Full Text

 

News

The Constitutionality of Homeless Encampments

From, and only as editor, by Steve Martinot
Thursday September 06, 2018 - 04:23:00 PM

The issue of homeless encampments keeps coming up. The reason is the insistence on the part of the police of Berkeley on raiding encampments, dispelling the groupings of the homeless, disrupting their comunities, and thereby forcing them to move, to resettle themselves, to figure out new procedures for survival.

During the Obama administration, the Dept. Of Justice formulated an argument for how and why and under what circumstances this practice of raiding and disbanding homeless encampments is unconstitutional, in violation of the 8th Amendment. The 8th Amendment prohibits “cruel and unusual punishment.” It therefore limits what can be punished and what not. In particular, certain conduct can be punished, but mere status cannot be under certain circumstances (such as illness, poverty, unemplyment, etc.). To the extent homelessness is a (involuntary) status, camping cannot be punished unless a city provides an alternative, such as shelter.

What I include below is an edited (by me) version of a writ introduced into a trial in Boise, Idaho, in 2015, on this issue. It was a case in which the homeless of Boise had filed suit against the city, and the US government had filed an amicus brief in favor of the plaintiffs (the homeless). I have redacted the footnotes and references in the interest of length, and to make the text more palable to those who would have trouble wading through all the legal citations and rhetoric. I tried to only leave the meat of the government’s argument there. For those who have no trouble with legalese, and would like to look at the precedents and citations, the name of the case is Bell vs. City of Boise, its trial number is 1:09-cv-00540-REB, held on 08/06/15. And the full text of the government’s writ can be found here – https://www.justice.gov/opa/file/643766/download 

******************** 

Civil Action No. 1:09-cv-540-REB 

Bell vs. Boise, Idaho 

STATEMENT OF INTEREST OF THE UNITED STATES 

On any given night in the United States, half a million people are likely to be experiencing homelessness. …These individuals must find space in a public shelter or sleep on the street. For many homeless people, finding a safe and legal place to sleep can be difficult or even impossible. In many cities, shelters are unable to accommodate all who are homeless. 

In [the case before us], Plaintiffs are homeless individuals who were convicted of violating certain city ordinances that prohibit camping and sleeping in public outdoor places.7 They claim that the City of Boise and the Boise Police Department’s (“BPD”) enforcement of these ordinances against homeless individuals violates their constitutional rights because there is inadequate shelter space available in Boise to accommodate the city’s homeless population. Plaintiffs argue that criminalizing public sleeping in a city without adequate shelter space constitutes criminalizing homelessness itself, in violation of the Eighth Amendment. 

The parties disagree about the appropriate framework for analyzing Plaintiffs’ claims. Plaintiffs encourage the court to follow Jones v. City of Los Angeles, 444 F.3d 1118 (9th Cir. 2006) (vacated after settlement, 505 F.3d 1006 (9th Cir. 2007)), which held that enforcement of anti-camping ordinances may violate the Eighth Amendment on nights where there is inadequate shelter space available for all of a city’s homeless individuals. Defendants, on the other hand, assert that Plaintiffs’ reliance on Jones is “heavily misplaced, factually unsupported, and immaterial to this case.” 

Because the summary judgment briefing in this case makes clear that there is a significant dispute between the parties on the applicability of Jones and conflicting lower court case law in this area, the United States files this Statement of Interest to make clear that the Jones framework is the appropriate legal framework for analyzing Plaintiffs’ Eighth Amendment claims. Under the Jones framework, the Court should consider whether conforming one’s conduct to the ordinance is possible for people who are homeless. 

INTEREST OF THE UNITED STATES 

The United States has a broad interest in ensuring that justice is applied fairly, regardless of wealth or status. In 2010, Attorney General Eric Holder launched the Office for Access to Justice (“ATJ”) at the Department of Justice to address the access-to-justice crisis in the criminal and civil justice systems. 

The United States also has an interest in breaking the cycle of poverty and criminalization. Numerous federal initiatives are tasked with reducing the criminalization of homelessness and promoting alternatives to incarceration that are more cost-effective, efficient, and fair. 

DISCUSSION 

The “Cruel and Unusual Punishments” Clause of the Eighth Amendment “imposes substantive limits on what can be made criminal and punished as such.” … The Supreme Court has held that laws that criminalize an individual’s status, rather than specific conduct, are unconstitutional. Robinson v. California, 370 U.S. 660 (1962). 

[In a precedent case in Texas (1968), one judge] did not rest his decision on the status-versus-conduct distinction … but instead … considered the voluntariness, or volitional nature, of the conduct in question. Under this analysis, if sufficient evidence is presented showing that the prohibited conduct was involuntary due to one’s condition, criminalization of that conduct would be impermissible under the Eighth Amendment. 

For the present case [with respect to the homeless] he explained that, “[f]or all practical purposes the public streets may be home for these unfortunates, … because … they have no place else to go. 

[There is] a division among courts on how to analyze claims regarding enforcement of anti-camping ordinances against homeless individuals. … Some courts have adopted the plurality’s strict interpretation, … that the Eighth Amendment limits only the criminalization of status, not of conduct. … Others have considered the voluntariness of the conduct, and whether the conduct is inextricably linked to one’s status, such that punishing the conduct is indistinguishable from punishing the status.  

[In precedent cases], the United States took the position … that criminalizing sleeping in public when no shelter is available violates the Eighth Amendment by criminalizing status. Consistent with the position taken in its previous filings, the United States now urges this Court to adopt the reasoning of Jones v. City of Los Angeles, 444 F.3d 1118 (9th Cir. 2006). Although the Ninth Circuit ultimately vacated its opinion in Jones—pursuant to a settlement agreement between the parties, 505 F.3d 1006 (9th Cir. 2007), not for any substantive reason— its logic remains instructive and persuasive. 

The Jones court considered the enforcement of a Los Angeles ordinance prohibiting sitting, lying, or sleeping in public. There, like here (Bell vs. Boise), the court was asked to consider a statute that, on its face, criminalized conduct rather than status. Importantly, the plaintiffs in Jones presented evidence suggesting that there was an inadequate number of shelter beds available for homeless individuals, so many individuals had no choice but to sleep in public in violation of the city’s ordinance. 

The Jones court [in LA] found enforcement of the ordinance to be unconstitutional as applied to the plaintiffs because of inadequate shelter space. The court based its decision on its conclusion that, “[w]hether sitting, lying, and sleeping are defined as acts or conditions, they are universal and unavoidable consequences of being human.” Because sleeping is unavoidable, the court then considered whether the plaintiffs had a choice to sleep somewhere other than in public, concluding that they did not: “for homeless individuals in [Los Angeles’] Skid Row who have no access to private spaces, these acts can only be done in public.” Id. at 1136. As a result, the court found that sleeping in public is “involuntary and inseparable from” an individual’s status or condition of being homeless when no shelter space is available. The court concluded that, “by criminalizing sitting, lying, and sleeping, the City [of Los Angeles] is in fact criminalizing [Plaintiffs’] status.” 

Defendants {Boise}assert that reliance on Jones would be “misplaced, factually unsupported, and immaterial to this case.” [They] rely on a conduct-versus-status distinction. Defendants’ position is unpersuasive because the Eighth Amendment analysis is not limited to the plain language of the statute in question. Rather, the practical implications of enforcing the statute’s language are equally important. Those implications are clear where there is insufficient shelter space to accommodate the homeless population: the conduct of sleeping in a public place is indistinguishable from the status of homelessness. 

It should be uncontroversial that punishing conduct that is a “universal and unavoidable consequence[] of being human” (having to sleep) violates the Eighth Amendment. It is impossible for individuals to avoid “sitting, lying, and sleeping for days, weeks, or months at a time . . . as if human beings could remain in perpetual motion.” Once an individual becomes homeless, by virtue of this status certain life necessities (such as sleeping) that would otherwise be performed in private must now be performed in public. Therefore, sleeping in public is precisely the type of “universal and unavoidable” conduct that is necessary for human survival for homeless individuals who lack access to shelter space. 

In this way, the Boise anti-camping and disorderly conduct ordinances are akin to the ordinance at issue in [a precedent case], at least on nights when homeless individuals are—for whatever non-volitional reason(s)—unable to secure shelter space. When adequate shelter space exists, individuals have a choice about whether or not to sleep in public. However, when adequate shelter space does not exist, there is no meaningful distinction between the status of being homeless and the conduct of sleeping in public. If a person literally has nowhere else to go, then enforcement of the anti-camping ordinance against that person criminalizes her for being homeless. 

[An objection has been raised to this approach, namely that it] implicates the knotty concerns with the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause becoming “the ultimate arbiter of the standards of criminal responsibility.” 

The Justices in the [precedent case] declined to extend the Eighth Amendment prohibition to the punishment of involuntary conduct because they feared doing so would allow violent defendants to argue that their conduct was “compelled” by any number of “conditions.” … But these concerns are not at issue when, as here, they are applied to conduct that is essential to human life and wholly innocent, such as sleeping. No inquiry is required to determine whether a person is compelled to sleep; we know that no one can stay awake indefinitely. Thus, the Court need not constitutionalize a general compulsion defense to resolve this case; it need only hold that the Eighth Amendment outlaws the punishment of unavoidable conduct that we know to be universal. Moreover, … Its punishment would serve no retributive purpose, or any other legitimate purpose. [The thrust of this] interpretation of the Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause is that criminal penalties may be inflicted only if the accused has committed some act [or] has engaged in some behavior which society has an interest in preventing.” 

Using this reasoning, the vital question for the Court becomes: Given the current homeless population and available shelter space in Boise, as well as any restrictions on those shelter beds, are homeless individuals in Boise capable of conforming the necessary life activity of sleeping to the current law? If not, enforcing the anti-camping ordinances and criminalizing sleeping in public violates the Eighth Amendment, because it is no different from criminalizing homelessness itself. … 

The realities facing homeless individuals each day support this application of the Eighth Amendment. … Regardless of the causes of homelessness, individuals remain homeless involuntarily, including children, families, veterans, and individuals with physical and mental health disabilities. Communities nationwide are suffering from a shortage of affordable housing. And, in many jurisdictions, emergency and temporary shelter systems are already underfunded and overcrowded. 

Criminalizing public sleeping in cities with insufficient housing and support for homeless individuals does not improve public safety outcomes or reduce the factors that contribute to homelessness. As noted by the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness, “[r]ather than helping people to regain housing, obtain employment, or access needed treatment and service, criminalization creates a costly revolving door that circulates individuals experiencing homelessness from the street to the criminal justice system and back.”17 Issuing citations for public sleeping forces individuals into the criminal justice system and creates additional obstacles to overcoming homelessness. Criminal records can create barriers to employment and participation in permanent, supportive housing programs.18 Convictions under these municipal ordinances can also lead to lengthy jail sentences based on the ordinance violation itself, or the inability to pay fines and fees associated with the ordinance violation. Incarceration, in turn, has a profound effect on these individuals’ lives.19 Thus, criminalizing homelessness is both unconstitutional and misguided public policy, leading to worse outcomes for people who are homeless and for their communities. 

Conclusion: The Court should adopt the analysis in Jones to evaluate Boise’s anti-camping and disorderly conduct ordinances as applied to Plaintiffs in this case. If the Court finds that it is impossible for homeless individuals to secure shelter space on some nights because no beds are available, no shelter meets their disability needs, or they have exceeded the maximum stay limitations, then the Court should also find that enforcement of the ordinances under those circumstances criminalizes the status of being homeless and violates the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution. 

Submitted this 6th day of August, 2015. 

Sharon Brett - Attorney for the United States of America 


Berkeley Campus Gun Scare Was False Alarm

Supriya Yelimeli (BCN)
Wednesday August 29, 2018 - 01:24:00 PM

A report of a person with a gun at University of California at Berkeley today was a private armored guard who was authorized to be on campus, police said. 

Police said at 11:50 a.m. that a person with a gun was sighted near the Martin Luther King Jr. and Cesar Chavez student buildings in Lower Sproul Plaza.  

Both buildings were placed on lockdown shortly after noon, according to UC Berkeley officials. 

Police reported that the area was clear at 12:24 p.m. and that the armored guard had "legitimate business" on the campus.


Opinion

Editorials

Fixing a Failing Flip: 2211 Harold Way Gets Another Pass for Another Year

Becky O'Malley
Saturday September 01, 2018 - 09:57:00 AM

If three trees fall on University Avenue in Berkeley, do they make any noise? Last week three felled redwoods created a reasonably substantial hullaballoo, proving once again that we’re a city of tree huggers. Online stories (Berkeley disciplines developer after redwood trees chopped down, City orders removal of 3 potentially dangerous trees at construction site, City orders redwood removal after trees destabilized at construction site ) prompted an outflow of outraged complaints from the little people, some of whom actually signed their real names, a refreshing contrast to the usual comments from the surly entitled trolls who spend too much time anonymously carping on these news sites.

Lost in the chorus was another disaster waiting to happen, the City of Berkeley Planning Department's surreptitious extension of the entitlements for 2211 Harold Way, a project which threatens to undermine the Shattuck Hotel in much the same way that this small-time developer undermined the redwoods. More about that later.  

