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News

Open Letter to the Berkeley City Council Re: Diesel-powered Ferry

Charlene M. Woodcock
Thursday March 09, 2023 - 02:17:00 PM

Dear Mayor and City Council members,

It is very disturbing to learn that WETA, in spite of promises of electric ferries, has instead based cost projections on the purchase of dirty, polluting diesel ferries.
If the ferries purchased for the planned new Bay ferry service for the Berkeley Marina are diesel, they will make a mockery of any claim that this ferry service is environmentally beneficial. The proposed ferry service, promoted as a replacement for gas-powered cars, cannot be justified if the ferries are powered by any of the fossil fuels that drive the climate crisis. 

Paul Kamen, Chairman of the Berkeley Waterfront Commission has stated this clearly, with substantiating facts in this piece published March 7 in Berkeleyside:
Please show us that you grasp the seriousness of the climate crisis and require electric, ferries for any Berkeley ferry service.
Thank you.


Opinion

Public Comment

Open Letter to the Berkeley Landmarks Preservation Commission
Re: Denial of my request to initiate the Henry Osgood Noyes House (1892)

Daniella Thompson
Monday March 06, 2023 - 11:34:00 AM

Some of you have known me for many years, while others, I believe, have never heard of me. I’m a historian, author of hundreds of articles about Berkeley’s architectural history, long-time editor of the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association website, and the recorder of the following 21 landmark applications: 

  1. Rev. Dr. Robert Bentley House (A.H. Broad, 1900), 2683 Le Conte Avenue
    Designated 2 Feb 1998
  2. George Edwards House (A.H. Broad, 1886), 2530 Dwight Way
    Designated 6 Apr 1998
  3. Josiah J. Rose-Goldsmith House (Josiah John Rose, builder, 1891), 2919 Lorina Street
    Designated 8 Sep 1998
  4. Theta Xi Chapter House (Drysdale & Thomsen, 1914), 1730 La Loma Avenue
    Designated 4 Jan 1999
  5. Prof. Stuart Daggett House (John Hudson Thomas, 1924, 1938), 1427 Hawthorne Terrace
    Designated 14 Jul 2003
  6. Laura Belle Marsh Kluegel House (John Hudson Thomas, 1911), 2667–69 Le Conte Ave
    Designated 3 August 2006
  7. Koerber Building (Berkeley Building Company, 1923), 2054 University Avenue
    Designated 3 September 2009
  8. Mary J. Berg House (William Garfield May, 1901), 2517 Regent Street
    Designated 1 November 2012
  9. Lucinda Reames House No. 1 (A. Dodge Coplin, 1902–1903), 2503 Regent Street
    Designated 2 October 2014
  10. Lucinda Reames House No. 2 (A. Dodge Coplin, 1903), 2509 Regent Street
    Designated 2 October 2014
  11. William Wilkinson House (A. Dodge Coplin, 1903), 2511 Regent Street
    Designated 2 October 2014
  12. Channing Apartments (Walter H. Ratcliff, Jr., 1913), 2409 College Avenue
    Designated 5 February 2015
  13. Hull Undertaking Co. & Little Chapel of the Flowers (Hutchison & Mills, 1923); Francis Harvey Slocombe, 1928), 3049–3051 Adeline Street
    Designated 3 September 2015
  14. Bennington Apartments (1892; 1915), 2508 Ridge Road
    Designated 4 February 2016
  15. Ali & Marion Yazdi Building (William I. Garren, 1933), 2910–2912 Telegraph Avenue
    Designated 7 July 2016
  16. Captain John Slater House (Thomas J. Welsh, 1894), 1335 Shattuck Avenue
    Designated 2 February 2017
  17. Charles H. Spear House (Robert Greig, builder, 1904), 1905 Martin Luther King, Jr. Way
    Designated 6 July 2017
  18. Thomas & Louise Hicks House (Chapin A. Martin, builder, 1904), 2901 Benvenue Ave
    Designated 1 March 2018
  19. Captain James & Cecilia Luttrell House (Ira A. Boynton, 1889), 2328 Channing Way
    Designated 2 July 2020
  20. William & Esther Payson House (Lord & Boynton, 1889), 1915 Berryman Street
    Denied 6 August 2020
  21. James T. Stocker-Loni Ding House (James T. Stocker, 1901), 1940 Hearst Avenue
    Designated 3 March 2022
 

Until a few years ago, the LPC always complied with my requests to initiate historic structures, and as you can see from the list above, I always delivered thoroughly researched, comprehensive landmark applications in a timely manner. 

It was therefore a deep disappointment to me that the five commissioners present at the LPC meeting of 2 March 2023 decided to take no action on my request to initiate the Henry Osgood Noyes House (1892) at 2531 Ridge Road. 

I had provided the commission with an 8-page document in which I outlined the reasons for my request. In the cover letter, I wrote that I could deliver a complete landmark application within a month (I have researched and written about this property and others in the Daley’s Scenic Park tract numerous times). I also explained, in writing, as well as orally, that for various personal and family reasons, it is a hardship for me to gather signatures on a petition. 

Given the age of the Noyes House, its being the last recognizable Queen Anne Victorian in the Daley’s Scenic Park tract, and the house’s unique history, I would have expected that an LPC initiation would be readily forthcoming. 

I can only conclude that the five commissioners present on 2 March 2023: 

  1. did not read my 8-page explanatory document, which was included in the agenda packet; or
  2. read the document but decided in advance that the structure does not possess sufficient merit for initiation.
Whether the first or the second assumption (or a combination of both) is true, they serve as a disincentive for preservation and deter community members from writing landmark applications. If the commissioners did not read the request for initiation, they would not be likely to read the full landmark application either (mine are hefty tomes). If they did read the document and decided a priori that the structure is not worthy, I would be wasting my time toiling over a landmark application, in addition to having to gather petition signatures. 

On the evening of the 2 March 2023 LPC meeting, I did not stay past my public comment remarks owing to urgent family obligations, but it was reported to me afterwards that “Commissioner Montgomery mentioned three prior initiations that did not result in submissions and did not want to have any more of that happening.” 

Even if some initiations do not result in submitted applications (which has never been my case in the past 25 years), what does it cost the commission to make the work of preservation a little easier for applicants? Why punish the entire preservation community because of a few omitted submissions? Why do the commissioners ignore the massive work required to complete and submit a landmark application? 

Your commission’s name includes the word “preservation,” and Berkeley would be a better place if your actions honored the name. 

I request once again that you initiate the Henry Osgood Noyes House (1892) at 2531 Ridge Road. If you do, I will complete the landmark application. If you don’t, this will be the end of my efforts on behalf of this building. 

 

 


CEQA Madness

Carol Denney
Sunday March 05, 2023 - 05:42:00 PM

The well orchestrated uproar over CEQA*[1] is similar to the 1930s hysteria over marijuana. Nancy Skinner, Scott Weiner, California Governor Gavin Newsom are all clutching their pearls over the alleged burden it creates for poor, downtrodden developers, and Berkeley's entire city council is apparently happy to applaud weakening it with even more exemptions. But the UC regents didn't lose their case in appellate court over their proposal to build housing on People's Park because of CEQA. They lost it because they were stupid.

The horrors attributed to CEQA are groundless. Two decades of CEQA decisions analyzed by the Rose Foundation[2] documents the fact that CEQA's requirements have not burdened developers or development, but rather have improved proposals statewide which ran the risk of damaging not just the environment but in particular communities of color and historic cultural treasures. Local politicians' close associations with developers may preclude the modest scrutiny provided by CEQA, which is simply designed to make sure that there is thorough discussion of a project's impacts, including environmental impacts. In People's Park's case, it mandated discussion of alternative locations for the project, which the University of California (UC), California's largest landowner, chose not to do. The First Appellate District Court of Appeal's tentative ruling of December 22, 2022 plainly states:

"We do not take sides on policy issues. Our task is modest. We must apply the laws that the Legislature has written to the facts in the record. In each area where the EIR[3] is deficient the EIR skipped a legal requirement, or the record did not support the EIR's conclusions, or both."[4] 

Perhaps it wasn't stupid to think that a legally inadequate brief would be affirmed at a lower court level; UC can presumably count on special favors unavailable to, in this case, small nonprofits. But consider that without CEQA, the simple question, "can this project's goals be accomplished without destroying redwoods, open space, much-needed recreational space and an historic park on the National Register of Historic Places?" might never have been asked emphatically enough to get the regents to take their fingers out of their ears. 

They have to listen now. They have to enumerate the obvious alternative locations for their project in lower court, justify their obvious omissions in the California Supreme Court, or settle for weakening CEQA for their own and other developers' purposes, putting the environment, and communities of color in particular, at even deeper risk. 

