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Rallies Today Protest Family Separation

Kathleen Kirkwood (BCN)
Saturday June 30, 2018 - 10:43:00 AM

Rallies and marches to protest family separations and detentions by U.S. border officials will be held around the Bay Area today.

Thousands are expected to turn out for the protests, which are part of a nationwide "Families Belong Together" action, with an anchor protest in Washington D.C.'s Lafayette Park.

The protests challenge the separation of what protesters describe as separation of children from families at the U.S.-Mexico border

In San Francisco, an event from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. will start with a march at Mission Dolores Park, at 19th and Dolores streets, and end with a rally at Civic Center.

Joan Baez and representatives from several organizations, including Mujeres Unidas y Activas, CA Domestic Workers and Causa Justa, are scheduled to speak at the at the San Francisco rally.

Event organizers include Families Belong Together San Francisco, Women's March San Francisco and Indivisible SF.

Another event in Oakland will take place from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at Lakeside Park, near Staten and Bellevue avenues. The family-friendly rally will feature children's activities and youth speakers.

A complete list of events can be found at https://act.moveon.org/event/families-belong-together/


Activists Protest ICE in Richmond

Bay City News
Tuesday June 26, 2018 - 10:56:00 AM

Organizers are expecting roughly a thousand people to attend a protest and vigil today against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and for immigrant detainees held at the West County Detention Facility in Richmond. The "Detention Center Day of Action" started at 7 a.m. outside 5555 Giant Highway, where activists estimate roughly 200 immigrants are being held. 

Roughly 60 people set up an open microphone with activists and community members stepping up to share their reasons for attending and other stories of resistance, according to activist Edward Wright, who was interviewed by phone from the scene. 

People there have also been singing songs and sharing chants for "more just and equitable immigration policy," Wright said. 

"We're here all day and we're going to continue putting pressure on Trump, his administration and on ICE," he added. 

A multi-day protest last week in Portland, Oregon, effectively shut down an ICE facility there after activists blocked access for federal employees. Wright said the group in Richmond is not looking to do the same thing here out of concerns that immigration officials might relocate detainees at other detention facilities further away from their friends and families. 

The group says they are committed to non-violence but they also respect a diversity of tactics, and they're trying to address broader issues including a public resurgence of white nationalism and white supremacy. 

"This isn't just about ICE," Wright said. "This isn't just about the new tactics of immigration enforcement happening at the border and at checkpoints around the country." 

"We see ICE as a symptom of a deeper problem," he added.


Trump's Hotels

Carol Denney
Saturday June 23, 2018 - 11:28:00 AM
Trump's Hotels
Carol Denney
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Record Spending and Outside Money Help Wicks in AD-15 Primary

Rob Wrenn
Saturday June 23, 2018 - 12:42:00 PM

In November, voters in Berkeley and the rest of the historically progressive 15th Assembly District will decide between two dramatically different candidates: Buffy Wicks, a newcomer to the district, with no local track record, but with record amounts of outside money, and Jovanka Beckles, a locally based candidate with a strong record of progressive activism.

Follow the Money

Through May 19, Assembly District candidate Buffy Wicks, who finished first in a 12 candidate race in the June 5 primary, received contributions totaling $656,597.91, a record amount for this district, according to campaign filings with the California Secretary of State.

On top of that, an independent expenditure committee of Govern for California, a group of wealthy “philanthropists” who support charter schools, spent $493,332.70 to support her candidacy, while the California Dental Association Independent Expenditure PAC spent $99,481.46 to support her.

The money her campaign raised added to the money spent to support her by outside groups totals $1,249,414, a record amount for a candidate in our local Assembly District and far more than in previous elections. Govern for California’s heavy spending for Wicks makes this election very different from previous 15th District races. 

The Out of State Candidate 

Buffy Wicks, who has never held any elected office, managed Hilary Clinton’s 2016 California Primary campaign against Bernie Sanders and also worked in Barack Obama’s campaigns and in the Obama White House. She has only been registered to vote in the 15th Assembly since 2016 and between 2008 and 2016 lived out of state or in Los Angeles. 

She has no track record working on local issues in the district and, for that reason, it may not be surprising that only 14% of those who have contributed money to her campaign so far live in the district. 

48% of contributors to Wicks’ campaign committee live out of state. 20% are residents of Washington D.C. and its suburbs. She has more contributors not only in DC and its suburbs, but in Chicago and its suburbs, and in New York City and its suburbs, than she does in either Berkeley or Oakland. 

There has never been a such an expensive local Assembly race or a candidate who has relied so heavily on outside money. It’s not unusual for candidates to receive some contributions from family members and friends in other parts of the country, but it is unusual for a local East Bay candidate to rely so heavily on out of state money. 

The Locally Based Candidates 

In sharp contrast, Jovanka Beckles, Vice Mayor of Richmond, in her second term as a member of the Richmond City Council, who came in second behind Wicks, raised a more modest $157,844.25 in the same period, less than a quarter of what Wicks raised. Beckles spent less per vote received than any of the other six major candidates. Spending for Wicks per vote received was more than three and a half times spending for Beckles as of the end of the latest filing period, with total spending not yet reported. 

67% of Beckles’ contributors live in the District; only 4% of her contributors live out of state. No outside money from independent expenditure committees run by wealthy investors or special interests was spent to support her. Not surprisingly, she has the most contributors from Richmond. 

 

 

Buffy Wicks 

Jovanka Beckles 

Contributions received through May 19 

$656,596.91 

$157,844.25 

% contributors from AD 15 

14% 

67% 

% contributors out of state 

48% 

4% 

% contributors DC & suburbs 

20% 

.3% 

Average contribution per 

Contributor 

 

$680 

 

$478 

 

Candidate committee 

Expenditures through May 19 

 

$540,867.29 

 

$157,518.84 

Independent Expenditures 

In support by outside groups 

 

$592,814.17 

 

 

Oakland City Councilmember Dan Kalb, who finished third behind Beckles, raised $279,21739 in the same period; 3% from out of state; 48% from inside the District. Much of the rest of his money came from parts of Oakland not in the District and from other Bay Area Cities. 

Berkeley school board member Judy Appel, who finished fourth, raised $288,791; 7% of her contributors reside out of state; 59% reside in the district. Appel had the largest number of contributors from Berkeley and was endorsed by four current Berkeley councilmembers. 

Two Berkeley-based candidates, East Bay MUD director Andy Katz and Berkeley City Councimember Ben Bartlett also raised very little money from out of state and got most of their contributions from AD-15 and the larger Bay Area. 

Big Increase Over 2014 

In the 2014 Assembly District 15 primary, Elizabeth Echols received 31.1% of the vote in the June primary, running ahead of Tony Thurmond who received 24.4%. 

In the same reporting periods that year, Echols, the best financed candidate, received contributions totaling $358,528.05, while Thurmond’s contributions totaled $242,014.90. Thurmond went on to win the November election. 

Wicks this year raised about $300,000 more than Echols did in 2014 for the same campaign filing periods. 

Who is Govern for California? 

So who the outsiders who are pouring so much money into our local Assembly race? Harriet Steele’s June 1 post on 48hills.org helps to answer the question and is worth reading. You can find it here: https://48hills.org/2018/06/big-right-wing-money-east-bay/ 

Steele reports that Govern for California’s founders are David Crane, a former advisor to Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger; David Penner, currently chairman of the board of Wal-Mart, and Ron Conway, a wealthy tech investor. 

One of Govern for California’s committees takes the money it receives from wealthy donors and gives it as PAC contributions to candidates they like. Wicks received two $4400 PAC contributions (one for the primary; one for the general election) from this committee, the maximum that can be given in a state race. Another Govern for California Committee acts as an intermediary for wealthy donors, with the majority giving the maximum $4400 to Wicks. Over $76,000 was raised for Wicks’ campaign committee by Govern for California. This money from wealthy donors is equal to almost half of the money Beckles raised, most of it from local donors. 

More significant is the Govern for California Action Committee, which is the committee that expended to date $493,332.70 in support of Buffy Wicks. This paid for mailers supporting Wicks as well as for research and consulting work in support of her candidacy. A little over $120,000 was donated to this committee by David Crane. Over $36,000 was donated by a pro-charter schools PAC. Crane is a charter school supporter and critic of teachers’ unions. 

While per pupil spending in in California ranks 41st in the nation, these wealthy donors to Govern for California are not advocating for reform of Prop 13 to generate more money for education. Nor will you find them calling for a higher minimum wage, single payer health care, funding for affordable housing or advocating other progressive positions. This is not a group that is addressing the growing economic inequality in this country. 

