Extra

U S. state sponsored terrorism around the world.

Jagjit Singh
Sunday October 01, 2023 - 12:02:00 PM

While lawmakers are seeking credit for declassifying U.S. state secrets (ref. letter to N.Y.T. by Nancy Pelosi) ) what is sorely missing is why lawmakers remained silent while our government went on a rampage targeting democracies around the world such as Iran and Chile. What is profoundly disturbing is President Biden's recent security pact with Saudi Arabia and the broader Middle East, especially given the atrocities committed by Saudi Arabia in Yemen and the role played by the United States and the United Kingdom in radicalizing Iran through the 1953 coup against Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh. -more-


ON MENTAL WELLNESS: Imperiled

Jack Bragen
Sunday October 01, 2023 - 11:40:00 AM

Over the past two or three decades, the caprices of fortune have not boded well for mentally ill disabled people. If a person has a mental or emotional difference that makes it hard for them to get and maintain work, it is automatic that they are at risk for homelessness. The amount we receive to live on is inadequate in the San Francisco Bay Area to pay for housing, forcing some to accept institutionalized housing when this is not appropriate for their level of development. Meanwhile, others have it worse. -more-


A BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S DIARY, WEEK ENDING SEPTEMBER 29

Kelly Hammargren
Saturday September 30, 2023 - 12:49:00 PM

After neighbors on Keeler showed up at the Transportation Commission on Thursday complaining about the condition of their street in the hills, I decided it was time for another drive into the Berkeley hills. After hearing Councilmember Wengraf say during the City Council debate on the ADU Ordinance Tuesday evening that property owners in the hills didn’t know where to put their fences as the hills were moving and property lines weren’t clear, Keeler wasn’t the only reason I was curious.

Adding to the urgency, nothing was settled Tuesday evening. The Berkelely City Council ended in a split vote (4 to 4) on the Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) Ordinance for the Hillside Overlay, the Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones (VHFHSZ), and will take up the ADU Ordinance again next Tuesday, October 3. It is item 10 on the agenda. https://berkeleyca.gov/city-council-regular-meeting-eagenda-october-3-2023

Writing about adding ADUs aka granny flats in the Berkeley Hills is a constantly moving target.

The more I read, the more I dig, the messier it gets. Just this week J.K. Dineen wrote in the San Francisco Chronicle about the multiple vacant multi-unit buildings in San Francisco. That was a contrast to the usual stories with the usual rants about not building new housing, often quoting Scott Wiener or Buffy Wicks.

I’ve always wondered how many vacant housing units there are in Berkeley with the “for lease” signs that never seem to go away. We’re supposed to get that answer with the vacancy tax? -more-


THE BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S CALENDAR: Oct. 1-8

Kelly Hammargren
Saturday September 30, 2023 - 07:55:00 PM

Worth Noting:

The manufacturing tours of Berkeley businesses look interesting!

BERKELEY MANUFACTURING WEEK TOURS October 2 – 6,

Check Webpage and Registration for Tour Times

Register for Free Tours: At https://www.eventbrite.com/cc/2023-berkeley-manufacturing-week-tours-2635549

Participating Local Manufacturers: Adams and Chittenden, Artworks Foundry, Berkeley Potters Guild, Boichik Bagels, Metro Lighting, Takara Sake, TCHO Chocolate, Zenbooth

https://berkeleyca.gov/community-recreation/news/explore-berkeleys-manufacturing-bagels-glass-soundproof-booths

The Go to meeting of the week is City Council on the ADU Ordinance in the Hillside Overly (Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone, Landslide Zones, and the Hayward Fault runs through it). Monday:

  • At 9 am the Elmwood BID meets in person.
  • At 3 pm the City Council meets in Closed Session.
  • At 7 pm the Personnel Board meets in person.
  • Tuesday: At 6 pm the City Council meets in the hybrid format. The ADU Ordinance is item 10 on the agenda.
  • Wednesday:
    • From 9 am – noon is the tree planting at John Hinkel Park.
    • At 2 pm FITES meets in the hybrid format on deconstruction/construction materials.
    • At 5:30 pm the Planning Commission meets in person and conducts a public hearing on zoning to support small business in Southside, BART Housing and Commercial Districts.
    • At 6:30 BOLT meets in person.
    • At 7 pm the Homeless Services Panel of Experts meets in person.
  • Thursday:
    • At 7 pm the Landmarks Preservation Commission meets in person.
    • At 7 pm the Housing Advisory Commission meets in person.