Be prepared for self-dealing politicians to offer to take more bites out of CEQA in the name of "student housing" despite the fact that "Project 1" in the regents' proposal demolished rent-controlled housing in a landmarked building and was replaced with high-end, student-only housing exempt from local zoning and contributions to the tax base. 

Your city council had no discouraging words for this plan. Even Kate Harrison, who abstained on the legally disputed agreement signed in a secret meeting between the university and Mayor Jesse Arreguin, refused to explain her lonely abstention. 

But remember this: the regents, as California's largest landholders, could have simply listed their alternative locations for housing. But it would be embarrassing; there's easily 100 acres of land even closer to the main campus than People's Park available, already UC owned, much of which is already zoned for housing. 

And then, of course, there's the rolling empty lawns of the campus itself, the open space that was Evans Hall, the state-wide opportunity to build more campuses, and the option to acquire under-attended Humboldt State University and incorporate it into the UC system without having to build a thing. But the latter would presume the priority of education itself, rather than development. Education, as the continuing sacrifice of UC's respected libraries[5] makes clear, is apparently the last thing on their mind. 

# # #  

Carol Denney is a Berkeley writer, musician, cartoonist, and co-founder of the People's Park Historic District Advocacy Group. 



[1] California Environmental Quality Act 

[2] Rose Foundation, CEQA - California's Living Environmental Law, CEQA's Role in Housing, Environmental Justice, and Climate Change, October 2021 

[3] Environmental Impact Report 

[4] First Appellate District Division Five Court of Appeals, Oakland Superior Court Tentative Ruling, Judge P. J. Jackson, December 22, 2022 

[5] "UC Berkeley library's end spurs a clash" San Francisco Chronicle, March 4, 2023, pg. 1 by Nanette Asimov 


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces:Tidbits&Obits

Gar Smith
Sunday March 05, 2023 - 05:35:00 PM

One of the Great Radio Bloopers

On February 12, 2023, a KCBS reporter's weather update went awry causing her to dissolve into a pot of on-air giggles. "Sorry," she said. "I meant to say we can expect good weather for hiking and cycling. Did I really say 'Good weather for hikeling and psyching'?" Yes, she did!

Pass the 28th Amendment

On March 2, the Progressive Democrats of America (PDA) thanked the Senate Committee on the Judiciary for holding a historic hearing on S.J.Res.4, a "bipartisan resolution affirming that Congress views the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) as valid, having been duly ratified by 38 states, (three-fourths of the 50 states, as required by Article V of the U.S. Constitution)." 

PDA collaborated with the National Organization for Women to support Sen. Benjamin Cardin’s initial introduction of S.J.Res.4, and worked to persuade other Senators to cosponsor and support the Joint Resolution by organizing in Illinois, Nevada, and Virginia to win the support of 38 qualifying states. 

Voting to enact S.J.Res.4 (and H.J.Res.25, the corresponding House version) will direct the Archivist of the United States to include the ERA as the Twenty-Eighth Amendment of the US Constitution. 

Unfortunately, the DC Federal Circuit Court ruled against the request of Illinois and Nevada to direct the US Archivist to accept the passage of the ERA because of an arbitrary deadline—a deadline the resolutions would directly supersede. 

If this hurdle can be hopped, PDA's Alan Minsky says, "the two steps forward we achieved this week will far outdistance this setback. We had a trailblazing hearing in the Senate, and public momentum is back on the side of the ERA." 

Fashion Plates 

Personalized license plates spotted around town. 

Honda: JAZZTIN (Beat those cymbals, jazz-man)
Honda: I AM OK 2 (Nice to get some good news)
Tesla: FAB FIVE (A happy couple with three kids?) 

Bumper Snickers 

I Brake for Worms 

Dirt-hugging Tree-Worshipper
Please Forgive Me I Was Raised by Wolves
Goin' Broke Paying for War
I'm Retired. Drive Around 

The Unseamly Story of the Tube-Shirt 

While loading up the backyard clothesline on a rare sunny day, I noticed something odd about my tee-shirts. While some had been constructed by stitching together a front and back—with seams running down the sides, most of the shirts had no side stitches—they appeared to have been constructed from floppy cloth tubes. How could that be? 

I typed a query onto my laptop and asked Google for info on "side-seamed tees and tubular tees." To my surprise, I immediately got a list of pages devoted to precisely that phrase! 

Here's an explanatory video from Bella+Canvas, a major T-shirt company: 

 

But that still leaves me trying to envision a machine that can turn cotton balls into tube shirts. Google has an answer to that question, too. Here's a video peek at the thousands of robot machines that are busily churning out tees in vast warehouses scattered around the world. 

 

Our War Tax Dollars at Work 

A couple of recent headlines from Air Force Times caught my eye. First:
Pentagon orders engine vibration fix for entire F-35 fleet worldwide
On March 3, AFT reported: "F-35 deliveries were halted in mid-December after a mishap involving a new F-35B in Fort Worth, Texas. That F-35B, which was undergoing a quality check flight, was videotaped bouncing, tipping forward, and spinning around on the ground before its pilot ejected safely." 

Meanwhile, owing to what the Joint Program Office (JPO) called "a potential engine vibration problem," the JPO ordered that all of these Lockheed Martin jets undergo a "fleet-wide retrofit—globally, not just American aircraft—over the next three months." (Further fiscal note: The cost of a single F-35 tops $80 million.) 

And second:
Another Air Force fleet grounded over fears plane tails may fall off
On March 2, AFT reported: "The big search for a tiny component that could cause an airplane’s tail to fall off has uncovered the problem on at least two dozen Air Force jets across at least five aircraft fleets. But the Air Force won’t say exactly how many planes have turned up with potentially dangerous parts." Rest assured, the Air Combat Command replied: "The E-3 Sentry aerial target tracking planes on Wednesday became the latest to undergo inspection for subpar tail pins." 

And third:
Six leaders fired from Air Force nuclear base in North Dakota
On February 27, AFT reported that Col. Gregory Mayer—joined by a second commander and four subordinates—had been summarily fired. While the Air Force "declined to say what led to their ousters," AFT did note that "Mayer oversaw 1,900 airmen across six squadrons and a base portfolio worth $4.3 billion... Minot is the Air Force’s only installation that houses two legs of the nuclear triad... Mayer’s group supports daily operations of the base’s B-52H Stratofortress nuclear-capable bombers, Minuteman III nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missiles and launch control centers.” 

Why were these actions taken? All AFT reveals is: “These personnel actions were necessary to maintain the very high standards we demand of those units entrusted with supporting our nation’s nuclear mission.”  

Balloon Baloney 

Could it be that the political kerfuffle surrounding the shoot-down of the alleged "Chinese Spy Balloon" was concocted to draw attention away from a much larger and troubling news report—i.e., Sy Hersh's exposé about the US role in the attack on Russia's Nord Stream gas pipelines. 

It remains to be seen (while awaiting the remains of the "Spy Balloon" to be fully recovered and assessed) whether China's wayward aircraft was on an actual spy mission. Meanwhile, the Pentagon busied itself shooting down a host of smaller unidentified aircraft that were ultimately identified as "benign." (One of these fighter-jet-versus-balloon encounters cost taxpayers an estimated cost of $2 million.) 

In retrospect, President Biden confessed, most of the odd floaters appeared to have been released by researchers or hobbyists. 

So the Pentagon's warplanes apparently operate under the same rules as America's "rogue cops"—i.e., even if a suspect (human or mechanical) is unarmed and poses no threat, they can be shot in the back while "in flight." 

In the Classroom with Bettina Aptheker 

Berkeley grad and FSM ringleader Bettina Aptheker once made local news in the 1960's when she revealed her membership in the US Communist Party. The next day's edition of the Hearst-owned Examiner carried a headline that read: "Aptheker Admits She's a Red!" 

Aptheker, now a Distinguished Professor at UC Santa Cruz, returned to the UCB campus on February 15, at the invitation of Brooke Lorber who teaches in Gender and Women’s Studies. Aptheker is the author of a scintillating new book titled "Communists in the Closet: Queering the History 1930s-1990s"—a history of US activists who were banned from the party for decades owing to their "non-conforming" sexual identities. 

"The instructor is doing a class on interpreting queer history and so invited me to give a talk," Aptheker texted friends, "and she opened it up to anyone who wants to come." 

The invitation was well received: Room 126 in the Social Sciences building was packed with 70-75 people listening and applauding Aptheker's colorful observations. 

At one point, Aptheker mentioned discovering that her politics had gifted her with "my own personal FBI agent." The agent was named Don Jones and he spent a good part of his time shadowing and harassing Aptheker. 

