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Another Berkeley Kidnapping Attempt by Green Minivan Suspect

Scott Morris (BCN)
Thursday March 17, 2016 - 05:36:00 PM

A 9-year-old girl told police a man who pulled up behind her in a minivan followed her and might have tried to kidnap her while she was walking to school in Berkeley on Monday morning, police said today. 

The girl was walking in the 2900 block of Harper Street on her way to Malcolm X Elementary School at about 8 a.m. Monday when a green minivan pulled into a driveway in front of her, police said. 

As she passed the van, a man got out of the passenger seat and started following her. She felt a push on her backpack and stumbled, so she started running and safely made it to school, police said. 

The girl told her mother what happened that evening and they notified the school on Tuesday. 

The man who followed her was described as a Hispanic man in his late 20s, standing 5 feet 9 inches tall with a thin build and straight dark hair. The van's driver was described as a black man in his 20s or older with shoulder-length dreadlocks. 

Police are trying to determine if the incident might be connected to a series of attempted kidnappings last fall that also involved a green minivan.  

A suspect yelled at three girls walking in the area of College Avenue and Webster Street the evening of Oct. 16 and demanded they get in his van. When they ran from him, he ran after them but they got away. 

On Sept. 18, a van pulled up to two Willard Middle School students walking in the area of Telegraph Avenue and Stewart Street and told the girls to get in his van. 

In both incidents, the suspect was described as a Hispanic man in his 20s or 30s with a scruffy face driving a green minivan. 

Police are asking residents to be on the lookout for suspicious behavior and to contact Berkeley police at (510) 981-5900 if they see anything suspicious or have information about the incidents. 

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Press Release: Berkeley Shooting Victims' Car Had Uber, Lyft Stickers

from ANDREW J. FRANKEL, Sergeant, S-29,Public information Officer,City of Berkeley Police Department
Thursday March 17, 2016 - 09:55:00 AM

As a number of media outlets have reported, the victim vehicle involved in the early Wednesday morning shooting at Tremont and Prince Streets had Uber and Lyft stickers on its windshield. We are grateful for the assistance provided to the Berkeley Police Department by Uber in confirming that the vehicle was not actively in service with their company. We have not yet determined if the car was in service by a Lyft operator when the incident occurred.  

The two victims remain in critical condition at Alameda County Hospital-Highland. No suspects have been arrested and the investigation is ongoing. 

We are asking for the Community’s support in bringing justice to the victims. We encourage anyone who witnessed the event or has additional information to contact the Berkeley Police Department at 981-5900.


50 BART Cars Out of Service

Dennis Culver (BCN)
Thursday March 17, 2016 - 09:53:00 AM

There are approximately 50 BART cars out of service this morning because of an unknown electrical issue that has been affecting trains since Wednesday on the tracks between the Pittsburg/Bay Point and North Concord/Martinez stations, BART officials said. 

BART spokeswoman Alicia Trost said the bus shuttles currently running between the two stations are expected to continue at least throughout the morning, with no train service expected there. 

Trost said there are plenty of buses available for riders, and the trip between the two stations is taking about 15 minutes. 

She said train cars are experiencing an electrical voltage spike that is damaging the propulsion equipment on cars running on the track between Pittsburg/Bay Point and North Concord/Martinez. 

The track is currently shut down and BART is flying in outside experts, as well as consulting with PG&E officials, to help investigate the electrical issues, Trost said. 

Riders traveling between the two stations are encouraged to allow for extra travel time and to listen to station staff and public address announcements for the latest information when arriving at stations. 

Trains are expected to be shorter and more crowded because of the number of cars out of service, according to Trost. 

Riders are able to board a train at the North Concord station if they are traveling toward Oakland and San Francisco. Parking is free at that station today, Trost said.


Berkeley Shooting Suspect Turns Himself In

JeffShuttleworth/ScottMorris (BCN)
Wednesday March 16, 2016 - 09:50:00 AM

The suspect in a shooting in West Berkeley late Tuesday morning turned himself in at police headquarters this afternoon, police said. 

The shooting occurred near the corner of San Pablo Avenue and Delaware Street at about 11:33 a.m. on Tuesday, police Sgt. Andrew Frankel said.  

Officers who responded to the scene found a 28-year-old man who had been hit by gunfire and he was transported to Highland Hospital in Oakland, where he is in critical condition, according to Frankel. 

Berkeley police said they aren't releasing the suspect's name at this time pending their ongoing investigative efforts. 

At about 1 a.m. today, a man and woman were shot in the area of Prince and Tremont streets, near the Ashby BART station in Berkeley, and were taken to a local hospital in critical condition, police said. 

Frankel said the shooting doesn't appear to be random but police don't think it is connected to the shooting in West Berkeley on Tuesday morning.


New: BPD Says Two Berkeley Shooting Incidents Unrelated

ScottMorris/DanMcMenamin (BCN)
Wednesday March 16, 2016 - 12:59:00 PM

Mar Two shootings in Berkeley late Tuesday morning and early this morning that critically injured three people are not believed to be related, a police sergeant said today. 

Police searched a west Berkeley neighborhood for about eight hours on Tuesday but were unable to locate the suspect in a shooting near the corner of San Pablo Avenue and Delaware Street at about 11:30 a.m., police Sgt. Andrew Frankel said today. 

They called off the search of several blocks between Ninth and Tenth streets and Virginia Street and Hearst Avenue at about 7:30 p.m., Frankel said. A 28-year-old man was critically injured in the shooting.  

Then at about 1 a.m., a man and woman were shot in the in the area of Prince and Tremont streets, located near the Ashby BART station. 

Officers arrived and found the two victims, who were taken to a hospital in critical condition, Frankel said. 

He said the shooting does not appear to be random. No suspect information was immediately available in connection with this morning's shooting, he said.


Press Release: Assemblymember Swanson Endorses Arreguin for Berkeley Mayor

from Noah Finneburgh, in the Office of Sandre Swanson
Wednesday March 16, 2016 - 10:31:00 AM

Today, Berkeley City Councilmember Jesse Arreguin announced that his campaign for Mayor has been endorsed by former California State Assemblymember Sandré Swanson, who represented the East Bay’s former 16th Assembly District from 2006 to 2012.

“I am very happy to give my endorsement and full support to Jesse Arreguin in his campaign for Mayor,” said Swanson. “He is a visionary leader who will be a great Mayor of Berkeley. Now, more than ever, Berkeley needs a Mayor who will fight to make the city work for all of its residents and improve the quality of life for the entire city. That’s Jesse Arreguin.” 

“I am deeply honored by Assemblymember Swanson’s endorsement,” said Councilmember Arreguin. “He is a principled leader who has never been afraid to stand up for what is right. His record of fighting for working people and at-risk youth is an inspiration, and I look forward to working with him in the months and years ahead on behalf of all of the people of Berkeley.” 

Sandré R. Swanson served three successful terms in the State Assembly. He was Chair of the Assembly Labor & Employment Committee, where he fought to grow the middle class with sustainable jobs. Assemblymember Swanson is passionate about the plight of at-risk youth. His work in the Assembly is widely used by the State of California today in its strategies for helping young people. In recognition of this work, Swanson was invited to the White House by President Barack Obama in 2014 and was requested to participate in the President’s “My Brother’s Keeper” initiative. 

Swanson joins an expanding list of elected officials and community leaders backing Arreguin’s campaign for Mayor, including former Berkeley Mayor and civil rights leader Gus Newport, Berkeley Councilmember Max Anderson, Berkeley Rent Board Chair Jesse Townley and a super-majority of the elected Rent Board, Emeryville Mayor Dianne Martinez, AC Transit Director Mark Williams, former Berkeley Councilmembers Ying Lee and Carole Kennerly, and former Alameda County Board of Education President Jacki Fox Ruby, among many others. 

### 

ABOUT JESSE ARREGUIN 

 

As the son and grandson of farmworkers, a passion for social justice runs deep for Jesse Arreguin. At the young age of 9, Jesse volunteered with the effort to re-name San Francisco’s Army Street after his hero César Chavez. His public service continued through his youth and college years, and in 2008 he became the first Latino and youngest person ever elected to the Berkeley City Council. For the past 7 years, Councilmember Arreguin has represented our vibrant Downtown and portions of North Berkeley. He has also served as a Planning Commissioner, Rent Board Chair, and Sierra Club Boardmember. 

On the City Council, Jesse has proven to be an effective consensus builder. He has helped move the City away from polarization, working constructively with his colleagues, local business, and community leaders to craft practical, forward-thinking solutions on pressing city issues. He has a demonstrated record of results, working to expand affordable housing, support local business, revitalize Downtown, and protect our environment. 

Jesse Arreguin will be a dynamic, hands-on Mayor, who will put forth the energy, vision, and smart, 21st Century solutions needed to bring residents from every neighborhood to the table and give people from all walks of a life a stake in Berkeley’s future. And as he has done throughout his life, Jesse will champion social and economic justice for children, families, and seniors as the next Mayor of Berkeley.  

www.jesse.vote 

 


Berkeley City Council Majority Fails to Protect Historic Building (Public Comment)

Fred Dodsworth
Wednesday March 16, 2016 - 10:29:00 AM

For those who don't already know, I'm running for Berkeley City Council. Last night (aptly the Ides of March) I attended a city council meeting and watched the city council stab the neighbors, the unions, the auto dealers and its own revenue stream to death by overriding its Landmarks Commission's decision to identify the old Berkeley Bowl as a building of significance (for example, it was the very place were Alan Ginsberg first read "Howl").  

Sure there was plenty of gnashing of teeth and quibbling about long lost windows and doors, but by failing to protect that historic building from grotesque over-development into a five or ten story mixed use building, the council insured that the neighbor's concerns were ignored, insured that the union jobs would be lost, and that the tax revenues from auto sales will be lost (which represent the largest portion of our retail tax income).  

Yet no one but Max Anderson dared to confront the rampant dishonesty, the pure kabuki theater of last night's highly orchestrated presentation. Also on the agenda was the council's proposal to fund an "eminent domain" fishing expedition which will further exacerbate and accelerate this plague upon our city of ugly, poorly designed, and poorly constructed giant buildings stomping all over Berkeley's historic identity.


Flash: Shooting at Tremont and Prince in Berkeley This Morning

Dan McMenamin (BCN)
Wednesday March 16, 2016 - 10:22:00 AM

A man and woman were injured in a shooting in Berkeley early this morning, a police sergeant said.

The shooting was reported around 1 a.m. in the area of Prince and Tremont streets, located near the Ashby BART station. 

Officers arrived and found the two victims, who were taken to a hospital in critical condition, police spokesman Sgt. Andrew Frankel said. 

Frankel said the shooting does not appear to be random and added that investigators do not think it is related to another shooting in Berkeley on Tuesday that injured one person. 

No suspect information was immediately available in connection with this morning's shooting, he said.