The Govern for California Action Committee seems to exist largely to support Buffy Wicks. While two other candidates have received some support, over 95% of the expenditures to support candidates, in the current election cycle, have been spent to support Wicks, apparently the favorite of Govern for California and its founder David Crane. It seems fair to assume that they think she will advance their agenda if elected and would prevent election of a progressive Assembly member who would challenge that agenda. 

Other candidates receiving support from Govern for California, via its Network Committee, include Marshall Tuck, who is running against Tony Thurmond for State Superintendent of Public Instruction, with over $175,000 in contributions channeled to Tuck, the second highest amount of support from Govern for California committees. 

Catherine Baker, the Republican candidate in Assembly District 16, which includes Eastern Alameda County, Lamorinda and part of Walnut Creek, is also backed by Govern for California, which was an intermediary for over $88,000 in donations. The group also backs some moderate Democrats like Scott Weiner, author of SB 827. 

The CNA-backed Candidate 

Buffy Wicks was not the only candidate to benefit from independent expenditures, though far more outside money was spent for her than for any other candidate. Rochelle Pardue-Okimoto, Mayor Pro Tem of El Cerrito and a neonatal nurse at Alta Bates Hospital, who finished fifth in the primary, benefited from $137,715.40 of independent expenditure by a committee affiliated with her union, the California Nurses Association, and from $56,114.30 spend by the California African American PAC. Pardue-Okimoto was endorsed by current AD-15 Assembly member Tony Thurmond. 

Rochelle Pardue Okimoto was not the only candidate backed by her union. Jovanka Beckles, who makes her living as a mental health specialist working with children, was supported by the PAC affiliated with her onw union, Teamsters Local 856 and by other Teamsters PACs, and by PACS affiliated with unions representing healthcare workers and other workers. Other candidates, including Dan Kalb, Andy Katz and Judy Appel had some union PAC support, with Appel winning support of the Berkeley Federation of Teachers and other unions representing educators. Both Appel and Beckles received contributions from the Equality California PAC. 

Dan Kalb, supported by the Sierra Club, received a contribution from the Club’s PAC and one from a solar industry PAC. Union PAC money and the few other PAC contributions, though, played a relatively small role in the race, being totally dwarfed by all the outside money flowing to Buffy Wicks and spent in support of her candidacy by wealthy donors from outside the district. 

 

What’s at Stake 

It’s not just on charter schools and education that the candidates differ. Buffy Wicks is the only Democratic candidate in the primary who does not support repeal of Costa Hawkins Rental Housing Act. Under Costa Hawkins, cities like Berkeley that passed rent control before 1995 cannot extend rent control to housing built since rent control was adopted (1980 in Berkeley). And no city can apply rent control to any housing built after 1995. Costa Hawkins prevents cities from taking steps, if they choose to do so, to protect tenants from soaring rents. There will be an initiative on the fall ballot to repeal Costa Hawkins. 

This fall’s election will determine whether outside money will prevail and whether a candidate with few ties to the East Bay and no track record, will end up representing one of the country’s more progressive districts. Her wealthy financial backers are not spending huge sums of money supporting her candidacy because they want to see progressive policy initiatives from AD-15’s representative. 

 

Technical note: contributions received is the sum of those reported on the form 460 for calendar year 2017 and those reported on Form 460 for 2018 through May 19. Money received after May 19 is not included, nor are expenditures made after May 19, which will be included in later campaign filings. Percent contributors from inside the District and from out of state is calculated from the spreadsheets for contributions on the Secretary of State’s Web site for AD-15. People whose contributions were returned for some reason are not included in my count. Some contributors made more than one contribution. Data based on percent of contributions, which is easier to calculate, would differ somewhat from date based on contributors, where each contributor is counted only once. Not all of Oakland falls within AD-15. Six zip codes made up entirely or partly of parts of Oakland fall wholly or partly in AD-15. Any person or group with one of these six zip codes is considered to be a resident of AD-15, though in a few cases they aren’t since district boundaries do not conform exactly to zip code boundaries. Street addresses are not given, so sorting by zip code is the best that can be done. Average contribution per contributor is calculated by dividing the total amount of contributions as found in the spreadsheets on the Secretary of State Web site by the number of contributors.


New: How Berkeley Voted in the June Primary Election

Rob Wrenn
Tuesday June 26, 2018 - 10:40:00 AM

45% of the votes cast in Alameda County in the AD-15 race were cast in Berkeley. Among Alameda County cities in the District, Wicks did best in affluent Piedmont, with 43.8%; while her poorest showing was in Berkeley with 30.6%. Countywide, she came in first with 32.5%.

Beckles did best in Berkeley with 18.1%; she got 12.8% in Oakland, finishing third. Countywide, Beckles won 14.6%. Kalb did best in Oakland with 26.2%, but came in behind Wicks who got33.1%.

Appel did best in her home city of Berkeley with 17.8% and finished fourth countywide with 14.1% Contra Costa County precinct results are not yet available 




How Berkeley Voted Assembly District 15 

 

Candidate Votes Percent
Wicks 10,431 30.6%
Beckles 6,156 18.1%
Appel 6,055 17.8%
Kalb 4,927 14.5%
Pardue-Okimoto 1,785 5.2%
Bartlett 1,745 5.1%
Katz 1,603 4.7%
Jandhyala 850 2.5%
Others 491 1.4%
Total 34,043



How Berkeley Voted Selected Statewide Offices 


 

 

US Senate Votes Percent
Feinstein* 20,923 57.8%
DeLeon 11,712 32.4%
Others

3,566 9.9%
Governor
Newsom* 21,982 59.8%
Eastin 4,432 12.0%
Villaraigosa 4,431 12.0%
Chiang 3,079 8.4%
Cox (Republican) 791 2.2%
Others

2,071 5.6%
Lt. Governor
Kounalakis* 11,624 33.4%
Bleich 9,073 26.1%
McLaughlin 6,589 19.0%
Hernandez 5,525 15.9%
Others

1,942 5.6%
Supt. of Public

Instruction

Thurmond 31,994 76.9%
Tuck* 4,578 14.3%
Others

2,826 8.8%
*Finished first



How Berkeley Voted Selected Alameda County Races

 

 

 

Office or Measure

Votes Percent
District Attorney
O’Malley* 16,383 51.5%
Price

15,459 48.5%
Measure A (2/3rds required for passage)
Yes 30,406 84.9%
No*

5,412 15.1%
Measure RM3
Yes* 25,452 72.3%
No

9,742 27.7%
*winner

Measure A was the measure to increase the sales tax by .5% to fund childcare and pre-school programs. Countywide, it won 66.2% of the vote, falling just 1500 votes short of the required two-thirds.



Berkeley Turnout Primary Elections 

 

 



Year


Ballots Cast
Percent of Registered Voters
2018 37,372 47.9%
2016 45,933 58.0%
2014 20,248 26.0%
2012 23,708 32.4%
2010 28,168 37.0%


Final Election Results Assembly District 15:
Wicks vs Beckles in November

Rob Wrenn
Saturday June 23, 2018 - 12:44:00 PM

Contra Costa County finished their count of vote by mail and provisional ballots. Alameda County finished their count last week. Here are the final totals. Jovanka Beckles beat out Dan Kalb for second place by 719 votes and will face Buffy Wicks, who finished first, in November. Official Statements of Vote, when released, will provide results by precinct and city. 

Buffy Wicks Votes Percent 

Alameda County: 24,655 32.5% 

Contra Costa County: 12,478 29.3% 

Total: 37,133 31.4% 

Jovanka Beckles 

Alameda County: 11,123 14.6% 

Contra Costa County: 7,602 17.9% 

Total: 18,725 15.8% 

Dan Kalb 

Alameda County: 14,770 19.4% 

Contra Costa County: 3,236 7.6%  

Total: 18,006 15.2% 

Judy Appel 

Alameda County: 10,714 14.1% 

Contra Costa County: 2,875 6.8%  

Total: 13,589 11.5%  

Rochelle Pardue-Okimoto 

Alameda County: 4,065 5.4% 

Contra Costa County: 5,760 13.5%  

Total: 9,825 8.3% 

Pranav Jandhyala 

Alameda County: 3,038 4.0% 

Contra Costa County: 3,907 9.8%  

Total: 6,945 5.9% 

Andy Katz 

Alameda County: 3,461 4.6% 

Contra Costa County: 2,747 6.5% 

Total: 6,208 5.2% 

Ben Bartlett: 

Alameda County: 2,787 3.3% 

Contra Costa County: 1,162 2.7% 

Total: 3,949 3.3%
 

Other Candidates

Alameda County: 1,229 1.6% 

Contra Costa County: 2,779 6.5%  

Total: 4,008 3.4% 

 

Turnout: 

Alameda County: 39.7% 

Contra Costa County: 39.8% 

Turnout was a lot higher than for the 2014 primary election, but a lot lower than turnout in the 2016 presidential primary. Results can be found on the Secretary of State’s Web site: https://vote.sos.ca.gov/returns/state-assembly/district/15 


It's not Just Burrowing Owls, Kites are Raising Young at the Bulb Too

Robert Brokl
Saturday June 23, 2018 - 11:26:00 AM
Labels on Costco rodent bait stations
Labels on Costco rodent bait stations
Pam Young

Like the little trains that could, burrowing owls have made a dramatic arrival to the Albany Bulb plateau. Birdwatchers and photographers have lined the cyclone fence on the Bulb plateau, under the jurisdiction of the East Bay Regional Park District, hoping to catch glimpses of the birds at their mounds. Burrowing owls are small, long-legged owls that nest in burrows. Unusual for owls, they are active during the day. 

