Extra

Press Release: UC Threatens Funding for People's Park Supportive Housing

Harvey Smith
Wednesday January 11, 2023 - 08:24:00 PM

Oral arguments will be heard tomorrow morning for Make UC A Good Neighbor (MUCGN) and the Peoples Park Historic District Advocacy Group (PPHDAG) lawsuit against UC before the First District Appellate Court of California, Division 5, San Francisco.

New information received yesterday by PPHDAG in the letter below clearly shows that despite UC's claim that supportive housing is integral to Housing Project #2, it is willing to undermine funding for it and jeopardize the project. Because People's Park is on the National Register of Historic Places, a federal environmental review is required to be eligible for HUD vouchers. Despite the PR spin put on this project, this new information clearly undermines their stated intention. -more-



Public Comment

A BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S DIARY, week ending January 8

Kelly Hammargren
Wednesday January 11, 2023 - 01:16:00 PM

City Council sent Lori Droste off into the sunset as a former two term Councilmember with nearly 1 ½ hours of accolades on December 6, 2022. Sometime before signing off that last evening Droste submitted two proposals that were first seen in the draft agenda for the January 17, 2023 City Council meeting as items 26 and 27 at the January 4, 2023 Agenda and Rules Committee. -more-


Measure P: Is More Transparency Needed?

Isabelle Gaston
Monday January 09, 2023 - 01:09:00 PM

It has been over four years since Berkeley voters approved Measure P for homeless and general city services, and to my knowledge, there has not been an accounting of its basic finances and uses.

Measure P raised the property transfer tax from 1.5% to 2.5% for the top third of properties and was initially applied to sales of $1.5 million or more. Thereafter, it is adjusted every year to capture the top third of sales.

The measure also established a Homeless Services Panel of Experts (HSPE). Like other city commissions, the HSPE plays an advisory role in making recommendations to council.

According to the city’s website, Measure P is to be used to fund immediate street conditions and hygiene, emergency shelter, permanent housing, and homelessness prevention.

However, because Measure P is a general tax and therefore part of the General Fund, it can also be used for other municipal purposes. Councilmember Hahn recently voiced her concern of that possibility at a city council meeting on December 13th:

"We have made a representation to the public that we are going to be using Measure P money for homeless matters. Last time I saw, we still had a big homeless problem and I want to make sure that we are not going to be digging into money that the public gave us for those purposes to fill other needs." -more-


McCarthy and Insurrectionists Win House Speakership

Ralph E. Stone
Sunday January 08, 2023 - 02:42:00 PM

On the fifteenth vote, Rep. Kevin McCarthy finally got enough votes to become House Speaker, a hollow victory at best. The anti-government Republicans used their new power to bring the House to a halt until they obtained major concessions from McCarthy. -more-


Policing and the Structure of Racialization

Steve Martinot
Sunday January 08, 2023 - 02:04:00 PM

(The Militarization of the Police– Part 3)

This series of articles on police militarization was initiated in response to the government (Dept. of Defense) policy of providing military equipment to local police departments. We have evaluated this policy in the context of social violence, under which term we have included both civilian violence against persons and property and police violence against civilians. Though a false separation between these two forms of violence has been created by labeling only one of them "criminality," that is a distinction that has been rejected here. It is false insofar as police violence serves as a role model for civilian violence. And police deployment of military equipment (assault rifles, tear gas, armored vehicles, etc.) implies or even admits to a comparability of enactment.

At the core of police militarization resides their power to command civilians with an expectation of immediate obedience (as in the army, thus imposing induction on civilians into military organization without consent). To the role played by police violence, their presumption to punish disobedience by beating or handcuffing to shooting people must be added, as if the role of judge and jury could also be played, but with the omission of due process. They complete the portrait of “police state” that this outlines by often approaching civilians with guns drawn, as an expression of "gun-nationalism." -more-


Flapping on a Hook

Carol Denney
Saturday January 07, 2023 - 08:49:00 PM

Kevin McCarthy flapping on a hook
Elon Musk flapping on a hook
Donald Trump flapping on a hook
let's all sing a song
Kari Lake flapping on a hook -more-