Updated: Advisory: Police activity in the area of Tenth & Delaware St.

Sent by Berkeley Police Department
Tuesday March 15, 2016 - 08:34:00 PM

Update:

The police activity at Tenth & Delaware is pairing down and we are lifting the "shelter in place." Although the suspect has not been apprehended, officers will continue to be in the area to continue the investigation. If you notice something suspicious in your neighborhood, do not hesitate to report it to BPD.

The Berkeley Police Department would like to thank the community for its support, patience, and cooperation during this incident. 

 

Original message: 

Officers are in the area bounded by Tenth St, Delaware St, Ninth St, and Hearst Ave searching for a suspect who is wanted in connection to a shooting that occurred earlier (11:30 am) this afternoon at San Pablo & Delaware. 

Residents in the area are advised to shelter in place and immediately call the Berkeley Police Department should they notice anything suspicious in their neighborhood. 

For full details, view this message on the web. 

Sent by Berkeley Police Department 2100 Martin Luther King Junior Way, Berkeley, CA 94704


Flash: Berkeley Police Search for West Side Shooting Suspect

Scott Morris (BCN)
Tuesday March 15, 2016 - 03:22:00 PM

Police are searching a west Berkeley neighborhood for a shooting suspect and are asking residents to stay in their homes, police said. Officers are searching the area between Ninth and Tenth streets and Delaware Street and Hearst Avenue. 

The shooting was reported at 11:33 a.m. near the corner of San Pablo Avenue and Delaware Street, police Sgt. Andrew Frankel said.  

Callers reported hearing multiple gunshots there, Frankel said. A victim was found with at least one gunshot wound and was taken to a hospital. 

Frankel did not immediately have information on the victim's condition or any possible suspects. 

Anyone in the area who sees anything suspicious has been asked to call Berkeley police at (510) 981-5900.


Flash: Police Activity in Berkeley between 10th and Delaware

Berkeley Police Department
Tuesday March 15, 2016 - 03:18:00 PM

Officers are in the area bounded by Tenth St, Delaware St, Ninth St, and Hearst Ave searching for a suspect who is wanted in connection to a shooting that occurred earlier (11:30 am) this afternoon at San Pablo & Delaware. Residents in the area are advised to shelter in place and immediately call the Berkeley Police Department should they notice anything suspicious in their neighborhood.


UC Berkeley Law Dean Steps Down Amid Harrassment Allegations

Scott Morris (BCN)
Wednesday March 09, 2016 - 04:38:00 PM

The dean of the University of California at Berkeley law school stepped down from his post today after a lawsuit filed Tuesday by his former executive assistant revealed he had sexually harassed her and other women in the office for months.  

University Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost Claude Steele confirmed that Dean Sujit Choudhry would be taking an indefinite leave of absence as dean, but would remain with the law school as a faculty member at a faculty member's salary.  

Steele also confirmed that he had found last year that Choudhry had violated the school's harassment policy, penalized him by docking his pay as dean 10 percent and ordered him to send a letter of apology to the woman and pursue counseling.  

"Based on the findings of the investigation I believed that a combination of disciplinary actions, monitoring of his behavior and formal training would be an appropriate and effective response, and would produce the necessary changes in his behavior," Choudhry said in a statement. 

But the lawsuit by Tyann Sorrell alleges that Steele told her during a meeting last October that "he had seriously considered terminating the dean but that the reason he had decided not to was because it would ruin the dean's career, that is, destroy his future chances for higher appointment." 

Sorrell, 41, started working for the law school under former Dean Christopher Edley in June 2012. She maintained that position without incident for over two years but when Choudhry took over as dean in July 2014, a pattern of harassment began that left her anxious, depressed and afraid to go to work, according to the suit. 

Choudhry started by giving her tight bear hugs twice a day and his sexual behavior escalated over the course of about six months, pressing his body against hers, kissing her and massaging her shoulders while she was at her desk working. 

He kissed her in view of other staff members to the point that others remarked on it, but she worried about addressing the issue directly because she could lose her job and "Choudhry had a temper and was known for berating and being rude and dismissive of employees when they upset him," the lawsuit states. 

Sorrell complained to Choudhry's chief of staff at the time, Marilyn Byrne, but those complaints never went any further. When Byrne left the position in January 2015 and Areca Smit took over, Sorrell complained to her, and Smit said Choudhry had hugged and kissed her too and it made her uncomfortable and that another woman in the office had made similar complaints. 

Smit told Sorrell a superior at the university would confront Choudhry about his behavior, but that confrontation never happened, though Sorrell was offered a raise. 

But as the harassment continued, Sorrell drafted a six-page email stating "she was tired of him constantly touching and kissing her, she felt violated and humiliated, that his conduct had caused her a significant amount of stress and anxiety for a long time, and that her health had significantly deteriorated as a result of his conduct." 

She also sent the letter to Smit and university human resources director Sheri Showalter. Sorrell went on leave while Choudhry was investigated. 

During the investigation, Choudhry admitted to hugging, kissing and caressing Sorrell and putting her hands on his waist, and he admitted doing similar things to other women in the office and not to male co-workers but he said there was no sexual intent. The investigation found that he didn't understand the power dynamic or the impact on his employee. 

Sorrell was informed he had been docked 10 percent salary and was ordered to write her a letter of apology as discipline in August. In late October, she received the letter during a meeting with Steele. 

Steele said today that Sorrell remains on paid administrative leave and he is willing to work with her to find a position on campus to fit her interests and needs once she is willing to return to work. 

Choudhry stepping down from the dean's position is not the first time the law school has lost a dean over sexual misconduct allegations. Dean John Dwyer resigned in 2002 after allegations that he had non-consensual sex with a student after a social event on campus. 

UC Berkeley has endured other recent complaints of sexual misconduct by faculty and staff. Astronomy professor Geoff Marcy resigned in October amid allegations that he had sexually harassed students for a decade as the university looked the other way. 

Last year, former student Aryle Butler joined two other women in suing the school because they said investigations into sexual assaults on campus are often inadequate.  

Butler said she was assaulted by a board member and guest lecturer at the Wrangell Mountains Center in Glennallen, Alaska, when she was there as part of a UC Berkeley program during the summer of 2012. She said in the suit that when she reported the assaults, the school's Title IX coordinator, tasked with preventing sexual discrimination on campus, implied the reports were false and the school conducted no investigation.  

In the university's response to the allegations against Choudhry becoming public today, Steele said the announcement of an interim replacement dean for the law school would be made shortly. 

"I know we all share the goal of eliminating of sexual harassment and all forms of discriminatory behavior at UC Berkeley," Steele said. "I intend to listen carefully to what members of our campus community and others have to suggest when it comes to how we prevent and respond to incidents like these."


New: A Toast to St. Patrick

By Ralph E. Stone
Tuesday March 15, 2016 - 01:13:00 PM

On March 12th, the wind and rain weren't enough to dampen the sounds of bagpipes accompanying festive dancers marching through downtown San Francisco for the 165th Annual Saint Patrick's Day Parade and Festival. Saint Patrick's Day is actually on Thursday, March 17th. 

The Irish, the more than 70 million world-wide who claim Irish heritage, and the Irish-for-a-day, lifted a pint of Guinness, or something stronger, to toast Saint Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland. I bet corn beef and cabbage was or will be on many a menu. And many were and will be wearin’ the green. Why is it celebrated on March 17th? One theory is that is the day St. Patrick died and is now celebrated as his feast day. 

The biggest observance of all will be, of course, in Ireland. With the exception of restaurants and pubs, almost all businesses will close on March 17th. Being a religious holiday as well, many Irish attend mass, where March 17th is the traditional day for offering prayers for missionaries worldwide before the serious celebrating begins. 

Saint Patrick’s Day wouldn’t exist if not for the man himself. Only two authentic letters from him survive, from which come the only universally accepted details of his life. Much of the rest is subject to some debate among scholars. Patrick is believed to have been born in the late fourth century about 387. He was born at Kilpatrick, near Dumbarton, in Scotland and died at Saul, Downpatrick, Ireland, March 17, 460 [some say 461 or 493]. His parents were Calpurnius and Conchessa, who were Romans living in Britain in charge of the colonies. When he was about 14, he was captured from Britain by Irish raiders and taken as a slave to Ireland, where Patrick worked as a herdsman, remaining a captive for six years, before escaping and returning to his family. While a captive, he learned the language and practices of the people who held him. 

He began his studies for the priesthood and was ordained four years later. Later, Patrick was ordained a bishop, and sent to take the Gospel to Ireland. He arrived in Ireland March 25, 433, at Slane. Patrick began preaching the Gospel throughout Ireland, converting many. He and his disciples preached and converted thousands and began building churches all over the country. Kings, their families, and entire kingdoms converted to Christianity when hearing Patrick’s message. After years of living in poverty, traveling and enduring much suffering, he died March 17, 460. He died at Saul, where he had built the first church. 

Interestingly enough, Patrick was never canonized by the Pope although some disagree For most of Christianity’s first 1,000 years, canonizations were done on the diocesan or regional level. Relatively soon after very holy people died, the local Church affirmed that they could be liturgically celebrated as saints as was done with Patrick. Nevertheless, various Christian churches declare that he is a Saint in Heaven — he is in the List of Saints — and he is widely venerated in Ireland and elsewhere. 

Legend credits Patrick with banishing snakes from Ireland, though evidence suggests that post-glacial Ireland never had snakes. The stories of Saint Patrick and the snakes are likely a metaphor for his bringing Christianity to Ireland and driving out the pagan religions such as the Druids (serpents were a common symbol in many of these religions). 

Another legend concerns the shamrock, the symbol of Ireland. Supposedly, Patrick used the shamrock, a 3-leaved clover, to teach the Irish about the concept of the Trinity, the Christian belief of three divine persons in the one God — the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. The shamrock was sacred to the Druids, so his use of it in explaining the trinity was very wise. 

If you haven't already done so, have a toast to Saint Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland.


The Ferocious Life of Barbara Yaley

Jeffrey St. Clair
Friday March 11, 2016 - 07:46:00 PM

Barbara Yaley lived in Berkeley and died on February 22. This remembrance was written on February 23, 2016, the day after she died, and posted on Counterpunch.org .



My friend Barbara Yaley died yesterday morning. The news was delivered by a close mutual friend and it came as a shock from which I’m still reeling. Three weeks ago Barbara was diagnosed with an aggressive form of leukemia. She started chemo treatments immediately and never left the hospital. I didn’t even know she was sick.

Many longtime CounterPunch readers may have encountered Barbara from her time together with Alexander Cockburn, in the late 1990s and the early Bush era, as the two of them migrated up and down the California coast from Barbara’s place on Milvia in Berkeley and Rancho Cockburn in Petrolia on the Lost Coast. Those were high times for CounterPunch, as well as Alex. Much of our vicious biography of Al Gore (Al Gore: a User’s Manual) was written on the telephone in Barbara’s house, with her African parrot Ernie spewing hilarious profanities in the background.