But they’re not the only rare California Species of Special Concern at the Bulb—a nesting pair of kites have successfully raised four young in a nest high in a tree top in the City of Albany-owned portion of the Bulb. Kites are birds of prey, distinguished for their hovering and diving flights. 

(Photo credit: Pam Young) 

Mature adults have dark red eyes, white breasts, and slate-colored wings. This juvenile has dark eyes, an orange band across its chest, and mottled brown white on its wings. 

My husband and I have been walking our dogs at the Bulb for the last 15 years. This year, we met a dog walker and Golden Gate Fields employee at the Bulb, with a replacement dog. The beloved pet he brought to work had died after killing a poisoned rat. Owls, kites, raptors in general, can have the same ugly fate, catching a poisoned rodent. 

The Bulb originated as a construction dumping site--part of the plan to eventually fill in the Bay. (An ornithologist from Boston told us the San Francisco Bay is studied globally as an example of efforts to repair and restore what had been so trashed.) 

Some time back, the plateau to the north of the parking lot was fenced off, as a mitigation for the Tom Bates soccer fields along Hwy. 80. The burrowing owls there were displaced, but officials hoped they might discover the Bulb. Or whatever: don’t mess with a soccer field named for Bates. The owls did move in last year. This year three different birds have been identified. 

Walking at dusk, we’ve been thrilled to experience the owls flying low and soundlessly by us. We’ve also encountered them sitting on the fence, not flying off as we walked gingerly around them. We’ve spotted other owls, possible barn owls, after dark. 

We also met up with Pam Young of the Audubon Society at the Bulb who shared some of their effort on the behalf of the owls. (These small owls are newly in the spotlight, after the recent New York Times story about the burrowing owls in Mountain View that are running up against feral cats favored by Google employees.) Unfortunately, we didn’t see any owls for all the high vegetation, but she was excited to find the kites, the breeding pair and their young. She also noted that their diet was “100% rodents." 

So far so good, like a 4-H project that gets a Gold Medal. Except that the Bulb is an urban park, and impinged upon on all sides by clashing interests. We also hadn’t forgotten about the poisoned pet, and worried how the owls would fare. 

The vegetation covered plateau is regularly mowed, and will be shortly, as the 4th of July approaches. A grass fire would impact traffic on the freeway. 

Scott Possin of the East Bay Regional Park District cites bird biologist Jules Evans who says burrowing owls prefer low grass, mowed areas. If the owls decide to breed, their young may still be vulnerable as late as May. And blackbirds, white crown sparrows, and other birds also nest in that area. As luck would have it, their nesting seasons are mostly over by the drop dead deadline of the 4th, and the nightmare urban plague of fireworks. 

Nearby Golden Gate Fields Racetrack, Costco, and the USPS Distribution warehouse all take measures to control rats and mice, often using rodenticides with anticoagulants and other poisons. Rats and mice are also part or all of the diet of the kites and owls. 

David Duggan, the new general manager of Golden Gate Fields, located within the borders of Berkeley and Albany, is open to exploring other options for rat control. Currently, Swat Pest control is using snap traps only in the stables, but Orkin Rodent Control is also working there. The Orkin phone operator I talked to said they were avoiding poison in their familiar plastic enclosed rodent bait stations, citing problems with rodents dying in walls. But she said they defer to their clients. 

Costco, in Richmond, is a special problem. The exterior of their store is lined with Ecolab plastic bait stations. They are labeled “poison,” with a poison hotline number to call. (I called the 800 number, asking about the bait stations. No help there, luckily I didn’t have a toddler throwing up and turning blue.) The stations have holes for easy exit and entry. Many are cracked and weathered. 

But Costco managers I talked to peremptorily dismissed my concerns. Keisha said the stations were “hotels rats entered and didn’t leave.” Period. Good-bye. The next manager, David Dorado, concurred, saying the rats remained in the traps. He denied the bait inside was poisonous, said that label was to discourage people from opening them up. (Perhaps to kill time during the long wait to have your tires changed?) 

Ecolab is a trip. They are a very big company, with many products. (Soap dispensers at Kaiser, I just noticed.) So I was told by the 800 number operator. She suggested using emails for Ecolab pest specialists, since she had no information about the bait stations, but my emails went unanswered. I did enjoy the Ecolab rodent education YouTube videos, which proclaimed the ground-breaking, patented “rodenticide-free devices (that) lower environmental impact," but the videos were oddly mute, even coy, about how exactly the rodents were dispatched. Snap traps? Baited with what? What if they nibbled bait and then decided to exit—traps don’t always spring. 

As the Swat owner explained, their bait stations aren’t labeled poisonous, because they’re not. 

The same Ecolab stations appear to be placed at the immense postal distribution facility next to Costco. Try getting someone there on the phone. 

Labels on Costco Rodent Bait Stations 

So, we have a situation of a threatened species making a tentative home, against all odds, with danger lurking just across the parking lot, or water. At worst, despite the best intentions of East Bay Regional Park employees and others, you have boutique, feel good conservation. 

The owls and kites have established a tentative foothold. Citizen activism, calling Costco (even better if you’re a member), Congressperson Lee (USPS), Richmond elected officials and Assembly candidate like Jovanka Beckles, Golden Gate Fields, and the East Bay Regional Park Dist. might help. 

 


Robert Brokl is an Oakland-based artist 

 


Opinion

Editorials

Who's In Charge Here Anyhow?

Becky O'Malley
Sunday June 24, 2018 - 01:44:00 PM

Thanks to a citizen videographer, I’ve been able to watch a very peculiar performance by a subcommittee of the Berkeley City Council which was tasked, more than a year ago, with reviewing Berkeley’s participation in the Urban Shield drills on police crisis response. You can find a good summary of what happened and a link to the video here.

It’s an issue which has attracted a lot of public attention not only in Berkeley, but also at the Alameda County Board of Supervisors, in Santa Cruz and San Francisco and probably other cities.

Opposition to Urban Shield goes back at least ten years, but has recently accelerated along with the Black Lives Matter movement. The program is based on a military assault model, which critics, including Berkeley Councilmember Kate Harrison, contend seriously neglects the de-escalation tactics which are more successful in the typical urban crisis. Other cities, including Palo Alto, have objected to how expensive police participation at overtime rates can be. Urban Shield exercises are accompanied by an “Expo”—translation: trade show –which pitches expensive military hardware to a pre-primed market of local cops.

The pros and cons of Berkeley’s participation have been extensively debated over the last decade, and Councilmember Harrison covers them well in her report to the subcommittee, so we don’t need to re-hash them here. But reviewing the video I was disturbed by what I saw of the civic decision-making process. 

At the very end of the meeting, Councilmember Susan Wengraf threw a procedural bombshell into the discussion. She produced what she said was a copy of several sections of the city’s charter, read them aloud, and interpreted them to mean that councilmembers (and perhaps even the subcommittee) would be breaking the law if they voted to withdraw from Urban Shield. Mayor Arreguin seemed to be persuaded by her logic and announced that he’d decided to vote no on the resolution which was proposed in the draft report authored by Councilmember Harrison. 

“I’m not here to break the law!” he said a couple of times. 

Say what? 

It’s a common error among relatively smart people who haven’t been to law school to think that if you just read a few sentences of any code you will know what the law requires of you. Unfortunately, it’s not quite that simple. Often, disputed interpretation of laws ultimately must be settled in court. 

Actually, whoever’s writing the Indivisible Berkeley emails just dropped a paragraph into my email stream which neatly sums up this problem (emphasis added): 

“Urban Shield: In the wake of the most recent Berkeley City Council ad hoc Subcommittee on Urban Shield meeting, the path forward seems murkier than ever. An opinion by one of the subcommittee members that the Council might not have the legal authority to direct the police in this matter caused Mayor Arreguin to completely back away from his previous decision to recommend withdrawal from participation in Urban Shield. This rescission was offered before any opinion was sought from the City Attorney. Without the Mayor affirming and insisting on City Council's authority in matters of policy and governance, even in view of long settled legal decisions and historical precedent, we believe the ramifications could be great and go beyond the issue of Urban Shield.” 