Indian Prime Minister Launches War on Journalists

Jagjit Singh
Wednesday January 11, 2023 - 08:31:00 PM

A major critic of Indian Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, is Indian journalist and Washington Post contributor, Rana Ayub. Ayub takes aim at Modi’s Hindu-nationalist government which has rejected its secular democratic roots in favor of promoting a fanatical Hindu State. She recently won the highest award for press freedom from the National Press Club. She is now headed back to India to face trial for money laundering, a favorite ploy of Modi’s government to silence influential journalists. -more-


Soylent Green

Jack Bragen
Wednesday January 11, 2023 - 02:02:00 PM

A 1973 movie, Soylent Green, starring Charlton Heston, was science fiction that projected a dystopic future including the "Greenhouse Effect," which is global warming, plus out-of-control overpopulation, and the death and putrefaction of Earth's oceans. Sound familiar? Science has known about global warming and the threat to the oceans since the 1970's and before. The movie was based on a 1966 novel by author Harry Harrison, called "Make Room, Make Room." -more-


Islam's War on Women

Jagjit Singh
Monday January 09, 2023 - 01:17:00 PM

Long abandoned by the Biden administration and much of the Islamic world, the Taliban and their geriatric brethren in Iran, have long declared their war on women. Many girls are lamenting they were born in such intolerant male dominant societies where they are forever tormented by the morality police who beat them mercilessly even if a few wisps of hair are protruding from their burkas or hijabs. They are forced to wear head to toe suffocating clothes to protect them from the gazing eyes of men. -more-


ON MENTAL WELLNESS: Your Housing Should Not be Contingent on a Relationship

Jack Bragen
Saturday January 07, 2023 - 08:47:00 PM

Decades ago, and probably through centuries, it seems when women and men partnered, there was little question they would stay together. When I say decades, I really mean more than sixty years. In the nineteen sixties, it appears that human consciousness evolved, and as a byproduct, divorce has become extremely common. I have witnessed some of this in my lifetime. -more-


Advice to the Lovelorn

Barbara Gilbert
Monday January 09, 2023 - 01:14:00 PM

In the arena of love, romance and sex there are many ersatz victims. The ongoing saga of would-be Berkeley Police Chief Louis evoked, for me, some deeper thoughts on love, romance and sex. -more-


The BTU Dumpster Fire

Carol Denney
Wednesday January 11, 2023 - 01:49:00 PM

I always think I've seen it all. I yawned a little during the recent knife fight over the Republican battle for Speaker of the House having been part of the earliest People's Park meetings which patiently harbored international strays of nearly unintelligible stripe, a deliberate custom which proved a valuable, albeit creative challenge. Free Radio Berkeley's earliest meetings were routinely fiascos; champions of profanity facing off with the community mission-driven over the best illustration of free speech. I did hard time at Occupy, and then there were the cascade of nonprofits I worked for, one of which sat pleasantly by while one employee graphically described his weekend workshop with a group willing to give each other naked presentations on the assumption that this would be valuable while clearly it was at the very least lucrative for the organizers. -more-


Editorial

Ringing in Another One

Becky O'Malley
Thursday December 29, 2022 - 02:07:00 PM

It’s That Time of Year—or actually it’s the trailing edge of the year, the remains of another year which has come and gone, seemingly in the twinkle of an eye.

For the politically minded, the good news at the national level is that the infamous Red Wave turned out to be a mirage. The bad news is that the Red Menace will be kinda sorta running the House of Representatives for a couple of years, and they could do a fair bit of harm in that time.


(For those of us well past a certain age, it’s beyond ironic that The Repugs have morphed into The Reds, a title formerly owned by lefties of all stripes.)

And of course, 2022 started with a bang with the investigation into the Republican Riot in the previous year. The best you could say about that event is that the hearings about it made for some great TV.

For the politically minded, local chapter, the bad news is the relentless progress of the neo-liberal version of urban renewal, Sacramento style, spearheaded by the likes of Scott Wiener, Nancy Skinner and Buffy Wicks. Evidently the message about what’s happening in downtown San Francisco hasn’t reached Sacto, let alone Berkeley.