Activist’s Diary for September 17, 2023 on Ready Festival, Planning and Fire Department Master Plan

https://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com/issue/2023-09-02/article/50412?headline=A-BERKELEY-ACTIVIST-S-DIARY-week-ending-Sept.-17--Kelly-Hammargren



The City Council October 10, 2023 is posted and available for comment.

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 -more-


THE (R)EVOLUTION OF STEVE JOBS at San Francisco Opera

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean

Friday September 29, 2023 - 10:00:00 AM

What I’d heard till now of music by Bay Area composer Mason Bates seemed to me glib, light-weight, and of llittle interest. For example, his Piano Concerto, which premiered at San Francisco Symphony in 2022, struck me as meretricious, hardly worth the valiant effort of the brilliant pianist Daniil Trifonov for whom Bates wrote the work and who performed it at its SF premiere. So now, as I attended the Sunday matinee of The (R()evolution of Steve Jobs on October 24, I didn’t expect great things. Well, though I certainly did not experience great things, I must say that, for the most part, Mason Bates’ pop-infused mix of traditional orchestration and computerized soundscapes worked reasonably well in this operatic tale about a Silicon Valley ihigh-tech mogul and ruthless executive. -more-


Why is there no new planet?

By Becky O'Malley
Saturday September 02, 2023 - 08:17:00 PM

Perhaps you have been wondering why the planet’s not publishing this week? The short answer is that I broke my ankle in three places and have been in bed ever since it was operated on at Kaiser. I can’t stand on it for 3 to 6 weeks.and it’s too hard to type from bed. Our faithful correspondents have been submitting as usual but I haven’t been able to post their work. Watch this space for updates. -more-


A BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S DIARY; week ending Sept. 17

Kelly Hammargren
Friday September 22, 2023 - 04:25:00 PM

Sunday, September 17 was the 100th anniversary of the 1923 Berkeley Fire that destroyed a 50-block area burning more that 600 homes to the ground. The anniversary was marked with the Fire Ready Festival at Live Oak Park, tented tables with city police, firefighters ready to talk about safety, vendors with fire prevention and safety products, sparkling fire trucks and children running around in their firefighter hats, playing games and generally enjoying the day. -more-



Public Comment

ON MENTAL WELLNESS: We Need Some Say in What Medications We Take

Jack Bragen
Saturday September 23, 2023 - 01:48:00 PM

Doctors and especially psychiatrists believe they can dictate to us how we're going to live. This is accurate if we are under conservatorship. However, in the absence of a court mandate, we have choices in what medications we're going to take or refuse. And if a doctor wants to give us a new "miracle drug," we should research the drug or the proposed treatment before we accept it. I can't give any specific medical advice because I'm not a doctor and I don't have the authority to dispense medical or psychiatric advice. Yet, I can tell you that you have the right to do research on a medication a doctor wants you to put into your body. -more-


Editorial

Manhattanizing Almost Everything Might Burst That Bubble,Even in Berkeley

Becky O'Malley
Tuesday August 08, 2023 - 01:48:00 PM

The two daily newspapers I look at regularly, the New York Times and the San Francisco Chronicle, are full these days of weeping and gnashing of teeth. Why? Because the downtown areas that they used to rely on for advertising revenue are looking more and more like ghost towns. Reporters are using those clever new software packages that can generate multi-color bar graphs and pie charts to fill up lots of column inches to show what percentage of office and retail space has already been abandoned.

Yes, times are tough in the big city.

With online access at home so easy, many workers who used to flock to downtown offices and patronize restaurants and shops on their lunch hours just don’t need to be there.

But surely San Francisco is still an exciting destination? Well, not really. The Chron’s erstwhile architecture critic (now on an“urban design” beat) has fallen back on making lists of the old standby tourist attractions since show-off structures like Sales Force’s Phallus Building aren’t being built because no one wants to work in them.

But people have always been willing to work downtown. Why not now?