Who thinks that a city council lacks the power to decide to opt out of expensive paramilitary training for its police force? And that if they tried to do so, they’d be “breaking the law”? 

As Councilmember Harrison can be observed explaining cogently in the video, councils are supposed to make policy for the city manager and her subordinates to follow up on with implementation details, not the other way round .  

Managers don’t make policy, they execute it. In Berkeley’s case, there’s even a court decision which backs up the City Council’s authority over “policies, practices and procedures of the police department.” 

Interpreting the meaning of codified law for councilmembers is the job of the city attorney, not a do-it-yourself project either for individual councilmembers or for the city manager. And if for some reason the councilmembers don’t like city attorney’s advice, they can ask for a second opinion from an outside counsel, and even take the matter to court for resolution. 

Berkeley has what is sometimes called a strong manager/ weak mayor form of government, which seems to have led current city manager Dee William-Ridley to claim ultimate authority over what kind of training the police should get under all circumstances. At the end of the subcommittee meeting she used the discussion of Urban Shield as a springboard for a general complaint that she doesn’t get enough respect. 

“While a lot of this may be fresh and new to many, this is not a new comment,” she said. “My desk, my office, has repeatedly stated both formally and behind the scenes that I believe there is an absolute erosion of the city manager responsibilities before my time and during my time.” She went on to detail what she personally thought the city’s policy should be. 

This is the crux of the problem.  

Williams-Ridley’s previous job was as an assistant city manager in Modesto—and I hate to break this to you, Madame Manager, but you’re not in Modesto any more. Berkeley council members have traditionally expressed and implemented leading edge positions and actions on a variety of controversial matters large and small, all the way down to specifying what kind of pesticides could or could not be used in city parks. Previous managers, notably Weldon Rucker and Phil Kamlarz, have understood and respected this dynamic, but Williams-Ridley doesn’t seem to get it. 

It doesn’t help matters that she speaks of herself in the third person (My desk, my office has repeatedly stated …) or reveals that she’s been trying to control the council from behind the arras (…both formally and behind scenes…) 

There’s an obvious power struggle going on. It should be out in the open, not behind the scenes. 

In the wake of Black Lives Matter, control of police by elected officials has gained new importance all over the country. The same kind of struggle has been going, for example, in Asheville, N.C. There elected councilmembers have been trying to place restrictions on probable cause searches which have been alleged to disproportionately affect minorities., and police have been resisting. The council prevailed, but it took some work. 

The question of whether the city council has the legal authority to vote to bar Berkeley police participation in paramilitary training should be on the table in the public forum. The city attorney should be asked to provide her formal, written advice on the topic well before the meeting at which Urban Shield is scheduled to be considered, on July 24.  

Objectors, councilmembers or whoever they are, could then consult their own legal authorities in order to facilitate an informed discussion. Other questions have arisen recently regarding city staff’s apparent assumptions about lines between their powers and the City Council’s--these might also be illuminated by a free exchange of opinions. 


Public Comment

Join Protests Against Family Separation

Alberto Lopez
Saturday June 23, 2018 - 03:09:00 PM

I want to bring to your attention that on June 30th there will be protests all over the country against the Trump administration's separation of families. I'm sure you have all seen the videos of the conditions in which ICE is keeping these kids. I was 11 years old when my family came to the U.S. and aside from the condescending attitude and rudeness of CBP when we went through passport control, our immigration experience was relatively uneventful. The experience was still traumatizing and the legal processes to become a permanent resident, and then a citizen felt dehumanizing at times. Even after going through that, I can't begin to imagine the hell those kids and parents are living.

I've been amused by the pundits, politicians, and newscasters mentioning how "this isn't who we are" and "how we are better than this." They seem to forget that there was a time when black children were sold like cattle and separated from their parents, or that the federal government took native children from their parents and sent them to "boarding schools" for what amounts to ethnic cleansing. Many of us are better than that, but a cursory look at social media or two minutes of watching Fox "News" will remind you that many have not moved past 1865 in their perception of the humanity of others.

I'd encourage you to visit the link below so you can see a list of protests near you. If you are not the protesting kind, but still feel inclined to do something, I have also included a link where you can find donation information for organizations helping the kids and their families.


Families Belong Together: Berkeley Mobilization


Protest link: https://www.familiesbelongtogether.org/

Donations: https://mashable.com/2018/06/18/child-separation-immigration-charities-donate/#8bGJniHFtqqo


Why Berkeley Should Not Participate in Urban Shield Vendor Show and Tactical Exercises

Councilmember Kate Harrison
Saturday June 23, 2018 - 01:02:00 PM

In 1990, the Berkeley Police Department (BPD) engaged in one of the most successful hostage rescue operations in history: Henry’s Hostage Crisis. This was not a case of foreign terrorism. The attacker was just 29 when he obtained three guns and took 33 people hostage. The BPD’s measured response to the situation was executed with textbook perfection. Their actions earned the BPD national acclaim, a legacy that our officers live up to each day.

Decades later, we see the BPD participating in a new and altogether different style of training -- Urban Shield, a set of war games, tactical exercises, and weapons expos designed around a Bush-era counter-terrorism agenda. Using millions of dollars in Department of Homeland Security funding, the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office puts on 48 hours of tactical anti-terrorism exercises for federal and local departments. The only way to get full points in the competition is through full escalation of force. In a real-world hostage situation at Children’s Hospital in 2010, officers successfully resolved the crisis without loss of life but in an Urban Shield hostage scenario based on the event, teams “won” by escalating and killing the perpetrators.

Far from this real life example, many scenarios at Urban Shield are improbable and are built around military-grade technology featured by for-profit companies in the vender expo. Take one of last year’s exercises, supposedly based on the 2008 attacks in Mumbai. Designed by Execushield, the sensationalized scenario had officers use Navy-grade aquatic raiding craft to kill members of a Hezbollah terrorist group, which had crossed the US border from South America to set up an armed encampment in a wooded cabin near a reservoir in Livermore. More than just improbable, the exercise bore almost no relationship to the Mumbai attacks, which featured multiple shootings and bomb threats distributed across multiple days and urban locations.

Berkeley can and should do better than Urban Shield. After months of subcommittee meetings including the Police Chief and presentations from the SRT team (Berkeley’s SWAT), the Council’s Urban Shield Subcommittee recommended on June 4th that the BPD suspend participation for the 2018 vendor expo and tactical exercises until revisions are made to the program. Berkeley is not pulling out of Urban Shield entirely. Certain modules of this year’s Urban Shield -- like the Emergency Operations Center exercises and the community fair – will focus on mass care and casualty. I encourage the BPD to attend these modules. 

The Urban Shield program does not reflect our needs. In the past decade, rather than confronting terrorist threats, the police department has trended toward facing high-risk search, arrest warrant services, patrol support, and crowd management. The tactical exercises at Urban Shield do not focus on these activities but instead on politically-motivated mass violence, obscuring the principle of de-escalation in community crime encounters. Urban Shield squanders resources that could be used for pressing community concerns. Going forward, we propose that Urban Shield focus on much more likely crises such as earthquakes and the 1991 Oakland fire. 

Moreover, the Urban Shield competition and expo don’t reflect our values as a community. Take ICE’s involvement in Urban Shield. Alameda is a Sanctuary County and Berkeley was the first Sanctuary City in the nation; even so, Urban Shield has stubbornly continued to host ICE, forcing our officers to exercise alongside a group that clearly stands against our city’s commitment to justice. In 2017, Urban Shield hosted the far-right Oath Keepers, a fundamentalist vigilante organization that provides security for white supremacist events like last year’s protests in Berkeley. Additionally, the exercises reinforce implicit racial biases against black and brown people in their representation within the program, expressing what Alameda County Supervisor Scott Haggerty calls racist undertones. Berkeley is against full escalation and the unnecessary use of force by officers -- yet Urban Shield encourages officers to escalate. 

Reform from within is no longer realistic. The Alameda County Board of Supervisors put guidelines in place that claimed to reform the event. Last year saw the Oath Keepers, ICE and surveillance firms participating anyway. Only some of the guidelines have been upheld and only after a community member brought violations to the attention of the Board, when the Sheriff signed a contract with a vendor that engages in blatant racial stereotyping. 

Urban Shield is not salvageable through our involvement because Berkeley and the BPD have no input into it. Many of its failures could have been avoided if local input was considered. Outsourcing public safety training without local input is dangerous, and Urban Shield has refused to listen to the communities it is meant to protect. 