Barbara teamed up with Cockburn, but she never operated in his shadow. Barbara Yaley was a titan in her own right. She earned a degree from Berkeley in criminology and followed that up with a PhD in the History of Consciousness from UC Santa Cruz, where she was in the same cohort with Black Panther Huey Newton. She wrote her dissertation was on the History of California Prisons. Barbara used her academic training to fight ferociously for the oppressed. She specialized in hopeless cases: death penalty cases, cases involving racist cops, the drug war, long-term solitary confinement. After our book Whiteout: the CIA, Drugs and the Press, Alex and I spent much time together organizing in Richmond, California against the street slaughter from gang violence sparked by the drug war. Barbara, whose years of footwork as a private investigator took across those mean streets, served as our Vergil, guiding us through that fraught terrain. 

Barbara was brilliant, strikingly beautiful and very, very funny. She could stand toe-to-toe with Alex on just about everything and often edited his prose, making it sharper. She loved rock music and reggae and hippies and outsider art. 

I got a call one night from Alex with a grudging requests. 

“Can you score a couple of tickets for the Springsteen show in Portland?” 

I started snickering. Alex was no fan of the Boss and had made a point of savagely deprecating his music for years. 

“For Barbara and who else?” I said. 

“Well, uhm, me.” Fake coughing. “And grab a couple of tickets for you and Kimberly, as well.” 

This was the tour for Springsteen’s post-911 album “The Rising” and during the show Barbara lured Alex from his seat and had him dancing in the aisle to “Badlands.” Later, Alex said he was grooving to the tones of Clarence’s sax, but we all knew it was Barbara’s irresistible appeal. 

Barbara was a Californian through and through and she loved the state for (not in spite of) its glorious contradictions. When the director Tim Robbins invited Alex and I to record a commentary for the DVD of his film Bob Roberts at the sprawling Claremont Hotel in the Berkeley Hills, Barbara asked to tag along. Alex told her that it would likely be a pretty boring affair. Barbara countered: “Oh, Alexander, I have no desire to listen to you and Jeffrey drone on and on, again. Heard all that before. But I’ve waited my entire life to go swimming in that sublime pool, where Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth once made out.” When Alex and I emerged from our recording session three hours later, Barbara was sunning in a lounge chair by the pool, shades on, gin and tonic in hand, looking very much like Ava Gardner. 

Barbara deplored anything that was corporate, pre-processed and conformist. I recall getting a tongue-lashing from her one night while we were stalled in a traffic jam on the Bay Bridge, running late for a gig at City Lights Bookstore in Chinatown. I slid a Commodores CD into the player to pass the time. “Jeffrey, I’m appalled at you! Turn that off and put on some hip hop or blues,” she demanded. “I can’t stand Soul Dreck!” Barbara rummaged through my CDs, grabbed one and handed it to me. “Try this.” It was Peter Tosh’s “Wanted: Dread & Alive.” Cockburn mumbled from the backseat. “Stoner.” 

She adored birds and dogs and, unlike many hardcore leftists, she loved children—hers, ours, Alex’s daughter, Daisy, and pretty much any kid off the streets. 

Barbara Yaley was one of the most liberated and liberating people I’ve ever encountered. Her vivaciousness and unrestrained joy for life was infectious, as was her optimism for a better future even in the grimmest circumstances. To be able to change the world you have to actually believe that it’s possible to make things better. And that’s the way Barbara lived, head on into the future, no looking back. 

I miss her already and will for a long, long time to come.


Opinion

Editorials

Updated: The Election Slouches Toward Berkeley

Becky O'Malley
Friday March 11, 2016 - 04:09:00 PM

Well, it’s time to face the facts. The election will be held next November, ready or not. And on the one hand, I’ve already started to miss the Obamas, not just because of the President’s politics but because of the family’s unfailingly admirable comportment. It’s been such a welcome relief not to have to be ashamed of the behavior of one or more members of the First Family for eight years. Besides, Barack Obama has gotten a lot done.

In this space we’ve talked about the field of candidates for the presidency, and we probably will again. Last week, for the very first time, I watch complete debates, not just clips, for both the Democrats and the Republicans. Nothing I saw changed my mind.

Between Clinton and Sanders, I could live with either. On the Republican side, OMG.

Just for starters, not a one of the Final Four speaks like an educated person, despite some of them having attended some expensive schools somewhere along the way and all of them claiming to be native born Americans. Evidently this week’s Republican show was tame, even genteel, compared to the earlier ones, from which I saw only the money clips. If any one of them should be elected President, we’re in deep trouble. (No, I will not resort to the kind of vulgarism Donald Trump enjoys.)

On the other hand, here in Berkeley, regime change can’t come too soon. When I look around and see how Berkeley has deteriorated in the 12-year Bates era, it’s sobering. Under Bates, Berkeley is turning into Speculation City, no longer the human-scale home town we used to be proud of.

On every corner, it seems, an ugly box is being constructed, built right out to the sidewalk, for “luxury” apartments, cheaply built but expensively marketed to wealthy San Francisco escapees and international flight capital. One of the speculation buildings constructed in the Bates era has already killed a bunch of Irish kids when it collapsed under them, and more are at risk. Dwellers in older moderate rent buildings are being displaced.

The Maudelle Shirek Old City Hall has been allowed to deteriorate to the point of Demolition by Neglect, and the Berkeley City Council is blithely just moving out with no plans for fixing it. It’s reminiscent of the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party, where everyone gets up and moves around the table to a new place when they want a clean cup.

The warm pool at Berkeley High has been demolished, and the Southside public pool at Willard Park has been filled in with dirt. The Berkeley Municipal Pier is falling down. The Rose Garden is collapsing.

The streets are ever more perilous. Residents without homes are sleeping in doorways and parks, at least until they’re rousted by security guards hired by downtown commercial property owners.

Civil rights demonstrators have been assaulted by Berkeley police.

And that’s just a few of our problems.

The local election will be on Tuesday, November 8, 2016, along with the national and state races.

The Berkeley offices to be elected are Mayor, City Council Districts 2, 3, 5, 6; the Berkeley rent stabilization board (4 seats) and the Berkeley school board (2 seats).

So far, here’s the preliminary line-up, with links to the candidate’s web site if I can find one, or to press reports about their candidacy if not. 

For mayor: 

Jesse Arreguin now represents District 4 on the Berkeley City Council, where his constituents are a mixed bag of students, flatlands residents and downtown small businesses. He’s still close to 30, and has been a member of the progressive trio which is in the minority on the current council. If he’s elected Mayor, he’d have to resign his council seat. 

Laurie Capitelli has been the councilmember for District 5, mostly consisting of the west end of the North Berkeley Hills, and has backed current mayor Tom Bates on almost every issue, except when he’s been even more conservative than Bates, if that’s possible. He’s been a developer and a real estate salesperson while he was on the council, and along with Bates is a reliable spokesperson for development interests. 

Mike Lee is a recent arrival in Berkeley whose campaign has been publicizing issues affecting homeless people. He took part in the Liberty City encampment, which was demolished by the Berkeley Police. 

Ben Gould is a U.C. grad student who grew up in Berkeley. He was appointed to the city’s Community Environmental Advisory Commission by District 2 Councilmember Darryl Moore. 

District 2: 

Darryl Moore, another Bates ally, has been on the council from District 2 for eleven years. As of this writing he has no announced opponent. The district is the center-north part of West Berkeley. 

District 3: 

Ben Bartlett has been endorsed by retiring incumbent progressive councilmember Max Anderson, who appointed him to the city’s Planning Commission. He’s a lawyer, raised in Berkeley, the son of Dale Bartlett, longtime aide to progressive icon Maudelle Shirek. 

Deborah Matthews is another real estate salesperson. She was a steady supporter of developers when she was on the Zoning Adjustment Board.  

Mark Coplan has been the spokesperson for the Berkeley Unified School District for many years.  

District 5: 

Jesse Townley is an elected member of the Berkeley Rent Board. He was a Green Party candidate for District 5 in 2004. 

Sophie Hahn also ran for District 5 four years ago, losing narrowly to incumbent Capitelli who will not seek the seat in November. She is an articulate well-informed member of the Zoning Adjustments Board. 

Steven Murphy was Capitelli’s appointment to the Berkeley Planning Commission and is his endorsed successor. 

District 6:  

Fred Dodsworth announced his intention to run against incumbent Susan Wengraf a couple of days ago, though she has yet to reveal whether she intends to run again in November. He’s been a reporter for a number of local publications, including the Berkeley Daily Planet. 

 

These are just thumbnail sketches, or even less than that, of preliminary candidates for a race that looks like it might be pretty lively. The last deadline for local candidates to file is August 12.  

One interesting manifestation of the excitement is that a new organization, the Berkeley Progressive Alliance, has been formed with the intent of having an electoral impact in November. (Disambiguation: not to be confused with a 2005 group with the same name, which never got off the ground.) Its first public event was a forum last weekend on housing affordability, as reported in the Daily Californian.  

All too often, even in Berkeley, voters seem to make decisions based on a quick glance at a glossy mailer which arrives a couple of days before the election. As long as I hold out, I’d like to make space in this publication available to all the candidates to express, in writing and in their own words, their views, plans, proposals and endorsers for the offices they seek.  

Candidate statements should be emailed as attached Word .doc or .docx files addressed to “editor (at) berkeleydailyplanet.com” and I’ll post them when I get around to it. They can submit as many as they want between now and November. There’s effectively no deadline until the election takes place, and no limit online to the space available, though I doubt if readers can digest more than about 1000 words at a pop. 

 


Public Comment

New: Stop Eminent Domain Fishing Expedition in Berkeley

Councilmember Kriss Worthington
Tuesday March 15, 2016 - 02:23:00 PM

A proposal for a wide-ranging fishing expedition that threatens to use taxpayer money to search the City for property the City can take away from its owners by eminent domain will be item 22 on the Berkeley City Council agenda tonight. Here is a link to the proposal: 

http://tinyurl.com/BerkeleyED2016

Threatening to use eminent domain at an unspecified number of locations is poor public policy and likely to counterproductively create consternation and fear. The City of Berkeley must recognize the threat that eminent domain poses to our low-income, our elderly, our minority residents and our many people of conscience of all races who care about fairness and justice. Given the controversial history of eminent domain displacing low income and minority residents around the country, any consideration of implementing eminent domain beyond an individual long-troubled property should be preceded by a policy limiting displacement. The seizure of private property has serious ramifications for impacted property owners, and for small businesses and for residential tenants, as we have seen from past catastrophes that eminent domain has caused. Given Berkeley’s own displacement of low income residents and the dramatic decline in the percentage of African American residents in Berkeley, it would be wise to develop strong assurances to limit negative impacts and displacement before voting on item 22 on the March 15 City Council agenda. 