On one occasion, when she was addressing a crowd of students in front of Sproul Hall, a fellow activist spotted Jones in the back of the crowd and whispered the news to Aptheker who interrupted her speech to announce: "We have a special guest in the audience. I'd like to introduce my own personal FBI agent, Don Jones." The fellow activist (who had by now taken up a position next to Jones) raised his hand and pointed to the flummoxed Fed, who left in a huff and a hurry. 

¡Bruce Barthol, Presente! 

Reposted from the Free Speech Movement Archives.
Born at Alta Bates, Bruce Barthol was one of the six juvenile participants in the Sproul Hall sit-in, but he left before the arrests (when minors were told to because only their parents would be able to bail them out of juvenile hall.) A couple of years later, he became one of the founding members of Country Joe and the Fish (Bruce played bass guitar on the 1967 studio album I’m Fixing to Die.)  

For 30 years, Bruce was the composer/lyricist/music director for the San Francisco Mime Troupe from 1976 to his retirement in 2009. He wrote the songs for many of the Mime Troupe’s greatest hits, including Factwino and Steel Town and he co-wrote (along with Mario’s son Daniel) the words and music to FSM: The Musical, which was presented at a special performance at Berkeley Rep during the FSM's 50th reunion. 

 

You can watch a long interview with Bruce and Mime Trouper Michael Gene Sullivan at this link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3TT_9fg0aB0 

A Note from Daniel Ellsberg 

 

Pentagon Papers whistleblower, author, and anti-war activist Daniel Ellsberg recently released a public statement concerning a personal health emergency. It began: 

"Dear friends and supporters, 

"I have difficult news to impart. On February 17, without much warning, I was diagnosed with inoperable pancreatic cancer on the basis of a CT scan and an MRI. (As is usual with pancreatic cancer — which has no early symptoms — it was found while looking for something else, relatively minor). I'm sorry to report to you that my doctors have given me three to six months to live. Of course, they emphasize that everyone's case is individual; it might be more, or less. 

"I have chosen not to do chemotherapy (which offers no promise) and I have assurance of great hospice care when needed. Please know: right now, I am not in any physical pain, and in fact, after my hip replacement surgery in late 2021, I feel better physically than I have in years! …" 

The full message can be read online at this link. And here are two videos of Dan addressing the motivations behind the US arms race and warning of the consequences of promoting the use of suicidal nuclear weapons. 

Who Really Benefits from War? 

Daniel Ellsberg / Al Jazeera UpFront (2022) 

 

The Doomsday Machine 

Daniel Ellsberg / The Commonwealth Club of California (2017) 

 

Remembering David Harris 

The headline for the February 22 New York Time obit was brief but comprehensive: "David Harris, Leader of Vietnam Draft Resistance Movement, Dies at 76: An activist who went to jail for refusing to serve in the military, he teamed with and married Joan Baez and later became a journalist." 

Local documentary filmmaker Judith Ehrlich (who directed "The Most Dangerous Man in America," an acclaimed profile of Kensington's Daniel Ellsberg) is also the artist behind "The Boys Who Said 'No'!", a documentary about draft resistance featuring David Harris. The film will be screened by the Santa Cruz Resource Center for Nonviolence on March 11, 2:00 - 5:00 p.m. along with a panel discussion featuring Mandy Carter, Winter Dellenbach, Bob Zaugh and Joe Williams. The film is also set to stream on Vimeo fromMarch 8 -11. 

 

A celebration of David Harris’s life will be held at Stanford University on a date to be announced. You can register here.


Kicking the Encampment Around Again

Steve Martinot
Sunday March 05, 2023 - 05:14:00 PM

On Jan. 31 of this year, the city did what it had been doing for years to no effect; it had again raided the encampment called “First They Came for the Homeless.” It had been situated on Adeline St. at 64th for years. But not because of city largess. It was only because of external circumstances, like a federal suit (the Boise decision), and the pandemic. The fact that it represented the main principled and ethical response to homelessness would not have mattered. That encampment had been raided and torn apart more times than this city knew how to count. For some reason, even a liberal city like Berkeley could not bring itself to live with the effects of its own corporate structure, nor with the autonomy of those dealing with that structure. 

They (the encampment) had set themselves up at city hall first, way back in 2016; it was at the old one, the one right under the noses of the police, whose HQ was 100 feet away. They had signs set up, saying why they were there, and what they hoped to accomplish by this protest. After about a week or so, the cops got tired of looking at them, and kicked them out of there. That was not what they wanted, but it what they expected -- a level of dehumanization that matched the fact that the entire society seemed unable to live with its growing number of "unhoused" people. 

Some people would say that “housing is a human right;” but for most people, even in Berkeley, that didn’t mean anything. Human rights? What the hell are they? 

So the encampment qua protest set itself up at the new city hall, one block away. They were both protesting their ability to survive and protecting their ability to live. They were, after all, residents of this society and its city. They were protesting their inability to get acceptance as residents. This time, the city lied about them, and called the police to deal with them. The lies were ugly. But what do you expect when even human rights are kicked to the curb. They moved again; to the Adeline median, to the North Shattuck median, to Ohlone Way, to the foot of Ashby, and on and on (not in that order). In each of these spots, they got support from people in the area, who would bring them things, like food, or water, or heat, or just materials to write on. They got good at moving, but not good at dealing with the crimes the cops kept committing. 

You know, when the cops violate the Constitution of the US, they are committing crimes against human rights. It says right there, in the Constitution, no one shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. “Due process” means that it occurs first, before the deprivation. It is an opportunity for the one the state wishes to deprive to argue against the state, and its cops, and its other institutions. A chance for an individual to have a moment of equalization with corporate governance. That has to come first, before the deprivation, otherwise all the individual has is "appeal." That’s not the same thing. 

Interestingly enough, an advocacy group for the homeless (the Coalition on Homelessness), has taken property claims against the city to Small Claims Court, and won – thousands of dollars. More cases have followed, and a movement has formed. [Mission Local, Feb. 22, 2023] 

That doesn’t help those who died because they were deprived of things they needed to defend themselves against the elements. But at least it recognizes the principle. 

When the cops take the property of a person that the person needs to survive, they are condemning that person to possible death. That is a felony. It is a felony to threaten someone with death. The cops have just committed that felony again, by raiding this encampment, and taking people’s property without due process of law. 

Well, they are good at killing people. Since 2015, they have averaged about 1000 a year, nationwide. And they have used live ammunition in Berkeley, shooting a man for eating sandwich. Someone has said that 2022 was a bumper year because the cops killed 1176 people that year. The encampment called itself “First They Came for the Homeless,” in honor of the anti-Nazi poem written by Niemoller. The Nazis killed thousands a day, the US government kills a thousand a year. When the cops kill, it is the government killing its own people. 

The encampment was later called Here/There because of two sculptures put up in the area. And it was easier (and more polite) to say. But “First They Came for the Homeless” should not be forgotten. 

Also, the majority of the cop’s victims are black or brown, even though those groups are not the majority of the people. Yes, it’s a human rights issue again, as well as one of despotism. We have dealt with the militarism of the police. When they give an order, they are putting the person so ordered into a military situation (against his/her will, and without consent). There are no human rights in the military. That is something the Dept. of Defense knows full well, when they agree to give military equipment to the local police. 

The cops would say that they were getting complaints about the encampment. And they use that to rationalize busting it up. They don’t say they got complaints about the fact that this city produces homeless people in the first place. They didn’t say that they got complaints about the cops dehumanizing and criminalizing the homeless. The cops spoke only of complaints about the existence of the homeless. And they use that to raid the encampment. Barbara Brust used to read the names of the homeless who had died on the streets that month in City Council. The Mayor would look on with a placid face, and not hold her to his time limits. But he would send the police to clear out another encampment. 

How the homeless held off the cops for a while

The members of the homeless community decided that they would camp out on BART land on Adeline St. and 64th. What made that work was that, as BART land, it was outside the jurisdiction of the Berkeley PD. So a number of years went by during which the encampment was safe from police raids. 

 

This was the flagship community of the homeless. The homeless had no addresses, and so had problems getting services – like trash pick-ups, and porto-potties – not to mention mail, and health care, just like other residents got – they had only themselves to fall back upon. Survival on the street is not easy. One needs help and support and friendship, as well as community. And “First They Came” (FTCFTH) became the center of all the encampments because it was the best organized. It would send people out to other encampments to help organize them. In that, they were participating in the survival of people that this society wished to sweep away. 

The principles of the encampment were formed around policies discussed by the members. They were passed by them by a vote. Their policies were simple; no drugs (except by prescription), no alcohol, no violence, nor rowdy behavior; members were expected to be self-sufficient but with an attitude of mutual aid, clean up after themselves, and maintain a “Good Neighbor” policy. And there were regulations for joining. Those who violated these standards could be kicked out by the rest of the membership (by modified consensus). And if policy had to be made concerning events, such as police raids, or new rulings by the City Council, or where the encampment should move to when it was raided by the cops, those would be discussed, and decided. No one could bring other people into the encampment as a member without it being discussed by all the other members first. A member could spend some time with a friend, but if it looked like the friend was moving in, that would have to be discussed by the whole membership. Before the pandemic, admission to the encampment was rarely a problem. 