The last time trees generated so much press was the protest against UC Berkeley’s proposed decimation of the oak grove which used to be outside of Memorial Stadium. Despite the efforts of several of the city’s most distinguished older matrons, who went up in a tree to register their protest against this stupid project, the university cut the oaks down. The stadium project continued on schedule, eventually producing an enormous albatross, a $438 million debt which U.C. bureaucrats are still haggling about paying for.  

It’s remarkable how many ill-conceived building projects produce unpredicted adverse results—or at least results denied by proponents. The concerned public all too often can say “I told you so” after things go south, for all the good that does. The stock in trade of development promoters is promises, promises, which are seldom if ever fulfilled.  

The redwoods were on a lot where an apartment project was approved at least 10 years ago. After a lot of protests at the Zoning Adjustment Board, needed variances were approved, with the proviso that the trees be preserved as a condition of the use permit.  

Since then, the project has been “flipped” multiple times.  

How does this work? The Zoning Board grants “entitlements” to the developer. According to the Urban Land Institute, “entitlements are legal rights conveyed by approvals from governmental entities to develop a property for a certain use, intensity, building type or building placement. “ Once a property is entitled, its value increases a great deal, often exponentially, and then it can be re-sold—flipped—multiple times, to add still more layers of profit and profiteers.  

What this means is that all the folderol which surrounds citizen testimony at ZAB hearings often adds up to just a lot of hot air. The ultimate flippee who now owns the project on University Avenue where the trees were lost has benefited handsomely because the Berkeley Planning Department turned a blind eye to numerous violations of the supposed conditions on the use permit. The flippers made out handsomely too, I’m sure.  

Friday morning when I started writing this I intended to list some of the many projects in the twenty or so years since I’ve been keeping track where the City of Berkeley has neglected to enforce conditions on a use permit. One of the three or four things I remember from law school is that standard conditions on use permits are not enforceable by citizens or their elected representatives, but must be enforced by the bureaucracy—if and when it wants to. If flipping is the goal, it’s a lot easier if Planning looks the other way where onerous conditions are concerned.  

Time and space do not permit me to provide a comprehensive list of such projects, so let’s just consider one, the apartment building on Shattuck which sports a theater marquee which says “Fine Arts”. That’s the former site of the historic Fine Arts Theater, and a successor art film house was supposed to be given space in the new building. Never happened. And this pattern exists all over Berkeley.  

My intention on Friday was to point out that across Shattuck from the Fine Arts is another debacle waiting to happen, the so-called 2211 Harold Way project. Its entitlements present many risks of disaster, some of which are detailed in the adjacent commentary from civic activist Kelly Hammargren, who sued the city on the inadequate EIR process which helped this bad scheme slide past a compliant council. 

Flipping hasn’t been going so well for the original recipient of the Harold Way entitlements, a “developer” which has never actually developed any of the projects for which it obtained permits. Two one year extensions on the permits had already been granted by Berkeley’s Planning Department in order to help the company out, and I had picked up rumors around City Hall that Planning was discussing giving them their third one year extension to continue trying to find a buyer. 

Trying to figure out what was going on, I made a call to the office of Planning Director Timothy Burroughs on Friday. His voice mail said he was out of town because of a family emergency, but he gave another number to call, where I left another (never returned) message. I’d tried to reach Burroughs a couple of months ago, when he was also out of the office, but that call was never returned either. 

I called the City Manager’s office, but was told I could only speak to the city flack, Matthai Chakko. I left him a voice mail message. 

Then I called Mayor Arreguin, who actually took my call. He told me he knew very little about what was going on with 2211 Harold Way, but would check. 

Finally, around three o’clock, Chakko called me back. Quelle surprise, quelle horreur, quel dommage! 

The letter granting an extension of the Harold Way entitlement to January 2020 had been sent that very day, perhaps that very afternoon, over Timothy Burroughs’ signature, despite the fact that he’s out of town. Chakko offered to send me a copy. 

So I called Councilmember Kate Harrison, who told me she’d also understood from the city manager in a discussion yesterday that staff were contemplating extending the project’s entitlements for a third year, which she opposed, but she had no idea the letter would be going out today. No further word from the Mayor at press time, so I sent them both a copy of the Burroughs letter. 

It seemed the least I could do. I hope Burroughs himself got one too, but if not I’d be glad to send him one. 

However, I did notice that cc’d on the letter along with two Planning staffers was Mark Rhoades, of the Rhoades Planning Group. He’s a predecessor of Burroughs in the city’s Planning Department. Having passed through the revolving door, he is now the developer’s fixer on this project. It is, shall we say, ironic, that Rhoades got a copy while none of our elected officials did. 

In case you are one of the innocents who believed that by changing the Berkeley City Council majority you could change the standard operating procedure in city government, think again. Even Berkeley, yes, dear little liberal Berkeley, is subject to regulatory capture. 

Wikipedia: “Regulatory capture is a form of government failure which occurs when a regulatory agency, created to act in the public interest, instead advances the commercial or political concerns of special interest groups that dominate the industry or sector it is charged with regulating.” 

The revolving door is the easiest way to achieve regulatory capture. Planners like Rhoades write the rules for development when they’re inside the government and then exploit them for profit when they move outside. 

This differs not at all from coal company executives getting jobs with the EPA or the DOE. And Michael Cohen is not the only fixer in the country, he’s just swimming in a bigger pond. 

Berkeleyans like to believe that they’re superior, but there’s a bit of Trumpism everywhere, even here. And so it goes…. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Let's Take Back the Speaker Along with the House

Becky O'Malley
Tuesday August 28, 2018 - 11:53:00 AM

The only time I ever saw Nancy Pelosi in person was at a 2012 fundraiser for Ami Bera, the second time he ran for Congress in a Sacramento-area district which was at best on the edge. He’d lost a previous run, as I recall, but it was a close race and he was trying again, benefited by a re-drawn district.

This was not an event for the big-time donors, not held in a Pacific Heights mansion, but in a routine San Francisco restaurant with admission price about on a par with a ticket to a San Francisco Symphony concert. I went out of curiosity, wondering where the middle of the road, not my usual hangout, was going. Bera was of interest in particular because he’s a physician, and health care was and is a crucial need, not just a lefty’s dream.

Nancy Pelosi (then House Minority Leader) was a surprise guest, dropping in towards the end of the party to make a very brief speech before she worked the room on Bera’s behalf. When she got to my corner, for some reason I chose to ask her an arcane question about an obscure Ohio race that I’d been wondering about.

To my genuine amazement she gave me a detailed specific answer, with all the facts at her fingertips and cleverly analyzed to boot. She’s usually been depicted in the media as charming, shrewd and a terrific fundraiser, but smart as a whip on fine points of issues? Not often mentioned, but clearly her ace in the hole.

So what’s this cryto-campaign by some smart-ass young-uns who think saying they won’t vote for Pelosi to be Speaker of the House will help them get elected to Congress? Exactly what’s that all about?

Most of these wannabes are running as Republicans-lite in districts where Clinton did relatively well against Trump. One special election Democratic winner, Colin Lamb, even ran commercials showing himself with his guns, presumably angling for the NRA vote. Ugh. 

There was a recent rundown on this trend in the St. Louis Post Dispatch, with a link to a Vox list of Democrats trying to run against Pelosi. Just FYI, in California one of them is Andrew Janz, the person running against the hated Trump surrogate Devin Nunes. He will be asking you for money sometime soon: let your conscience be your guide. 

There was an excellent interview with Congresswoman Pelosi on KQED’s Political Breakdown show last week: Nancy Pelosi on Running Against a 'Culture of Corruption,' Challenges to Her Leadership, and Dark Chocolate. She pointed out that the main reason Republicans want to run against her is that she’s effective, and that’s true. But I think there’s more when ambitious Dems try the same trick.. 

Any woman who’s been in a position of power after the age of about 45 is familiar with what might be called the Baba Yaga factor. There’s a reason that witches, including the Russian ones who live in the forest, are most often depicted as old women. When a woman has been around for close to a half century she knows where the bodies are buried, and that’s bound to scare the young folks, male and even female.  

It’s sometimes said that older people can’t understand the point of view of younger ones. But old people have been both young and old, though young people have never been old, which gives the old an information edge. 

Pelosi’s detractors like to suggest that younger leadership is needed because ________________. Fill in the blank yourself.  

It’s true that younger people are sometimes more energetic that older people, but in the radio interview Nancy Pelosi amusingly pointed out that she’d had five children (all aged six and younger at one point) but had more than enough energy left over after they’d mostly grown up to take on Congress. 

With seemingly boundless energy, she can still out-organize, not to mention out-orate, most of her younger colleagues. Remember her eight-hour marathon attempt to bring DACA to the floor of the house? 

Her current frustration comes from a problem not of her own devising. While she was busy keeping the federal House in line, Democratic National Commitee functionaries allowed Republican-dominated state legislatures to gerrymander enough congressional districts to capture a phony majority in Congress, just as they captured enough Electoral College votes to defeat a popular vote Democratic majority in 2016. Recent revelations about Russian hacking of DNC files, another cause of the 2016 election defeat, can’t be blamed on Pelosi either. Nevertheless, she’s managed to keep her troops together since them, waiting for this year’s election. 

Now, because Donald Trump’s cronies have managed to turn the Washington swamp into The Alligators’ Ball, the Democrats have a chance to retake the House. Sadly, the usual Democratic circular firing squad is already being assembled.  

The moderates who denounce California’s leftish tendencies are out in force.And right on cure, the right-wing media, the Moony-owned Washington Times and its ilk, is trying to gin up some anti-Pelosi action oni the left, but it doesn’t seem to be getting much traction so far. When cute-as-a-button Socialista Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez beat out Pelosi’s putative successor as Speaker, she was tempted by interviewers to denounce the mnority leader, but so far she’s resisted the temptation. 

Triumphal press releases from Berniecrats this week celebrate recent changes in DNC rules to reduce the power of superdelegates, office-holders and other dignitaries, to vote in national conventions without being elected as delegates. That might be fine, but be careful what you wish for. The risk of unintended consequences is always present. Opponents of the change expressed apprehension that since local officials are often more heavily African-American and Latinx that might result in a Whiter convention in 2020.  

If the Republicans had allowed superdelegates in 2016, moderates (yes, there were still some moderate Republicans way back then) might have been able to stop Trump. Even the sainted Dems risk having their own Manchurian Candidate in the wrong circumstances. 

All in all, if (knock on wood) the Democrats do take back the House, they would be world-class foolish to dump Nancy Pelosi in favor of one of the several eager young white guys who’d like her job. Just this morning I heard the loudest among them, Tim Ryan from Ohio, on the radio enthusing over Trump’s touted “Mexico-U.S.” trade deal, which is supposed to replace NAFTA. 

Say what? It’s about as much of a deal as that one with North Korea. No way a wise old woman like Nancy Pelosi would be fooled by it, but Ryan seemed to be.  

There’s a sucker born every minute, isn’t there? But there’s no reason to make one Speaker of the House. 

Having said all this, there’s a Young White Guy running in the nearby 10th Congressional District who deserves your support. Josh Harder made an appearance last night at an event sponsored by the Wellstone Democratic Club and Barbara Lee, and he seems to be the real deal. His no-notes speech touched all the right points for a very critical East Bay audience—didn’t get a single hostile question, which is almost unheard of. And also, thank goodness, he didn’t say a word about dumping Nancy Pelosi. If you’d like to help elect him, go to https://www.harderforcongress.com/ for the opportunity; 


The Editor's Back Fence

More to Come

Saturday September 01, 2018 - 10:59:00 AM

Since it's Labor Day weekend, I'm taking my time. There are more submissions which I'll be posting at my leisure this weekend--stay tuned


Public Comment

What's Happening to 2211 Harold Way?

Kelly Hammargren
Saturday September 01, 2018 - 10:15:00 AM

The sinking Millennium Tower has captivated San Francisco. Is Berkeley sliding toward its own scandal?

Berkeley Planning Director Timothy Burroughs succumbed to City pressure to sign yet another extension for the project planned for 2211 Harold Way, so presumably the developers who carried the project through entitlement and won the CEQA lawsuit can find a buyer to build it and an institution to finance the project.

With a perceived shortage of housing and a captive student rental audience, why has this project been so hard to flip?
Location.


The project site consists of interconnected buildings (the Shattuck Hotel Complex) which are divided into three overlapping commercial condominiums: Units A, B and C.

The developers of the Harold Way project own Unit A and Unit B, the Postal Annex, the storefronts along Shattuck Avenue, the Shattuck Cinemas and the basements underneath. Longtime residents recognize these portions as the former Hink’s Department Store.

Unit C includes the operational Shattuck Hotel, the restaurant, the hotel lobby, the basement service area and the hotel rooms, including the hotel rooms along Shattuck Avenue, floors two through five above UNIT A. These are owned by BPR, an independent family operation.

The 2211 Harold Way project as entitled calls for demolition and excavation under the hotel rooms (which the developer does not own) to build the three subterranean movie theaters and a lobby area which are promised under the permit.

It may be possible to properly brace the upper floors of the historic Shattuck Hotel to prevent damage and/or collapse during demolition and excavation for these promised theaters, but if (and some would say when) something goes wrong, who is responsible and what is the cost?

The City of Berkeley approved the project. As San Francisco has been with the Millennium Tower, Berkeley could very likely be pulled into lawsuits along with the developer.