Eminent domain has historically targeted racial and ethnic minorities. The amicus brief by the NAACP, AARP, Hispanic Alliance, and Southern Christian Leadership Conference as a response to Kelo v. New London, makes that outcome clear. These respected community organizations explain how “the burden of eminent domain has and will continue to fall disproportionately upon racial and ethnic minorities, the elderly, and the economically disadvantaged”. We must acknowledge this historical fact and seriously consider who our policies might damage. In this case, it is most likely Berkeley’s low-income residents. It is irresponsible and reckless to propose a measure that fails to provide any criteria for the method that the City will use to determine what properties to seize, and without providing assurances that a displacement prevention policy will be put in place first. 

Eminent Domain should be a rarely used tool, not a replacement for policy. This proposal would be like the U.S. threatening to use nuclear weapons for the smallest diplomatic dispute. It would be far more productive to identify vacant residential units and negotiate with the property owner to return the property to productive use. Offers to buy or lease such a property would likely be better received than threats of eminent domain. It is also unfair to City staff that would be required to do this work to have their research on options be poisoned by this threat. The possibility of misuse of eminent domain to advantage particular corporations needs to be addressed promptly given Berkeley’s recent history of letting certain developers evade millions of dollars in fees required of other developers. 

Eminent domain should be used as a last resort, when all other options for curing problem property issues are exhausted. Fines or liens are more appropriate tools than eminent domain. Low income or middle class property owners should not be victimized so the City should seek to work in partnership with them. City Council adoption of clear Code Enforcement priority guidelines would be preferable to this fishing expedition. 

The current proposal to search for properties on which to use eminent domain puts the cart before the horse. It is the responsibility of the City to protect its residents from the threat that eminent domain will be used to displace our disadvantaged communities or give unfair advantage to wealthy corporations. Therefore, a comprehensive policy to address displacement should be adopted before voting on item 22 on the March 15 agenda. 

To share your opinion please email all 9 Council members at 

council@cityofberkeley.info 

 


New: Council Action Needed to Prevent Berkeley Displacement

Councilmember Jesse Arreguin
Tuesday March 15, 2016 - 01:20:00 PM

Most people in Berkeley agree that we have a housing affordability crisis. Yet last Tuesday, a majority of the Berkeley City Council voted down two critical measures to fund new affordable housing.  

We’ve all seen news reports of rents spiraling out of control in San Francisco, and thousands of evictions of longtime residents. Unfortunately, the housing crisis has spread across the Bay and is changing the face of Berkeley, threatening our diversity. Our diversity is our strength and part of what makes Berkeley such an incredible place to live in. Diversity not only fosters intellectual exchange, but innovation in the arts and in our local economy. Sadly, we are seeing low income people, families, students and even middle-income residents being priced out of our city. Berkeley city leaders need to take immediate action to prevent displacement and create more affordable housing. 

In this crisis, we need to be creative and pursue all solutions. That’s why I proposed that we increase affordable housing funds by taking a small percentage of the surplus from our Real Property Transfer Tax. Councilmember Worthington has also proposed several ways to increase money into our Affordable Housing Trust Fund. He proposed a one-time loan of $1 million dollars from our reserves to fund affordable housing. Currently the City has only $1.1 million in our Housing Trust Fund, making it increasingly difficult to fund new affordable units. Yet these proposals were summarily shot down Tuesday night (I will note, the Council continuously delayed these items for months, despite the crisis that we are facing). 

The City currently has a surplus from the Transfer Tax (due to a hot real estate market) and excess reserve funds. While there are many demands for city funding, including crumbling streets and park facilities, there are more sources available from regional funding to address these priorities. There are however shrinking resources for affordable housing. We can find a way to fund our infrastructure and invest in human infrastructure by funding affordable housing

Because our entire City Council claims they are concerned about the affordable housing crisis, I expected that they would vote for this modest proposal to infuse our Housing Trust Fund (HTF) with needed dollars. I was surprised and saddened when those same Councilmembers voted down this proposal, making specious arguments. 

Last fall, City staff released a report which found that over $30 million in city funds are needed over the next three years to fund affordable housing. These projects have not been able to apply for funds because there is not enough funding currently available. The very same Councilmembers that voted down these proposals claimed that there are no projects right now that need money, and therefore we don’t need to put more money into the HTF. This kind of circular logic ignores basic facts and might be a good way to mask your hollow objections, but does not help working class people struggling to live in our community. 

This is not surprising from a City Council majority that has given sweetheart deals to big developers to pay less in affordable housing funds and community benefits. One Councilmember even once compared affordable housing to “chocolate cake”, a luxury not a necessity. 

The City Council will be taking up a number of affordable housing issues in the coming weeks. The Council majority has delayed measures to increase affordable housing for over a year now. We can’t delay any more! The Council needs to hear from you. Please email Council@cityofberkeley.info and urge the Mayor and Council majority to act now to fund affordable housing and prevent displacement.  

My entire time in Berkeley, I have been an outspoken advocate for housing affordability and tenants’ rights. I will continue to stand above politics and fight for affordable housing. We need to save the soul of our city.  


Thomas Paine On Social Security

Harry Brill, East Bay Tax the Rich Group
Saturday March 12, 2016 - 10:24:00 AM

In a preface to Thomas Paine's 1795-6 pamphlet, Agrarian Justice, the writer correctly notes that Social Security is currently the most effective antipoverty program in the nation. Indeed, as a result of Social Security, over 20 million Americans including more than 1 million children each year escape poverty.

Thomas Paine understood the immense importance of providing an adequate pension to the elderly. To the best of my knowledge, he was the first prominent intellectual after the birth of this nation who advocated social security for both older and disabled Americans. To sustain the program, he proposed a tax on inherited property.  

Property owners instead favored voluntary and charitable assistance. But Paine disagreed not only because their donations would be insufficient. In his own words, he claimed that poverty was due to "the effect of paying too little for the labor that produced it." So providing a decent pension was not a charitable act. It was a matter of justice. 

The late Robert M. Ball, who was the nation's longest serving Social Security Commissioner, agreed with Paine's estate tax proposal because it would supplement the Social Security fund. The Republicans disagreed. In fact, the Republican dominated Congress appreciably reduced the estate tax last year, a move which favored the wealthy at the expense of the rest of us.  

A larger social security fund would make it possible to increase the pension. The average social security pension, which is about $16,100 annually, is much too little for many recipients. Currently, the social security tax applies to an income maximum of $118,500. Pensions and stipends to the disabled could be increased considerably if this modest tax, which is paid by both employees and employers, was raised to, say, a maximum of $250,000. So far, Congress has not been interested. 

Thomas Paine was absolutely right. To build a really civilized society, political decisions must be built on justice and humane principles. 

 

 

 

 

 


Too Cute to Fail? A Critical Look at Tiny Houses

Carol Denney
Thursday March 10, 2016 - 10:19:00 PM

A friend of mine reminded me recently that when Senator Dianne Feinstein was mayor of San Francisco she thought that homelessness was going to be a brief phase, and one proposal floating through town was the idea of mobile cement drain pipes to be used as temporary shelters. The Department of Public Works was already adept at carting them around, they were too heavy to steal, unbreakable, semi-private, washable, and available. And if you think this is a little nutty, you'll have a sense of my response to tiny houses, the movement for miniature abodes sometimes promoted as one solution to the housing crisis.

My friend said that all the contractor proposing the cement drain pipe shelters was requesting from the city was "a plot to put them on." And I thought well, golly. Is that all? Because that's what Liberty City, the community of tents on Berkeley's old City Hall lawn was requesting. And that's what the people in tents under the Division Street freeway overpass were requesting after being flushed away from San Francisco's Market Street Superbowl City celebration area.

That's what the Albany Bulb community was requesting. That's what people ferrying what little they have left to call their own have been requesting of cities nationwide for decades along with their human rights and perhaps a little compassion. Most communities of homeless people are having the door slammed on such requests, and it isn't because tents aren't aesthetically appealing. Liberty City was a monument to cleanliness, orderliness, cooperative living and indigenous democratic organization, much more so than most apartment buildings or even co-ops, and the famously liberal City of Berkeley still swept it away. 

I know what tiny houses do: they hit you square in the cute. The little windows, the cunning shingles, the seductive implication that the smaller your house's footprint the "greener" you are. In the nebulous background of tiny house presentations is something unidentifiable which seems to make even the most intelligent people I know go weak in the knees because they just can't wait to put the tiny curtains up in the tiny house. 

There are several curious implications that seem to enter the room with any discussion of tiny houses which I find myself unable to accept as easily as everyone around me. What issue does the miniaturization of housing solve for anyone except developers, who are the more obvious voices pressuring city planning departments into accepting more and more density with less and less living space and amenities? 

"Curbed San Francisco" has a website which illustrates the developer angle for miniaturization in an article by Tracy Elsen published on April 9, 2015. Local developer Patrick Kennedy is referred to as a "Micro Maven" for proposing 395 square foot "affordable rentals" for a development south of Market Street not far from the Division Street tents. The article refers to him as "best known for developing teensy but livable micro-units." In Berkeley he is better known for snookering a gullible Berkeley City Council into giving him generous opportunities to ignore height restrictions and waive pesky requirements on the grounds that his buildings would replace theaters or provide cultural spaces most of which proved theatrically, culturally, or financially unworkable, having been designed primarily as Potemkin villages. There is no mechanism for making sure these micro-apartments aren't snapped up by people who need a San Francisco pied-a-terre in town for a quick change of clothes while their real lives, their family lives and community lives, are lived somewhere over the bridges where they can grow some carrots in the back yard. 

Let me clarify that I love the tiny houses. They hit me right in the Betty Crocker Easy-Bake Oven. But with all due respect to the people who have built small, portable houses of recycled materials (or buffalo hides) for centuries, one 264 square foot micro unit hit the San Francisco market this past December for the "affordable" price of $425,000. Developers are better than any of the rest of us at capitalizing on the housing crisis, and are no more likely to be motivated by honest human needs and long-term community planning than the enthusiastic college students who compete for annual prizes with their tiny house designs, houses in which they have no plans to actually live. 

Tiny houses are not necessarily any more problematic than a tent. But the day my city allows the person with the $10,000 to $80,000 tiny house a city-sanctioned public space for his or her charming mini-abode, I will be there demanding that the person with less than $10,000 and only a charming tent be allowed the same privilege, and I hope I will not be alone. I don't want to see either the housing crisis, the cute factor, or both used to create a new tier of underclass in towns as yet unable to see people struggling on the streets as refugees from a federal, state, and municipal housing policy which created the horror of homelessness out of the whole cloth of greed. 