The couple of years that they were able to avoid Berkeley police by living on BART land enabled them to save quite a few people, and stabilize their community. 

Of course, the city of Berkeley hated them for that, just as all bureaucrats hate it when people find living autonomously better than going along with corporate governance. So eventually, the Berkeley City Council got the BART Board of Directors to pay attention, and kick the encampment out of its jurisdiction. Ho-hum. So the encampment moved over to city land, right next to where they had lived on BART land. And it just so happened that the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals was at that moment dealing with the Boise decision. So the city called the cops off while the court dealt with that issue. 

The Boise Decision was based on the Eighth Amendment of the US Constitution, which was interpreted as saying that a person could not be criminalized for sleeping. At last, someone knew something about human life and existence. Can you imagine living in a society in which such an idea could be considered new??? In which such an idea had to be stated in a high court in order to have any existence for that society? 

The Boise decision stated that a person could not be removed from public land on which they were sleeping (or camping) if the city had no shelter to give them. Without city shelter, a homeless person could set up a tent on public land, and sleep there. 

 

Well, ever since then, Berkeley City Council has been falling all over itself looking for loopholes to use against the encampments, some detail that they could grab hold of to again criminalize the homeless. They invented details, like setting property in a 3 square foot area, or not holding anything over a sidewalk, etc. Anything to give the cops a way of harassing people. 

But the cops were modern. They used the tactics of the surveillance state. It is called “false flag” operations, and is done by corruption, lying, and by underhanded intentional disruption. The cops provide (or allow) disrupters to enter the camp, smoke some dope, and give an excuse to raid. And they did it twice. 

They did it first to boot the encampment off the Post Office when there was a movement to save the building. The encampment had become an important element in saving the building (back in 2018). And they (the cops) did it again for the Adeline St. (FTCFTH) encampment. 

The first time, when the Trump administration sought to get rid of buildings like the Post Office, as white elephants, there was popular outrage in Berkeley, and many people came together to save the PO, including the FTCFTH encampment. They set up their HQs next to the PO, standing guard against government action to close it. That didn’t happen. But what did happen was worse. 

The cops told a bunch of "tweakers" (drug users, as they were called) to set up their tents next to the place where FTCFTH had set up for watching the PO. It was right across the street from the High School. And the cops warned that if the encampment allowed drug use across the street from the HS, they (the cops) were going to bust the encampment. The tweakers were invading the encampment’s space, and could not be separated from it except through possible violence. The campers told the tweakers to move around the corner, and establish some distance from the encampment. But that didn’t work. The cops used the tweakers presence to the encampment as a reason for raiding it, and shutting it down. 

It can be summarized as the city saying, if we can’t hold you down to our standards, then we will do what we can to make your standards unlivable. This is the US’s attitude toward nations like Cuba or Venezuela. Both have insisted on their sovereignty, which means not having to ask anyone for permission to exist. The US, on the other hand, as the dominant force in the world, thought it could require any nation to plead, beg, and ask for permission to be who they wanted to be. Otherwise, it would try to starve the recalcitrant into submission. That was how the cops dealt with the homeless in Berkeley. That was why homeless autonomy was, and is, so important. 

The city used the same tactic a second time to shut down the encampment on Adeline and 64th St. This second time, other homeless were used to create disruption, setting themselves up in the camp, while refusing to obey camp regulations. They were drinking and doing drugs, and being racist toward some of the other members. They brought in waste food, and created a rat problem (where none had been). 

There was a neighborhood organization that had engaged in past dialogues with the encampment, and supported what the homeless people were doing. When trouble started in the encampment, one of the members of the encampment sought to go to that organization and speak to them about what was happening. But the organization turned him down. Though he was known to them, they wouldn’t allow him time in their territory to speak about things. Evidently, it was something the organization didn’t want to hear. 

Another member, who knew the source of the trouble-makers, and tried to stand up to them, was attacked. Rather than defend himself, which would have involved some kind of violence, left the encampment for some days in order not to be made a provocation. That was counted against him by some in the neighborhood. 

As a result, division in the support that the neighborhood had originally been showing the encampment, became evident. There was a community member who seemed to be unable or unwilling to distinguish between the protest (the encampment) and the counterprotest (those who came to disrupt it). There was a civil rights organizer who got involved. He said that the encampment had to allow the new-comers to become members, otherwise, he would call the cops in to break up the camp. Between the gossip that was forming around the camp, and the unawareness of others in the neighborhood, local support for the encampment became divided, and left space for the police to come in and evict. 

You can’t come in from the outside and tell people who are inside a situation how to live in it or with it. Just like, you can’t go into a prison and tell prisoners how to deal with or live with their imprisonment. That is simply impermissible. And especially since one is dealing with an autonomous community, and one that is known to be such, and has a sense of itself already. 

To have disrupted the homeless community, and at the same time split the support offered, was all the cops needed. There were people talking about the conditions in the camp without creating a larger dialogue on what was going down. They were doing a disservice to the encampment by ignoring the fact that the cops were ready to raid. And the cops did, trashing the people’s possessions, and put an end to their community’s existence. All the cops had to do was pick the moment to raid it. They gave it three days notice, to a community that had existed in Berkeley for 7 years. 

The encampment wasn’t doing anything illegal. They weren’t even blocking a sidewalk, or leaving stuff on it. They simply existed, which apparently is enough to open one to attack


ON MENTAL WELLNESS: Governor Newsom Signs "CARE Court" Into Law

Jack Bragen
Sunday March 05, 2023 - 05:06:00 PM

I have mixed feelings, leaning toward dismay, about Newsom's new "CARE Court" bill, which is now signed into law. It is intended to force noncompliant mental health consumers into treatment, and this is presumed to eliminate or ease homelessness. But it won't do that. In order for mentally ill people and others to be housed, you must provide housing that we can reasonably pay for on the scant amount of benefits we get. 

This legislation assumes the cause of homelessness is noncompliance with treatment of mentally ill people. In some instances, this is accurate. Yet in most instances, a homeless person isn't mentally impaired, and they merely can't keep pace with the amount of money you must earn to live in the Bay Area. 

Additionally, this seems like a roundabout effort to jail people for being mentally ill or for being homeless. Jails and prisons are sources of profit for the people who build them and who work in them. Those who build or work in the jail systems have a stake in the results of this new law. Since counties aren't going to have enough resources to house mentally ill people who comply with the court orders, jailing could end up as the default. This is an excuse for bulldozing the encampments, which many people probably believe are unsightly. 

It amounts to jailing people for being poor, for having a mental illness, or both. It will create greater fear among mentally ill people, and many of us are scared enough already. CARE Court is too much court and not enough care. 

CARE Court conjures to my mind an image of Jesus in shackles facing Caesar. 

Many Californians won't mind it. They want to see clean, safe-appearing streets, sidewalks, and bridges. Yet this is deceptive. Because tucked away somewhere will be the lives of the mentally ill who couldn't fulfill their requirements to stay liberated and potentially housed. Such mentally ill people will never be able to get the better of their illnesses because they will be locked up. 

I have been jailed. It was the worst thing that ever happened to me. It was worse than being threatened by two gunmen when I worked in Oakland, when they wanted to rob the supermarket where I worked night shift. That was unbelievably terrifying. Jail is worse than that. This could be a "Trojan Horse" in which the stated purpose differs from the actual purpose. 

It could make our streets look cleaned up, and this will bring visual relief to many who live in California. But at what cost? 

The entitlements received by disabled people will not pay the rent of an apartment or a room in a house. We need some method of providing a decent place to live that a disabled person can actually pay, out of what we get. And this is a tall order. And HUD housing makes it too easy to become displaced. Section 8 Housing is risky business, because if you don't comply well enough with their rules, or sometimes even if you do, the subsidy could be lost. Section 8 doesn't do anything to stop evictions. And when evicted, you need to have deposit money for another place, you need to move all of your belongings, and you need to deal with an entirely new set of circumstances in the new housing, assuming you can jump through the hoops adequately to get into a unit. 

Rather than providing housing that we could actually afford, CARE Court blames the individuals who find they have become homeless, because according to the assumptions behind this law, you were displaced because you didn't take your medication. 

The issue isn't about civil rights, it is about the impracticality of this law, and how it provides a non-solution. Governor Newsom, your policies resemble those of Donald Trump a bit too much. 


Jack Bragen is a writer who lives in Martinez.