The other question is why any investor group would buy a project which requires demolition and excavation under a building it does not own when there are sites all across the country without this complication and risk. Maybe there is a different plan: an expectation of an easy ride, of dumping the cinemas in the current Harold Way project plan, especially if they start demolition and problems develop.

Over five thousand cinema patrons from all across the Bay Area signed petitions to save Shattuck Cinemas. Just a few spoke in favor of the project, many of whom were vying to be recipients of the project's supposed “community benefits.”

Citizens by the hundreds wrote and testified against this project, objecting to:

  • the lack of inclusionary affordable housing,
  • intrusion into the view from Campanile Way,
  • demolition of Shattuck Cinemas and portions of the landmarked Shattuck Hotel Complex,
  • allowing a seismic report instead of a seismic study with soil borings,
  • location in a school zone impacting approximately 3500 students,
  • a transportation study that challenged common sense with the project parking entrance/exit across from the Central Library on Kittredge and
  • impact on City infrastructure.
It might be a good time for backers with career ambitions to start looking for a different job, before this project goes wrong as predicted by many.  


Housing the Homeless

Marcia Poole
Sunday September 02, 2018 - 02:01:00 PM

UPDATE: This morning, at 7 am, displaced homeless from the shelter, FTCFTH, and supporters took city hall. The reason is obvious. 90 out of the old, 60 into the new. The other 30?

The city had plenty of time to make sure no one was displaced. They did not care enough to. These homeless are all disabled. They are seniors. And the city again, did not care about the most vulnerable.


Recently, at a town hall meeting hosted by Berkeley’s Mayor Jesse Arreguin and Vice Mayor Cheryl Davila, the public was asked to think about ways we could house the residents of the soon to be closed Berkeley Emergency Storm Shelter at 9th and University. A number of good possibilities, short and long- term were offered. I would like to lend my support to several of them.

I request that the Mayor’s office to do whatever is necessary to extend the operation of the shelter at its current location. Declare a state of emergency and request the County of Alameda and State of California governments extend the 180 days to whatever time is necessary. Comply with any and all repairs needed. In addition, build several bathrooms on site, add showers and washing machines. The Dorothy Day House does a spectacular job of making this place a well-run center and we should see that the City does everything it can to continue the operation of this good shelter they have created. 

Open the West Berkeley Senior Center to being a full-time shelter for several years. Have the Dorothy Day House extend their management to this center as well. Open the parking lot to rv dwellers. 

If safe, open the men’s shelter in the Veterans Building on Center Street and Old City Hall, downstairs, to create two more temporary shelters. Again, the Dorothy Day House should manage them. 

Start looking at residential/commercial properties and negotiate with the building owners about repairing and improving the structures. Pay for and help with special expedited zoning permits. Leases of the structures to the City for at least 20 years should be obtained if the cost of repair is very large. Apartments that are included in the structures should all be made code compliant and rented as very low income apartments under rent control. The rent control status must stay with the apartments, even if the building is sold after the leasing has expired. 

I live in a building that extends east/west for l block. The building has 8 apartments on the top (second) floor, 2 (possibly 3, according to City records) on the main floor and a huge cavernous open space that two business once occupied 12 years ago (Half Price Books and the Blue Nile Restaurant.) The building’s address is 2510 Telegraph Avenue on the west side and 2512-16 Regent St. on the east side. Of the 11 rent-controlled apartments, only 4 have been occupied in the last 12 years, with one of these having become unoccupied for the last 3 or 4 years due to the death of the occupant. The unoccupied apartments were gutted to the joists 10 years ago and no work was done on them since then.  

The downstairs commercial areas were also gutted around 10 years ago, with walls and structural supports removed to create one massive space. The landlord stopped working on the building when he encountered structural problems and had to sue the apartment house to the south for leaning on his property. A thorough analysis on the structural soundness of the total property was done 10 years ago. The building was found to be stable, with some reinforcement needed on the south wall. I propose that the City of Berkeley contact the owner, Ali Eslami, at 510.774.8387 or 510.644.2922 to confer with him on this property. 

I envision a large shelter on the main floor (street level) that would accommodate senior and disabled clients, along with their animals and partners, in addition to several small offices, a communal room and a kitchen. There are several bathrooms already there, so the plumbing is in and could be extended. A large commercial kitchen had been located there. The configuration of the rest of the space could be for rooms for the people recovering from illnesses or surgery and larger spaces for those not incapacitated. Staff could be provided by the Dorothy Day House. 

Funding for this Senior/Disabled shelter could be requested from Kaiser, which has established a funding unit just for these helpful places. Also, UC could be requested to contribute funds to it and perhaps an office for public health might be established there with doctors and nurses on duty. Perhaps LifeLong Medical Center would like to participate. 

The function of this space, though, is to give the senior and disabled homeless community in Berkeley a safe and supportive place to be at 24/7. Of course, the owner would be helped financially with grants and funding, tax incentives and special provisions to establish this needed center for those in need in Berkeley. The surrounding neighborhood would be benefited by a stable, humanitarian place that was dedicated to helping some of the most vulnerable in our population. 

You are faced with a humanitarian crisis that will continue for many years to come. I wish you all the best and thank you for the help you have already given and your willingness to expand the services you offer.


Wisdom of the Locals

Jovanka Beckles
Sunday September 02, 2018 - 01:32:00 PM

Every so often a writer produces a phrase that vividly encapsulates the political spirit of the times.

Becky O’Malley, in this space, did this for me when she coined the term “wisdom of the locals,” saying that this is what we need instead of endorsements from outside famous politicians. She named what is now flooding into my race for Assembly District 15.

I’m astonished and humbled. I am the grateful beneficiary of the wisdom of the locals.

Every day I seem to receive another endorsement from local activists, politicians and organizations brimming with expertise and knowledge of our dynamic East Bay and state. These people, together, represent centuries of experience and they know a huge amount about what we need to rectify the abiding problems we’re facing, from climate degradation, to a dysfunctional justice system, to deficient charter schools set up for profit not for children.

Only this week, when I thought there could be no more, more came. I welcome the help of the wise - maybe that’s why they keep coming! 

This week the California Latino Legislative Caucus joined the California Black Legislative Caucus to endorse me, then former Berkeley mayor Shirley Dean (years of wisdom). Two days ago I met with a group of East Bay Jewish supporters of our people-driven campaign to discuss how our values and desires to fight discrimination align. I am so grateful to learn and to be heard. On Sunday I had the honor to address the Wellstone Democratic Renewal Club, the biggest Democratic club in the East Bay. That evening I was delighted to hear they had endorsed me with more than 70% of the vote. 

These latest endorsements add to a list that is almost beyond imagination to me. Seven environmental groups including the Sierra Club (wisdom for survival); 20 labor unions, including nurses and teachers (picket lines are in my blood, because I’m in a union myself: the wisdom of the workers); truly progressive organizations including the Richmond Progressive Alliance (where I developed my political awareness), the Democratic Socialists of America (a rising national chorus of people before profit!); Our Revolution (indefatigable Bernie as a hero, Sister Nina as an inspiration, come hug me again, please!); my fellow elected officials and candidates in the primary Dan Kalb, Judy Appel, Rochelle Pardue-Okimoto, Andy Katz, Owen Poindexter, Cheryl Sudduth and Raquella Thaman; Oakland City Council Member Rebecca Kaplan; my friends Actor Danny Glover and Gus Newport. And many more! The wells of wisdom are deep, and from them our world needs refreshing. 

I’ve been an elected official in Richmond for two terms, and served on city commissions before that. I’ve had to develop the fortitude and patience to stand up, to the pressures of Big Money, against personal attacks, and for people who need help. California’s state budget is more than $250 billion, and the state regulates conditions for many, varied, and huge economic interests. That’s why politics gets vicious and people can be mean. The moneyed forces seek profits; but we put people first. 

What touches me about the wisdom coming my way is not that it’s Delphic - from the top down or from some established, calcified system of lobbyists, political experts or party hacks. The wisdom is bubbling up from the grassroots and from all around. 

My campaign is run almost completely by volunteers. We really are corporate free; the vast preponderance of our limited funds come from right here in the East Bay; and while working people and their unions rally with me, there isn’t any Big Money powering this campaign. We really are corporate free, not pretend-corporate free; we are part of a movement sweeping parts of the country, not a manufactured campaign; we really do put people first, not just try to convince them of our good intentions. 

Solving and managing the challenges that face us will take the wisdom of all of us, and a lot of love. I thank these generous activists who go to meetings all the time and care, care, care for our communities as they take action. Their wisdom comes with a lot of warmth. I am honored. 


Predictive Work Scheduling Law Is a Must

Harry Brill
Friday August 31, 2018 - 07:13:00 PM

Among the serious problems that working people confront particularly in the retail industries, which include food service establishments, is that their work schedules are subject to change with very short notice. This is problematic for women with children. It poses major hurdles for those who want to advance themselves by attending school or just taking courses they would enjoy.

Also, many workers in the retail industries who work part time need another part time job as well. Without steady and predictable hours, schedule changes make that impossible. For workers generally it makes planning difficult and even at times impossible. Most employees do not complain to avoid the risk of losing their jobs.

Unfortunately, these workers are treated as things that employers can manipulate rather than as real people. There should be a federal law as there is in other countries to protect working people against this abuse. Instead it is up to the states and cities to enact predictive scheduling laws. But very few communities have done so.

Two bay area cities, San Francisco and Emeryville, have each enacted a predictive scheduling law. San Francisco was the first city to enact a scheduling law (2014). The law applies to retail and chain restaurants, which are required to provide two weeks' notice of work schedules. If schedules change in less than seven days employers are subjected to a small penalty. However, there are no heavy fines. Moreover, most workers are not protected. The ordinance covers only those retail establishments that have at least 40 locations worldwide and 20 or more employees in San Francisco. As a result, only a small minority of workers benefit from the law. 

The Emeryville restrictive scheduling law, which was also enacted in 2014, is more inclusive, but not inclusive enough. The law, which requires employers to post schedules 14 days ahead, protects relatively few employees. The reason is that the law only applies to retail and food service company with at least a total of 56 or more employees.  

New York City, on the other hand, enacted in November last year a law that looks good on paper. Employer violations can carry a very heavy fine. It may be too early to tell whether the legislation is being rigorously enforced. If it is, the New York City law can serve as a model for other communities as well as states. 

Workers in Berkeley certainly need a predictive scheduling law. Berkeley's Labor Commission, whose members are appointed by the Berkeley City Council, is considering creating a bill that would be forwarded to the Council. Although it seems that most if not all its members favor protecting workers, the Labor Commission should move at a faster tempo. 

Of course, the Council itself could propose and pass a good scheduling law. But no member of the Council has so far attempted to. I would like, then, to urge the many progressive organizations and individuals to contact and pressure the Council to demand action on this very vital issue.


When Women Are The Main Breadwinners

Harry Brill
Saturday August 25, 2018 - 12:22:00 PM



Despite the gain in earnings that many women have made, obtaining equality is a long way off. The current wage gap of 80.5 percent of male earnings is still substantial. As a result, women who work full time year-round are losing on the average over $10,000 a year. Moreover, If working women were receiving equal pay with men, their poverty rate would be cut in half.

Yet as revealing as this summary statistic is, it also conceals very important, contrary data. In over a third of all husband and wife families the woman is the main and in many instances the sole breadwinner. The changes in family work patterns have been considerable since 1970, when in almost half of all families only the father was employed. Now. the male as the sole family provider is in the minority.

In the last few decades, an increasing number of women have been entering the labor market. Women, who comprised fewer than thirty percent of the workforce in 1950 ,now make up 47 percent. In fact, the Department of Labor predicts that women for the first time in history will soon constitute a majority of working people.

Many women have been successfully competing for jobs that were once held only by men. Women have been able to do so in part because an increasing number have been going to college. In fact, they have been exceeding the number of males who receive higher education degrees. 

Women currently earn about 57 percent of all bachelor's degrees, 60 percent of all masters, and 51 percent of all doctorates. Although these achievements have not been enough to close the gender wage gap, it explains why many women have increased their income and have also become major breadwinners. Women in the last four decades have averaged a wage increase of 30 percent. Also, the gender wage gap for full time women workers has narrowed in the last four decades from 60 to 80.5 percent. 

Unfortunately, another very important reason women seem to be catching up is that men are losing ground. Their real wages have for a long while been stagnant. After taking account of inflation the purchasing power of men in the last forty years remains not only unchanged. For some it has even declined. 

Among the problems is that too many jobs are being exported. Over 14 million jobs, including 5 million manufacturing jobs, many which were well paying, have been outsourced to low wage foreign countries. Since 2001 well over 3 million jobs have been shipped to China. In addition, millions of additional jobs have vanished due to the immense loss in purchasing power that the domestic layoffs precipitated. Under the current Trump administration, despite the President's rhetoric, the exodus of jobs is continuing unabated. 

Also, as a result of the very successful legal and political 

assault against unions by business interests, the unions have been devastated. Union membership has decline from around a third of the workforce in the 1950s to currently just under 11 percent and only 6.5 percent in the private sector. Men particularly have been victimized. In 1979, when union membership peaked, almost 70 percent were male. Before the unions were busted, their earnings were up to 30 percent more than non-unionized workers. Now, according to the Brooking Institution, after taking account of inflation, men have not gotten a collective raise since 1973.  