It turns out that Manhattanization is still not a good brand. Who knew?

Those Big Ugly Boxes, both the expensive tiny apartments for techniks and their empty former offices, are now a drug on the market, if you believe the aghast stories in the shrinking SF Chronicle.

And along with the annoying things that this gang and their allies are doing, what they aren’t doing is even worse.

Unhoused people are camping everywhere. Citizens of Everywhere believe that’s because the Everywhere City Council has created munificent incentives for Those People to pitch their tents on Everywhere’s streets.

The usual simple questions still have the obvious answers.

To wit: Why are Those People still poor? Because they don’t have enough money.

Why do some of Them act crazy? Because they’re mentally ill and can’t get help.

Why are they so dirty? Because they don’t have showers.

Why do they sleep in tents? Because they don’t have houses

Etc., etc. etc.

So-called Democratic legislators, who enjoy a super-majority in the state legislature, persist in pushing market-based neo-liberal solutions worthy of my father’s generation of old-timey moderate Republicans: Build a whole bunch of any kind of units and the market will decide what’s needed.

Well, it looks like the market has decided that Those People can damn well sleep in tents on city sidewalks. And it’s evidently not a city’s job to help them move inside, except in dribs and drabs to create photo ops.

No one’s offering cash, treatment, sanitation or shelter in quantities close to matching the number of people who need these obvious solutions, But BTW, let’s get rid of those tedious CEQA regulations to make speculative development easier, okay?

What seemed not to work in the 1970s still doesn’t work now, so maybe it’s time to give up inveighing against it. The Manhattanization of San Francisco (and now Berkeley) is just as dark and dreary as Bruce Brugmann in the seventies SF Bay Guardian warned us it would be. As he (and I) predicted, people don’t like working there anymore—even the techniks I know prefer to work at home in the ‘burbs. The office space vacancy rate in San Francisco is now 27%. (And also as predicted, PG&E is still thuggish, up to no good, as it always was.)

The international situation is no more logical. Loony autocrats rule major nations, perseverating in ancient conflicts.

Hey guys, let’s revive the Russian Empire: It was so much fun the last couple of times, says President Putin.

Let’s just re-think Israel’s tired old democracy into a religion-ruled Utopia, suggests Prime Minister Netanyahu.

At the end of the year, those of us who write about politics among other topics are sometimes expected or at least permitted to make recommendations regarding the perennial question of What is to be Done? Что дѣлать?, a title Lenin lifted from an earlier radical, Nikolay Chernyshevsky.

It's a good question, and as yet no one has really come up with much of an answer. Liberal democracy with free and fair elections seems like a good idea, as do various flavors of socialism. Just how many organizational principles call themselves socialist can be guessed at from the lengthy and dense Wikipedia entry for “democratic socialism”, a rabbit hole down which we will not go today. But it’s discouraging to reflect on how many chief executives at all levels have taken office espousing the highest democratic principles and then gravitated toward autocracy—in recent memory, all the way from people like President Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua down to mayors of towns like Berkeley who are in thrall to developers.

I’ve been writing about this for about fifty years, and my ultimate conclusion is the French maxim: plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose—“the more it changes, the more it’s the same thing”.

I am reminded of what my girlhood idol, Tom Lehrer, is reputed to have said, that he gave up writing satiric songs when Henry Kissinger got the Nobel Peace Prize. After fifty years of watching people make the same mistakes over and over, it might just be time for me to give up generating admonitory verbiage. -more-


Arts & Events

Whose Vision of the French Resistance?
The singing of La Marseillaise in CASABLANCA

James Roy MacBean
Wednesday January 11, 2023 - 01:18:00 PM

During the extremely rainy weather in the Bay Area over the recent holidays, like many people I mostly stayed home. One of the ways I entertained myself was to take another look, perhaps for the umpteenth time, at the 1942 film Casablanca directed by Michael Curtiz and memorably starring Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman. I have fond memories of viewing that film while in Cyprus with an Iranian friend who was a dissident of the theocratic regime of Iran’s Islamic Republic. My friend’s tales of the oppression enforced by Iran’s morality police dovetailed appropriately with the Nazis’ attempted oppression in the Unoccupied France of wartime Casablanca. -more-


THE BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S CALENDAR: January 8-15

Kelly Hammargren
Saturday January 07, 2023 - 04:32:00 PM

Worth Noting:

Wednesday is the evening where every meeting has agenda items that fit as a go to meeting and the Golden Gate Audubon Society with other local chapters is sponsoring Douglas Tallamy speaking on creating landscapes that enhance local ecosystems.