New: International Women’s Day; Women Here and in Iran and Afghanistan

James Roy MacBean
Wednesday March 08, 2023 - 08:48:00 PM

Today, March 8, as I write, it is International Women’s Day. On this occasion, it strikes me as important that we here in the USA take serious note of the dire situations facing women in both Iran and Afghanistan. Indeed, demonstrations today by women in many of our American cities are emphasising the solidarity between women here and women in Iran and Afghanistan. Moreover, women here recognise that the struggles of women in Iran and Afghanistan are part of the very same struggles women face in this country, especially now that Row v. Wade has removed women’s constitutional right to abortion and reproductive rights over their own bodies. 

Over the past few weeks, Iran has recorded mysterious poisonings at some 290-350 girls’ schools throughout the country, causing harm to girls who experience burning eyes, nausea, fainting, and respiratory problems. Quite a few Iranian girls have been hospitalised, and at least two have died. The exact cause of these poisonings, whether by food or by chemicals released in the air, is not yet known. But what is clear is that the extent and focus of these attacks can be no coincidence. In the wake of mass protests lead by Iranian women over the last 6 months, it is clear that these poisonings are either instigated by the theocratic regime itself or at least by its most extreme supporters. And the attacks are clearly meant to punish girls and strike fear in them so they will no longer join or support the mass anti-regime protests, In any case, these attacks are part and parcel of a misogynist regime of the patriarchal mullahs who run Iran’s theocratic government. 

As for Afghanistan, since taking over the government in August 2021 the Taliban has reneged on promises to respect women’s rights and they have barred girls from higher education, barred women from working for government agencies or NGOs, and have banned women from traveling anywhere without a male family member as escort. Women in Afghanistan have thus been confined to their homes where even there they are second-class citizens with no rights vis a vis their male relatives. 

Meanwhile, in this country, on International Women’s Day, KPFA’s Mitch Jeserich aired an interview he conducted with feminist Eve, formerly known as Eve Ensler, who famously authored and performed The Vagina Monlogues. The woman now known simply as Eve spoke of her humility as she began to learn how widespread was the sexual and psychological abuse experienced by American women at the hands of male members of their own families. The structures of patriarchy, Eve warned, are still very much with us in today’s America. It is time we bring this atrocity to an end here, and support its end everywhere, including in Iran and Afghanistan.


Arts & Events

Watch "Women Talking"

Marc Sapir
Wednesday March 08, 2023 - 08:52:00 PM

In a personal celebration of International Women's Day I recommend that everyone who has not already done so view the film Women Talking. Nominated for best film at the Academy Awards it is loosely based on actual events that occurred in a Mennonite community in Bolivia (to US Women) between 2005 and 2009. But it gives us pause to think about how to fight back against what is happening in Texas, Florida, other fascist Republican dominated states, the Supreme Court, Windsor California, as well as Afghanistan, and elsewhere that women are under the gun and power of male supremacy. For one thing, it's easy to boycott Walgreen's and to ask others to join the Courage Campaign's boycott.


The Vienna Philharmonic Opens a 3-Day Visit to Berkeley’s Zellerbach Hall

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Wednesday March 08, 2023 - 08:44:00 PM

The illustrious Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra is currently in Berkeley under the auspices of Cal Performances, and on Tuesday, March 7 they presented the first of three concerts they will give here over three days. Under conductor Christian Thielemann, who makes his Bay Area debut, Vienna Philharmonic will traverse a century of Viennese music. When Christian Thielemann walked on stage at Tuesday’s concert, he struck me as looking more like a rugby player than a symphony conductor. He is husky and square-jawed. But make no mistake, Thielemann is a consummate conductor. 

Tuesday’s opening concert began with Arnold Schoenberg’s 1899 Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night). Originally written for a string sextet, Verklärte Nacht was expanded by Schoenberg for full string orchestra in 1917, and that is the version performed here by the Vienna Philharmonic. I actually prefer the chamber music version, where I find this work’s remarkable colours and textures stand out more clearly than in the version for string orchestra. That notwithstanding, it was a treat to hear the storied Vienna Philharmonic perform what is by far Schoenberg’s best-loved work. 

Based on the 1896 poem “Zwei Menschen” (“Two People”) by Richard Demel, Verklärte Nacht tells a shockingly unconventional love story about a man and woman who walk one night “through the bare cold woods.” She confesses that she is bearing a child that she conceived when, longing for motherhood, she gave herself to a stranger. Now, she notes, “I met you, you,” the man she truly loves. Hearing this, the man surprises her with his compassionate response, saying, “The child that you have conceived be to your soul no burden.” He then remarks on the glittering stars that will transfigure the child. The man and woman embrace then walk on through the now transfigured “high, bright night.” The overall trajectory of this work moves from a D minor beginning to a D Major conclusion. Glittering arpeggios and pizzicato strings are featured in the transfiguration music.  

After intermission, Vienna Philharmonic performed Richard Strauss’s Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64. 

Written between 1911 and 1915, Strauss’s Alpine Symphony was a work of the middle-aged composer, though his inspiration for this monumental symphonic tone poem came from a hiking party to the top of an Alpine peak he had engaged in back in 1879 when he was only 15 yeas old. 

Obviously, Strauss retained vivid memories of that ascent and the vistas that greeted him at themountain’s summit. 

Eine Alpensinfonie calls for a gargantuan orchestra of more than 150 instrumentalists, including a wind machine and a thunder machine for the work’s climactic storm. Throughout this work, which traces the ascent and descent of the hikers, the Vienna Philharmonic gave a wonderfully fluent performance, highlighting each vivid detail yet bringing it all together as a whole. As the climbers enter a wooded region, we hear 12 horns. Later, when they enter a high meadow where cattle herds graze in summer, we hear a cowbell and a yodeling motif in the bassoons and clarinets. When the climbers finally reach the summit, there is an overwhelming climax that is one of the most thrilling moments in the orchestral repertoire. Strauss even evokes the awe and humility the climbers experience at the immense grandeur before their eyes, and he does so with a frail, stammering oboe solo. 

When they begin their descent from the summit, distant rumbles of thunder announce an approaching storm. Now a wind machine evokes the growing winds as the storm nears. What ensues has been called the greatest storm scene in the symphonic literature. Wind and thunder machines peal out, and an organ adds to the storm’s din. But the storm’s onset is brief, and gradually it subsides, and now the sun returns. Eventually, as the descent continues, the sun sets. But in a lovely coda, the organ leads the elegiac “Ausklang” (“After Tones”) as the climbers reflect on the emotions they have experienced on this momentous mountain trek. 

What an enormous treat it was to hear the Vienna Philharmonic perform this Alpine Symphony that I had previously never heard live. This was an experience I’ll never forget!  

 


The English Concert Performs A Splendidly Tedious Handel’s SOLOMON Oratorio

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Wednesday March 08, 2023 - 08:38:00 PM

Although I appreciate Handel’s extraordinary gift for composing beautiful music, I often find his works, especially his oratorios but also some of his operas, overlong, tedious and downright boring. Take, for example, Handel’s oratorio Solomon, which the highly regarded Baroque music group The English Concert just performed on Sunday, March 5, at Zellerbach Hall. The performance of Solomon was announced as lasting three hours and ten minutes, including two intermissions, though in fact it lasted far longer than that. When one considers Handel’s use of the da capo format, with its endless repeats, I find that my attention wanes and my impatience mounts. 

Where length is concerned, Handel’s opera Alcina, which The English Concert performed here on November 7, 2021, takes the cake. It lasts four and a-half hours! For Alcina, Cal Performances offered no printed plot summary, and, alas, the supertitles at Zellerbach for that 2021 performance didn’t work, so the audience was left in the dark about what was happening in this extremely convoluted plot. I simply walked out after the first hour and criticised Cal Performances for its failure to provide technical and informational support for this English Concert effort. 

Happily, at this Sunday’s Solomon, the supertitles worked fine. Moreover, perhaps in response to my complaint about the lack of a printed plot synopsis for Alcina, Cal Performances announced that a printed booklet would be presented to audience members at Solomon. However, when I entered the Zellerbach lobby and was given only a thin program, I inquired about the booklet. My attention was drawn to a statement at the top of the program that “delivery of the printed program book for this concert was not possible due to severe weather and road closures in the Pacific Northwest.” At this news, I began to wonder if The English Concert was somehow cursed, at least here at Zellerbach Hall. However, I am happy to report that the printed program offered us, though relatively brief, included an excellent plot synopsis and significant background information on Handel’s Solomon. Cal Performances is here applauded for its efforts this time. 