Due to the beating many men have been taking, women have been replacing men as the main family provider. According to the US Department of Labor, in families where both spouses are working, the wives in 29 percent of these families earns more than their spouses. When the Department of labor also includes unemployed spouses, who made no financial contribution to their families, women are the primary breadwinners in 38 percent of these households. 

In a household where the woman is the primary bread winner, this arrangement can generate considerable marital tension and can even result in divorce. The patriarchal role that men have been playing, which has been rooted in their being the main breadwinner, has certainly been very problematic. As more women are becoming the main breadwinner, the risk is that some will be tempted to play a similar role. The version of feminism that favors the dominance of women could be reinforced in families where women are the main providers.  

The best route by far for a successful marriage is an egalitarian relationship in which both spouses see themselves as equal partners regardless of the different family roles they play. According to the research of John Gottman, who has interviewed thousands of married couples, spouses who treat each other as equal partners are much less likely to divorce and are more likely to have a happy marriage. Those who make the effort to build an egalitarian marriage will eventually see, according to an old metaphorical expression, the light at the end of the tunnel. 


Why Should BART Be Offered Zoning Power?

Zelda Bronstein
Saturday August 25, 2018 - 05:07:00 PM

In recent weeks, I’ve asked why Mayor Arreguín hasn’t vocally opposed Assembly Bill 2923, the state legislation that would remove zoning authority over BART stations in Alameda, Contra Costa, and San Francisco counties from the host cities and give it to BART. On May 29, he voted with the council majority to oppose the bill and staunchly defended community say in land use. But his name was missing from the strong letter of opposition signed by ten other mayors and published on August 4 in the East Bay Times. He’s continued to remain silent, leaving Berkeleyans to speculate on the reasons for his reticence. 

I think I’ve stumbled over a clue. On May 22, Arreguín sent an email to Housing Advisory Commissioners Darrell Owens and Igor Tregub, members of the HAC Subcommittee on North Berkeley BART. Here’s the revealing passage: 

“Any development on this site must be done in partnership with BART, as it is their property. We must work with them and [be] consistent with their TOD Guidelines to develop any implementing zoning.” 

If I read this correctly, first, Arreguín thinks that when it comes to land use policy, property-owners are equal partners with municipal authorities; and second, in this case, that the City of Berkeley must defer to BART—a special use district agency—and follow its TOD [Transit-Oriented Development] Guidelines. 

The first supposition is troubling. Zoning is the proper prerogative of cities and counties, not special use district agencies. Arreguín must know that. 

The second supposition is also disquieting. If AB 2923 becomes state law, Berkeley and other Alameda, Contra Costa, and San Francisco cities with BART stations will indeed have to follow BART’s TOD Guidelines. But AB 2923 has yet to be enacted. In this coming week, it will either pass on the Assembly floor or die. Apparently Arreguín’s silence on the bill reflects his assumption that it’s going to pass, which means he’s sucking up to BART. 

To those who, like myself, supported his mayoral campaign in hopes of boldly democratic leadership in the Berkeley Mayor’s office, this pandering is a big disappointment.


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE: It’s the Corruption, Stupid

Bob Burnett
Saturday September 01, 2018 - 10:50:00 AM

As we head for the November 6th midterm elections, it's worth remembering that Donald Trump was elected President because he promised to "drain the swamp." Instead of doing that, Trump has unleashed a tidal wave of corruption. Over the next two months, Republican corruption is the key topic Democrats must talk about. A 2016 Washington Post/ABC News poll (http://apps.washingtonpost.com/g/page/politics/post-abc-tracking-poll-oct-30-nov-2/2124/ ), released a few days before the presidential election, found that Hillary Clinton had a narrow lead over Trump on all issues except corruption -- where voters trusted Donald to address "corruption in government." In the presidential election exit polls (https://www.cnn.com/election/2016/results/exit-polls ), 39 percent of respondents said the candidate quality that mattered the most was the ability to "bring change;" 82 percent believed Trump was more likely to do this. It can be argued that ending corruption was Trump's key issue.  

Over the course of Trump's presidency, he has lost ground as a perceived agent of change. Now, most voters see Trump as part of the swamp; someone incapable of bringing the required change to Washington. The most recent USA Today/ Suffolk University poll (https://www.suffolk.edu/documents/SUPRC/8_29_2018_tables.pdf ) asked: "During the 2016 campaign, Donald Trump promised to 'drain the swamp' -- to reduce corruption in Washington. Which comes closer to your view?" 57 percent of poll respondents said, "The swamp has gotten worse during the Trump Administration." 

A recent Pew Research poll (http://www.people-press.org/2018/06/20/1-views-of-donald-trump/ ) found, "about half of Americans (54%) say they trust what Trump says less than they trusted what previous presidents said while in office." (In the latest Washington Post/ABC News poll, 60 percent of respondents disapproved of Trump's job performance.) 

As a consequence of Trump's diminished credibility, voters have begun to label Republicans as the Party of corruption. In July, the Center for American Progress (https://cdn.americanprogress.org/content/uploads/sites/2/2018/07/09124028/CAP-Battleground-Poll-Memo-070918.pdf ) commissioned a significant poll in 48 "battleground" congressional districts. "By an 8-point margin, most voters say that Republicans are more corrupt than Democrats, 54 – 46 percent. This gap (larger than the Democratic lead on the generic congressional ballot) is driven in major part by the 60 percent of Independents who find more fault with the Republican Party, and the 27 percent of moderate Republican voters who agree with them." 

How the issue of corruption will factor in the midterm elections will vary from state to state and from congressional district to congressional district. For example, in California there are (at least) three contested congressional races where incumbent corruption will be an issue: CA 22, where Representative Devin Nunes spends his Washington time trying to scuttle the Trump-Russia investigation. Recently his home time newspaper, The Fresno Bee, featured the headline, "Nunes used to care about Valley. Now he’s a D.C. fat cat living large on donors’ dime." CA 48, where Dana Rohrabacher is Russia's man in Congress. Recently the New York Times ran a front-page article about Rohrabacher, "He’s a Member of Congress. The Kremlin Likes Him So Much It Gave Him a Code Name." And CA 50, where Duncan Hunter was recently indicted for misuse of $250,000 in campaign funds. 

Corruption infests Trump's cabinet. We've already seen several cabinet members leave because of corruption charges (Tom Price and Scott Pruitt). Several others are being investigated. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross has been accused of stealing $120 million at his investment company (https://www.newsweek.com/ross-accused-stealing-120-million-1060598 ) -- Ross is also accused of violating conflict-of-interest laws and filing false information. 

For Trump, his family, and his close associates, corruption is tied to self dealing. The most noteworthy case involves emoluments. Article I of the Constitution says, "No Person holding any Office... shall, without the Consent of the Congress, accept of any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State.” On March 28th, a Federal Judge in Maryland let an emolument lawsuit go forward. (https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/25/us/politics/trump-emoluments-lawsuit.html ) This action, brought by the District of Columbia and the State of Maryland, focuses on the Trump International Hotel in Washington DC: "The District of Columbia and Maryland said their local residents who compete with Trump's businesses, such as Trump International Hotel... , are harmed by decreased patronage, wages and tips..." 

Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner is said to be under investigation for self dealing. (https://www.economist.com/united-states/2018/03/08/jared-kushner-appears-to-be-in-trouble ) So is Trump's son, Donald Junior. (https://www.axios.com/donald-trump-jr-trump-tower-meeting-mueller-investigation-e48b2134-560c-4943-8100-de9826d18913.html

Close Trump associates have either been indicted (Michael Cohen, Paul Manafort) or are under investigation (Elliott Broidy) (http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/scandals-engulf-multiple-rnc-finance-chairs ). 

It's an open secret in Washington that if you want to get Trump's attention you should stay in his Washington hotel or better yet, buy a membership in one of his golf clubs. (https://newrepublic.com/minutes/144704/easiest-way-get-trumps-ear-paying-play-one-golf-clubs ) It's clear that Trump's economic policies are dictated by his friends. For example, the New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/05/us/politics/nucor-us-steel-tariff-exemptions.html ) reported that the implementation of the steel tariffs has guided by Trump supporters at two large US steel companies, Nucor and US Steel. As another example, Trump plans a coal company bailout that will help some of his biggest donors. (https://www.marketwatch.com/story/trump-sells-regulatory-favors-to-his-donors-2018-06-14 ) And, of course, it's well established that the 2017 Trump-sponsored tax cuts primarily favored big GOP donors (https://www.politico.com/story/2018/01/29/big-donors-republican-tax-cuts-374842 ). Finally, early in the month, ProPublica reported that Trump has ceded control of the VA to three members of his Mar-A-Lago resort (https://splinternews.com/trump-has-reportedly-handed-over-control-of-the-va-to-h-1828187399 ). 

Donald Trump was elected President because he promised to "drain the swamp." Instead of doing that, he's enabled "the swamp." And he's give Democrats the key issue to talk about heading for the midterm elections 


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

 


DISPATCHES FROM THE EDGE: Asia/Pacific’s Shifting Alliances

Conn Hallinan
Sunday September 02, 2018 - 01:53:00 PM

“Boxing the compass” is an old nautical term for locating the points on a magnetic compass in order to set a course. With the erratic winds blowing out of Washington these days, countries all over Asia and the Middle East are boxing the compass and re-evaluating traditional foes and old alliances.

India and Pakistan have fought three wars in the past half-century, and both have nuclear weapons on a hair trigger. But the two countries are now part of a security and trade organization, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), along with China, Russia and most of the countries of Central Asia. Following the recent elections in Pakistan, Islamabad’s Foreign Minister, Shah Mehmood Qureshi, has called for an “uninterrupted continued dialogue” with New Delhi to resolve conflicts and establish “peace and stability” in Afghanistan.

Pakistan’s new Prime Minister, Imran Khan, is a critic of the U.S. war in Afghanistan and particularly opposed to the use of U.S. drones to kill insurgents in Pakistan. 

Russia has reached out to the Taliban, which has accepted an invitation for peace talks in Moscow on Sept. 4 to end the 17-year old war. Three decades ago the Taliban were shooting down Russian helicopters with American-made Stinger missiles. 

Turkey and Russia have agreed to increase trade and to seek a political solution to end the war in Syria. Turkey also pledged to ignore Washington’s sanctions on Russia and Iran. Less than three years ago, Turkish warplanes downed a Russian bomber, Ankara was denouncing Iran, and Turkey was arming and supporting Islamic extremists trying to overthrow the government of Bashar al Assad. 

After years of tension in the South China Sea between China and a host of Southeast Asian nations, including Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei, on Aug. 2 Beijing announced a “breakthrough” in talks between China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). After years of bluster— including ship-to-ship face-offs—China and ASEAN held joint computer naval games Aug. 2-3. China has also proposed cooperative oil and gas exploration with ASEAN members. 

Starting with the administration of George W. Bush, the U.S. has tried to lure India into an alliance with Japan and Australia—the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue or “quad”—to challenge China in the South China Sea and Indian Ocean. The Americans turned a blind eye to India’s violation of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and dropped the ban on selling arms to New Delhi. The Pentagon even re-named its Pacific Command, “Indo-Pacific Command” to reflect India’s concerns in the Indian Ocean. The U.S. is currently training Indian fighter pilots, and this summer held joint naval maneuvers with Japan and the U.S.—Malabar 18— in the strategic Malacca Straits

But following an April Wuhan Summit meeting between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, New Delhi’s enthusiasm for the Quad appears to have cooled. New Delhi vetoed Australia joining the Malabar war games. 

At June’s Shangri-La Dialogue held in Singapore, Modi said “India does not see the Indo-Pacific region as a strategy or as a club of limited members,” and pointedly avoided any criticism of China’s behavior in the South China Sea. Given that Indian and Chinese troops have engaged in shoving matches and fistfights with one another in the Doklam border region, Modi’s silence on the Chinese military was surprising. 

China and India have recently established a military “hot line,” and Beijing has cut tariffs on Indian products. 

During the SCO meetings, Modi and Xi met and discussed cooperation on bringing an end to the war in Afghanistan. India, Pakistan and Russia fear that extremism in Afghanistan will spill over their borders, and the three have joined in an effort to shore up the Taliban as a bulwark against the growth of the Islamic State. 

There is also a push to build the long-delayed Iran-Pakistan natural gas pipeline that will eventually terminate in energy-starved India. 

India signed the SCO’s “Qingdao Declaration,” which warned that “economic globalization is confronted with the expansion of unilateral protectionist policies,” a statement aimed directly at the Trump administration. 

The Modi government also made it clear that New Delhi will not join U.S. sanctions against Iran and will continue to buy gas and oil from Teheran. India’s Defense Minister, Nirmala Sitharaman also said that India would ignore U.S. threats to sanction any country doing business with Russia’s arms industry

Even such a staunch ally as Australia is having second thoughts on who it wants to align itself with in the Western Pacific. Australia currently hosts U.S. Marines and the huge U.S. intelligence gathering operation at Pine Gap. But China is Canberra’s largest trading partner, and Chinese students and tourists are an important source of income for Australia. 

Canberra is currently consumed with arguments over China’s influence on Australia’s politics, and there is a division in the foreign policy establishment over how closely aligned the Australians should be with Washington, given the uncertain policies of the Trump administration. Some—like defense strategist Hugh White—argue that “Not only is America failing to remain the dominant power, it is failing to retain any substantial strategic role at all.” 