  • Monday: The Youth Commission meets at 6:30 pm. The Peace and Justice Commission and the Personnel Board both meet at 7 pm. The Personnel Board Packet includes a report on City staff vacancies. The modifications in the Police Recruit and Officer job descriptions are to meet new CA law. Peace and Justice Commission has invited Indigenous Representatives to discuss the Shellmound and the Land Acknowledgement.
  • Tuesday: Council meets at 10 am to vote to continue virtual meetings until the COVID emergency ends on February 28, 2023.
  • Wednesday: The go to meeting of the week is Nature’s Best Hope with Douglas Tallamy at 7 pm. The Disability Commission meets at 6 pm and will take up Berkeley Bike Plan and Barriers to Pedestrians and Bike Safety and IKE Kiosks. The Police Accountability Board (PAB) meets at 6:30 pm. The PAB agenda includes the LA Times report on the Interim Chief and sexual harassment investigation and Bike Unit allegations. The Parks Commission meets at 7 pm. Turtle Island Monument and T1 shortfall are on the agenda. A letter in the packet from Todd Jersey Architects states the pier is safe for pedestrian access and should be reopened.
  • Thursday: WETA meets at 1 pm. The Zoning Adjustment Board has 7 projects listed on consent, two 7-story projects 2439 Durant and 1752 Shattuck and two 5-story projects 1773 Oxford and 1820 San Pablo.
City Council is officially on recess through January 16. The January 10 meeting is just to renew legislative body virtual meetings. The agenda for the January 17 regular City Council meeting is available for comment. Use link or check agenda list at the end of this post. The January 18 special City Council at 4 pm is for the adoption of the 2023 – 2031 Housing Element. The packet with the report is 1428 pages. https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/city-council-agendas

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

BERKELEY PUBLIC MEETINGS AND SPECIAL EVENTS

Sunday, January 8, 2023 – No city meetings listed. -more-


Back Stories

Opinion

Public Comment

A BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S DIARY, week ending January 8 Kelly Hammargren 01-11-2023

Measure P: Is More Transparency Needed? Isabelle Gaston 01-09-2023

McCarthy and Insurrectionists Win House Speakership Ralph E. Stone 01-08-2023

Policing and the Structure of Racialization Steve Martinot 01-08-2023

Flapping on a Hook Carol Denney 01-07-2023

Indian Prime Minister Launches War on Journalists Jagjit Singh 01-11-2023

Soylent Green Jack Bragen 01-11-2023

Islam's War on Women Jagjit Singh 01-09-2023

ON MENTAL WELLNESS: Your Housing Should Not be Contingent on a Relationship Jack Bragen 01-07-2023

Advice to the Lovelorn Barbara Gilbert 01-09-2023

The BTU Dumpster Fire Carol Denney 01-11-2023

ON MENTAL WELLNESS: Prioritize the Body Jack Bragen 01-02-2023

"Waterballoongate" Police Scandal - How It Rates Against All the Others Carol Denney 01-03-2023

SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces: SmitherDigs&Diddles Gar Smith 01-02-2023

ECLECTIC RANT: Death of Pope Emeritus Ralph E. Stone 01-02-2023

January Pepper Spray Times By Grace Underpressure 12-20-2022

News

Press Release: UC Threatens Funding for People's Park Supportive Housing Harvey Smith 01-11-2023

Arts & Events

Whose Vision of the French Resistance?
The singing of La Marseillaise in CASABLANCA
James Roy MacBean 01-11-2023

THE BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S CALENDAR: January 8-15 Kelly Hammargren 01-07-2023

THE BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S CALENDAR, Jan. 1-8 Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition 01-02-2023