Artistic Director for this English Concert Solomon was Stephen Fox, standing in for Harry Bickert, the group’s director. Conducting from the harpsichord, Stephen Fox led as vibrant a rendition of this oratorio as one could hope for. Yet its endless repeats and overall length nonetheless palled, at least for this listener. However, there was splendid singing from all the soloists and also from the large chorus, which latter is given extended prominence in this oratorio. Outstanding among the soloists were two women, mezzo-soprano Ann Hallenberg as Solomon and Miah Persson as Solomon’s Queen. The choice of a female in the role of Solomon is perhaps unexpected and may seem odd; but Swedish mezzo-soprano Ann Hallenberg brought off her portrayal of Solomon quite splendidly. 

Likewise, Swedish soprano Miah Persson almost outshone all the other singers with her lilting vocal portrayal of Solomon’s Queen and her dramatic portrayal as well of one of the two women who dispute which of them is the mother of a baby. In this latter scene, known as The Judgement of Solomon, I found that Handel’s music hardly did justice to this dramatic moment. After each of the two women has plead her case, Handel inserts a lengthy instrumental passage that tends to break the inherent drama, as we wait for Solomon’s decision. Then, when Solomon declares that the baby be split in half with each woman gaining a half of the child, the second woman, sung by soprano Niamb O’Sullivan, voices her acceptance of this decision. Then the first woman’s response, though beautifully sung by Miah Persson, strikes me as too subdued, too lacking in dismay and horror at the prospect of seeing her baby — and it is her baby — cleaved in half by the sword. Only the dissonances in the orchestral accompaniment to her plea to save the child betray the tensions in her response. But all’s well that ends well as Solomon now decides in her favour, restores the baby to her and banishes the second woman from his court. 

Male singers play only bit parts in this oratorio; but American bass-baritone Brandon Cedel was a vocally robust Levite, and tenor James Way offered splendid coloratura as Zadok. Lastly, Cuban-American soprano Elena Villalón was superb as the visiting Queen of Sheba. 

Though the librettist for Solomon is unknown, the story is roughly based on the Old Testament Books of First Kings and Second Chronicles. In the program notes for this performance, Janet E. Bedel maintains, rightly, I think, that Handel is not only praising Solomon for good governance but also his own king and patron, George II. She cites the obvious fact that this Solomon is totally without flaw and is even a paragon of monogamous marriage, whereas the real historical Solomon had hundreds of concubines.  

Solomon’s multiple choruses were expertly sung by the Clarion Choir, whose artistic director is the same Stephen Fox who conducted this Solomon. The choruses in Solomon are indeed among the most varied and complex of all Handel’s choruses. There are double choruses that feature an extraordinary display of antiphonal counterpoint. Also, among many choruses that vigorously praise the resounding splendour of Solomon’s court, there is also a beautifully quiet chorus, known as the “Nightingale Chorus,” simply evoking the quiet whispers of Nature. Accompanying the Clarion Choir, two flutes captured the song of the nightingales. 

Finally, amidst all this hyperbolic praise of Solomon as Israel’s greatest king, I couldn’t help contrasting this with all the recent criticism now being levied on Israel’s latest would-be ’king,’ Bibi Netanyahu. In a desperate effort to return to power and secure his position for the future, Netanyahu has formed an extreme right-wing coalition, including outright Jewish fascists; and he is personally trying to eliminate the autonomy of Israel’s judiciary. Even as prominent an Israeli supporter as journalist Thomas Friedman has repeatedly published recent articles in The New York Times condemning Netanyahu for shattering Israeli society. Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak recently warned that Netanyahu’s attack on the judiciary could soon bring on an extremely disruptive constitutional crisis that would be devastating to Israel’s.democracy. All this, of course, is a far cry from Handel’s panegyric praise, fictiononal though it may be, of the Old Testament Solomon as society’s ideal leader,


THE BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S CALENDAR, March 5-12, 2023

Kelly Hammagren
Sunday March 05, 2023 - 05:00:00 PM

Worth Noting:

City meetings at 2180 Milvia in the Redwood Room (City Council committees) and at 1231 Addison in the BUSD Board Room (City Council and ZAB) are hybrid, in-person and by videoconference. All other city commission and board meetings in city buildings at 2939 Ellis the South Berkeley Senior Center, 2800 Park the Frances Albrier Community Center and Live Oak Park are in-person only.

  • SUNDAY: At 2 pm is the North Berkeley BART Housing Site Walk
  • MONDAY: At 12 noon the Community for a Cultural Civic Center (CCCC) meets via ZOOM. At 2:30 pm the Agenda and Rules Committee meets on a hybrid format on the draft agenda for the March 21 regular City Council meeting. The Peace and Justice Commission and the Personnel Board meet in person at 7 pm.
  • TUESDAY: CANCELED - The planned Council worksession on BMASP (Berkeley Marina Area Specific Plan) has been canceled.
  • WEDNESDAY: From 8 – 11 am is the planting of 40 native California trees. At 5:30 pm the Police Accountability Board (PAB) holds an in-person special meeting on fixed camera surveillance policies. At 7 pm the Parks, Recreation and Waterfront Commission meets at 7 pm with a full agenda on the marina, capital projects, aquatic park and grants.
  • THURSDAY: At 10 am the Budget Committee meets in a hybrid format. At 7 pm ZAB meets in a hybrid format. Two projects are in the Hillside Overlay, the high fire hazard area. The Hayward Fault runs through the Berkeley Hills and many areas of the hills are mapped as hillside slide areas.
  • SATURDAY: At 10 am the Berkeley Neighborhoods Council (BNC) meets for the first time in a hybrid format. The agenda is not posted yet. BNC meetings are always full and worth attending.
  • SUNDAY: At noon there is a special gathering at Peoples Park
The Droste proposal to limit Public Comment at City Council meetings was rescheduled from February 28 to the March 14 City Council meeting as the first action item, item-20

The proposals were item-19 in February 28 council meeting agenda which is why these commentaries from Councilmember Kate Harrison, Phil Allen D-1 Resident and the Activist’s Diary from February 26, 2023 list the Droste & Robinson/Wengraf proposals as item 19.

The full Agenda for the March 14 City Council meeting is after the calendar of meetings and after the draft agenda for the March 21 City Council meeting.

Check the City website for late announcements and meetings posted on short notice at: https://berkeleyca.gov/

Links to ZOOM support for activating Closed Captioning and Save Transcript are at the bottom of this calendar.

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BERKELEY PUBLIC MEETINGS AND CIVIC EVENTS 

Sunday, March 5, 2023 

NORTH BERLELEY BART HOUSING SITE WALK at 2 pm 

Meet at the station building to begin the public walk tour. 

https://www.northberkeleyhousingpartners.com/ 

Monday, March 6, 2023 

COMMUNITY FOR A CULTURAL CIVIC CENTER (CCCC) at 12 noon 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84774865934?pwd=T1RNOTc2TTNxUnFmTGJpNmNTZmFwUT09 

Teleconference: Meeting ID:  

AGENDA: General meeting and planning for the March 21 City Council work session on the Civic Center Plan 

https://berkeleycccc.org/what-were-about 

AGENDA AND RULES COMMITTEE Meeting at 2:30 pm 

Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor – Redwood Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/s/1615313815 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (Toll Free) Meeting ID: 161 531 3815 

AGENDA: Public Comment on non-agenda and items 1 – 7. 1. Minutes, 2. Review and Approve 3/21/2023 draft agenda – use link or read full draft agenda below at the end of the list of city meetings, 3. Berkeley Considers, 4. Adjournment in Memory, 5. Council Workssessions, 6. Referrals for scheduling, 7. Land Use Calendar, Referred Items for Review: 8. COVID, 9. Discussion of Potential Changes to City Council Legislative Process, Unscheduled Items: 10. Strengthening and Supporting City Commission: Guidance on Development of Legislative Proposals, 11. Discussion Regarding Design and Strengthening of Policy Committees Process and Structure (Including Budget Referrals), 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/council-committees/policy-committee-agenda-rules 

PEACE and JUSTICE COMMISSION at 7 pm 

In-Person Only: 2939 Ellis, South Berkeley Senior Center 

AGENDA: 4. Public Comment, 6. Commission & Chairperson’s Report, 7. Secretary’s Report, Discussion/Action Items: 8. Reimaging Public safety, 9. Shellmound Issues and possible modification of land acknowledgement, 10. Update Reproductive services and Education Access Survey, 11. Update BUSD on Ethnic Studies, 12. Seating at Berkeley Post Offices 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/peace-and-justice-commission 

PERSONNEL BOARD at 7 pm 

In-Person Only: at 1301 Shattuck at Live Oak Community Center, Fireside Room 

AGENDA: III: Public Comment, V. Request for Extension of Temporary Animal Services Assistant, VI. Recommendation to Create New Classifications of Electrical Supervisor and Communications Supervisor in Public Works, Facilities Division IBEW 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/personnel-board 