White’s analysis is an overstatement. The U.S. is the most powerful military force in the region, and the Pacific basin is still Washington’s number one trade partner. In the balance of forces, Canberra doesn’t count for much. But the debate is an interesting one and a reflection that the Obama administration’s “Asia pivot” to ring China with U.S. allies has not exactly been a slam-dunk. 

Of course, one can make too much of these re-alignments. 

There are still tensions between China and India over their borders and competition for the Indian Ocean. Many Indians see the latter as “Mare Nostrum” [“Our Sea”], and New Delhi is acquiring submarines and surface crafts to control it. 

However, since some 80 percent of China’s energy supplies transit the Indian Ocean, China is busy building up ports in Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Djibouti to guard those routes. 

India has recently tested a long-range ICBM—the Agni V—that has the capacity to strike China. The Indians claim the missile has a range of 3000 miles, but the Chinese say it can strike targets 5000 miles away, thus threatening most of China’s population centers. Since Pakistan is already within range of India’s medium range missiles, the Agni V could only have been developed to target China. 

India is also one of the few countries in the region not to endorse China’s immense “One Belt, One Road” infrastructure initiative to link Asia, South Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East and Europe into a vast trading network. 

A number of these diplomatic initiatives and re-alignments could easily fail. 

Pakistan and India could fall out over Kashmir, and resolving the Afghanistan situation is the diplomatic equivalent of untying the Gordian Knot. The Taliban accepted the Russian invitation, but the Americans dismissed it. So too has the government in Kabal, but that could change, particularly if the Indians push the Afghan government to join the talks. Just the fact that the Taliban agreed to negotiate with Kabal, however, is a breakthrough, and since almost everyone in the region wants this long and terrible war to end, the initiative is hardly a dead letter. 

There are other reefs and shoals out there. 

Turkey and Russia still don’t trust each other, and while Iran currently finds itself on the same side as Moscow and Ankara, there is no love lost among any of them. But Iran needs a way to block Trump’s sanctions from strangling its economy, and that means shelving its historical suspicions of Turkey and Russia. Both countries say they will not abide by the U.S. sanctions, and the Russians are even considering setting up credit system to bypass using dollars in banking. 

The Europeans are already knuckling under to the U.S. sanctions, but the U.S. and the European Union are not the only games in town. Organizations like the SCO, ASEAN, the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa), and Latin America’s Mercosur are creating independent poles of power and influence, and while the U.S. has enormous military power, it no longer can dictate what other countries decide on things like war and trade. 

From what direction on the Compass Rose the winds out of Washington will blow is hardly clear, but increasingly a number of countries are charting a course of their own. 

 


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

 

 

 

 

 

 


ECLECTIC RANT: Labor Day 2018

Ralph E. Stone
Sunday September 02, 2018 - 01:38:00 PM

Labor Day, the first Monday in September, is a creation of the labor movement and is dedicated to the social and economic achievements of American workers. It constitutes a yearly national tribute to the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and well-being of our country. Labor Day became an official federal holiday in 1894. This year, Labor Day will be celebrated on Monday, September 3.

Corporations did not all of a sudden give workers two days off each week, which we now call weekends, or paid vacations and sick leave, or rights at the workplace, or pensions, or overtime pay. Virtually all the benefits we have at work, whether in the public or private sector, are because unions fought hard and long against big business who did everything they could to prevent giving us these rights. 

Thanks to collective bargaining, union members have higher wages and better benefits. In addition, union membership actually raises living and working standards for all working men and women, union and non-union. When union membership rates are high, so is the share of income that goes to the middle class. When those rates fall, income inequality grows and the middle class shrinks. 

However, labor membership is shrinking. In 2017, union membership was 10.7% of the workforce down from about one-third in1945. Yet, in 2017, union workers reported higher median weekly earnings ($1,041) than workers not covered by unions ($829). 

As of last year, 61% of Americans had a favorable opinion of labor unions, up from an all-time low of 48% in 2009. 

Why do we need unions anyway? Because they are essential for America. Unions are the only large-scale movement left in America that serve as a countervailing balance against corporate power, acting in the economic interest of the middle class. But the decline of unions over the past few decades has left corporations and the rich with essentially no powerful opposition.  

You may take issue with a particular union’s position on an issue, but remember they are the only real organized check on the power of the business community in this country.


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Paranoia as an Obstacle to Treatment

Jack Bragen
Friday August 31, 2018 - 07:10:00 PM

When mental health consumers are paranoid about everything, this can become an obstacle to accepting treatment.

Treatment practitioners generally intend to help us. This makes sense for a number of reasons. If we can get our symptoms under control, it is less likely that we will be a nuisance or a threat to society. In addition, it is cost-effective to treat severe symptoms. Services given to people in crisis are usually much more expensive compared to preventative maintenance.

Thus, it is in society's interest and it is in our own interest to accept treatment. If we accept treatment, it becomes possible to create good lives for ourselves. Without treatment, we are shortchanging ourselves of the possibility of good things. 

You cannot enjoy any of the good things in life when psychotic. You are too busy being taken over by the symptoms. And, it is usually a lot more painful to be deeply into psychosis than it is to be recovered. This includes the fact that medications create suffering, and it includes the fact that life may stink. It is far preferable to live in reality, even when reality has its difficulties. Being psychotic is no way to live. 

If we remain stabilized, refrain from getting in trouble, and obtain a part time job or a volunteer job, then we have a chance at happiness, and we could create a good name for ourselves. This, in turn, is an incentive for authorities to ease up on us, and to ease up on any restrictions that could be imposed on us. 

When paranoid, we may feel that treatment professionals are the enemy. If we can not correct this soon enough, it leads to disaster. Although the agendas of treatment practitioners are not solely to help us, helping us is still on their plate. 

Paranoia is an obstacle to treatment. If we believe that the treatment system is "out to get me," it is likely that we will resist various forms of treatment. We have to participate in treatment in order to get well. I still struggle with this dilemma even though I am more than twenty-two years into recovery. 

Taking the chance of trusting is courageous. If we are too wrapped up in symptoms to trust anyone, this is caused by the illness. When the brain illness takes over consciousness, then we, as a soul or perhaps as a personality, may not have the power to overcome this. When the illness takes over, any kind of reasonable thinking is blocked. 

A mentally ill person is better off preventing this dilemma from ever happening. In an ideal world, we could do that. But, for some, this ideal may be out of reach. This is unfortunate. However, we should not give up. 

If you had a broken leg, you would probably want to have a splint put on it, so that it could heal. Medication to treat psychosis is the same thing. The brain, because of the malfunction, has the potential to wreck itself through some type of overload, or through improper firing of the neurons. Too many relapses or going too long without medication may have a long term bad impact on our prognoses. 

When the brain has what it needs, the healing process can happen. The more years you go while stabilized, the better are your chances of having good brain function. 

When in treatment, you have a chance at having the basic freedom to fight the "stinking thinking" of treatment professionals. A psychiatrist told me that being schizophrenic doesn't indicate a lack of intelligence, but that it affects "harnessing of intelligence." You do not have to buy into messages that you're "dumb" due to being mentally ill. 

Most medication does not turn you into a "cognitively impaired" person. There are some exceptions. However, most of the antipsychotics that I have taken have helped my mind, and have not turned off intelligence. Although medication can cause some "slowness," the main areas impacted by this are in reflexes and physical energy. Antipsychotic medications mess with the body, but they do not ruin the mind--at least, that has been my experience. 

Some anti-medication advocates have asserted that psych meds shut down the higher functions of the mind. My experience is that psychosis does a thousand-fold more to shut down higher functions than medications do. Some medications I've taken have shut down a lot of my awareness, and my solution to this is to switch to other ones that I've tolerated better. 


Please look for my books on amazon, including two self-help manuals, a memoir, and two fiction collections. 

 

 


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Sunday September 02, 2018 - 01:43:00 PM

Roll Out the Barrels

Alarmed that pot-puffing might lead to a decline in suds-sucking, beer-brewer Heinekin has announced plans to purchase Petaluma's Lagunitas Brewery Company, a firm that produces non-alcoholic sparkling water infused with THC, the active ingredient in marijuana. (The brewery's "Hop Water" gives new meaning to the phrase "potable water." Remember, kids: It's important to remain HIGH-drated. Presumably these pot-water bottles will be labeled and thirsty customers will need to be carded before making a purchase.)

We're happy to report that the cafe at the Berkeley Bowl in West Berkeley is already a jump ahead of Heinekin. There were four specialty brews on tap at the coffee counter this week including Lavender Lemonade and "Cannabliss." 

Lest there be any mistake, a nearby card touted the benefits of toking CBD (Cannabidiol) via a tasty beverage. According to the signage, CBD is an antidote for fatigue, pain, schizophrenia, anxiety, depression, and nausea and it also "fights cancer, may treat seizures, lowers incidence of diabetes, and promotes cardiovascular health." 

What Was that Word Again? 

KCBS offers a daily "Commute Cash" contest wherein a common, every-day word is announced on-air and listeners are invited to text the word to KCBS for a chance to win $1,000 in a nationwide contest. 

On Friday, July 20, the word was "school." On Thursday, July 19, the word was "habit." But on Wednesday, July 18, the contest took a disturbing turn when the female newscaster announced that the chosen word was . . . "Terror." 

First thought: Could this have been part of some kind of secretive, government-sponsored mass-media psychological experiment? 

Favorite Quote of the Week 

"As one reporter pointed out: 'Now Trump's campaign chairman, national security adviser, and personal lawyers are all admitted or convicted felons.' So much for draining the swamp." -- Nancy Pelosi 

WarSpeech Watch 

On August 21, Robert Cruickshank, the Senior Campaign Manager at Democracy for America "fired off" a "targeted message" to his email audience. The subject line read: 

"Elizabeth Warren just dropped a bombshell." 

Trumpty Dumpty Sat on a Wall… 

Faced with his lawyer's testimony that hush-money was paid to a porn star and a Playboy bunny, Donald Trump has gone from denying that he knew anything about the buy-off to confessing on Fox & Friends that, yes, the hush-money "came from me." He pointed out that this admission would exonerate him from charges of violating campaign financing laws. 

Moving from "didn't happen" to "didn't know it happened" to "didn't pay" to "paid but it wasn't illegal" covers a lot of wiggle room. 

I'm anticipating that Trump's next fall-back position will be to grudgingly admit his guilt—but in a classic self-referential statement: "Frankly, everyone makes mistakes. Nobody is perfect. But, believe me, I'm the most imperfect person you've ever met. I make the best mistakes. Nobody makes mistakes better than me, that I can tell you!" 

Trump's Space Force Farce 

Mike Pence recently test-launched Donald Trump's Space Force farce, calling it "an idea whose time has come." But Pence's use of the Fear Card (citing "a new generation of threats to our people, to our nation") ignores history. 

The US was the first country to plot the militarization of space. In 1959, the Pentagon's "Project Horizon" proposed building a military base on the moon. In 1985, the US was the first nation to attack and destroy a satellite in orbit. 

China has 57 military satellites in orbit. Russia has 83. The US has 157. 

In January 2018, the US refused to join China and Russia in signing a treaty to assure the "Prevention of an Arms Race in Outer Space." 

The Pentagon—which has been unable to win wars on Earth—now wants to toss additional tax-dollars into the black hole of space. Specifically, Trump wants $8 billion to kick-start his new Military-Celestial-Complex. 

Note to the Mike Pence and the White House: Peaceful, freedom-loving nations don't wish to "dominate": that is the core verb favored by totalitarian military dictatorships. 

We're Doomed… I Mean "Domed" 

Now that Donald Trump has called for a Space Force—armed with arsenals of costly orbital weaponry—I think I know what his new 2020 presidential campaign promise will be (assuming he's not impeached, indicted, or otherwise dispatched in the meantime): 

"Forget the Wall. If we want to keep the aliens out, we need to build a big beautiful Dome over the entire country!" 

And he will promise to make the Martians pay for it. 

Donald Trump Channels James Garner 

I just saw a quote from Der Trump that suggests the Reprimander-In-Chief is not only a narcissist and a misogynist but a plagiarist, as well. 

"Money was never a big motivation for me, except as a way to keep score," Donald J. Trump likes to brag. "The real excitement is playing the game.

Well, it turns out that line appears in a 1963 movie called The Wheeler Dealers in which James Garner declares: "You do it for fun. Money's just the way you keep score." (Film note: "James Garner scores big as Henry, a flimflammer who lands in New York City after his Texas oil well comes a duster.") 

Two other Big Money notables apparently used this quote well before Trump: 

"Money is just a way of keeping score." -- H. L. Hunt 

"Life is a game. Money is how we keep score." -- Ted Turner 

Snapp Decisions 

I rarely visit Facebook but recently I found a note from long-time East Bay journalist/columnist Martin Snapp who announced: 

"Making end-of-life decisions and considering cremation because it's cheaper than burial. Can anyone recommend either a) a good, cheap cremation service or b) another alternative, like turning myself into a tree? Thanks." 

One friendly Facebook couple recommended donating your mortal remains to a medical school. "After a year, the cremated remains were returned, to do with as you wish." 