It’s the Manhattanization, stupid. In San Francisco’s chilly climate, sunshine matters year-round, and the windy concrete canyons which have been constructed in the last four decades are not appealing.

Poet George Sterling’s “cool, gray city of love” has become the cold, dark city of greed. It’s not, of course, that greed hasn’t always been a driving force in San Franciso: first the gold rush, next the robber barons and then the Hearsts, who now own the Chronicle brand, and their ilk.

Now the high tech companies are getting the blame, but the twist is that in today’s tech world you can be just as greedy in the comfort of your own country home. That's what’s always driven up house prices in the sunny suburbs which ring the city and county of San Francisco in Northern California. It’s just gotten even more intense during the pandemic.

And the business section of the NYT has started playing another variant on the same tune. Much of Manhattan’s housing is now just pricey pieds à terre for people who live most of the time in The Hamptons or Connecticut or Hunterdon County or The Hudson River Valley. That’s always been somewhat true, but the contemporary twist is that the cognoscenti almost never need to come into New York City any more. Office vacancies in Manhattan are lamented in the Times with the same anguish as they are in what we’ve always called The City around here, and the cause is somewhat the same.

In both cities hopeful electeds suggest daily that excess office space might be converted to dwellings, but that turns out to be technically difficult and therefore expensive. It’s likely that the bubble in demand for pricey “ market rate” apartments is about to burst as today’s techies age a bit and think about having kids and wanting backyards. It will be interesting to see how the neo-liberal fauxgressive promoters of unregulated for-profit development will react if and when that happens.

The city of Berkeley is a special case because the presence of the University of California, with its ability to gin up demand simply by increasing enrollment, continues to guarantee a very generous return to speculative developers of fancy private dorms. The big ugly boxes which are Manhattanizing the streets of what used to be called Downtown Berkeley are from the Stack’em and Pack’em school of design. They’re getting taller and taller.

These three-bedroom apartment complexes are pitched to pods of six or more undergraduates with bunk beds. They are not attractive to families with children who can afford to move to the suburbs, and they are too expensive for low-paid UCB employees who must accept long commutes to find affordable suburban rentals. Better paid UC administrators and faculty members don’t need to live here, and they often don’t. Teaching is most often left to poorly paid academic grad student temps while tech researchers count on corporate funding.

The school is increasingly dominated by what might be called an Edifice Complex. Building more stuff creates some jobs, which gets support from the building trades, plus generating big profits for contractors. What’s not to like? Well…

Example: The crazy expensive expansion of Cal’s Memorial Stadium with accompanying fancy gym for elite athletes. It will be a burden for California taxpayers for decades into the future, though the builders made out like bandits, as they always do. Reports that the Pac 12 is disintegrating suggest that the anticipated fantastic profits from ticket sales were just that, fantasy.

The Berkeley Daily Planet extensively covered UC’s foolish project of creating this football temple and the lengthy protests which tried to stop it, but there it stands today, with a gigantic debt, a losing team and declining attendance—all predicted.

Planet reporters and citizen commenters repeatedly told our readers that the stadium was doomed to fail, but they were ignored by the powers that be, who built it anyway. Something similar is now happening with Carol Christ’s cockamamie plan to pave People’s Park for more luxury dorms, this time with the collusion of our assemblymember, Buffy Wicks.

More examples: Bruce Brugmann’s SF Bay Guardian gets the credit for warning about the consequences of Manhattanizing San Francisco in the early 70s, but in the end his cautionary admonitions didn’t work and now the city is paying the price.. And remember when everyone made fun of the SFBG for harping on PG&E’s faults? The Guardian was not only right, at first it only had half the story of PG&E’s transgressions, with the rest now coming to light.

I did a story for the Guardian in the mid-seventies predicting the many problems with the proposed demolition and re-building of the Transbay Terminal in downtown San Francisco, to which no one in power in SF paid the slightest attention. Now, forty years later, it has all happened, and worse, and there’s nothing on the site but the “temporary” terminal. There are calls for it to be demolished.

It’s increasingly annoying to continue in the news media because the mantra for the publications I’ve been associated with in last three or four decades seems to be “I told you so, but so what?”.