Focusing on the cunning curtains on the adorable windows of the tiny house without first securing the human rights many cities increasingly subtract from the poor strikes me as falling right out of the developer's or planner's playbook, where individual solutions are prized and larger, collective visions are just somehow too complex for contemplation. The issue isn't the size (or cuteness) of the house, tent, or place you roll out your sleeping bag and hang your washed-out socks in the nearby tree. It's the unwillingness of your town, city, land owner, or public official to allow you to be there at all. I'm hoping the seduction of miniaturization doesn't distract from the call for a right to rest, for human rights, and for housing based on the needs of minimum wage workers, people with disabilities, veterans, and low-income seniors who can't compete in a market designed by and for the one percent. 

Tiny houses fall suspiciously into the basket of misconceptions one often hears at planning meetings and zoning hearings most people don't have the time or patience to attend: 

1. The misconception that there is not enough land, resources, money to address the housing crisis. This is nonsense. We are a wealthy nation capable of housing the poor. One should never confuse an absence of resources with an absence of political will. 

2. The misconception that tiny houses' "cute quotient" will overpower issues of planning and zoning such that that the necessary square footage will just magically manifest. Again, this is nonsense, with all due respect to pet developers' projects' peculiar success on politically packed citizen commissions. 

3. The misconception that poor people (and apparently nobody else) should start living their lives in miniature. This is not just nonsense, it is offensive. 

People just seem to love the idea of these houses being small, as though poor people somehow need less room than other people. As though they would need less room to cook, less need to have bookshelves, less need to have friends over for a meal, etc. Hidden in these assumptions is an assumption that people who have gone through a period of grinding poverty need less light, less space, less access to computers, art supplies, pianos, companionship, room for their children, etc. I would argue the opposite. 

The main market for tiny houses is wealthy people: land owners and homeowners hoping to situate a temporary guest room where the garden tool shed now resides in an ample backyard and need to coax considerable flexibility and baskets of variances from their local city council, zoning board, and planning commission to do so. The severe subdivision of lots in residential areas, however greased by the housing crisis, looks a lot less green when one factors in the impact on resources for the rest of the neighborhood in the same ways and for the same reasons that loose rules about Airbnb's short-term rentals take a neighborhood toll without housing the poor.  

Live in a teacup if you like, I would say to tiny house proponents, those who aren't frankly angling to capitalize on the human need for shelter or jousting enthusiastically for some academic design prize. But think deeply before requesting the miniaturization of someone else's life or needs. 

An unexamined love affair with tiny houses runs the risk of creating what most developers are building anyway: housing that addresses such a minimum of human needs that the need for storage, parking, companionship, bookshelves, etc is visited upon the surrounding neighborhoods if not piled up in the yard. Neighbors of densely packed, student-filled, in no way affordable party houses can assure you that not providing parking on site, for instance, doesn't preclude the inevitable impact on the surrounding streets, which fill up with the dense building residents' cars anyway while the developer, happily living in a large house in Orinda, periodically dusts the environmental prize hung by the mantel. 

Do tiny houses solve human rights issues in a town which criminalizes sitting on the sidewalk, either on paper or in fact? There is no evidence of this. Do tiny houses magically create square footage for people who need to rest with their belongings without being criminalized for "camping" or "blocking" the sidewalk? There is no evidence of this. Do tiny houses address the need for public bathrooms and campgrounds? There is no evidence of this. Do they decriminalize sleeping in one's car? There is no evidence of this. Do they address the corrosive prejudice against the sight of poverty often linked to criminalization campaigns? There is no evidence of this.  

The tiny house enthusiasts seem to imply that tininess, or tidiness, or ecological economy, or the mere implication of all three will solve or be part of a solution to homelessness. If this were the case, Liberty City would have been celebrated instead of swept away by the Berkeley City Council after its brief weeks of existence a few months ago. Most of Liberty City's tents took up less space than the smallest tiny house, and the green qualities of shared cooking and recreational resources are obvious. 

Liberty City was absurdly tidy, and began with several donated tents which were identical, kind of an aesthetic cherry on top for those charmed by uniformity. The residents swept the grounds and corrected the corners of papers on the information tables. It was public land, presumably already dedicated to address the public good. The need for people with nowhere to go to organize together for their own safety is a public good, a necessity, and slowly being officially recognized as a right. Liberty City even was close to three outdoor restrooms in the park across the street, near the shelter (which ran out of room) near food giveaways, near the library, near transit, etc., which any sensible city concerned about public health issues should admit made its location ideal. But Berkeley booted it without bothering to provide alternatives for the people it served. 

Again, I have no opposition in particular to miniature houses which tickle the toy box in everybody. But I am noticing that the enthusiasm for tiny houses always seems to sidestep the need for tent communities, campgrounds, RV parks, etc., not to mention low-income housing. If Berkeley and San Francisco sweep away tent cities, doesn't it seem a little absurd to think that they would join in celebratory dances for tiny houses just because they're adorable? I would feel differently about this tiny house enthusiasm if we had already won the right to rest in public spaces, the right for people to sleep in their own cars, the obligation of cities with no low-income housing options to provide free public campgrounds, etc. But it worries me that without these fundamentals the "tiny house" enthusiasm diverts more sensible efforts into a holding pattern for good wishes and intentions which never honestly materialize for the enormous majority of people in need. 

It is never an either/or issue in this world. We can have tiny houses and civil rights, tiny houses and low-income housing, tiny houses and public campgrounds; one does not preclude the other. But make sure your public campgrounds and human rights issues come first, or run the risk of having human housing needs boutiquified for the gain of a handful of profiteers. And please consider that many people, especially people already doubled up in studio apartments intended for single individuals and families trying to make do in one-bedroom apartments, have been living in miniature for decades.


 


BART's Failures

Jeff Hoffman
Thursday March 10, 2016 - 10:11:00 PM

It would be nice to see an in depth story about BART's failures as a public transit system. My point of view is that public transit should be funded by those who drive in the form of a gasoline tax, but since we don't have that, BART workers and management should not be overpaid (as they are quite substantially in most cases), and BART should not be used as a jobs program to employ people in useless positions, such as most station agents (this job for all but the busiest stations could easily be handled by a call center). 

I commute to & from work on BART daily, as well as using it occasionally for other transportation. I grew up riding the El in Chicago and have also ridden the New York subway a lot, and ridden a little on the Boston and Philadelphia subways. BART is easily the worst of all of these systems in its grossly overcrowded trains, and its unreliability due to breakdowns and police state actions that stop trains for no good reason, just to mention a few problems off the top of my head. The overpaid and unnecessary workers are sucking money out of a system that can't afford it at the expense of the half million of us who ride BART daily and at the expense of the environment in causing people to drive because of BART's problems (not to even mention their nerve to go on strike!), and I welcome a detailed debate on this very important issue.


Democratic Presidential Contenders

Tejinder Uberoi
Friday March 11, 2016 - 04:16:00 PM

The print and cable media continues to keep up the drum beat of Bernie Sanders being unelectable and have effectively blocked out his campaign coverage. By contrast, Hillary Clinton actual record has largely escaped scrutiny. She supported the deregulation and gambling activities of Wall Street which precipitated the economic crash of 2008. Her stubborn refusal to release the transcript of her speech to Golden Sacks speaks volumes of her cozy relationship to these banks. At the recent Democratic debate she defended her dark money activity claiming that it was acceptable because President Obama was also a recipient of millions from Wall Street Banks. That is precisely why the Wall Street banks got a free pass from the Obama administration and none of the executives served prison time. 

Responding to the political winds of change, Clinton waited until April 2014 to support the modest, staggered $10.10 per hour minimum wage bill. 

Her vote for the disastrous war in Iraq was not a minor aberration but a major policy blunder. Later, she ignored the advice of Defense Secretary Robert Gates, for an unauthorized war on Libya that has plunged the region into utter chaos. Using a private email server in her garage to conduct private and state business displays a further lack of judgment. To allow subordinates to be the fall guys in an ongoing FBI investigation is inexcusable. 

By contrast, Sanders is squeaky clean and exhibits a rare quality of integrity and a sincere compassion for the underdogs in our society.


Columns

DISPATCHES FROM THE EDGE:Socialists Rain On Spain

Conn Hallinan
Thursday March 10, 2016 - 10:32:00 PM

The effort by Pedro Sanchez, leader of the Spanish Socialist Workers Party, to form a government on March 2 brings to mind the story of the hunter who goes into the forest with one bullet in his rifle. Seeing a deer on his right and a boar on his left, he shoots in the middle.

Sanchez’s search for a viable coalition partner began when the ruling right-wing Popular Party (PP) took a pounding in Spain’s Dec. 20 election, dropping 63 seats and losing its majority. Voters, angered by years of savage austerity that drove poverty and unemployment rates to among the highest in Europe, voted PP Prime Minster Mariano Rajoy out and anti-austerity parties in, although leaving the PP as the largest single party in the parliament.

The only real winner in election was the left-wing Podemos Party, which took 20.6 percent of the vote. The Socialist Party actually lost 20 seats, its worst showing ever, and at 22 percent, barely edged out Podemos. And if the Spanish political system were not rigged to give rural voters more power than urban ones, Podemos would have done much better. The Socialists and the PP are particularly strong in rural areas, while Podemos is strong in the cities. 

While a candidate in Madrid needs 128,000 votes to be elected, in rural areas as few as 38,000 votes will get you into the parliament. Podemos and the Socialists both won over five million votes, with the difference only 341,000. But the Socialists took 89 seats to Podemos’s 65. 

Spaniards voted for change, but the Socialists, who ran an anti-austerity campaign, chose to form an alliance with the conservative Ciudadanos or Citizens Party, which refuses to have anything to do with Podemos—and the feeling is mutual. Ciudadanos also underperformed at the polls. Ciudadanos was predicted to get as much as 25 percent of the vote and surpass Podemos, but instead came in under 14 percent with only 40 seats. 

On the surface the only thing the Socialists and Ciudadanos have in common is their adamant opposition to Catalonia’s push for a referendum on independence. Podemos is also opposed to a Catalan breakaway, but supports the right of the region to vote on the matter. 

Catalonia’s drive for independence is certainly controversial and would have a major impact on Spain’s economy, but exactly how the Spanish government thinks it can block a referendum is not clear. And if Catalans did vote for independence, how would Madrid stop it? One doubts that the government would send in the army or that such an intervention would be successful. 

Indeed, the fierceness with which the PP, Socialist Party and Ciudadanos oppose the right of Catalans to vote is more likely to drive the province toward independence, rather than discourage it. At this point Catalonia’s voters are split slightly in favor of remaining in Spain, although young voters favor independence, a demographic factor that will loom larger in the future. In provincial elections last September, candidates who supported independence took 47.7 percent of the vote. 

The Socialists had a path to form a government, but one that would have required the party to modify its position on a Catalan referendum. If it had done so, it could have formed a government using Podemos, the Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC), the Basque Nationalist Party, (EJA-PNV), Canary Islanders, and a mix of independents. Had the Socialists compromised on Catalonia, they might even have picked up the votes from the center-right Democracy and Freedom Party (DIL). 