An SF-based writer offered a caveat: "I had an elderly uncle in New Jersey who just died (he was just short of 95). He tried to make arrangements for his body to be donated to science, as his wife's had been about 10 years ago. But they told him there is now a fee of $800 to donate the body! He opted out of THAT!" 

Former Chronicle columnist Jon Carroll modestly responded: "I'm not sure they want my body." 

And, wouldn't you know, the Facebook side-panel featured a prominent ad for a burial service. But it was kinda cool: "Better Place Forests are America's first spreading-forests. Instead of graves and tombstones, return the ashes of your loved one to the earth under a permanently protected, private family tree. Our first memorial forest is a redwood forest overlooking the Pacific Ocean in Mendocino County, CA." 

This left me wondering: Can you auction your corpse on eBay? In the meantime, I'm contemplating an after-life in a planter box. 

Couldn't Be Sweeter: Willie Brown Tweaks the Tweeter 

In his August 19, Sunday column, Willie Brown wrote: 

Trump says the press should not be reporting "fake news." . . . We could start with his endless tweets, which are sent out over the cable news channels as if they were the golden words of a supreme ruler, rather than what they really are, the childish blather of a sleep-deprived narcissist. 

Maybe we should also boycott Trump's appearances. At least until he gets his facts straight. 

Fair enough. Automatically passing along (and, thus, amplifying) Trump's Tweets is not the proper role of a free press. That isn't journalism: it's an unprofessional public relations exercise. 

Here's one deal the media could offer: No more automatic reprinting of Oval Office Tweets until Trump grows up, agrees to act "presidential," and submits to regular press conferences where he will respond directly to members of the media. 

The Tweeter Cheater Misses the Meter 

Following up on Willie's rant: Since Trump's 24-7 Tweetstorms already have a huge built-in audience, there's really no need for the press to repeat Trump's Tweets. 

As Trump himself Tweeted on June 16, 2017: "The Fake News Media hates it when I use what has turned out to be my very powerful Social Media—More than 100 million people! I can go around them." 

There's only problem: Trump doesn't have 100 million followers. A CNN check at the time found that Trump had only 32.4 million followers. In February 2018, only three celebrities had more than 100 million followers—Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, and (sorry, Donald) Barack Obama. 

More bad news. When it comes to the top 100 Twitter celebs, even when Trump was claiming 52 million followers, that only placed him in spot #18. Adding to the humiliation: Trump trailed CNN, which was ranked #17. 

In June 2018, Trump's Twitter-rep took another hit when 15 million of his alleged followers were deleted when it turned out they were fictitious accounts. (Would you call that "Fake Views"?) 

As Long as We're Renaming Football Teams…. 

I'm all for renaming the Washington Redskins but, while we're at it, how about addressing the Pentagon's grisly habit of naming military helicopters after indigenous Native American nations wantonly slaughtered by US Army troops? 

It's a long list: Apache, Arapaho, Black Hawk, Cayuse, Choctaw, Chinook, Comanche, Creek, Iroquois, Kiowa, Lakota, Mescalero, Mohawk, Navaho, Seminole, and Shawnee? 

And if Jeep wants to keep selling those Cherokee Chiefs, maybe they should offer a free SUV to anyone whose ancestors suffered through the "Trail of Tears"—a notorious forced march that sent the Cherokee Nation on a 1,000-mile trek from their ancestral homelands to new settlements in "Indian Territory," west of the Mississippi. 

Spoiler Alert 

I think I know why Kevin Spacey's latest (and probably last) film only brought in $126 in ticket sales on opening day. (That's like, what? Ten tickets sold nationwide?) 

Message to the Marketing Department: If you're going to feature a super-wealthy actor who's made headlines for being outed as a sexual abuser of young men, don't call your film . . . Billionaire Boys Club


THE PUBLIC EYE:Elizabeth’s Big Idea

Bob Burnett
Saturday August 25, 2018 - 12:14:00 PM

As the United States approaches the critical November 6th midterm elections, Democratic candidates convey three themes: costs, wages, and corruption. While aspects of the corruption theme are readily apparent -- almost every week some Republican big wig is indicted for corruption, what has been lacking is a "big picture" proposal to address inequity. Now, Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren has proposed a sweeping reform of capitalism. 

Democrats have winning messages on costs and wages. Costs because consumer prices are increasing for health care, housing, and energy. Wages because Trump's economic policies have increased corporate profits but this hasn't translated to more money in the wallets of working families. (Republican largesse has enabled corporations to raise their dividends, increase CEO salaries, and buy back their stock; but it hasn't benefited their employees.) 

Democrats also have a winning issue on corruption. As each days passes, there's more evidence of corruption in the Trump administration -- this week saw Trump's campaign manager, Paul Manafort, convicted of financial crimes, and Trump's personal attorney, Michael Cohen, plead guilty to campaign finance violations. (This week we also saw an early Trump supporter, California Congressman Duncan Hunter, indicted for misuse of campaign funds.) 

Although these events support a Democratic campaign narrative of "rot at the top," they do not address what is really happening in American society: Capitalism is failing working Americans. (One of 2018's savage ironies is that Donald Trump, who ran as a populist candidate, has abandoned America's workers.) 

That's why Senator Elizabeth Warren's proposal, The Accountable Capitalism Act (https://www.warren.senate.gov/newsroom/press-releases/warren-introduces-accountable-capitalism-act? ), is important: This act seeks a fundamental reform in capitalism; one that will make capitalism work for all Americans -- not just the top 1 percent. Senator Warren noted that in the last forty years there has been a fundamental shift in the relationship of large corporations and American society: “In the early 1980s, large American companies sent less than half their earnings to shareholders, spending the rest on their employees and other priorities... But between 2007 and 2016, large American companies dedicated 93% of their earnings to shareholders. Because the wealthiest 10% of US households own 84% of American-held shares, the obsession with maximizing shareholder returns effectively means America’s biggest companies have dedicated themselves to making the rich even richer." Warren observed, "Real wages have stagnated even as productivity has continued to rise. Workers aren't getting what they've earned." 

To change corporate behavior, Senator Warren's Accountable Capitalism Act has four components. 1. Charter Reform. "Big corporations that make more than $1 billion a year in revenue would need to get new charters from the federal government. Those new charters would make it clear that the companies must consider the interests of their workers – and other people affected by the company – not just shareholders." In other words, corporation would need to consider the needs of their employees; not just the need for equitable wages but other needs such as healthcare and childcare -- and environmental safety. 

2. Worker Participation: "Workers would elect at least 40% of board members for big corporations – giving them seats at the table when big decisions need to be made." It's estimated that this would affect 3500 public US companies -- and hundreds of private companies. 

3. CEO compensation: "Top corporate executives are now compensated primarily in company equity, which gives them huge financial incentives to focus exclusively on shareholder returns. To make sure CEOs are focused on the long-term success of the company, rather than the short-term interests of shareholders, executives at big corporations wouldn't be able to sell company shares for at least five years after receiving them – and for at least three years after a stock buyback." 

4. Political Contributions: "Corporate executives wouldn't be able to use company dollars to make political contributions unless they got approval from 75% of directors and shareholders. This ensures any political expenditures benefit all corporate stakeholders." 

5. Consequences: "Permits the federal government to revoke the charter of a United States corporation if the company has engaged in repeated and egregious illegal conduct. State Attorneys General are authorized to submit petitions to the Office of United States Corporations to revoke a United States corporation's charter. If the Director of the Office finds that the corporation has a history of egregious and repeated illegal conduct and has failed to take meaningful steps to address its problems, she may grant the petition." 

Senator Warren's proposal is likely to get little traction in a Republican-controlled Congress. Nonetheless, it's an important idea. One that should get the attention of all Democratic candidates. We have to reform American capitalism and Elizabeth Warren has suggested a significant first step. 


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


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Acceptance

Jack Bragen
Saturday August 25, 2018 - 12:01:00 PM

There are numerous things that society, people, and the mental health treatment systems expect from mentally ill people, and these expectations are often unreasonable.

When a person with a psychiatric disability is facing expectations from others that such person could not possibly fulfill, sometimes he or she experiences an overload, or a "does not compute" which can result in breaking down. Society is set up intentionally to make mentally ill people fail. That is the only conclusion I can draw, when I look at my entire history, which is riddled with me being sabotaged and attacked. Also, if I look at the outcome of so many other people with my problem, their lives almost always end in tragedy. This tragedy could be an early death, or it could mean being permanently incarcerated or institutionalized. Society and people are set up to prove that they were right about us. They then create circumstances that are unsolvable.

Many people may feel this way. What can you do in a situation that is clearly impossible to resolve? You must learn to accept the unacceptable. This idea did not come from me, it came from a spiritual teacher who was teaching a form of Buddhism. 

Regardless of your religious affiliation, and any automatic dismissal of a religious practice other than yours, you need to acknowledge that if you are in the path of a speeding bus, you have to get out of the way. A Buddhist might say, "If you don't get out of the way of the bus, you will die. If you get out of the way of the bus, you will die of something else." 

It will not help you to accuse the bus of being a bad bus, to accuse the driver of bad driving, or to feel sorry for yourself over your premature death. The laws of physics do not care about right or wrong or about your lamenting. You can not bribe the bus, reason with it, or play mind games with it or with yourself over it; the bus is headed your way. 

Acceptance can allow people to do better. Part of acceptance is the simple acknowledgment of facts. If you do not acknowledge facts because they are too painful, then you go into a system of denial. If this denial happens too much, an incorrect neural route is established that leads to becoming sick. This is part of what goes wrong in the minds of psychotic people. 

I have schizophrenia, paranoid-type. Yet, people expect me to function as they believe they would function--in a "normal" way. I'm sorry, but I am not normal. If people can not make an allowance for my problems, it seems that I am the one who suffers. When I do not act in a way that people can understand, they decide that I am the devil. I am not the devil; I am disabled. This affects how I act and think and speak. 

I am in the process of solving my circumstances without blaming anyone. Many who work in the mental health treatment system are good intentioned, and many have helped me a lot. Treatment practitioners want to see respect and cooperation. They want to see that we are making an effort to do the right thing. Some may have ulterior motives. However, it is probably paranoid of me to believe that "they are out to get me." 

Part of the role of treatment practitioners is to protect society. If they believe that a person they are treating is a threat, they will act. The only way of us getting through is to participate. 

I do not know to what extent I am being naive. 

However, acceptance is very important for us. We must first acknowledge facts, and then if we can tolerate the discomfort of facing facts, we can head in the right direction. 

Fact: I suffer from paranoia. I am resolving this situation by seeking additional treatment. I will continue writing this column. If you see me absent for a week, don't worry.


ECLECTIC RANT:Global warming is real and it could become irreversible

Ralph E. Stone
Saturday August 25, 2018 - 05:05:00 PM

Empirical evidence shows that global warming is real and is largely caused by man. This is not a theory; it is a fact. If someone tells you that this is not true, then they are lying or stupid or stand to make lots of money by ignoring it. By denying global warming, you have an excuse to do little or nothing about it. Global warming is no longer about science; it is now a political, economic, social debate. In other words, what do we do about global warming? 

It has long been known that humans impact our atmosphere severely and our unrelenting production of carbon dioxide (and other greenhouse gases) increase the effects of the naturally occurring "greenhouse effect" that keeps our planet habitable. The more CO2 we pump into our atmosphere, the warmer the atmosphere gets. This is a scientific fact based on decades of scientific study. The main cause of the increase in global average temperatures in recent history is not because of any natural cycle -- although natural cycles do exist -- it is because of man. 

Earth is noticeably hotter, the weather stormier and more extreme. Polar regions have lost billions of tons of ice; sea levels have been raised by trillions of gallons of water. Far more wildfires rage. The world’s annual temperature has warmed nearly 1 degree (0.54 degrees Celsius). And the temperature in the U.S. has gone up even more — nearly 1.6 degrees. 

NASA satellites have shown three inches of sea level rise in just the past 25 years. With more than 70% of the Earth covered by oceans, a 3-inch increase means about 6,500 cubic-miles of extra water, enough to cover the entire U.S. with water about 9 inches deep. 

In California, for example, scientists predict that in less than 30 years, rising waters will flood about 30,000 homes along the state’s shoreline. This will have a major impact on real estate and housing with the real estate value of the threatened homes estimated to be $15 billion statewide. 

Under Donald Trump, the federal government is doing nothing. Trump has had a lot of things to say about global warming. He’s called it an urgent problem, and he’s called it a hoax. He’s said, the “concept of global warming was created by and for the Chinese in order to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive.” When he became president, his true intention became clear when he quickly signed an executive order rolling back key Obama-era limits on greenhouse gas emissions. And then he pulled the U.S. out of the Paris Climate Accord, signed by 176 countries and the European Union. 

With so much at stake, why is the Trump administration, and too many in Congress, not addressing climate change head on? It is no mystery to me. These so-called climate change deniers have made a self-interested political decision, rather than a scientific one. By denying climate change, they have an excuse to do little or nothing about it; they don't want to alienate their friends in the fossil fuel industry,  

It is not coincidental that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and 21 other Republicans, whose campaigns have collected more than $10 million in oil, gas and, coal money since 2012, sent a letter to the president urging him to withdraw from the Paris Climate Accord.  