Tuesday, March 7, 2023 – CANCELED Meeting on the BMASP (Berkeley Marina Area Specific Plan) 

Wednesday, March 8, 2023 

PARKS, RECREATION and WATERFRONT (PRW) at 7 pm 

In-Person Only: 2800 Park St Auditorium 

AGENDA: 6. Public comment, 7. Chair’s Report, 8. Director’s Report, 9. Discussion/Action – Potential FY 2023-2023 PRW Capital Projects Reductions, 10. Update Marina BMASP (Berkeley Marina Area Specific Plan), 11. Update: Marina – project grant funding from Sate Coastal Conservancy, 12. Update – Aquatic Park water Quality, 13. Update – aquatic Park Berkeley Commons 600 Addison, 14. Workplan 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/parks-recreation-and-waterfront-commission 

POLICE ACCOUNTABILITY BOARD at 5:30 pm 

In-Person Only: 2939 South Berkeley Senior Center 

AGENDA: 3. Special comment Public Comment limited to agenda items, 4. Presentation of the Policy Review Board on Proposed BPD Policies 351 (External Fixed Video Surveillance Cameras) and 1304 (Surveillance Use Policy - External Fixed Video Surveillance Cameras). (56 page packet contains the current policies, camera sites, and council approval of purchasing surveillance cameras) 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/police-accountability-board 

JOHN HINKEL PARK TREE PLANTING from 8 am – 11 am 

At 41 Somerset Place 

AGENDA: If joining in the planting wear closed toes shoes and plan to get dirty – city supplies the tools or watch the planting of 40 California native trees – 30 coast live oak and 10 California buckeyes 

https://berkeleyca.gov/community-recreation/events/john-hinkel-park-tree-planting 

Thursday, March 9, 2023 

 

BUDGET & FINANCE COMMITTEE at 10 am 

Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor – Redwood Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1601862854 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (Toll Free) Meeting ID: 160 186 2854 

AGENDA: 2. Friedrichsen, Budget Manager - Unfunded Liability Obligations and Unfunded Needs, 3. Robinson & Arreguin - Approval of the Public East Bay Viability Study. 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/council-committees/policy-committee-budget-finance 

ZONING ADJUSTMENTS BOARD at 7 pm 

Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 1231 Addison, BUSD Board Room 

Videoconference: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/83222545623 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 or 1-669-444-9171 Meeting ID: 832 2254 5623 

AGENDA: 3. 2600 Benevenue – On Consent – Legalize unpermitted addition and add two ADUs (1723 sq ft) to a 2-story 4,906 sq ft apartment building with 8 dwelling units 

4. 612 Cragmont – On Consent – Construct new 2-story (height 33 ft) 2095 sq ft single family dwelling and one-car garage with a roof deck (20 feet) on a 16,550 sq ft vacant lot in Hillside Overlay District (High Fire Hazard Zone) 

5. 725-A Gilman – On Consent – establish a winery with tasting room and incidental retail sales of goods under Type 2 ABC license 

6. 870 Santa Barbara – On Action – Appeal of Administrative Use Permit – To construct a 6 ft fence on top of a 3-ft retaining wall in Hillside Overlay District (High Fire Hazard Zone) 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/zoning-adjustments-board 

Friday, March 10, 2023 – A Reduced City Service Day 

Saturday, March 11, 2023 

BERKELEY NEIGHBORHOODS COUNCIL at 10 am 

Hybrid:  

In-Person: at 1901 Russell, Tarea Hall Pittman South Branch Library 

Videoconference:  

https://us06web.zoom.us/j/4223188307?pwd=dFlNMVlVZ2d6b0FnSHh3ZlFwV2NMdz09 

Teleconference: 1-669-444-9171 Meeting ID: 8422 318 8307 Passcode: 521161 

AGENDA: Not posted, check later in the week 

https://berkeleyneighborhoodscouncil.com/ 

Sunday, March 12, 2023 

Community Climate Healing Gathering at Peoples Park from 12 – 3 pm 

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AGENDA AND RULES COMMITTEE Meeting at 2:30 pm 

DRAFT AGENDA for March 21 City Council Regular Meeting at 6 pm 

Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor – Redwood Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/s/1615313815 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (Toll Free) Meeting ID: 161 531 3815 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/council-committees/policy-committee-agenda-rules 

AGENDA on CONSENT: 

  1. Brown, City Attorney – Resolution Reviewing and Ratifying the Proclamation of Local COVID Emergency
  2. Williams-Ridley, City Manager – Designate the Line of Succession for the Director of Emergency Services in the event of an emergency
  3. Sprague, Fire - Grant Application: FEMA to expand National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) 1582/1583 for $840,000 with 10% or $84,000 city matching funds for Wellness, Fitness and Human Performance Program
  4. Warhuus, HHCS - Amend Contract #32200156 add $561,917.11 total $1,201,917.11 with Options Recovery Services for Community Response Services and extend to 12/31/2023
  5. Warhuus, HHCS - Amend Contract #32200147 add $75,600 total $195,000 with Women’s Daytime Drop-in Center for Community Crisis Response Services and extend to 12/31/2023
  6. Warhuus, HHCS - Amend Contract #32300025 add $300,000 total $350,000 with Non-Profit Intelligence Partners for Flexible Funding program services and extend to 6/30/2024
  7. Warhuus, HHCS – Revenue Agreements with California Department of Public Health (CDHP) for 1. Total $383,455 for Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention for years FY 2024, 2025, 2026, and 2. Total $487,170 or $162,390 each year for CalFresh Healthy Living Program FFY 2024, 2025, 2026
  8. Warhuus, HHCS – Funding Recommendation and Joint Homekey Application for University Inn at 1461 University for 1. Measure P $8,500,000 for University Inn permanent supportive housing, 2. Measure P $1,000,000 to operate University Inn as emergency shelter prior to conversion to permanent housing program, 3. Authorize submission to CA Housing and Community Development (HCD) for University Inn permanent supportive housing project, 4. Authorize CM or designee to eneter agreements with HCD, 5. Authorize CM or designee to execute all original or amended documents to effectuate these actions.
  9. Warhuus, HHCS – Amending the 2021 Annual Action Plan to Accept Home-American Rescue Plan Funds, $2,735,696, allocate 15% $410,354 for administration and planning, 5% $136,785 for nonprofit capacity building, and remaining 80% $2,188,557 to supportive services for qualifying populations
  10. Kouyoumdjian, HR – Salary adjustments Local 1 Senior Behavioral Health Clinician by 0.83%, Mental Health Clinical Supervisor by 4.18%, Mental Health Program Supervisor by 7.33%, Assistant Manager of Mental Health Division by 7.33%, and Manager of Mental Health Division by 1.2% effective 1/14/2023
  11. Kouyoumdjian, HR – Salary Range Adjustments increase top step salary of Deputy City Manager classification from $277,840.99 to $291,733.04 and the Employee Relations Manager fro $175,026.38 to $180,065.60 effective 1/14/2023
  12. Ferris, Parks - Contract $260,312.50 includes $52,062.50 contingency with TERCONS Inc. for Aquatic Park Paddling and Rowing Club Parking Lot Improvements
  13. Klein, Planning – Grant Funding $80,000 to CA Energy Commission to integrate Application for SolarAPP+ Integration web software to the Permit Service Center operations
  14. Garland, Public Works – Amend Contract #32100192 add $200,000 total $2,375,900 with California Constructores for Sidewalk Repairs FY 2020 Project
  15. Garland, Public Works – Contract $10,203,711 with JV Lucas Paving, Inc for Street Rehabilitation FY2023 Project
  16. Garland, Public Works – Purchase Order $215,000 for one John Deere 320P Backhoe Loader with Pape Machinery, Inc
  17. Garland, Public Works – Purchase Order $496,454 with Nicholas K Corp dba Ford Store San Leandro for eight Ford Interceptor Hybrid Utility Vehicles
  18. Art Commission – Referral Response Grant Program $300,000 for retaining and improving creative spaces
  19. Mental Health Commission – Resolution to Adopt a City-Wide “Care First, Jails Last” Policy
  20. Peace and Justice Commission – Referral of two health educator positions to the COB FY 2024 budget process
  21. Arreguin – Budget Referral $2,000,000 to augment the post COVID-19 Rental Assistance/Anti-Displacement administered by the Eviction Defense Center
  22. Arreguin – Relinquishment Council Office Budget funds to co-sponsor Bioneers Conference
  23. Hahn – Budget Referral $40,000 for speed feedback sighns for Arlington Ave.
  24. Hahn – Budget Referral for $35,000 for Pedestrian Safety Upgrades for Arlington Ave, refresh painted markings
  25. Wengraf - Relinquishment Council Office Budget funds for 2023 Virtual Holocaust Remembrance Day Program
  26. Wengraf – Proclamation in Honor of Holocaust Remembrance Day April 16 from 2-3 pm
AGENDA on ACTION: 

