Council Mulls Fate Of Fire Company: By MATTHEW ARTZ
Backed into a corner by a mounting deficit and an obstinate firefighters’ union, the City Council Tuesday will contemplate approving the first cut to fire response services in over 20 years. -more-
Backed into a corner by a mounting deficit and an obstinate firefighters’ union, the City Council Tuesday will contemplate approving the first cut to fire response services in over 20 years. -more-
As crews prepare to dredge a shoreline marsh in Richmond on the edge of one of the region’s most polluted sites, Assemblymember Loni Hancock (D-Berkeley) is pushing for a legislative hearing. -more-
The math of building affordable housing in Berkeley looks especially troubling this year. -more-
There are 16 state ballot propositions this year. Enjoy. -more-
With school board elections less than a month away, controversial items are generally absent from BUSD’s board agenda for Wednesday night. One such contested item, however, may be a fee for the Middle School Extended Day Program. -more-
As string trios played and wait staff served up wine and munchies Friday evening, a hundred or so Berkeley business and political leaders got their first look at Patrick Kennedy’s newest additions to the downtown. -more-
Like many of you, I came to Berkeley to be a student at the University of California and I liked so many things about the city that I have lived here ever since. My wife Marilyn and I raised both of our children here, and Sarah and Matt went through the Berkeley schools. I graduated in 1967 with a degree in political science and began teaching social studies. I chose to teach high school because I wanted to help people understand the forces, policies, and even mythologies that shape the lives of ordinary people not only in this country but all over the world, and because I wanted to help give young people some of the tools they could use to change those conditions and to create better and fairer conditions for themselves and others. Although I changed careers in 1978, those values are still fundamentally important to me. They are the reasons I became active in city government 25 years ago, and they are the reasons why I’m running for City Council in District 5. -more-
District 5 and the city need Barbara Gilbert as councilperson because, put simply, the points of view for which I speak are not now adequately represented on our City Council. -more-
As important as the national elections are, we need to remember that our local democracy is also at risk. While I am not suggesting that we have local equivalents of Dick Cheney or John Ashcroft in our city government, I am suggesting that there is a connection between development and the democratic process which demands our attention. At a time when malign neglect of the economy at the national level and irresponsible grandstanding by our own governor have left cities such as Berkeley in severe economic distress, it is tempting to let the richest and most powerful segments of our community “solve” our problems for us. -more-
Paula Casio wants President Bush out of office. But with a daughter and a full-time job, she can’t spend the next month canvassing the streets of swing states. -more-
Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Seymour Hersh, political humorist Molly Ivins and satirist Paul Krassner are among the voices speaking out as the Free Speech Movement’s 40th anniversary commemoration continues throughout the week. -more-
SAN FRANCISCO—Outside of a Vietnamese coffee shop in the Tenderloin district, two older Vietnamese men are smoking and talking about Bush and Kerry. “Kerry did very well, but Bush came out solid and strong,” says Mr. Tinh Nguyen. “Kerry might still have a fighting chance. Too bad we are voting in California. We can’t help President Bush from here.” -more-
Arsonist Strikes Julia Morgan Shed -more-
Attending the first day of an MFA fiction workshop at San Francisco State, I listened as the instructor took roll. When he came to the name Kirk Read, he hesitated, and then mumbled something about Kirk Read telling him he wouldn’t be taking the class. My ears perked up. The name Kirk Read was familiar. During the school year of 1982-83 in Virginia, when I was teaching fourth grade, I had a student named Kirk Read. Could it be the same little boy, all grown up and enrolled in graduate school? -more-