Does the “public trust doctrine” apply to the federal government’s inaction on global warming, which holds the government responsible for managing natural resources, such as air, land and water, for the benefit of the people? The government officials have known for decades that oil, coal, and other fossil fuels emit carbon dioxide that heats the atmosphere, but have promoted mining and use of those fuels while temperatures reach historic levels. This is the contention of the plaintiffs in Juliana v. United States

For a frightening must read about climate change, see Losing Earth: The Decade we almost stopped climate change. A tragedy in two acts, by Nathaniel Rich; Photographs by George Steinmetz. 

One positive is California. California set a goal to reduce the state's greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2020 and to 80% below 1990 levels by 2050. The state hit its first target for cutting back on emissions four years ahead of schedule. Much of the state’s success in achieving its goal has come from its growing reliance on renewable energy. 

It is way past time for the Trump administration to develop and implement an action plan at the federal level. It is time to put public health and the environment ahead of corporate interests. Planet Earth is our home; we have no place to evacuate to if our home becomes uninhabitable. 


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces:

Gar Smith
Saturday August 25, 2018 - 07:56:00 PM

Roll Out the Barrels

Alarmed that pot-puffing might lead to a decline in suds-sucking, beer-brewer Heinekin has announced plans to purchase Petaluma's Lagunitas Brewery Company, a firm that produces non-alcoholic sparkling water infused with THC, the active ingredient in marijuana. (The brewery's "Hop Water" gives new meaning to the phrase "potable water." Remember, kids: It's important to remain HIGH-drated. Presumably these pot-water bottles will be labeled and thirsty customers will need to be carded before making a purchase.)

We're happy to report that the cafe at the Berkeley Bowl in West Berkeley is already a jump ahead of Heinekin. There were four specialty brews on tap at the coffee counter this week including Lavender Lemonade and "Cannabliss."

Lest there be any mistake, a nearby card touted the benefits of toking CBD (Cannabidiol) via a tasty beverage. According to the signage, CBD is an antidote for fatigue, pain, schizophrenia, anxiety, depression, and nausea and it also "fights cancer, may treat seizures, lowers incidence of diabetes, and promotes cardiovascular health." 

What Was that Word Again? 

KCBS offers a daily "Commute Cash" contest wherein a common, every-day word is announced on-air and listeners are invited to text the word to KCBS for a chance to win $1,000 in a nationwide contest. 

On Friday, July 20, the word was "school." On Thursday, July 19, the word was "habit." But on Wednesday, July 18, the contest took a disturbing turn when the female newscaster announced that the chosen word was . . . "Terror." 

First thought: Could this have been part of some kind of secretive, government-sponsored mass-media psychological experiment? 

Favorite Quote of the Week 

"As one reporter pointed out: 'Now Trump's campaign chairman, national security adviser, and personal lawyers are all admitted or convicted felons.' So much for draining the swamp." -- Nancy Pelosi 

WarSpeech Watch 

On August 21, Robert Cruickshank, the Senior Campaign Manager at Democracy for America "fired off" a "targeted message" to his email audience. The subject line read: 

"Elizabeth Warren just dropped a bombshell." 

Trumpty Dumpty Sat on a Wall… 

Faced with his lawyer's testimony that hush-money was paid to a porn star and a Playboy bunny, Donald Trump has gone from denying that he knew anything about the buy-off to confessing on Fox & Friends that, yes, the hush-money "came from me." He pointed out that this admission would exonerate him from charges of violating campaign financing laws. 

Moving from "didn't happen" to "didn't know it happened" to "didn't pay" to "paid but it wasn't illegal" covers a lot of wiggle room. 

I'm anticipating that Trump's next fall-back position will be to grudgingly admit his guilt—but in a classic self-referential statement: "Frankly, everyone makes mistakes. Nobody is perfect. But, believe me, I'm the most imperfect person you've ever met. I make the best mistakes. Nobody makes mistakes better than me, that I can tell you!" 

Trump's Space Force Farce 

Mike Pence recently test-launched Donald Trump's Space Force farce, calling it "an idea whose time has come." But Pence's use of the Fear Card (citing "a new generation of threats to our people, to our nation") ignores history. 

The US was the first country to plot the militarization of space. In 1959, the Pentagon's "Project Horizon" proposed building a military base on the moon. In 1985, the US was the first nation to attack and destroy a satellite in orbit. 

China has 57 military satellites in orbit. Russia has 83. The US has 157. 

In January 2018, the US refused to join China and Russia in signing a treaty to assure the "Prevention of an Arms Race in Outer Space." 

The Pentagon—which has been unable to win wars on Earth—now wants to toss additional tax-dollars into the black hole of space. Specifically, Trump wants $8 billion to kick-start his new Military-Celestial-Complex. 

Note to the Mike Pence and the White House: Peaceful, freedom-loving nations don't wish to "dominate": that is the core verb favored by totalitarian military dictatorships. 

We're Doomed… I Mean "Domed" 

Now that Donald Trump has called for a Space Force—armed with arsenals of costly orbital weaponry—I think I know what his new 2020 presidential campaign promise will be (assuming he's not impeached, indicted, or otherwise dispatched in the meantime): 

"Forget the Wall. If we want to keep the aliens out, we need to build a big beautiful Dome over the entire country!" 

And he will promise to make the Martians pay for it. 

Donald Trump Channels James Garner 

I just saw a quote from Der Trump that suggests the Reprimander-In-Chief is not only a narcissist and a misogynist but a plagiarist, as well. 

"Money was never a big motivation for me, except as a way to keep score," Donald J. Trump likes to brag. "The real excitement is playing the game.

Well, it turns out that line appears in a 1963 movie called The Wheeler Dealers in which James Garner declares: "You do it for fun. Money's just the way you keep score." (Film note: "James Garner scores big as Henry, a flimflammer who lands in New York City after his Texas oil well comes a duster.") 

Two other Big Money notables apparently used this quote well before Trump: 

"Money is just a way of keeping score." -- H. L. Hunt 

"Life is a game. Money is how we keep score." -- Ted Turner 

Snapp Decisions 

I rarely visit Facebook but recently I found a note from long-time East Bay journalist/columnist Martin Snapp who announced: 

"Making end-of-life decisions and considering cremation because it's cheaper than burial. Can anyone recommend either a) a good, cheap cremation service or b) another alternative, like turning myself into a tree? Thanks." 

One friendly Facebook couple recommended donating your mortal remains to a medical school. "After a year, the cremated remains were returned, to do with as you wish." 

An SF-based writer offered a caveat: "I had an elderly uncle in New Jersey who just died (he was just short of 95). He tried to make arrangements for his body to be donated to science, as his wife's had been about 10 years ago. But they told him there is now a fee of $800 to donate the body! He opted out of THAT!" 

Former Chronicle columnist Jon Carroll modestly responded: "I'm not sure they want my body." 

And, wouldn't you know, the Facebook side-panel featured a prominent ad for a burial service. But it was kinda cool: "Better Place Forests are America's first spreading-forests. Instead of graves and tombstones, return the ashes of your loved one to the earth under a permanently protected, private family tree. Our first memorial forest is a redwood forest overlooking the Pacific Ocean in Mendocino County, CA." 

This left me wondering: Can you auction your corpse on eBay? In the meantime, I'm contemplating an after-life in a planter box. 

Couldn't Be Sweeter: Willie Brown Tweaks the Tweeter 

In his August 19, Sunday column, Willie Brown wrote: 

Trump says the press should not be reporting "fake news." . . . We could start with his endless tweets, which are sent out over the cable news channels as if they were the golden words of a supreme ruler, rather than what they really are, the childish blather of a sleep-deprived narcissist. 

Maybe we should also boycott Trump's appearances. At least until he gets his facts straight. 

Fair enough. Automatically passing along (and, thus, amplifying) Trump's Tweets is not the proper role of a free press. That isn't journalism: it's an unprofessional public relations exercise. 

Here's one deal the media could offer: No more automatic reprinting of Oval Office Tweets until Trump grows up, agrees to act "presidential," and submits to regular press conferences where he will respond directly to members of the media. 

The Tweeter Cheater Misses the Meter 

Following up on Willie's rant: Since Trump's 24-7 Tweetstorms already have a huge built-in audience, there's really no need for the press to repeat Trump's Tweets. 

As Trump himself Tweeted on June 16, 2017: "The Fake News Media hates it when I use what has turned out to be my very powerful Social Media—More than 100 million people! I can go around them." 

There's only problem: Trump doesn't have 100 million followers. A CNN check at the time found that Trump had only 32.4 million followers. In February 2018, only three celebrities had more than 100 million followers—Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, and (sorry, Donald) Barack Obama. 

More bad news. When it comes to the top 100 Twitter celebs, even when Trump was claiming 52 million followers, that only placed him in spot #18. Adding to the humiliation: Trump trailed CNN, which was ranked #17. 

In June 2018, Trump's Twitter-rep took another hit when 15 million of his alleged followers were deleted when it turned out they were fictitious accounts. (Would you call that "Fake Views"?) 

As Long as We're Renaming Football Teams…. 

I'm all for renaming the Washington Redskins but, while we're at it, how about addressing the Pentagon's grisly habit of naming military helicopters after indigenous Native American nations wantonly slaughtered by US Army troops? 

It's a long list: Apache, Arapaho, Black Hawk, Cayuse, Choctaw, Chinook, Comanche, Creek, Iroquois, Kiowa, Lakota, Mescalero, Mohawk, Navaho, Seminole, and Shawnee? 

And if Jeep wants to keep selling those Cherokee Chiefs, maybe they should offer a free SUV to anyone whose ancestors suffered through the "Trail of Tears"—a notorious forced march that sent the Cherokee Nation on a 1,000-mile trek from their ancestral homelands to new settlements in "Indian Territory," west of the Mississippi. 

Spoiler Alert 

I think I know why Kevin Spacey's latest (and probably last) film only brought in $126 in ticket sales on opening day. (That's like, what? Ten tickets sold nationwide?) 

Message to the Marketing Department: If you're going to feature a super-wealthy actor who's made headlines for being outed as a sexual abuser of young men, don't call your film . . . Billionaire Boys Club


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, Sept. 7-9

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday September 01, 2018 - 10:41:00 AM

Worth Noting: 

Summer vacations are over and City meetings are resuming. 

The Thursday, September 13, City Council is available for comment, email council@cityofberkeley.info, Agenda: Recess: item 2. Winter Shelter extension to Aug 31, Consent: 6.Uptima Business Bootcamp $120,000, 8. Fire Administration approve positions to enhance Fire Dept fire prevention services, billing, collection, grant writing, 9. Seek funding thru SB 840 for Homeless Mentally Ill Outreach and Treatment, 11.establish Resilient Buildings Program Manager, 12. Bay Trail extension, 13. 15 Dock Sections, 14. Central Library Stucco Demolition, 15. Consideration of Accessibility in ADU, 16. Filling Vacancies Human Welfare and Community Action Commission, 17. Live/Work Inclusionary Units, 18. Resolution to support enforcement and mitigate damages from removal of trees at 1698 University, 19. No change to Standards of Inverse Condemnation (Wildfires), Action: 21. Lobbyist Ordinance, 22. ADU Ordinance, 23. Eliminating parking from Berkeley Way Project, 24. Cannabis, 25. Disposition MOU between BPD and ICE. 26. a.&b. Vehicle Encampment, 27. Enforcement Policy Downtown Berkeley BART Plaza – no lying, camping, obstruction, etc. 28. Urban Forest and Wildlife Habitat Preservation, 29. Limiting Publishing Photos (doxing) of people arrested by BPD, 30. Green Monday, 31. Standby Officer Qualifications, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2018/09_Sep/City_Council__09-13-2018_-_Regular_Meeting_Agenda.aspx 

Future Events: 

There are events and forums planned before the Global Climate Action Summit (GCAS) (September 12 – 14) http://globalclimateactionsummit.org. including a forum on Tuesday September 11 with a very impressive list of international presenters. 