Our officers need even more training in everyday emergency response and disaster preparedness. Lasts week’s shooting in South Berkeley shows this. The shooting was not by a terrorist or active shooter, but rather against a tenant by his landlord. The BPD used medical techniques taught to them at ongoing Bay Area Urban Areas Security Initiative trainings. More funding could be allocated to these if Urban Shield did not absorb $1.5 million of the $5 million annual grant. 

Reforming Urban Shield has been an exercise in futility for the community and the city. While the discussion continues, it is time to throw the full weight of our community into this withdrawal, aligning our community preparedness with our needs and values while supporting our officers as they take this brave step away from Urban Shield and what it represents. 


Art Opening Education

Carol Denney
Saturday June 23, 2018 - 01:08:00 PM

Walking by the art opening entrance on Center Street was a young woman who took the brewery sandwich signboard blocking the sidewalk and slid it several feet into the passageway. I stood close by and thought it was some kind of strange magic. I walked out to see and two people who knew her counseled me to let it go as she walked away, explaining that she was one of the people constantly getting ticketed and hassled for sidewalk stuff, while nobody bothers with the signboards blocking sidewalks. 

It made perfect sense to me. I'd only a couple months ago documented over a hundred permit violations by similar businesses; tables, chairs, signboards, rolling racks of merchandise. There were no legal permits for any of it; I had checked with various planning and code entities to make sure. But the police and the city council have an agenda, and signboards aren't on it, only poor people, and mostly for their visibility. They're serious when they insist that their downtown look like Disneyland. 

This is the same nexus of policymakers who want your money and your vote in a few months. They want you to support more taxes without addressing the lopsided use of police resources against the poor. If you're anything like me, you're receiving newsletters and carefully ironed updates with carefully chosen vocabulary in the hope that you'll have your view of the city and your neighborhood's issues framed in a manageable parameter. 

This is your chance. Ask them why they haven't spoken up for respect for People's Park's city landmark status. Ask them why they haven't led a parade through your local commercial district picking up sidewalk-blocking signboards and placing them back inside the businesses where they belong. Ask them why the tent sweeps always seem to happen in the middle of the night, in the dark when it is hardest for the people affected to pack their belongings, find their glasses, and safely comply. 

You don't have to raise your voice, sound angry, or use profanity; you'll probably give them an advantage if you do. Just ask. Watch them to see if there is any sign that they recognize the issues you're raising and have given them thought. Call their opposition and ask the same questions. 

This matters. Because those carefully constrained newsletters and campaign events are going to come harder and faster as the election grows closer. And each time someone hears the civil rights concerns often unaddressed in a town that thinks it has all the answers inquired about with dignity and civility, it gives others courage to raise the same questions. 

The best politicians are not born. They are crafted and nourished by eagle-eyed citizens taking their measure, nurturing their talent, and if necessary, exposing their corruption. Be that citizen with your poetry, your art, your dance, your theater, your wallet, and certainly your voice. You may start alone, but you won't be alone for long.


No Police To Arrest Corporate Criminals

Harry Brill
Saturday June 23, 2018 - 12:57:00 PM

Working people in the aggregate lose billions of dollars annually due to wage theft by both big and small business. The money stolen from workers is substantial and so the consequences are often severe. Wage theft increases poverty and makes low wage employees even poorer. Women, African Americans, and Hispanics have been disproportionally impacted. The most common crimes that are committed include paying below the legal minimum wage, violating overtime pay, and requiring hourly workers to perform various unpaid tasks before they clock in and after they clock out. As one researcher commented, "Wage theft is built into the business model of a substantial portion of corporate America." 

Among the corporations that have been guilty of wage theft are Walmart, AT&T, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JP Morgan, United Parcel Service, FedEx and Allstate. Each of these companies had profits last year of $3 billion or more. Their executives each receive a yearly pay of millions of dollars. So these and many other highly profitable corporations cannot justifiably complain they have to cut corners. Also, wage theft in the restaurant industry is rampant. Nine out of ten employees in fast food establishments claim that they have been victims of wage theft.  

To explain why business is able to violate the law and get away with it requires understanding the complicit role of the various sectors of federal and state governments. Rather than the various branches of government doing what they can to prevent this serious crime from flourishing, they have been exacerbating the problem. In effect, they have been giving business the right of way. 

Because wage theft is widespread, to successfully tackle this issue demands a larger budget for agencies to hire and retain a sufficient number of committed federal and state investigators. But not surprisingly, legislative bodies, bowing to business pressure, have been unwilling to allocate sufficient funds.  

According to a report sponsored by the AFL the working class population increased by seven fold since 1948. Yet the number of investigators in the Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division have been reduced by 10 percent. At the state level, six states have no investigators to check on minimum wage violations. Twenty-six other states have less than ten investigators. Worse still, only eight states enforce wage theft penalties. Clearly, the lobbying campaigns by business interests, particularly the bribes, which are euphemistically called campaign contributions, have been very persuasive. 

But haven't many corporations been compelled to pay millions in law suit settlements? In fact, several corporations have paid out over a hundred million dollars to settle disputes in lost wages. Understandably, many members of the public are impressed with the size of the payouts. But by taking a closer look we learn that the settlements are actually a raw deal for employees who are victims of wage theft. 

Here is what is actually occurring. When the Department of Labor prevails in a suit against a corporation, it settles for substantially less money than private suits brought collectively by working people. As a result employees recoup only some of the money they lost. The penalties these corporations pay for wage theft are just the cost of doing business. 

The evidence that workers are being short changed is apparent because these settlements encourage rather than discourage business to continue the same practices afterward. Walmart is among the corporations that after paying its penalties is later sued for continuing similar illegal labor practices. In a comprehensives study of the problem of wage theft about 600 other corporations also paid penalties for repeatedly engaging in similar wage theft practices. They wouldn't do so if it wasn't worth it. 

Ideally, rather than the Department of Labor's Wage and Hour division as well as other relevant government bodies negotiating with business about the magnitude and terms of a penalty, they should attempt to mandate a verdict After all, that is what judges do in criminal cases. These verdicts should not only completely cover the amount of money that was stolen plus interest. In addition the corporation should be required to pay a high enough punitive penalty to increase the likelihood that the offense will not be repeated. Also, violations by executives could result in a prison sentence for up to six months. But that provision of the law is never used. 

Since government law suits settle for substantially less than suits brought by workers collectively, many employees have decided to bypass government in favor of private action. But this route is not problem free. These suits can drag on for a long while, and they are also very expensive. The compensation that lawyers receive when winning a case is far and above what working people earn. 

Also, as a result of two important developments, workers are being stripped of their democratic rights to sue collectively. Many employers are requiring newly hired workers to sign forced arbitration agreements as a condition of being hired. This deprives working people of the right to go to court. Second, the U.S. Supreme Court recently decided that employers can prevent employees from filing class action suits. This decision is very worrisome. Without allowing workers to band together in their own interests the high court chose to close a major avenue for challenging the theft of their wages. 

The California Legislature has passed legislation that can get around these handicaps. Relatively speaking California has been more protective on wage issues than most states. The state has rejected the right of employees to force employers to sign arbitration agreements. With regard to the onerous Supreme Court decision, California allows victims to sue in the name of the state rather than workers collective suing. The state even approved a law that requires a business if it loses a case to reimburse their opponent for legal expenses Also, access to the courts in California are much easier than elsewhere. Particularly important California passed a law that permits the state to take possession of the property of an employer until the wages that are owed are paid. 

Although workers could benefit from more protective laws, there are many good laws already on the books that are not enforced. The problem is that working people are short on clout. Wage theft has flourished as labor unions have precipitously declined. Since the mid-fifties union density has dropped from 35 percent to only 6.5 percent of the workforce currently. Without the protections of unions the ability to exploit and cheat workers have increased tremendously. 

Of course, workers can still make important advances. However, nothing less than building a formidable labor movement and, ideally, with the cooperation of government (by electing progressive candidates) can working people be rescued from the nightmare that many are now experiencing.


Trump’s Little Hostages

Tejinder Uberoi
Saturday June 23, 2018 - 12:55:00 PM

President Trump’s executive order rescinding his prior order separating children from their parents does nothing to address the crisis of thousands of families who have already been torn apart. Many parents have been deported and the likelihood of ever seeing their children again remains highly unlikely. New asylum seekers and their children will be locked up together intensifying their misery. 

More than 600 members of the United Methodist Church have filed a formal complaint against fellow church member, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, accusing him of child abuse, immorality and racial discrimination. Protesters followed him shouting, “Stop taking kids!” The audio tape released by ProPublica which captured the wailing sounds of children crying “Mama” and “Papi” from inside a detention center has intensified the outrage. The immigrants are not “animals” as Trump likes to describe them but innocent victims of gang violence. One immigrant lost two children to gun violence before she crossed the border with her only remaining infant toddler. Not even the sight of devastated families and children in internment camps could move the party that once boasted family values and the protection of the unborn child. The silence of the Republican lambs is deafening! 