Probably the best-known human rights in the U.S. are the right to a lawyer and the right to due process. Anyone who has ever been arrested in a mass protest or in a strike may have also heard of the right to habeas corpus: the right, immediately after being arrested, to be brought before an official in the judicial system and told on what charges you are being held. -more-
Matthew Artz’ article “Owners Can Rebuild Near Creeks and Culverts,” (Daily Planet, Oct. 1-4) focused on the contentious nature of the Sept. 28 public hearing. Readers may remain unaware of some underlying details and issues. -more-
Daily Planet letter writer Doug Pestrak (Sept. 21-23) doesn’t have to look far for an answer to the homeless situation which puzzles him so much. If he just turns a few pages in the issue of the Planet in which his letter appeared, he’ll see that a site which once housed more than 70 low-income people with come-as-you-are (no large security deposits, leases, etc.) units runs the risk of being replaced with a building housing only 20 people, with possibly one or two “low income” units for the $35,000 a year set. -more-
I attended the public hearing on the Berkeley Creek Ordinance on Wednesday and was taken aback by the degree of fear and anxiety over the ordinance. The fear is based on the mistaken belief that you could not rebuild your home to the same footprint and height after a disaster or fire. I cannot think of any instance where the Creek Ordinance prevented a home from being rebuilt. Nevertheless, the City Council passed Alternative No. 2 with some amendments to make that clear. When misconceptions are repeated frequently enough, it can give listeners a mistaken impression that the idea is true. This is reminiscent of FOX news. -more-
In 1989 a group of creek enthusiasts, presumably with personal ties to members of the City Council, surreptitiously sold the City a strange bill of goods – an ordinance filled with nitpicking regulations and a glossary of arcane terms (rip-rap, crib-walls, fascines, gabions) – that reads as if it were written not by common-sense conservationists but by a cult of creek-worshipers intent on imposing their obsession on the world. It offered some reasonable constraints – no new construction within thirty feet of a creek, the day-lighting of culverted creeks where feasible – but hidden within it and unnoticed for fifteen years wasa larger vision. Following a major disaster – something like the ‘06 quake and its attendant firestorms – no creek-side structure could be rebuilt without a special variance from the City’s notoriously willful and erratic Zoning Adjustments Board. Thus, after such an event, great swaths of homes and businesses could be replaced by parkland with footpaths and biketrails. -more-
In the past 40 years the world of ceramic art has undergone a metamorphosis. In the 1960s every Berkeley housewife was a potter, producing clunky mugs and vases in the muted, often glassy, grays and browns of high temperature reduction firing. The influence of Bernard Leach was strong. -more-
In the shimmering, intricately beautiful music of the Balinese gamelan orchestra, the recurring cycles of melody are marked by the stirring ring of a gong. -more-
Although nature writers are supposed to have benign feelings about their (nonhuman, anyway) fellow creatures, I draw the line at raccoons: garbage-raiding, koi-eating thugs that make alarming noises in the dead of night. But to give the Devil his due, they’re good with their hands. Lacking opposable thumbs doesn’t seem to slow them down much. Scientists have claimed that raccoons far outrank their fellow carnivores in manual dexterity and are almost up there with the primates. -more-
This week Berkeley is remembering the grand excitement of the Free Speech Movement, at a time, 40 years later, when a sizable number of movement veterans are still around to reminisce. I wasn’t here in 1964 myself, so what’s entertaining for me is finding out which of my current friends and acquaintances who still live here took part in the action, considering who they are now. Landlords, teachers, corporate lobbyists, lawyers, stock market investors, gardeners, small business owners, farmers, political organizers, librarians…their jobs, if they still have them, run the gamut, as do their experiences over the last 40 years. What was remarkable about the FSM is that it swept up a broad cross-section of students who understood that it was a bad idea for a state university to ban free expression of ideas from its campus. -more-