We’ve been told that the truth will make us free, which might occasionally be true, but there’s little satisfaction in truth-telling if it makes very little difference in outcomes. Just sayin’. -more-


Events

THE BERKELEY ACTVIST'S CALENDAR: September 10 - September 17, 2023

Kelly Hammargren
Tuesday September 12, 2023 - 02:12:00 PM

Worth Noting:

City Council returns from summer recess on Tuesday. It is getting busy.



The Go To meetings of the week are in bold and underlined. The agenda for parks is unknown

  • Sunday: Solano Stroll from 10 am – 5 pm
  • Monday:
    • At 3 pm City Council meets in closed session.
    • From 6 – 8 pm the North Berkeley Housing presentation is in-person.
    • At 6:30 pm the Youth Commission meets in person.
    • At 7 pm the Peace and Justice Commission meets in person.
    • At 7 pm the Personnel Board meets in person.
  • Tuesday: At 6 pm City Council meets in the hybrid format with only one action item, should the land in front of the Maudelle Shirek Building (Old City Hall) be designated as a linear park?
  • Wednesday:
    • At 5 pm the Commission on Disability meets in person.
    • At 7 pm the Parks, Recreation and Waterfront Commission is scheduled to meet, not documents, not agenda or location have been posted as 3 pm Saturday.
  • Thursday:
    • At 10 am the Budget Committee meets in the hybrid format.
    • At 6:30 pm the PAB meets in the hybrid format.
    • At 7 pm the Zoning adjustment Board meets the hybrid format presentation and comments for the EIR on the Solid Waste and Recycling Transfer Station is the only action item.
  • Friday: From 9 am – 12 pm the Climate Emergency Mobilization Task Force (CEMTF) webinar is on Climate & Indigenous Leadership
  • Saturday: From 10 am – 2 pm the Fire Ready Festival is at Live Oak Park


The City Council Regular Meeting Agenda for September 19, 2023 is available for comment.

Check the City website for postings on short notice at https://berkeleyca.gov/



Bay Area SunShares Solar Discount Program is open from September 1 – November 15, 2023.

Register at: https://www.bayareasunshares.org/



Free on-day household hazardous waste drop-off event in Albany, Sunday, September 24, appointment required sign-up early. https://berkeleyca.gov/community-recreation/news/free-one-day-household-hazardous-waste-drop-event-albany-sunday-sept-24



Library Service Survey https://content.govdelivery.com/accounts/CABERKE/bulletins/36ee2d5



If you know someone needing assistance with overdue water bills, refer them to the Low Income Household Waster Assistance Program (LIWAP) Program has been extended, however, applications need to be submitted asap https://www.ebmud.com/customers/customer-assistance-program/financial-relief-customers-behind-water-bills-during-pandemic



e-Bike rewards/purchase discount program for Richmond-San Rafael Bridge

https://www.rsrebikecommute.org/s/



Berkeley Daily Planet postings are currently on hold while the editor recovers from an injury: www.berkeleydailyplanet.com



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BERKELEY PUBLIC MEETINGS AND CIVIC EVENTS



Sunday, September 10, 2023



SOLANO STROLL from 10 am – 5 pm

https://www.solanoavenueassn.org/events/solano-avenue-stroll/



Monday, September 11, 2023 -more-


Back Stories

Opinion

Public Comment

ON MENTAL WELLNESS: We Need Some Say in What Medications We Take Jack Bragen 09-23-2023

News

U S. state sponsored terrorism around the world. Jagjit Singh 10-01-2023

ON MENTAL WELLNESS: Imperiled Jack Bragen 10-01-2023

A BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S DIARY, WEEK ENDING SEPTEMBER 29 Kelly Hammargren 09-30-2023

THE BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S CALENDAR: Oct. 1-8 Kelly Hammargren 09-30-2023

THE (R)EVOLUTION OF STEVE JOBS at San Francisco Opera

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean

09-29-2023

Why is there no new planet? By Becky O'Malley 09-02-2023

A BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S DIARY; week ending Sept. 17 Kelly Hammargren 09-22-2023

Arts & Events

THE BERKELEY ACTVIST'S CALENDAR: September 10 - September 17, 2023 Kelly Hammargren 09-12-2023