The longer these children are separated from their parents the more likely they will suffer long term physiological damage. Bed wetting physical and sexual abuse has already been reported. It is time to halt this inhumane policy NOW. For more go to http://callforsocialjustice.blogspot.com/


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE: All the President’s Men: Stephen Miller

Bob Burnett
Saturday June 23, 2018 - 12:33:00 PM

515 days into Trump's presidency, three things are clear: Donald's signature issue is division; he always plays to his base; and his primary issue is immigration. Trump promised his base a wall along the southern border and he's willing to do anything to accomplish this. His most recent tactic is to generate outrage by separating immigrant families at the border. The architect of this tactic is Stephen Miller.

In his ongoing effort to solidify and energize his base, Trump has pursued a consistent set of campaign issues: immigration; trade; taxes; and energy. Trump's most significant failure has been his inability to secure funding for his border wall. 

Trump has had a couple of opportunities to get funds. In September, Donald announced an initiative to phase out the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) act. In January, in an effort to save this program, Democrats offered Trump money for his wall in return for protection of the DACA recipients; Trump initially agreed but then backed off, seeking additional immigration constraints. In May, Trump threatened to veto the $1.3 trillion spending bill, unless there was full wall funding; then he relented and signed the bill citing "national security." 

Meanwhile, Trump's base has gotten restless. One of his most notorious supporters, Ann Coulter, has mocked Donald for failing to deliver on his border-wall promise . Despite Administration efforts, illegal border immigration increased in May. Trump seized on the tactic of separating immigrant families at the border in order to outrage Democrats and, in effect, blackmail them into providing funds for his wall. 

This is also an effort to galvanize Trump's base before the 2018 midterm elections. Trump had planned to excite them with tax cuts but this hasn't worked -- the base has figured out that the Trump tax cuts don't help them. 

Stephen Miller is the architect of the tactic of separating immigrant families at the border. (Miller was also the architect of Trump's January 2017 executive order restricting immigration from seven predominantly Muslim countries.) The 32-year-old Miller has several White House jobs: he advises Trump on domestic policy, particularly immigration and trade; he helps write Donald's speeches; and when Trump hits the campaign trail, Miller goes with him as an opening act -- he fires up the base with an incendiary monologue. 

Miller has an interesting history. He was born into a liberal Jewish family in Santa Monica, California. As a teenager, Stephen took a hard-right turn and developed a reputation as a "troll" at Santa Monica High School and Duke University. (In this context, a "troll" is someone who deliberately sews discord by making inflammatory comments.) 

In May, Atlantic staff writer McKay Coppins wrote an excellent profile of Stephen Miller . Coppins observed that when Trump announced his presidential candidacy, Miller realized: "the New York billionaire was the flesh-and-blood manifestation of everything he cared about most: an opponent of political correctness, a hard-liner on immigration, and enemy of the political establishment -- and a world-class troll." 

Coppins noted: "People who have known [Miller] at different points in his life say his political worldview is also rooted in a deep-seated instinct for trolling. Miller represents a rising generation of conservatives for whom 'melting the snowflakes' and 'triggering the libs' are first principles." 

Stephen Miller is Trump's closest adviser who is not a member of Donald's family. (Miller serves in a White House position that is roughly equivalent to that of Valerie Jarrett in the Obama administration.) There are those that say Miller's function is to articulate Trump's impulses. 

Reading McKay Coppins article about Miller and a companion piece in Alternet by Kali Holloway four characteristics jump out. The first is that Miller is an unabashed racist. A high-school classmate remembered that Miller had, "an intense hatred toward people of color, especially toward Latinos." 

To say the least, Stephen Miller is strident. A Duke University official remembered Miller: "He's the most sanctimonious student I think I ever encountered. He seemed to be absolutely sure of his own views and the correctness of them, and seemed to assume that if you were in disagreement with him, there was something malevolent or stupid about your thinking. Incredibly intolerant." 

Miller is mini-Trump. On the campaign trail he typically warms up audiences by railing against immigration: "Uncontrolled migration from the Middle East....illegal immigrants being arrested... for the most heinous crimes imaginable... Low-wage foreign workers being brought in to take your place at less pay." 

Finally, Miller is Trump's enforcer on immigration. Miller is the architect of both of Trump's signature immigration actions: restricting immigration from seven predominantly Muslim countries and separating immigrant families at the border. (Since 2013 he's led the opposition to common-sense immigration reform; in January, Miller convinced Trump to renege on a DACA deal.) 

One of the notable similarities between Trump's signature immigration actions (restricting immigration from seven predominantly Muslim countries and separating immigrant families at the border) is how sloppy the implementation was. For example, there's every indication that when immigrant parents are separated from their children, the government is not taking steps to ensure they can be reconciled later. This appears to be intentional. 

Stephen Miller and Donald Trump are not motivated by civility or legality. They want to generate outrage, foment division. 


Bob Burnett is a Berkeley writer and activist. He can be reached at bburnett@sonic.net


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Trump's War on Disabled People

Jack Bragen
Saturday June 23, 2018 - 12:40:00 PM

A fundamental part of Trump's strategy for dominating the American people is the use of intimidation as a weapon. Trump would like to make Americans afraid to speak out against him or to defy him in other ways. We have seen this as effective in countries other than the U.S., such as Putin's ironclad hold on power in Russia, and the oppressive patriarchy of North Korea. In either of those countries, attempting to speak freely could get a person killed. 

I am unclear as the role of CNN in this. Is CNN truly defying Trump by speaking the truth? Or, are they a force that makes him look more evil and more frightening, a figure resembling Darth Vader? On the surface of it, it appears that CNN has bias against Trump, since Trump lies continuously, and CNN purportedly supports 'the truth.' 

However, much of CNN's advertising revenue comes from the oil and energy companies. I do not have access to the amounts; however, I repeatedly see commercials on CNN bought by oil and fossil fuel energy companies. 

Trump would have you believe he is another Genghis Khan, another Napoleon, or worse. He feeds on that. And it enhances his power grab, since some individuals are quick to get out of his way. 

The effects of this administration on people with disabilities are devastating. Trump is waging psychological, economic, and executive warfare on the disabled. The Republicans are trying to bolster their bogus budget by raiding Social Security and gutting Obamacare. They are also slashing affordable housing. Any program that has mercy for the disabled and/or disadvantaged is a target for the Trump Administration. 

Disabled individuals are among the most vulnerable, because it is harder for this group to stand up for our rights, for the following reasons: It appears that most people with disabilities are restricted by means of economic deprivation. Disabled people, whether their disability is physical or psychiatric, could be physically unable to get out and demonstrate, due to medications that limit physical energy, or that limit the ability to be out in the elements. Some people in wheelchairs have demonstrated, but this is a more difficult feat than someone who can just drive to the general area of the assembly, and walk long distances. 

Disabled people are often under the thumb of organizations that provide housing and treatment, and it may be a lot harder for us to organize in any significant way. 

The effects of the Trump Administration on those afflicted with brain-induced paranoia add injury to insult. It is part of Trump's political strategy to use public paranoia as a means of manipulation. Thus, since Trump took office, the level of paranoia in the general public has surged, and paranoia has become normalized. Because of that, it is a lot harder for a person who suffers from brain-induced paranoia to calm ourselves down, to remember that it doesn't have to be The End, and to maintain that little bit of naiveté or trust that tells us to believe what people are telling us. 

Since lies are the bread and butter of the Trump administration, it is much harder for paranoid people to trust any branch of government. Lies are poison for people with paranoid or delusional tendencies, and can worsen our condition or can even lead to a relapse, if bad enough. 

Finally, the Trump administration is using mentally ill as a scapegoat to blame for the upsurge in mass shootings across the U.S. of recent years. Even while he blames mental illness for these crimes, he has done nothing whatsoever to help mentally ill people get into treatment and housing, things that would alleviate a lot of the resentment and that would make it easier to keep a helpful eye on us. Instead, he is slashing services of all kinds. If he actually wanted to create more jobs, he would introduce bills that would provide training and placement for people with disabilities. I haven't heard of this happening. 

Thus, Trump's Presidency is poisonous to the disabled. Since he intends to make conditions worse for mentally ill people, this will make the U.S. less safe and more hostile for all citizens. 


To the readers: Please be sure and check out my books, available on Amazon, in other places or on LULU, which gives me a bigger cut if you buy directly from them. 