 

Left parties in the Parliament can put together 162 votes on their own, which is short of the 176 needed to form a government. But it would not have been impossible to pick up 13 more votes from the mix of 14 independents and eight seats controlled by the Catalan DIL. 

Choosing Ciudadanos as a partner makes little sense. Podemos immediately dropped cooperation talks with the Socialists and sharply criticized Sanchez for not building a genuine left government. Ciudadanos’ economic policies are not much different than the PP’s, plus it opposes abortion, and is hawkish on immigration. In any case the party did poorly in the national elections. The merger “prevents the possibility of forming a pluralistic government of change,” according to the parliamentary deputy and Podemos spokesperson, Inigo Errejon

“Negotiate with us,” Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias told Sanchez, “stop obeying the oligarchs.” The Socialist Party leader pleaded with Podemos to vote for him so that the Socialist-Ciudadanos alliance could pass “progressive” legislation like raising the minimum wage and addressing the gender wage gap. The Socialists also presented a plan to tax the wealthy, improve health care, and try to stop the growth of “temporary” worker contracts that have reduced benefits and job security. 

But those issues do not really address the underlying humanitarian crisis most Spaniards are experiencing, like poverty and growing homelessness, and the damage austerity has inflicted on education and social services. And Ciudadanos’ views on abortion, immigration and privatizing public services are repugnant to Podemos. 

Spain’s unemployment rate is still over 20 percent—far more among the youth in the country’s south—and many of the jobless will soon run out of government aid. While the economy grew 3.1 percent in 2015 and is projected to grow 2.7 percent in 2016, it is not nearly where it was before the great 2008 financial crisis and the implosion of Spain’s enormous real estate bubble. On top of which, that growth rate had nothing to do with the austerity policies, but instead was the result declining value of the euro, low interest rates, and cheap oil. 

If the Socialists have no success in forming a government, there will be new elections, probably in late June. Polls show the outcome of such a vote would be similar to the last election, but Spanish polls are notoriously inaccurate. In the last election they predicted Ciudadanos would eclipse Podemos. The opposite was the case. 

The right-wing Popular Party is likely to do worse, because it is mired in a series of corruption scandals over bid-rigging and illegal commissions. In Valencia, nine out of the 10 PP councilors are considered formal suspects in the case. Indeed, the Party’s reputation for corruption makes it difficult for any other grouping in the parliament to make common cause with it. And even if Ciudadanos dumped its anti-corruption plank and broke its promise never to cooperate with the PP, such a government would still fall short of the 176 votes needed. The PP controls 119 seats. 

In part, the Socialists are frightened by the growth of Podemos and the fact that it might replace them as the number two party in the parliament. In part, the Socialists also tend to run from the left and govern from the center, even the center-right. That is a formula that will simply not work anymore in Spain. The domination of the Spanish government by the two major parties since 1977 is a thing of the past, having been replaced by regional and anti-austerity parties like Podemos. 

Before the recent election, the two major parties controlled between 75 percent and 85 percent of the voters. In the December election, they fell to just over 50 percent. 

A more successful model is being built next door in Portugal, where the Socialists united with two left-wing parties to form a government. All the parties involved had to compromise to make it work, and the alliance might come apart in the long run. But for now it is working, and the government is dismantling the more egregious austerity measures and has put a halt to the privatization of public services like transportation. 

Spain’s Socialist Party is riven with factions, some more conservative than others. Sanchez—whose nickname is “ El Guapo” (handsome)—has so far out-maneuvered his party opponents, but this latest debacle will do him little good. He did receive support from the party’s rank and file for the Ciudadanos move, but that led nowhere in the end. Sanchez got 130 votes in the first round and only picked up one more vote in the second round. 

Another election will probably not produce a sea change in terms of party support, but voters may punish the Socialists for their unwillingness to compromise. Those votes are unlikely to go to Ciudadanos, and the PP is so mired in corruption that it will struggle to keep its current status as the largest party in the parliament. A recent poll taken after Prime Minster Rajoy passed on trying to form a government found that 71 percent of the voters felt that the PP did not have the best interests of Spain in mind. That refusal may come to haunt the PP in June. 

Podemos will undoubtedly pick up some Socialist Party voters, but probably not enough to form a government. That will only happen if Socialists put aside their stubborn opposition to a Catalan referendum and help build what Podemos calls a “genuine” leftist government. 

---30--- 

Conn Hallinan can be read at dispatchesfromtheedgeblog.wordpress.com and middleempireseries.wordpress.com 

 

 

 

 

 

The effort by Pedro Sanchez, leader of the Spanish Socialist Workers Party, to form a government on March 2 brings to mind the story of the hunter who goes into the forest with one bullet in his rifle. Seeing a deer on his right and a boar on his left, he shoots in the middle. 

Sanchez’s search for a viable coalition partner began when the ruling right-wing Popular Party (PP) took a pounding in Spain’s Dec. 20 election, dropping 63 seats and losing its majority. Voters, angered by years of savage austerity that drove poverty and unemployment rates to among the highest in Europe, voted PP Prime Minster Mariano Rajoy out and anti-austerity parties in, although leaving the PP as the largest single party in the parliament. 

The only real winner in election was the left-wing Podemos Party, which took 20.6 percent of the vote. The Socialist Party actually lost 20 seats, its worst showing ever, and at 22 percent, barely edged out Podemos. And if the Spanish political system were not rigged to give rural voters more power than urban ones, Podemos would have done much better. The Socialists and the PP are particularly strong in rural areas, while Podemos is strong in the cities. 

While a candidate in Madrid needs 128,000 votes to be elected, in rural areas as few as 38,000 votes will get you into the parliament. Podemos and the Socialists both won over five million votes, with the difference only 341,000. But the Socialists took 89 seats to Podemos’s 65. 

Spaniards voted for change, but the Socialists, who ran an anti-austerity campaign, chose to form an alliance with the conservative Ciudadanos or Citizens Party, which refuses to have anything to do with Podemos—and the feeling is mutual. Ciudadanos also underperformed at the polls. Ciudadanos was predicted to get as much as 25 percent of the vote and surpass Podemos, but instead came in under 14 percent with only 40 seats. 

On the surface the only thing the Socialists and Ciudadanos have in common is their adamant opposition to Catalonia’s push for a referendum on independence. Podemos is also opposed to a Catalan breakaway, but supports the right of the region to vote on the matter. 

Catalonia’s drive for independence is certainly controversial and would have a major impact on Spain’s economy, but exactly how the Spanish government thinks it can block a referendum is not clear. And if Catalans did vote for independence, how would Madrid stop it? One doubts that the government would send in the army or that such an intervention would be successful. 

Indeed, the fierceness with which the PP, Socialist Party and Ciudadanos oppose the right of Catalans to vote is more likely to drive the province toward independence, rather than discourage it. At this point Catalonia’s voters are split slightly in favor of remaining in Spain, although young voters favor independence, a demographic factor that will loom larger in the future. In provincial elections last September, candidates who supported independence took 47.7 percent of the vote. 

The Socialists had a path to form a government, but one that would have required the party to modify its position on a Catalan referendum. If it had done so, it could have formed a government using Podemos, the Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC), the Basque Nationalist Party, (EJA-PNV), Canary Islanders, and a mix of independents. Had the Socialists compromised on Catalonia, they might even have picked up the votes from the center-right Democracy and Freedom Party (DIL). 

Left parties in the Parliament can put together 162 votes on their own, which is short of the 176 needed to form a government. But it would not have been impossible to pick up 13 more votes from the mix of 14 independents and eight seats controlled by the Catalan DIL. 

Choosing Ciudadanos as a partner makes little sense. Podemos immediately dropped cooperation talks with the Socialists and sharply criticized Sanchez for not building a genuine left government. Ciudadanos’ economic policies are not much different than the PP’s, plus it opposes abortion, and is hawkish on immigration. In any case the party did poorly in the national elections. The merger “prevents the possibility of forming a pluralistic government of change,” according to the parliamentary deputy and Podemos spokesperson, Inigo Errejon

“Negotiate with us,” Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias told Sanchez, “stop obeying the oligarchs.” The Socialist Party leader pleaded with Podemos to vote for him so that the Socialist-Ciudadanos alliance could pass “progressive” legislation like raising the minimum wage and addressing the gender wage gap. The Socialists also presented a plan to tax the wealthy, improve health care, and try to stop the growth of “temporary” worker contracts that have reduced benefits and job security. 

But those issues do not really address the underlying humanitarian crisis most Spaniards are experiencing, like poverty and growing homelessness, and the damage austerity has inflicted on education and social services. And Ciudadanos’ views on abortion, immigration and privatizing public services are repugnant to Podemos. 

Spain’s unemployment rate is still over 20 percent—far more among the youth in the country’s south—and many of the jobless will soon run out of government aid. While the economy grew 3.1 percent in 2015 and is projected to grow 2.7 percent in 2016, it is not nearly where it was before the great 2008 financial crisis and the implosion of Spain’s enormous real estate bubble. On top of which, that growth rate had nothing to do with the austerity policies, but instead was the result declining value of the euro, low interest rates, and cheap oil. 

If the Socialists have no success in forming a government, there will be new elections, probably in late June. Polls show the outcome of such a vote would be similar to the last election, but Spanish polls are notoriously inaccurate. In the last election they predicted Ciudadanos would eclipse Podemos. The opposite was the case. 

The right-wing Popular Party is likely to do worse, because it is mired in a series of corruption scandals over bid-rigging and illegal commissions. In Valencia, nine out of the 10 PP councilors are considered formal suspects in the case. Indeed, the Party’s reputation for corruption makes it difficult for any other grouping in the parliament to make common cause with it. And even if Ciudadanos dumped its anti-corruption plank and broke its promise never to cooperate with the PP, such a government would still fall short of the 176 votes needed. The PP controls 119 seats. 

In part, the Socialists are frightened by the growth of Podemos and the fact that it might replace them as the number two party in the parliament. In part, the Socialists also tend to run from the left and govern from the center, even the center-right. That is a formula that will simply not work anymore in Spain. The domination of the Spanish government by the two major parties since 1977 is a thing of the past, having been replaced by regional and anti-austerity parties like Podemos. 

Before the recent election, the two major parties controlled between 75 percent and 85 percent of the voters. In the December election, they fell to just over 50 percent. 

A more successful model is being built next door in Portugal, where the Socialists united with two left-wing parties to form a government. All the parties involved had to compromise to make it work, and the alliance might come apart in the long run. But for now it is working, and the government is dismantling the more egregious austerity measures and has put a halt to the privatization of public services like transportation. 

Spain’s Socialist Party is riven with factions, some more conservative than others. Sanchez—whose nickname is “ El Guapo” (handsome)—has so far out-maneuvered his party opponents, but this latest debacle will do him little good. He did receive support from the party’s rank and file for the Ciudadanos move, but that led nowhere in the end. Sanchez got 130 votes in the first round and only picked up one more vote in the second round. 

