EDITOR'S NOTE: Kelly Hammargren was one of the original organizers of Save the Shattuck Cinemas, and she was one of the unsuccessful plaintiffs in lawsuits challenging the project's Environmental Impact Report. This week she completed her review of more than 800 pages of the public record of the City of Berkeley's dealings with the project backers of 2211 Harold Way, which is attempting to get a fourth renewal of its use permit grant from city staffers in the City of Berkeley Planning Department before Monday, January 20.
. If you are having trouble keeping track of what is happening with the project proposed for 2211 Harold Way, here is what seems to be the latest, along with some history for context, information I acquired from making a Public Records Act (PRA) request
[1] which resulted in 808 pages of communications between the City of Berkeley and the developer and developer’s representatives/agents.
The December 31, 2019 email from Joe Penner of the HSR financial firm, the current property owner and holder of the use permit which has already been approved, said:
“…The city believed that development projects are a never ending piggy bank."
Was this a ploy to get Timothy Burroughs, Director of the City of Berkeley Department of Planning and Development, to give the Harold Way project developers a
fourth extension of time to get their act together? The third extension granted by Timothy Burroughs
[link to Burroughs letter] expires on January 20 if the developer doesn’t pay the building permit fees.
Members of the Save Shattuck Cinemas group said all along that Harold Way developer Joseph Penner,
founder of Hill Street Realty, /
[2] was a speculator who would be selling the project after it was entitled (approved). Lawsuits
[3] delayed the for-sale posting, but by December 31, 2016, the announcement was up on the Arbor Realty Capital Advisors website with the drawing of the project listed as 2200-2240 Shattuck Ave, not 2211 Harold Way
[4] and the statement “coming soon.” While Arbor has updated its website since 2016, the Harold Way for-sale ad is
can still be seen there today. Even though the Harold Way developers won the 2016 lawsuits, the problems identified by the public through testimony at dozens of meetings and in their hundreds of letters didn’t go away.
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