Here is a link: http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/bragen 


ECLECTIC RANT: Trump’s Cruel Zero-Tolerance Immigration Policy in a Nutshell

Ralph E. Stone
Saturday June 23, 2018 - 05:10:00 PM

In April 2018, the Trump administration introduced a "zero-tolerance” immigration policy calling for the prosecution of all individuals who illegally enter the U.S.. This policy has the effect of separating parents from their children when they enter the country together, because parents are referred for prosecution and the children are placed in the custody of a sponsor, such as a relative or foster home, or held in a shelter. The Trump administration’s hope is that harsh treatment would deter illegal immigration. 

When an adult is referred for prosecution, a child traveling with the adult is turned over to the U.S. Health and Human Services Department. That agency is responsible for placing the child with a sponsor as the child’s immigration case is resolved. Nearly 2,000 children were separated from their parents due to the zero-tolerance policy and reports indicate that federal authorities have lost track of nearly 1,500 immigrant children in their custody. 

A family seeking asylum does not necessarily make them illegal. Asylum seekers have a right to due process. The Due Process Clause, which the Supreme Court has ruled applies to “all persons” on U.S. soil, prohibits the government from separating a parent from her child absent the most compelling reasons. In addition, the zero-tolerance practices run counter to the Flores Settlement Agreement of 1997 currently binding on U.S. immigration services. It states, “The INS [now USCIS, ICE, and CBP] treats, and shall continue to treat, all minors in its custody with dignity, respect and special concern for their particular vulnerability as minors.” 

In a recent ruling, Sessions said that immigration judges should not necessarily consider claims of domestic abuse or gang violence as a basis for asylum seekers, absent other evidence that someone has suffered persecution as a member of a social group protected by law — a ruling that establishes a major new roadblock for thousands of Central Americans trying to seek refuge in the U.S. 

The American Psychological Association sent an open letter to President Trump calling for an immediate change to his administration’s immigration policy. 

“Families fleeing their homes to seek sanctuary in the United States are already under a tremendous amount of stress. Sudden and unexpected family separation, such as separating families at the border, can add to that stress, leading to emotional trauma in children.” 

Attorney General Jeff Sessions cited the Bible to defend the policy, saying that the Apostle Paul issued a “wise command” to obey the government. What would Jesus say about Sessions using the Bible to justify official cruelty to children? 

After coming under intense criticism for his administration's zero-tolerance policy, Trump then blamed the policy on a law enacted by Democrats, claiming that his opponents in Congress are blocking attempts to fix the immigration system to get rid of the “horrible law.” Turns out, however, the policy of separating families trying to cross the border illegally isn't a law in itself. Instead, it stems from a a “zero-tolerance” policy advocated by the Justice Department under Sessions, which calls for stricter adherence to existing laws.  

Actually, going back to the presidency of George W. Bush, family units were hardly ever detained, but rather processed and released with a notice to appear at immigration court. this policy was designed to offer noncriminal immigrants a way to earn temporary status in the U.S. while awaiting a ruling on whether they would be granted asylum. The “breaking up” of families is a Trump/Sessions policy and Trump is lying that it is the Democrats’ fault.  

Unfortunately, according to a recent Daily Beast poll conducted June 14-15, 46% of republicans agreed with the following statement, "It is appropriate to separate undocumented immigrant parents from their children when they cross the border in order to discourage others from crossing the border illegally.” So far Trump is successfully playing to his base, using his administration’s inhumane zero-tolerance immigration policy as leverage to get his wall and to help republicans maintain their majorities in Congress. 

Will Trump's strategy work? Stay tuned.


Arts & Events

Daniil Trifonov Excels in Rachmaninoff’s 3rd Piano Concerto

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Sunday June 24, 2018 - 01:41:00 PM

This weekend, June 21-24, Pianist Daniil Trifonov appeared in his final of three performances this season with the San Francisco Symphony. Trifonov’s three-part series was well planned. He opened back in October with a solo program of music by Chopin and those inspired by Chopin, followed by a February program of four-hand piano works in which Trifonov teamed up with his mentor Sergei Babayan; and, now, Trifonov tackles Rachmaninoff’s demanding Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor. Showing off three different aspects of this multi-talented young musician, this series clearly demonstrates why Daniil Trifonov has been hailed as the leading pianist of the new generation. Trifonov is simply amazing. His technique is astounding, and his sensitivity is acute. Moreover, Trifonov plays with such intensity that at times he seems a man possessed!  

Take, for instance, Trifonov’s performance Friday evening of the “big” cadenza Rachmaninoff wrote for the first movement of his 3rd Piano Concerto. In the heavily percussive moments of this cadenza, Trifonov’s head snapped back repeatedly, his hair went flying, and he played for all the world like a man with his hair on fire. (This is the “demonic” quality in Trifonov appreciatively noted by Martha Argerich when she first heard him at Carnegie hall.) Yet all the while Trifonov was in complete control of Rachmaninoff’s difficult and demanding music. The results were electrifying. Moreover, Trifonov also excelled in the more lyrical and melodic moments of this great concerto. He tenderly caressed the first movement’s lovely opening minor-key tune, and he did likewise with the second theme.  

In the expanded Intermezzo that forms the second movement, Trifonov and the orchestra traded melodies with finesse and charm. The woodwinds and strings opened this movement, and the soloist got a respite. Soon, however, Trifonov entered abruptly, sending the music off into distant harmonic regions. Soloist and orchestra then collaborated in working out the first theme. Clarinet, bassoon and strings then introduced the second theme, a waltz that bears some resemblance to this concerto’s opening theme. Trifonov then embarked on mini-solos packed with vigorous passage-work. When the orchestra re-entered, Trifonov got only his second true moment of rest in this strenuously demanding concerto.  

In the finale, Trifonov signaled the first theme with a figure in triplets in the third measure. The second theme is introduced by energetic chords in the orchestra, followed by densely packed chords from Trifonov against drumming strings. There follows a beautiful melody for piano, exquisitely played by Trifonov. Then the concerto’s opening melody makes a reappearance in violas and cellos. A pianissimo phrase from Trifonov leads to a vigorous recapitulation of the two ideas of the finale.  

At the close of Rachmaninoff’s 3rd Piano Concerto, Daniil Trifonov drew tumultuous applause from the admiring audience, as did conductor Michael Tilson Thomas. As an encore, Trifonov performed a lilting, introspective rendering of Robert Schumann’s Scenes from Childhood. 

The first half of the program was devoted to the final two symphonies of Jean Sibelius. Symphony No. 6 has been styled as Sibelius’s “Pastorale Symphony.” It is cloudless and continuously optimistic, unlike the early symphonies of this composer. Although it has the traditional four movements, there is no slow movement. It opens with strings wending their way as if through a forest glen. In the second movement one hears the chirping of flutes. The third movement begins with a striding rhythm that is slightly uneven. Cheerful throughout, the 6th Symphony ends by simply fading away on a peaceful note. Conductor Michael Tilson Thomas led the orchestra in a convincing rendition of this unusual work. 

Sibelius’s 7th Symphony contains no movements at all but simply unfolds for 22 minutes in one long continuous flow. It begins with an air of mystery: a rumbling in the kettledrums brings an ascending figure in the strings. A second subject appears in divided strings. Then a hymn-like solo by trombone leads to a quickening of pace. Now a scherzo-like section develops. Then the slow tempo of the opening returns plus a repeat of the trombone’s hymn, which is restated emphatically by the full brass section. Winds then offer a fanfare-like subject, and a certain climax ensues. The strings then offer a sweeping emotional theme before the flute and bassoon enter with a last poignant reflection. There ensues a forceful crescendo and a dramatic finish.  

Rarely heard, Sibelius’s 6th and 7th Symphonies were given excellent readings by MTT and the San Francisco Symphony. This is unusual music, to be sure, but it is surprisingly accessible and approachable music, especially when given in such dedicated performances as these.  


The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, June 24-July 1

Kelly Hammargren
Sunday June 24, 2018 - 01:39:00 PM

Worth Noting:

The week starts with 2018 SF Pride Parade and ends with Families Belong Together Rally and Consider the Homeless Fundraiser. Labor negotiations are ongoing. The State of the City is Monday evening. Tuesday City Council meeting agenda item 47 is a budget referral for the creation of Vehicle Dweller Park in Berkeley. Wednesday the Police Review Commission will discuss the proposed Charter amendments which are scheduled to come back to Council on July 10th.  