Another election will probably not produce a sea change in terms of party support, but voters may punish the Socialists for their unwillingness to compromise. Those votes are unlikely to go to Ciudadanos, and the PP is so mired in corruption that it will struggle to keep its current status as the largest party in the parliament. A recent poll taken after Prime Minster Rajoy passed on trying to form a government found that 71 percent of the voters felt that the PP did not have the best interests of Spain in mind. That refusal may come to haunt the PP in June. 

Podemos will undoubtedly pick up some Socialist Party voters, but probably not enough to form a government. That will only happen if Socialists put aside their stubborn opposition to a Catalan referendum and help build what Podemos calls a “genuine” leftist government. 

 


Conn Hallinan can be read at dispatchesfromtheedgeblog.wordpress.com and middleempireseries.wordpress.com 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


THE PUBLIC EYE: White Men, Go to the Back of the Line!

Bob Burnett
Thursday March 10, 2016 - 04:42:00 PM

In 2012, Democrat Barack Obama won reelection with 51 percent of the vote compared to Republican Mitt Romney’s 47 percent. Obama’s victory was the result of a formidable coalition of racial minorities and progressive Whites, particularly single women. In 2016, if Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders is to prevail, they must recreate the same coalition. And, White men will be the smallest faction. 

As reported by Ruy Teixeira and John Halpin in The Obama Coalition in the 2012 Election…, Obama achieved victory, “by carrying 93 percent of African American voters, 71 percent of Latino voters, 73 percent of Asian American voters, and only 39 percent of white voters.” 

In his recent book, “Brown is the New White,” Steve Phillips claimed Obama’s victory symbolizes a new American majority: “Progressive people of color now comprise 23 percent of all the eligible voters in America, and progressive Whites account for 28 percent of all eligible voters.” 

The 2016 Democratic presidential candidate must mobilize the new American majority. If they do, they won’t need to carry blue-collar white men to win. In 2012, Obama got the votes of only 35 percent of white men. 

The groups Clinton or Sanders needs to carry are African American voters, Latino voters, Asian American voters, and progressive White voters – particularly single women. 

African American Voters: In 2012, 13 percent of voters were African American. Teixeira and Halpin noted, “[Obama’s] support among African Americans was… overwhelming this year (93 percent…).” Steve Phillips observed, “African Americans are the most loyal and consistent Democratic voters in the country.” They are 23 percent of the Democratic vote. 

Latino voters: In 2012, 10 percent of voters were Latinos. Teixeira and Halpin reported, “Hispanics increased their share in line with their growing share of the eligible electorate.” Steve Phillips noted, “Latinos are now the largest group of color in the country, …making up 17 percent of the total U.S. population and 46 percent of all people of color in America.” Phillips predicted more Latinos will vote in 2016; he estimated that if they have the same participation rate as in 2012 (less than 50 percent) they will be 14 percent of the Democratic vote. 

Asian American voters: In 2012, 3 percent of voters were Asian American. (2 percent were of “other” race: Native American, Pacific Islanders, Arab Americans, Iranian Americans, or mixed.) Steve Phillips forecast that if, in 2016, they have the same participation rate as in 2012 (greater than 50 percent) they will be about 8 percent of the Democratic vote. 

Progressive White voters: In 2012, non-Hispanic White voters were 71 percent of the electorate. In 2016, because of differential growth rates that share will decrease to 68 percent. 

Of particular interest are the unmarried White women. Teixeira and Halpin reported, “President Obama did especially well among unmarried women in 2012, carrying them by 36 points (67 percent to 31 percent)... Unmarried women also made up a larger share of voters in this election—23 percent.” 

Extrapolating from 2012 numbers, in 2016, White non-Hispanic voters will constitute approximately 56 percent of the Democratic base. 17 percent will be unmarried White women. 16 percent will be married White women. 12 percent will be unmarried White men. And, 10 percent will be married White men. 

Ranking Democratic segments In 2016 the key Democratic voting groups will be: - African Americans, 23 percent - Unmarried White (non Hispanic) women, 17 percent - Married White (non Hispanic) women. 16 percent - Latinos, 14 percent - Unmarried White (non Hispanic) men, 12 percent - Married White (non Hispanic) men. 10 percent - Asian Americans (and others), 8 percent 

This should be encouraging news for Democrats. African American voters can be expected to turnout in high numbers (unless their votes are suppressed by Republican dirty tricks). A recent Elle magazine survey found that 90 percent of single women said they were “almost certain” to vote in 2016 and most will vote Democratic. And, there’s compelling evidence women will not vote for Donald Trump; the same Elle survey noted 84 percent of all women said, "they'd be unlikely to vote for a candidate who referred to women as ‘fat pigs,’ ‘dogs,’ ‘slobs,’ ‘disgusting animals,’ or ‘bimbos.’" 

In addition, there’s strong evidence Republican anti-immigrant, anti-Hispanic rhetoric will dramatically increase the Latino voter participation rate. 

Meanwhile, Democrats fret about blue-collar White men. While every vote counts, it’s estimated that these White men are only 5 percent of the Democratic base. Therefore, the outreach to White men should have a low priority. 

There is a logical and doable path to victory for the Democratic presidential candidate. Clinton or Sanders should build upon the 2012 Obama coalition. In particular, they should reach out to African Americans, women, and Latinos. White men, your place is the end of the line. 


Bob Burnett is a Berkeley writer, [a man,] (and a WASP). He can be reached at bburnett@sonic.net 


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Strategies Delusions Use vs. Strategies to Alleviate Delusions

Jack Bragen
Thursday March 10, 2016 - 10:10:00 PM

In case my readers didn't know by now, I have done a lot of introspection partly for the purposes of gaining a better understanding of my psychotic illness, and also for gaining a better understanding of my mind, in general. I have often combined this introspection with journaling, and this is useful because I can see the thoughts and ideas on the pad of paper in front of me.  

(My journals would not make any sense to another human being, and usually the pads of paper are thrown out, or are stored without any good reason, becoming a magnet for a lot of dust and cat hair.) 

As you probably already know, this column is an opinion column that contains the perspective of one individual who lives with mental illness, yours truly. If you are looking for a professional opinion, or for something backed up by scientific research, this column is not that.  

Yet, I do my own informal research by observing my own mind and by observing the behavior of my mentally ill peers. Among other things, I have looked at the strategies delusions use to become ingrained in the thinking.  

Delusions in the mind of an ill person seem to have access to the pleasure, pain, and fear mechanisms in the brain. Many persons who suffer from psychosis, through no fault of their own but because of the nature of the disease, are emotionally attached to their delusions. Delusions could promise something good, or they could be a means of denial of something hard to face. Or, also, the delusions could induce pleasure, pain, or fear.  

Everyone has certain areas of their lives, and therefore certain areas of thought, that make them feel something good or bad, and that they find pleasurable or painful. The illness latches onto these issues, exaggerates them, and turns them into subject matter of delusions. Thus, if you have psychotic tendencies and broke up with a lover, or wanted to have a lover and the feeling wasn't mutual, the illness will latch onto that area of thought and will cause delusions about that person.  

If you have delusional tendencies and are subject to jealousy, and if you are in a relationship, it could cause thoughts to come about of your partner having an affair. (This is not to deny that affairs sometimes happen.)  

For someone who does not have psychotic tendencies, they have coping mechanisms that allow letting go of a terminated relationship. This could be painful in the short term, but a non-delusional person can sustain that. Persons with untreated schizophrenia are not usually able to handle strong emotions--instead, delusions will come about. While in treatment, painful emotions and realities can be faced.  

If you have unresolved anger about someone or something, delusions will latch onto that. Delusions of "grandeur" could also happen due to their potential to invoke strong emotions.  

Delusions could also happen when the brain is trying to resolve depression. When someone with the tendency to be psychotic is in a depressed mode, delusions could arise that trigger an increase in serotonin and that thus alleviate the depression, albeit while replacing it with psychosis, which is usually an even worse problem. This could happen to someone whose depression is related to difficult circumstances, or could happen to someone whose depression is neurochemical.  

I believe that psychosis is intertwined with the pain and pleasure mechanisms in the brain. Someone could be emotionally attached to their delusions, or could be put into a state of fear or anguish from them. Either way, the delusions are reinforced by the powerful emotions they trigger.  

One hint I can give you is that you can create your own reward system, one that makes you feel better about yourself every time you overcome a delusion. You can also create an "anti-delusional system" in which you have trained yourself to automatically recognize some of the delusions. This is analogous to an antivirus system on a computer. This is not foolproof, but it can help.  

The mindfulness training I have given to myself allows me to better cope with emotions and minimize some of them. This allows my delusions to have less power over me. This training has not cured my schizophrenia, but it allows me to have a better handle on the illness.  

If you are interested, there are plenty of books on the subject, and you do not need to study under a Zen master. I don't do Zen, but rather, I have my own methods of being mindful. There are all types of meditation out there. However, I do not recommend any group that appears to be even the least bit cult-like.  

Mindfulness can help alleviate some of the strong emotions that make schizophrenia worse. It can also help with gaining greater insight about oneself. Yet, it is not a substitute for obtaining treatment with the help of a doctor.  

 


Arts & Events

New: Purcell’s THE FAIRY QUEEN at SF Conservatory of Music

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Wednesday March 16, 2016 - 10:50:00 AM

Henry Purcell died in 1695 at the early age of 36 just three years after the premiere of his semi-opera The Fairy Queen, which in turn came only a year after the great success of his other noteworthy works in this genre, Dioclesian and King Arthur. The genre itself developed in England out of the popular court masques. Semi-operas combined spoken dialogue, acting, instrumental music, singing, and dance. The libretto for The Fairy Queen, by an anonymous author, offers a heavily abridged version of Shakespeare’s Midsummer Night’s Dream. This material, usually presented in spoken dialogue, was absent in the San Francisco Conservatory of Music’s concert version of Purcell’s The Fairy Queen, which included all the music Purcell composed for the 1692 premiere as well as the music he added for the 1693 revival. None of the familiar characters from Shakespeare’s Midsummer Night’s Dream have singing roles, so the singing is provided by nymphs, fairies and allegorical figures. I attended on Saturday afternoon, March 12, the second of two performances of Purcell’s The Fairy Queen at San Francisco Conservatory of Music. 

Under the direction of Corey Jamason and Elisabeth Reed, The SF Conserv-atory Baroque Ensemble presented a large orchestra including strings, two recorders, two oboes, two trumpets, kettledrums, and a continuo provided by theorbo, guitar, cello, and harpsichord. Corey Jamason conducted from the harpsichord. The Fairy Queen begins with instrumental music: a Prelude, Hornpipe, and Rondeau. Then comes the Overture to Act I. Following the Overture a song is offered as a duet for a pair of lovers, here sung by soprano Erin O’Meally and baritone Thomas Wade. Erin O’Meally made her mark right from the start with her excellent delivery of her share of this duet. Next came a delightfully comic “Song of the Drunken Poet,” sung in rollicking fashion by the oversized baritone Brandon Jaico, who demonstrated a flair for comic delivery. Two sopranos, Ashley Valentine and Jie Pan, sang as the drunken poet’s interlocutors. 

