granted, at least one of these particular protesters hanged by the regime had allegedly engaged in a street battle with security elements that resulted in the death of members of Iran’s Bajis, a subdivision of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard that is the most visible element of the Revolutionary Guard to participate in the regime’s maximal crackdown on the popular protest movement. -more-


Editorial

What Elections Can Teach Berkeley

Becky O'Malley
Thursday November 17, 2022 - 12:02:00 PM

Elections are over for the moment, and what, you may ask, have we learned?

Well, first, don’t trust either polls or the pundits who dote on them.

As Michael Moore presciently pointed out before the election: “…not only were the Republicans not going to clobber us in the House with 30 to 50 new seats, they might be in for an upset because it’s gonna be so dang close. And Trump’s mob of election-denying candidates were going to go down in flames. There would be record numbers of young voters, and women were on a rampage over the abolishment of Roe. The sword of vengeance would be theirs.”

Yes. And lo, the waves parted and we walked on water. Or something like that. The naysayers were wrong. But how about Berkeley?

Here in Berkeley, the only polls we have are those paid for by promoters, either for potential candidates or for proposed ballot measures. Apparently locals have lost interest in the city. There’s something very wrong with the way Berkeley is governed these days, which turns out to be a self-fullfilling prophecy. The only real race was in District 1, where the people most likely to be impacted by the Big Bart Boxes mounted a creditable attempt to unseat an incumbent, but failed, as is almost always the case.

In District 8, the race was to the swift, with attorney Humbert rounding up the usual suspects to pre-endorse him before the incumbent had even announced in public that she wasn’t running. -more-


Arts & Events

THE BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S CALENDAR, December 11-18

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Sunday December 11, 2022 - 05:15:00 PM

Worth Noting:

City Council Winter Recess is December 14, 2022 – January 16, 2023.

  • Monday :The Council Health, Life Enrichment Equity & Community meets at 10 am on parking, towing, fines and fees and impact on low-income community and homeless, and Residential Preferred Parking (RPP) for low-income individuals with parking tickets. Hopkins Corridor Transportation Safety Redesign Project Gillman to San Pablo at 5:30 pm. The Youth Commission meets at 6:30 with discussion on access to reproductive services and School Safety. Also, Speaking Up for Point Molate at 6 pm is on the Shellmound and protecting ancestral sites. This looks interesting.
  • Tuesday :These are the go to meetings - City Council meeting at 5 pm starts with confirming the election results, reassignment of committees and item-2 on accepting the $15,000,000 grant from the State Coastal Conservancy and how the City plans to spend the money. The Council regular meeting at 6 pm includes on consent item-8 on placing 22 more IKE Kiosks in Berkeley, item-12 on $4,500,000 to Bonita House for a 2-year pilot of a Specialized Care Unit, and on action item-23 on the mid-year budget adjustment (AAO), item-24 on Pension liabilities and item-25 on BUSD and tennis team trip reduction.
  • Wednesday the 4 x 4 Committee meets at 2:30 pm on the demolition ordinance. Parks, Recreation and Waterfront Commission meets at 7 pm on Marina Fund deficit, Santa Fe Park project, Waterfront projects and the expected The Turtle Island Monument Project as a discussion item is listed as communication letter.
  • Thursday the Design Review Committee takes up the 25-story, 326 unit project at 2190 Shattuck (Walgreens at Allston site). The project at 3000 Shattuck at Ashby will be reviewed in January and plans are posted for a 10-story building of studio apartments. The Rent Board at 7 pm agenda isn’t posted, check after Monday.
No meetings on Friday or the weekend. Please consider pulling out your N95 or KN95 masks for indoor events. It is winter and people are getting sick with COVID, Flu and RSV (Respiratory Syncytial Virus).

Check the City website for last minute meetings posted on short notice at: https://berkeleyca.gov/ -more-