 

Sunday, June 24, 2018 

2018 SF Pride Parade, Sun, June 24, parade starts 10:30 am,  

schedule of events http://www.sfpride.org/schedule/ 

Monday, June 25, 2018 

State of the City 2018 – Mayor Jesse Arreguin, Mon, June 25, 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm, 2050 Center St., Berkeley City College 

https://www.facebook.com/events/203488340291703/ 

Agenda Committee, Mon, June 25, 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm, 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor Redwood Conf Room, Agenda Plan for July 10 City Council meeting: 8. CEAC recommendations City-wide Green Development requirements apply to 50 units or more, LEED Silver, 17. Permit Process for Scooter Sharing Companies on Public Streets, 18. Revisions to Short Term Rental Ordinance, 23. Request for Comprehensive Annual Report on Homeless Services (past reports in packet pages 85 – 139), 24. ZAB appeal 840 Page Street, 28 a.&b. Charter Amendment Police Commission, 29. Affordable Housing Bond Nov. Ballot Initiative, 30. Ballot Initiative Rent Ordinance, 31. Berkeley Waterfront Parking Restrictions, 32. Urban Agriculture Ordinance, 33. Cannabis Ordinance, 34. a.&b. Immediate Priorities for Fire Safety and Overall Disaster Preparedness 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/Agenda_Committee__2018_Index.aspx 

City Council Closed Session, Mon, June 25, 3:30 pm, 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor, Agenda: Conference with Labor Negotiators, organizations Berkeley Firefighters 1227, Firefighters Association, Berkeley Chief Fire Officers Association; Berkeley Police Association; Unrepresented Employees; SEIU, Local 1021 Community Services & Part-Time Recreation Leaders Association, Public Employees’ Union; Local 1; the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 1245 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2018/06_June/City_Council__06-25-2018_-_Special_Closed_Meeting_Agenda.aspx 

City/UC/Student Relations Committee, Mon, June 25, 10:30 – 12:00 pm, 2465 Bancroft Way, Eshleman Hall, ASUC Senate Chamber, 5th Floor, Agenda: Adopt recommendation to Council on proposed amendments to Group Living Accommodation (GLA) Ordinance 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Home/2018-06-25_City/UC/Student_Relations_Committee_Meeting.aspx 

Children, Youth and Recreation Commission, Mon, June 25, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 2800 Park St, Frances Albrier Community Center at San Pablo Park, Agenda: 2020 Vision update, Community Agency Grant Process 

http://www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/Children_Youth_and_Recreation_Commission/ 

Zero Waste Commission, Mon, June 25, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: Transfer Station rebuild, Street Sweeping Improvement Plan, Single use foodware and litter reduction, CA SB1383 (CalRecycle methane reduction) 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Zero_Waste_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Tax the Rich rally – Mon, June 25, 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm top of Solano in front of closed Oaks Theater,  

Tuesday, June 26, 2018 

Grand Opening Pathways Project Stair Center, Tue, June 26, 9:45 am arrival | 10:00 am Opening Ceremony, Second Street @ Cedar 

Berkeley City Council, Tuesday, 6:00 pm – 11:00 pm, 2134 MLK Jr Way, City Council Chambers, Agenda: 18. Revisions to Investment Policy, 19. Trust Fund, 22. Reserve $11 million in Housing Trust Fund for Berkeley Way 25. Downtown Streets Sweeping Team, Graffiti Abatement, Poster Removal, 26. Audit Report: Code Enforcement Case Management and Oversight, 27. Credit Card Use Audit, 28. Fee Waivers Berkeley Rep Live/Work Housing 32. Removal Coast Live Oak Trees, 36. Expansion GoBerkeley Transportation, 38. Welcome to Berkeley Signs, 39. Urgency Ordinance Bonds to Finance Affordable Housing, 40. Adopt Budget, 41. Annual Appropriations Ordinance, 42. Ballot measure full-time salaries Mayor and City Council, 43. Increase transfer Tax to fund homeless services, 44. Borrowing $14 million, 45. Berkeley Density Bonus, 46. HAC recommendations U1 Revenues, 47. Budget referral creation Vehicle Dweller Park in Berkeley 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2018/06_June/City_Council__06-26-2018_-_Regular_Meeting_Agenda.aspx 

Civic Arts Commission – Policy Subcommittee, Tue, June 26, 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm, 1901 Russell St, South Berkeley Library, Agenda: Public Art on Private Development Policy, Harold Way Policy, entitlement waivers, 500,000 arts baseline, Festival Grant Policy 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/CivicArtsCommissionHomepage/ 

Wednesday, June 27, 2018 

3x3 Committee (3 City Council members and 3 members of Berkeley Housing Authority), Wed, June 27, 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: Creation Section 8 “type” program by City, Berkeley Way Project 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Home/3x3_Committee_Homepage.aspx 

Civic Arts Commission, Wed, June 27, 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: BART Plaza, Relocation of Earth Song and s-Jertogenbosch Shattuck reconfiguration, Grant Program https://www.cityofberkeley.info/CivicArtsCommissionHomepage/ 

Commission on the Status of Women, Wed, June 27, 6:45 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Commission_on_the_Status_of_Women_Homepage.aspx 

Community Environmental Advisory Commission – Fossil Free & Climate Emergency Subcommittee, Wed, June 27, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 2000 University, Au Coquelet 

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/Community_Environmental_Advisory_Commission/ 

Disaster and Fire Safety Commission, Wed, June 27, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 997 Cedar St, Fire Department Training Center, Agenda: GG Funding, Memo to Council on withdrawing from Urban Shield, 5-year expanded Disaster preparedness, Report response to Tubbs Fire 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Disaster_and_Fire_Safety_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Energy Commission, Wed, June 27, 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: Presentation East Bay Community Energy, Update progress Deep Green Building 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Energy_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Police Review Commission, Wed, June 27, 2939 Ellis St, South Berkeley Senior Center, 

  • 5:30 pm. Lexipol Subcommittee
  • 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm, Regular Meeting Agenda: subcommittee reports General Orders C-64, Homeless Encampment, Lexipol Policies, F/U Charter Amendment, Policing Equity Report, consider requesting information from BPD regarding involvement in dismantling 2nd and Cedar Homeless encampment June 4, 2018
https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Police_Review_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Affordable Housing and Homelessness, Wed, June 27, 1:30 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: Boona Cheema and Steve Barton 

Thursday, June 28, 2018 

2x2 Committee, Thur, June 28, 8:30 am – 10:00 am, 2020 Bonor Street, Room 126, Berkeley Unified School District, Agenda: Update BUSD and COB MOU for joint property, BUSD Employee Housing / City Affordable Housing Bond 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Home/2x2_Committee_Homepage.aspx 

Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board – Habitable & Sustainable Housing Committee, Thur, June 28, 6:00 pm, 2001 Center St, 2nd Floor Law Library, Agenda: disaster recover, green building standards, EV charging, elevator ordinance 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/rent/ 

Community Health Commission, Thur, June 28, 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm, 2939 Ellis St. South Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: not posted 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Community_Health_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Mental Health Commission, Thur, June 28,7 :00 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: Mental Health Care Programs and Financing in CA 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Mental_Health_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Zoning Adjustments Board, Thur, June 28, 7:00 pm – 11:30 pm, 2134 MLK Jr. Way, City Council Chambers, Agenda: staff recommend approve 

  • 3000 Shattuck Ave – demolish gas station, construct 5-story mixed use with ground floor retail and 23 dwellings, co-housing units, mix of dwellings includes 5 4-bedroom, 6 5-bedroom units, 1 6-bedroom, resident manager unit, 6 3-bedroom, 1 2-bedroom, 2 1-bedroom, 2 studio
  • 1331 Ashby Ave – demolish 1-story single family dwelling, construct 6-dwelling units in 3 detached 3-story (34’ 11”) with 6 parking spaces
https://www.cityofberkeley.info/zoningadjustmentsboard/ 

Friday, June 29, 2018 

No City meetings/events posted 

Saturday, June 30, 2018 

Families Belong Together Rally, Sat, June 30, 12 noon, 2134 MLK Jr Way, Old Berkeley City Hall Steps, join mass mobilization 

https://www.facebook.com/events/2189587291277684/ 

Consider the Homeless Movie and Fundraiser, Sat, June 30, 3:15 pm – 7:00 pm, 1924 Cedar @Bonita, Berkeley Fellowship Hall, $25 includes dinner, the film and Q&A. Film by internationally renowned author and scholar, Dr. Samar Habid, “Homeless: The Story of America’s Economic Refugees, make reservations by June 26 

https://www.facebook.com/events/358823894610001/ 

Sunday, July 1, 2018 

Affordable Housing Act – a proposed ballot initiative, Sun, July 1, canvassing in South Berkeley by East Bay DSA https://www.eastbaydsa.org/events 

 

_____________________ 

 

 

The meeting list is also posted on the Sustainable Berkeley Coalition website. 

http://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/whats-ahead.html 

 

When notices of meetings are found that are posted after Friday 5:00 pm they are added to the website schedule https://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/whats-ahead.html and preceded by LATE ENTRY 

 

To see what happened at Berkeley City Council meetings in bite size by subject videos go to Watch Berkeley Gov, a new YouTube channel and read about the project by Dave Margulius at https://davemargulius.com/introducing-watch-berkeley-gov/