Act II begins with an instrumental Prelude, followed by a song addressed to the birds. Tenor James Hogan gave a strong rendition of this song, which was immediately followed by two recorders imitating birdsong. A trio comprised of mezzo-soprano Whitney Steele, tenor Sidney Ragland, and baritone Thomas Wade then sang in hopes of inspiring the birds, and their voices were echoed by trumpets. Soprano Megan Rao then delivered a brief, lively song inviting the chorus to join in. Soprano Jessica Bianco sang Purcell’s night music, sensitively portraying the soporific quality of Purcell’s invocation of the night. Two mezzo-sopranos, Mariya Kaganskaya and Marissa Simmons, then offered more night music, followed by baritone Justin Bays who hushed the world to sleep. 

Act III begins with an instrumental Prelude, followed by soprano Erin O’Meally offering the dreamy, sensuous “If Love’s a Sweet Passion.” Two dances ensued, then soprano Ashley Valentine sang “Ye Gentle Spirits of the Air,” a difficult piece full of coloratura that was handled beautifully by the richly voiced Ashley Valentine in one of the highlights of the show. There followed a comic interlude between mezzo-soprano Elizabeth Dickerson and baritone Brandon Jaico, which offered another vehicle for the latter’s comic genius. Soprano Cara Gabrielson then delivered a nymph’s song on wooing, accompanied by cello, theorbo, and guitar. 

After intermission, a brief Symphony introduced Act IV, followed by a solo and chorus performed by soprano Jessica Bianco and full chorus. Next came renditions of the four seasons. Tenor Taylor Rawley sang of Winter; soprano Cara Gabrielson sang of Spring; mezzo-soprano Whitney Steele invoked Summer; and tenor Sidney Ragland invoked Autumn. Baritone Justin Bays then rounded off this invocation of the season by bringing us round again to Winter. 

Act V begins with an instrumental Prelude, followed by a song from Juno, goddess of marriage, sung exquisitely here by soprano Ashley Valentine. Then came a real show-stopper: the Lament or Plaint, “O Let me Weep.” This song, which Purcell added for the 1693 revival, was beautifully sung by soprano Erin O’Meally; and her performance, accompanied by echoes from the first violin, brought forth applause and bravas from an appreciative audience. This was Purcell at his most felicitous. Tenor James Hogan took up the sad mood of the previous Plaint with his song, “Thus the gloomy World.” Soprano Megan Rao brightened the mood with the short and sweet song, “Thus Happy and Free.” Soprano Jessica Bianco offered “Hark now the Echoing Air,” a florid aria of Italianate influence. Purcell’s The Fairy Queen then closed with a duet, a trio and choruses praising love and marriage. 

 


Press Release: The Dazzling Divas at Le Bateau Ivre on Wednesday

Arlene Giordano, Le Bateau Ivre
Friday March 11, 2016 - 04:35:00 PM

Opera Divas Kathleen Moss (mezzo) and Eliza O’Malley (soprano), with special guests Deborah Rosengaus (mezzo-soprano) and Maestro Alexander Katsman (piano), will light up the hall with arias, duets and trios from celebrated operas of Puccini, Verdi, Bellini, Bizet, Delibes and a special selection of Irish favorites in honor of St. Patrick's Day. . 

Hear Irish favorites such as Danny Boy, Tooralooralay and the Last Rose of Summer in addition to popular opera arias and duets. Come indulge yourself in a dazzling evening of opera’s top hits with these Bay Area favorites. 

Le Bateau Ivre welcomes you at 2629 Telegraph Avenue , Berkeley 

* DINNER SEATING: Begins at 5:00pm 

* PERFORMANCE: 7:00 - 9:00pm - No Cover Charge. Come early for a nice seat.


New Falcon String Quartet in Vallejo

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Thursday March 10, 2016 - 10:05:00 PM

On Sunday, March 6, the New Falcon String Quartet gave its debut performance under the aegis of Vallejo Symphony Orchestra at Vallejo’s First Presbyterian Church. This group of eminent musicians formed only five weeks earlier, arising phoenix-like out of the ashes of another group, which was to bear the name Peregrine Quartet. Dissension in the first group led to its dissolution as two musicians departed, and a second group was formed, comprising musicians who had performed with the Mendocino Music Festival. Standing before a statue of a falcon in Mendocino, the musicians, mindful of the former name Peregrine Quartet, hit on the name New Falcon String Quartet. It seems a happy choice. The New Falcon String Quartet is comprised of Joseph Gold on first violin, Dan Kristianson on second (and occasional first) violin, Raphael Gold on viola, and Burke Schuchmann on cello. All are experienced as members of Bay Area symphonies, and they have also performed widely in the USA and abroad. 

The program for their debut performance included Mozart’s Divertimento in F Major, K. 138, Mendelssohn’s String Quartet in E minor, Op. 44, No. 2, and Dvořák’s String Quartet in F Major, Op. 96, “American Quartet.” Opening the program was Mozart’s Divertimento No. 3 in F Major, K. 138. Written weeks after Mozart returned to Salzburg with his father in December 1771 after his second, enormously successful and inspiring trip to Italy, this divertimento may have been intended by Mozart to be a work for string quartet. However, it is usually encountered these days as a work for string orchestra. Scholars note, however, that the title “Divertimento” is written by a hand other than Mozart’s above the original score; and it may well be that single instruments were intended to carry the lines rather than the massed instrumentation of a string orchestra. In any case, the two outer movements are fast-paced and feature the first violin, here played by Joseph Gold, whose tone seemed occasionally shrill. The middle or second movement is a slow Andante, and there is a fine interplay and exchange of lead between first violin and cello. As played by New Falcon String Quartet, however, this lovely Andante failed to flow smoothly, and it risked bogging down in all too slow tempos. By contrast, the two brisk outer movements were noteworthy for fine interaction and taut execution.
Next on the program was Felix Mendelssohn’s String Quartet in E minor, Op. 44, No. 2. This work was written in 1837 while Mendelssohn was on his honey-moon. The first movement is an extended elaboration of themes Mendelssohn would later use in his Concerto for Violin. It begins with the first violin, here played by Dan Kristianson, sounding out the first theme in the low range of his instrument. Later, there are pizzicato pluckings by the cellist, here played by Burke Schuchmann, who was principal cellist and soloist with the Salzburger Solisten in Austria before coming to the Bay Area. In the succeeding Scherzo, the first violin plays quite high in its register. There follows a lovely Andante, introduced by the viola, the second violinist, and the cellist. When the first violin enters, it plays a sweetly sentimental melody over the bass. The final movement, a Presto agitato, begins with an all-out attack, followed by pizzicato plucking from the cello. A lilting phrase is developed and leads to a rousing tutti finale. 

After intermission, New Falcon String Quartet returned to play Antonín Dvořák’s String Quartet in F Major, Op. 96, “American Quartet.” This work was written while Dvořák was living in the Czech-American farming community of Spillville, Iowa, in 1893. Traces of American spirituals or Native American rhythms may or may not be found in this work, but Dvořák himself noted that Haydn’s music was much on his mind at this time, and as a consequence he wrote straightforward melodic lines, much to the popular success of this work. The opening theme is played by the viola, an instrument Dvořák himself played. In the performance by New Falcon String Quartet, the burnished sound of violist Raphael Gold was noteworthy, especially perhaps when accompanied by pizzicato plucking from cellist Burke Schuchmann. The second movement, marked Lento, opens with shimmering violins over pizzicato cello. Soon the cello states the principal theme. Later, the pizzicatos are shared out among all four instruments. In the third movement, marked Molto vivace, the cello opens followed by the first violin. In the fourth and final movement, the work proceeds rapidly to a brisk conclusion. All told, this was an impressive debut performance by the newly formed New Falcon String Quartet that I look forward to hearing many times in the future to see how they develop. 


The Lost Trio Plays Monk Plus Originals Saturday Night At California Jazz Academy

Ken Bullock
Friday March 11, 2016 - 12:55:00 PM

The Lost Trio—Phillip Greenlief (saxophone) of Oakland, Dan Seamans (bass) of Berkeley and Tom Hassett (drums) of San Francisco—premiere Bay Area jazz combo founded in 1994, will play Six By Monk, Six By The Lost Trio, 8 p. m. Saturday, March 12, at the California Jazz Conservatory, formerly known as the Jazzschool, 2087 Addison near Shattuck in downtown Berkeley. 

The program will feature six Thelonious Monk compositions from the Trio's sixth CD, 'Monkwork,' voted onto NPR's Top 10 jazz albums last year, in what will probably be the final concert revisiting of material from that acclaimed album. 

The remaining six tunes are originals by Greenlief and Seamans, live previews, in a way (as Greenlief put it), for a a forthcoming CD of all original Trio numbers. 

Saturday night will also be the last Lost Trio concert for the near future, due to members' personal schedules. 

Tickets: $15 ($1.21 service charge for presale) at cjc.edu or 845-5373. More about The Lost Trio at evandermusic.com


Press Release: Pianist Sarah Cahill in Concert at Berkeley Public Library

From Debbie Carton, Art & Music Librarian, Berkeley Public Library
Thursday March 10, 2016 - 10:13:00 PM

Berkeley Public Library welcomes local pianist/writer/producer Sarah Cahill on Sunday, March 20 at 2:00pm at the Central Library, 2090 Kittredge (at Shattuck) in the third floor Community Meeting Room. 

Ms. Cahill will perform and discuss works by women composers in honor of Women’s History Month. Come hear works by classical and contemporary composers such as Ruth Crawford, Sofia Gubaidalina, Pauline Oliveros and Bunita Marcus. Time Out New York hails Berkeley native Cahill as “a brilliant and charismatic advocate for modern and contemporary composers. “For more information about the artist, visit www.sarahcahill.com. For questions regarding this program, call 510-981-6241

Find music and articles about Sarah Cahill and the other women mentioned above through our Library Catalog or our elibrary

This free program is sponsored by the Friends of the Berkeley Public Library (www.berkeleylibraryfriends.org). 

The Central Library is located at 2090 Kittredge St. and is open: Monday, noon – 8:00 pm, Tuesday, 10:00 am – 8:00 pm, Wednesday – Saturday, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm, and Sunday 1:00-5:00 pm. 

Wheelchair accessible. For questions, to request a sign language interpreter or other accommodations for this event, please call (510) 981-6195 (voice) or (510) 548-1240 (TTY); at least five working days will help ensure availability. Please refrain from wearing scented products to public programs. Visit the library’s website: www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org.