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A BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S CALENDAR: JUNE 11 – June 18

Sunday June 11, 2023 - 12:39:00 PM



Worth Noting



MONDAY

  • 10 am, Health, Life Enrichment, Equity & Community Committee discuss Responsible Psychedelic Drug Policy;
  • 2:30 pm Agenda & Rules Committee on the June-27 Draft Agenda for City Council.
  • 3 pm African American Holistic Resource Center Community Meeting
  • 6 pm Mental Health Services Act Community Input Meeting
TUESDAY

  • 4 pm City Council Special Session on Fire Department Community Risk Assessment Report
  • 6 pm City Council Regular Meeting includes Budget, Surveillance Ordinance, T1
THURSDAY

  • 12:30 pm Arts Organizations Preparedness 101
  • 6:30 pm, Fair Campaign Practices Commission and Open Government Commission meet concurrently, with several reports, donor contribution policy, public participation in City Council meetings and public records act
  • 7 pm Mental Health Commission
  • 7 pm Design Review Committee
FRIDAY – 8:40 pm Movies in the Park, From the Rough

SATURDAY – 4 pm Music in the Park, (R&B.Soul)

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

Directions with 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, June 11, 2023 – No public meeting listed.



Monday, June 12, 2023 -more-



An Emotional Presentation of Kaija Saariaho’s Opera ADRIANA MATER at SF Symphony

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Monday June 12, 2023 - 03:50:00 PM

On Thursday, June 8, San Francisco Symphony’s music director Esa-Pekka Salonen led the first of three scheduled performances at Davies Hall of Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho’s 2006 opera Adriana Mater. In light of the very recent death of Kaija Saariaho at age 70, this was an emotion-laden event, and SF Symphony dedicates these performances in honor of the extraordinary life and work of Kaija Saariaho. Moreover, several of Saariaho’s lifelong closest collaborators were involved in this production. Esa-Pekka Salonen, himself from Finland, acknowledges that Saariaho’s family and musical life have always been deeply intertwined with his own. For example, Salonen conducted the world premiere of Adriana Mater in 2006 at Paris’s Opéra Bastille, en event that was unfortunately marred by a last-minute technicians’ strike. Moreover, stage director Peter Sellars, who staged our SF Symphony production, has worked often with both Saariaho and Salonen, including at the Paris premiere of Adriana Mater in 2006. At Davies Hall on Thursday night, Peter Sellars gave a very emotional pre-performance talk about the opera Adriana Mater and about his longterm involvement with Kaija Saariaho and her music. Sellars will offer similar talks before each performance at Davies Hall on Saturday night and Sunday afternoon. Finally, the librettist for Adriana Mater was Lebanese-French writer Amin Maalouf, a longtime friend and collaborator with Kaija Saariaho. -more-


Public Comment

SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces: SmitherBytes,Bummers&Bombers

Gar Smith
Sunday June 11, 2023 - 09:33:00 PM

Mr. Mopp's Tops the List

It's a new month—and it's the month of June—so my fave neighborhood bookstore, Mr. Mopp's (on MLK and Rose), has prepared a new window display devoted to the theme of gay pride.

As usual, the Mopp's crew takes pride in its work and has assembled a shelf-mounted rainbow of book titles. Here's a brief scan of some of the offerings.

Pride: The Story of Harvey Milk and the Rainbow Flag

Queer, There and Everywhere

Julian Is a Mermaid

She, He, They, Them: Understanding Gender Identity

Queer Ducks: The Natural World of Animal Sexuality

Mama and Mommy and Me in the Middle

My Moms Love Me

My Two Dads and Me

The Stonewall Riots

Bodies Are Cool

The Unabomber and Me

The death of Ted Kaczynski, aka the Unabomber, brought back some memories. Memories of the time I was fingered as a Unabomber suspect—a turn of events that brought the FBI—and various media hounds—to my door. A 4,000-word article in the July 20, 1995 edition of The Washington Post described how the adventure began:

"Gar Smith heard a knock at the door. It was about 5 in the afternoon and he wasn't expecting anyone. Two guys in suits and shiny shoes flashed badges — the FBI. One of them said, 'We've received a tip that you may be the Unabomber.' -more-


he Climate Crisis

Jagjit Singh
Monday June 12, 2023 - 03:38:00 PM

The climate crisis has reached a critical point, and the recent record-breaking Canadian wildfires serve as a stark reminder of the urgency of this issue. The skies across much of North America were filled with smoke sending air quality alerts for approximately 100 million people. Shockingly, New York City now holds the unfortunate title of having the worst air quality among major cities worldwide. This is not just an isolated incident; it is a glimpse into our future in the climate crisis. -more-


ON MENTAL WELLNESS: My Psychotic Episode of 1990: Birds and Other Content

Jack Bragen
Sunday June 11, 2023 - 09:20:00 PM

In mental illness, in some rare instances, a brief neurological quirk might allow for the unlocking of romanticism.

I can look to the past and sometimes I can remember much of the delusional content of past psychotic episodes. When I remember my past delusions, they are framed in terms of them being delusions, and they do not reinstate themselves just because I can remember them. And at the same time, I can see how in some of the delusions, there are tiny bits of speculative truth, even though the beliefs were essentially false.

In my psychotic episode of 1990, the subject matter of the delusions might be worthy of note. Or it might even be worthy of fictionalizing. My mind was jarred back to the memory of it when reading the work of another contributor in the May 28 issue of the Planet. I had musings of birds as a once incredibly advanced, but since devolved form of life, something previously far higher than "homo sapiens." And, when I was in a waiting area of Herrick and was being asked a ton of questions and answering them as well as I could in my mentally disjointed state, at times I could hear the chirping notes of birds. A hallucination? Probably.

The canary in a coal mine is not merely a figure of speech. It was the predecessor of modern air sensing equipment. It was a way for coal miners to know whether it was safe in the tunnels or whether they had better evacuate because of unsafe air. The tunnels of coal mines can contain methane and/or carbon monoxide, both of which can kill humans. The canary in the mine would die first because it was more sensitive to these toxic gases. At that point, the miners knew they had to evacuate. -more-


Editorial

Choosing the Chief Isn't
Berkeley Voters' Only Gripe

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

According to the L.A. Times,

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

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

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

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

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

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

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