  1. Garland, Public Works – Implement Residential Residential Preferential Parking (RPP) on 1600 block of Fifth Street
  2. Friedrichsen, Budget Manager – Presentation Unfunded Liability Obligations and Unfunded Infrastructure Needs
  3. Garland, Public Works – Adopt resolution approving Berkeley Transit-First Policy and appoing two members and one alternative to serve on the Inter-Agency Liaison Committee between COB and AC Transit
  4. Taplin & Bartlett – Incentives for Equitable and Affordable Middle Housing refer to CM and Planning Commission to study and return to Council potential amendments to BMC and General Plan (Middle Housing is duplexes, triplexes and quadplexes ) – this adds ADUs
  5. Harrison – Adopt Ordinance Adding BMC Chapter 2.102 to Establish a Labor Peace Policy Minimizing Labor/Management Conflict in Berkeley Marina Zone
  6. Robinson – Referral to CM for On-Street Secure Bike Storage
INFORMATION REPORTS: 

  1. Fiscal Year 2023 Mid-year Budget Update
  2. LPO NOD 1581 1581 LeRoy Ave #LMSAP2022-0009
  3. LPO NOD 1325 Arch #LMSAP2022-0013
  4. LPO NOD 1911 Fourth Street #LMSAP2022-0014
  5. 2022 Disaster and Fire Safety Work Plan
+++++++++++++++++++ 

March 14, 2023 Agenda for CITY COUNCIL Meeting at 6 pm 

A Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 1231 Addison St. in the School District Board Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1600955724 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (toll free) Meeting ID: 160 095 5724 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/city-council-agendas 

AGENDA on CONSENT: 

  1. Arreguin – 2nd reading – Amendments to COVID-19 Emergency Response Ordinance, Suspend the application of the ordinance to commercial property, permit lawful owner move-in evictions, and establish a Transition Period during which time specified evictions would be prohibited
  2. Harrison – 2nd reading - Modifies Environment and Climate Commission membership to add two youth members appointed by council in addition to commissioners appointed by each councilmember and mayor.
  3. Oyekanmi, Finance - Formal Bid Solicitations $2,802,400 (Mobile Wellness Services for individuals who are unhoused and living in area encampments).
  4. Sprague, Fire – Contract $400,000 with KLD Engineering, P.C. for Evacuation and Response Time Modeling from 4/1/2023 to 6/30/2024 with option to renew for $100,000 for additional 2 years
  5. Warhuus, HHCS – Contract $350,000 with GoGo Technologies Inc for Transportation Services for Seniors and Disabled from 4/1/2023 to 6/30/2026 for 24/7 call center to arrange rides with Uber and Lyft for customers of the Aging Services Division’s Berkeley Rides for Seniors and Disabled
  6. Warhuus, HHCS – Contract $128,315 with mySidewalk, Inc for HHCS Web-Based Population Health Data Platform 3/15/2023 to 3/14/2026
  7. Kouyoumdjian, HR – Amend Contract 32000225 add $149,000 total $349,000 and extend 6/30/2024 with Its Personnel Consulting for Recruitment, Hiring, and Independent Workplace Investigation
  8. Kouyoumdjian, HR – Amend Contract 32100046 add $139,000 total $189,000 with HR Acuity, LLC for Case Management and Employee Relations Software
  9. Kouyoumdjian, HR – Purchase Order $150,000 with Glassdoor to Provide Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and Ad Work from4/1/2023 to 3/31/2025
  10. Kouyoumdjian, HR – Purchase Order $150,000 with Indeed to Provide Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and Ad Work from4/1/2023 to 3/31/2025
  11. Fong, IT – Amend Contract 31900187 add $106,000 total $278,000 with LV.NET (formerly Towerstream) for Secondary Internet for Redundancy and Load Balancing from 10/3/2017 to 6/30/2024
  12. Arreguin co-sponsors Hahn, Harrison, Wengraf – Opposition to Initiative #1935 deceptively named “Taxpayer Protection and Government Accountability Act”
  13. Arreguin, co-sponsor Robinson, Hahn – Resolution Support SB 50 – would allow Berkeley to move forward with BerkDOT program for a Berkeley Department of Transportation instead of police to enforce vehicle or bike low-level infractions (traffic stops and enforcement)
  14. Arreguin, co-sponsors Hahn, Harrison, Wengraf – Support SB 252 State Divestment from Fossil Fuels
  15. Taplin, co-sponsors Harrison, Robinson – Budget Referral Vision 2050 Complete Streets Parcel Tax Community Engagement and Program Plan refer $400,000 to June 2023 mid-year budget update to conduct community engagement, public information campaign and program plan development and climate resilient infrastructure
  16. Taplin co-sponsors Robinson – Support Unionization Efforts by Urban Ore Workers under representation by the IWW Union 670
  17. Taplin, co-sponsor - Robinson - Support for SB 58 Controlled Substances, decriminalization
  18. Robinson, co-sponsor Arreguin, Hahn, Harrison – Support SB 466 reforming Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act
  19. Robinson, co-sponsor Hahn – Support H.R. 852 Investing in Safer Traffic Stops Act
AGENDA on ACTION: 

  1. Droste – REFORMS TO PUBLIC COMMENT PROCEDURES AT MEETINGS OF THE BERKELEY CITY COUNCIL – LIMITS PUBLIC COMMENT TO ONCE FOR THE AGENDA ON CONSENT AND ONCE FOR THE ENTIRE AGENDA ON ACTION with three exceptions: hearings, appeals and quasi-judicial (court like) proceedings. After all the council votes have been taken, all decisions made, the public would have a 3rd opportunity to speak before the council adjourns.
  2. Sprague, Fire - Ambulance User Fee Increase
  3. Fair Campaign Practices Commission – Cost of Living Adjustment for $250 campaign contribution limit increase by nearest $10 in every odd-numbered year
  4. Klein, Planning – Climate Action Plan and Resilience Update
  5. Hollander, Economic Development – Berkeley Economic Dashboards Update – move to action
  6. Droste – Bureaucratic Effectiveness and Referral Improvement and Prioritization Effort (BE RIPE) limits submission of legislation to 1 item per year per council member and 2 items per year for the mayor
+++++++++++++++++++ 

LAND USE CALENDAR: 

 

Public Hearings 

1262 Francisco (add 40 sq ft and 2nd story balcony) 2/28/2023 

469 Kentucky (single family dwelling) 5/23/2023 

Remanded to ZAB or LPC 

1205 Peralta – Conversion of an existing garage 

 

WORK SESSIONS & SPECIAL MEETINGS: 

March 7 - Berkeley Marina Area Specific Plan Canceled 

March 14 – Annual Crime Report at 4 pm 

March 21 - Civic Arts Grantmaking Process & Capital Grant Program at 4 pm, Civic Center Vision Project at 4 pm 

April 18 – Hopkins Corridor Plan 

May 16 - Fire Facilities Study Report 5/16/2023 

Unscheduled Presentations: 

Climate Action Plan and Resilience Update – regular agenda March 14 

City Policies for Managing Parking Around BART Stations – check with Garland ?May 

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Kelly Hammargren’s summary on what happened the preceding week can be found in the Berkeley Daily Planet under Activist’s Diary at: www.berkeleydailyplanet.com

This meeting list is also posted at: https://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/whats-ahead.html 

If you would like to receive the Activist’s Calendar as soon as it is completed send an email to kellyhammargren@gmail.com

If you wish to stop receiving the weekly calendar of city meetings please forward the email you received to kellyhammargren@gmail.com with the request to be removed from the email list. 

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For Online Public Meetings 

CLOSED CAPTIONING, SAVE TRANSCRIPT OVERVIEW, DIRECTIONS and ZOOM SUPPORT LINKS: 

ZOOM has as part of the program - (for no extra cost) Closed Captioning (CC). It turns computer voice recognition into a transcript. Accuracy of the Closed Captioning is affected by background noise, the volume and clarity of the speaker, lexicons/wordbook and dialect of the speaker. The transcript will not be perfect, but most of the time reading through it the few words that don't fit, can be deciphered, like Shattuck was transcribed as Shadow in one recent transcript. 

Here is the link to ZOOM Support for how to set up Closed Captioning for a meeting or webinar:  

https://support.zoom.us/hc/en-us/articles/8158738379917#h_01GHWATNVPW5FR304S2SVGXN2X 

Here is the link to ZOOM Support for attendees in how to save Closed Captions: 

https://support.zoom.us/hc/en-us/articles/360060958752-Using-save-captions#h_01F5XW3BGWJAKJFWCHPPZGBD70