Free Speech—The Next 40 Years: By BECKY O'MALLEY 10-05-2004
Supporting the Arts Without Money: By BECKY O'MALLEY 10-01-2004
Council Mulls Fate Of Fire Company: By MATTHEW ARTZ 10-05-2004
Hancock Calls For Hearing On Campus Bay Dredging: By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-05-2004
Housing Fund Gap Leaves Projects Wanting: By MATTHEW ARTZ 10-05-2004
A Voter’s Guide to the State Ballot Propositions: By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 10-05-2004
A Panoramic Downtown Building Tour: By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-05-2004
District 5 City Council Candidate Statements: Laurie Capitelli 10-05-2004
District 5 City Council Candidate Statements: Barbara Gilbert 10-05-2004
District 5 City Council Candidate Statements: Jesse Townley 10-05-2004
Party for America Gets on the Phones: By JAKOB SCHILLER 10-05-2004
Hersh, Ivins, Krassner on Campus For FSM Anniversary Events: By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-05-2004
FSM Event Organizers Looking for Volunteers 10-05-2004
Vietnamese Americans Back President Bush —But For How Long?: By ANDREW LAM Pacific News Service 10-05-2004
Letters to the Editor 10-05-2004
Police Blotter: By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-05-2004
Fire Department Log: By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-05-2004
Coming Out, Coming of Age, And Finding Your Fourth Grade Teacher: By SUSAN PARKER 10-05-2004
The Right to a Lawyer and to Due Process: By ANN FAGAN GINGER CHALLENGING RIGHTS VIOLATIONS 10-05-2004
Creek Ordinance Widely Misunderstood: By JULIET LAMONT and PHIL PRICE COMMENTARY 10-05-2004
Homelessness? Try Housing: By CAROL DENNEY COMMENTARY 10-05-2004
Ordinance Still Needs More Updates: By DIANE TOKUGAWA COMMENTARY 10-05-2004
Creek Worshipers Pose Threat To Some Homeowners: By JERRY LANDIS COMMENTARY 10-05-2004
Art and Craft Become One at Trax Tube Kiln Exhibit: By KAY CAMPBELL Special to the Planet 10-05-2004
Balinese Artists Join Gamelan for Anniversary Concert: By BEN FRANDZEL Special to the Planet 10-05-2004
Handiwork Comes Easily to Remarkable Raccoons: By JOE EATON Special to the Planet 10-05-2004
Berkeley This Week 10-05-2004
From Atop a Police Car, A Revolution Was Born: By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-01-2004
Owners Can Rebuild Near Creeks and Culverts: By MATTHEW ARTZ 10-01-2004
State Grants Bonus Floors to Builders: By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-01-2004
Council Ponders Chevron’s Pt. Molate Offer: By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-01-2004
Campus Bay Dredging Approved: By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-01-2004
Veterans Want Back in to Veteran’s Building: By MATTHEW ARTZ 10-01-2004
Two Berkeleyans Win MacArthur Fellowships: By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 10-01-2004
Berkeley Cops Ticketed Claremont Protest Supporters: By JAKOB SCHILLER 10-01-2004
How Do You Solve a Problem Like Berlusconi?: By PAOLO PONTONIERE Pacific News Service 10-01-2004
Wet Cables Continue to Block North Berkeley Phone Service: By MATTHEW ARTZ 10-01-2004
Gourmet Meals Offered to the Hungry in People’s Park: By LYDIA GANS Special to the Planet 10-01-2004
Letters to the Editor 10-01-2004
Oakland’s Shrine Ban Mirrors Iraq War Excuses: By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR UNDERCURRENTS OF THE EAST BAY AND BEYOND 10-01-2004
The Right Not to Serve in Wartime: By ANN FAGAN GINGER CHALLENGING RIGHTS VIOLATIONS 10-01-2004
Police Blotter: By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-01-2004
Briefly Noted 10-01-2004
Fire Department Log: By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-01-2004
Park Plans Destroyed Habitat: By MARIS ARNOLD COMMENTARY 10-01-2004
Feinstein Bill Fixes Casino Mistake: By MINA EDELSTON COMMENTARY 10-01-2004
City Fee Increase Would Kill Off Cal Sailing: By JANE MORSON COMMENTARY 10-01-2004
Questions For The Candidates: By ROSEMARY VINCENT COMMENTARY 10-01-2004
Caffe Trieste Brings a Taste of Italy to Berkeley: By MICHAEL HOWERTON 10-01-2004
Nabolom Bakery In Crisis Mode: By JAKOB SCHILLER 10-01-2004
National Theatre Brings ‘Lysistrata’ to Oakland: By KEN BULLOCK Special to the Planet 10-01-2004
Arts Calendar 10-01-2004
A Bit of the Past Survives in Pleasanton Along With New Pleasures: By KATHLEEN HILL Special to the Planet 10-01-2004
Berkeley This Week 10-01-2004