September 11 - Women’s Assembly for Climate Justice 1:00 pm – 8:30 pm, local and international leaders, free and open to the public, wecaninternational.org/pages/sept2018

 

Sunday, September 2, 2018 

No City Events found 

Monday, September 3, 2018 – Labor Day Holiday 

Tax the Rich rally with Occupella sing along – Mon, Sept 3, 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm top of Solano in front of closed Oaks Theater,  

Tuesday, September 4, 2018 

Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board – Special Workshop for Small Rental Property Owners, Tue, Sept 4, 6:00 - 7:30 pm, 1901 Russell St, Community Room, Tarea Hall Pittman South Branch Library 

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/rent/ 

Personnel Board, Tue, Sept 4, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: EEO Workforce Report 

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

Wednesday, September 5, 2018 

Commission on Disability, Wed, Sept 5, 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: 2. E-Scooter, 3. Zero Waste, 4. Elevator Ordinance, 5. HTF-RFP, 6. Relocation Ordinance,7. ADU and universal design, 8. bikes on sidewalks, 9. bike share, 10. universal design/visitability, 11. Alta Bates ADA compliance, 12. obstacles on sidewalks, 

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

Planning Commission, Wed, Sept 5, 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: 9. Student Housing in Southside, 10. Moderate Impact Home Occupation Regulations, https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Planning_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Thursday, September 6, 2018 

Housing Advisory Commission, Thur, Sept 6, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 2939 Ellis St, South Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: 5. Housing North Berkeley BART, 6. Annual Performance Report, 8. Relocation Ordinance, 9. Small Sites, 12. U1, Recommendation in support of Housing, Opportunity, Mobility, Equity (HOME) Act, 14. Satellite Affordable Housing, 15. Code Enforcement, 16. Housing Innovations Summit, 17. HAC recommendation 5th Street Properties, 18. Smoke-free Housing Ordinance, 19. Joint Subcommittee 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Housing_Advisory_Commission/ 

Landmarks Preservation Commission, Thur, Sept 6, 7:00 pm – 11:30 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: 

1920 Allston Way – continue review rehab, discussion 

2198 San Pablo - Demolition referral – discussion 

UC Upper Hearst Development project referral – Notice of Preparation 

1940 Haste – DRC referral, comments to ZAB on placement and renovation brown shingle, 

2355 Telegraph – signage alteration 

1450 Hawthorne Terrace – Landmark or Structure of Merit, Sperry-McLaughlin House and gardens 

1440 Hawthorne Terrace – Landmark or Structure of Merit, Marsh House 

1013 Pardee Street – list of potential initiations 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/landmarkspreservationcommission/ 

Public Works Commission, Thur, Sept 6, 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm, 1326 Allston Way, Willow Room, City of Berkeley Corporation Yard, Agenda Action Items: 1. Codornices Creek Maintenance, Watershed Management Plan, 2. 5 year paving plan, 3. T1, 5. T1 Green Infrastructure Project 

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

Zero Waste Commission, - Foodware Subcommittee, Thur, Sept 6, 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm, 2727 Milvia, Sports Basement, Agenda: 2. Intro by Mayor Jessie Arreguin, 3. Proposed Ordinance, 4. Public and Stakeholder Input 

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

Friday, September 7, 2018 

Movies in the Park- Lion King, Fri, Sept 7, 7:30 pm – 10:00 pm, San Pablo Park Sports Field, 

Saturday, September 8, 2018 

Rise for Climate March (National Day of Action for Climate), 10 :00 am San Francisco Embarcadero Plaza, 11:00 am March, https://peoplesclimate.org/takeaction 

Sunday, September 9, 2018 

Oakland Pride with Human Rights Campaign (HRC), Sun, Sept 9, 10:30 am – 7:00 pm, https://www.oaklandpride.org/ 

Solano Stroll, Sun, Sept 9, 10:00 am,  

https://www.solanoavenueassn.org/events/solano-avenue-stroll/ 

 

 

_____________________ 

 

The meeting list is posted in the Berkeley Daily Planet under Berkeley Activist’s Calendar 

www.berkeleydailyplanet.com 

 

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

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

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

Wish to engage in campaigns to flip Republican Congressional Districts, local, state and national events check Indivisible Berkeley https://www.indivisibleberkeley.org/actions and Wellstone Democratic Club, http://wellstoneclub.org 


The Berkeley Activist's Calendar

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday August 25, 2018 - 12:19:00 PM

Worth Noting:

Boards, Commissions and Council are still on August recess with few City meetings.

The emergency Homeless Shelter which houses 95 people per night at 9th and University closes after August 31. No new location has been identified.

On Monday the Agenda Committee reviews the proposed agenda for the first City Council meeting after summer recess

On Tuesday there will be community meeting on safety and the recent shooting at San Pablo Park.

Future Events:

There are events and forums planned before the Global Climate Action Summit (GCAS) (September 12 – 14) http://globalclimateactionsummit.org. There is a march on Saturday, September 8 and a forum on Tuesday September 11 with a very impressive list of international presenters.

September 8 - Rise for Climate March (National Day of Action for Climate), 10 am San Francisco https://peoplesclimate.org/takeaction

September 11 - Women’s Assembly for Climate Justice 1:00 pm – 8:30 pm, local and international leaders, free and open to the public, wecaninternational.org/pages/sept2018,



The LeConte Neighborhood is postponing the meeting on Traffic Circles and Peoples Park until the end of September.

 

Sunday, August 26, 2018 

Wellstone Club Endorsement Meeting for November 6 Election, Sun, Aug 26, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm, 390 27th Street, Oakland, Humanist Hall, Agenda: 15th Assembly District, Oakland and Berkeley City Government, State and Local Propositions, only (existing) current members may vote 

http://wellstoneclub.org/event/wellstone-club-endorsement-meeting-for-the-november-6th-election/ 

Monday, August 27, 2018 

Agenda Committee, Mon, Aug 27, 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm, 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor Redwood Conf Room, Agenda: Planning for Thursday, September 13, 2018 City Council Meeting, Consent Calendar: 6.Uptima Business Bootcamp $120,000, 11.establish Resilient Buildings Program Manager, 13. 12 Dock Sections, 14. Central Library Stucco Demolition, 15. Consideration of Accessibility in ADU, 16. Filling Vacancies Human Welfare and Community Action Commission, 17. Urban Forest and Habitat Preservation – preserving and adding trees, 18. Live/Work Inclusionary Units, 19. Green Monday, 20. Oppose S.3157 wireless infrastructure, 21. Standby Officers & Emergency Response Plan, 22. No change to Standards of Inverse Condemnation Wildfire Conf. Committee, 23. Mini-dorm ordinance, 24. Lobbyist Ordinance, 25. ADU Ordinance, 26. Parking Berkeley Way Project, 27. Cannabis, 28 a&b, Vehicle Encampment, 29. BART Plaza Enforcement Policy 

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

Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board – Eviction/Section 8/Foreclosure Committee Meeting, 5:30 pm, 2001 Center St, 2nd Floor Law Library 

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/rent/ 

Housing Advisory Commission – Student Housing Subcommittee, 12:00 pm, 2000 University Au Coquelet, Agenda: council referral on student housing and site selection 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Housing_Advisory_Commission/ 

Tax the Rich rally – Mon, Aug 27, 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm top of Solano in front of closed Oaks Theater,  

Tuesday, August 28, 2018 

Community Meeting on Recent Shooting and Safety at San Pablo Park, Tue, Aug 28, 2800 Park St, Frances Albrier Community Center 

 

Wednesday, August 29, 2018 

No City meetings found 

Thursday, August 30, 2018 

Ad-Hoc Sub-Committee on Climate Emergency, Thur, Aug 30, 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm, 2180 Milvia, 5th Floor, Pepperwood Room, Agenda: Forum debrief, next steps 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Adhoc_Committee_on_Climate_Emergency/ 

Friday, August 31, 2018 

No City meetings found 

Saturday, September 1, 2018 

No City events listed 

Sunday, September 2, 2018 

No City events listed 

 

 

_____________________ 

 

The meeting list is posted in the Berkeley Daily Planet under Berkeley Activist’s Calendar 

www.berkeleydailyplanet.com 

 

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

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

 

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

 

Wish to engage in campaigns to flip Republican Congressional Districts, local, state and national events check Indivisible Berkeley https://www.indivisibleberkeley.org/actions and Wellstone Democratic Club, http://wellstoneclub.org 


Wonderful Recordings of Lute Music

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Monday August 27, 2018 - 02:22:00 PM

During the 2018 Berkeley Early Music Festival & Exhibition in June, I took time to visit the Exhibition, where rare and unusual instruments were on display and available for musicians to try them out. While at the Exhibition, I was offered four compact discs of music for lute, all produced by Gamut Music. I was asked by the people from Gamut Music if I would review these discs. I replied that I’d be happy to review them but couldn’t promise when I’d have the time to do so. Well, now in the last days of August I am delighted to fulfill my promise.  

For lovers of lute music, these recordings are outstanding. The first CD I chose to listen to was entitled Canto y Danza, performed by Chambure Vihuela Quartet with Carrie Henneman Shaw. The vihuela, similar to a modern lute, developed out of waisted fiddles of the Middle Ages. In fifteenth century Spain, vihuelas (both bowed and plucked) were the favored string instrument of the Spanish nobility and high bourgeoisie. Today’s revival of the vihuela comes as a sideline of the renewed interest in music for the lute. The Chambure Vihuela Quartet performs on four vihuelas of differing sizes and tunings. Soprano Carrie Henneman Shaw is featured as vocalist on many of this CD’s pieces. The music is lively and gracious; and the recording is of outstanding technical quality. 

Indeed, in all four CDs by Gamut Music the technical quality of the recordings is remarkable for its clarity and immediacy. In a CD entitled Orynthology featuring the Venere Lute Quartet, music written by William Byrd, Thomas Tallis, Alfonso Ferrabosco, Thomas Morely, and John Dowland is heard. In a CD entitled Courante, 

French Baroque Lute Duets are performed by Edward Martin and Thomas Walker. The fourth CD is entitled Psyché and features 17th & 18th century lute music by French composers Ennemond “le Vieux” Gaultier, Jacques Gallot, and Robert le Visée, as well as pieces by German composer Sylvius Leopold Weiss. All four of these CDs are highly recommended for lovers of the lute (and the vihuela).


The 2018 Merola Grand Finale

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Sunday August 26, 2018 - 10:02:00 AM

Each year, the Merola Opera Program takes in a new class of young singers. In some years, the last two, for example, there is a bumper crop, and the Grand Finale concert at summer’s end features one standout performance after another. This year that is not exactly the case. At the Saturday, August 18 concert at War Memorial Opera House, the overall level of technical artistry on display was high, but the truly incendiary, standout performances were few and far between. This year’s Grand Finale program got under way with Dean Williamson conducting the San Francisco Opera Orchestra in a somewhat subdued rendition of the Overture to Rossini’s L’Italiana in Algeri. Director Marcus Shields employed a unit stage set throughout which consisted of a semicircle of what looked like boxes in an opera house, though two staircases led from ground level to the first tier of three. 

The first vocal number on the program was a duet from Mascagni’s L’amico Fritz, featuring mezzo-soprano Megan Grey as Beppe and tenor Brian Michael Moore as Fritz. Both singers acquitted themselves well. Next came another duet, this time from Berlioz’s Béatrice et Bénédict. Here we enjoyed the first standout performance, as mezzo-soprano Simone McIntosh was a vivacious and vocally splendid Béatrice. On the other hand, tenor Zhengyi Bai was merely adequate as Bénédict. Following this number was soprano Patricia Westley singing “Care compagne…” from Bellini’s La Sonnambula. I expected great things from Patricia Westley, for she had stolen the show as Elisa in Mozart’s Il Re Pastore earlier in Merola’s Summer Season. However, though she handled Bellini’s difficult coloratura quite handily, Patricia Westley’s voice lacked power and failed to project sufficiently. That was not the case, however, for soprano Brittany Nickell who was a powerful Magda in a scene from Puccini’s La Rondine. Brittany Nickell as Magda was one of the highlights of the concert. She also had a bit part as Gräfin in a duet from Richard Strauss’s Capriccio, though the featured singer in this was tenor Christopher Oglesby as Flamand. Oglesby, who earlier in Merola’s Summer Season sang the role of Tom Rakewell in Stravinsky’s The Rake’s Progress, gave a good performance here as Flamand.  

I don’t quite know what to say about South Korean tenor WooYoung Yoon, except to say that he needs a great deal of vocal coaching. Earlier this summer, in a duet from Bizet’s Les Pêcheurs de perles, WooYoung Yoon repeatedly mispronounced the French word “déesse.” Now, singing Tonio’s “Ah, mes amis” from Donizetti’s la Fille du régiment, WooYoung Yoon repeatedly sang the wrong word, substituting the English word “in” for the French word “à” in the phrase “militaire à Paris.” Given the excellent vocal coaching offered by the Merola staff, I can only conclude that WooYoung Yoon’s language facility is sorely lacking, and he apparently doesn’t listen to what he is taught. Oh, and by the way, the nine high C’s he was supposed to sing in this aria were cut short due to shortness of breath, which destroyed the rhythm of the aria and brought it to a sudden halt. In spite of all these shortcomings, he got a good round of applause from the audience, perhaps taking the difficulty of this aria into consideration and rewarding his effort. (I did not join in the applause.) 

In the role of Dinah in Leonard Bernstein’s Trouble in Tahiti, mezzo-soprano Alexandra Urquiola sang well enough, though the role didn’t really offer much opportunity to showcase her voice. However, baritone SeokJong Baek was outstanding as Cascart in the aria “Zazà, piccolo zingara,” from Leoncavallo’s Zazà. Mezzo-soprano Ann McGuire was an adequate Principessa de Bouillon from Cilea’s Adriana Lecouvreur. The first half of the concert concluded with a standout duet from soprano Marlen Nahhas as Elisabetta and tenor Christopher Colmenero as Carlo from Verdi’s Don Carlo.  

After intermission, soprano Kendra Berentsen was excellent as Thaïs in the aria “Ah, je suis seule… Dis-moi que je suis belle.” This was another of the highlights of the concert. Later, bass-baritone Ted Allen Pickell gave a capable but uninspired rendition of Athaniel’s aria “Voilà donc la terrible cité,” also from Thaïs. Tenor Charles Sy sang an aria from Rossini’s rarely heard Otello. Baritone Xiaomeng Zhang was excellent as Ulisse in the aria “Dormo ancora?” from Monteverdi’s Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria. Tenor Addison Marlor gave a fine account of an aria from Smetana’s rarely heard Prodaná Nevěstna; and soprano Cheyanne Coss teamed up with baritone Jacob Scharfman in a duet from Donizetti’s Don Pasquale. Baritone Andrew Moore sang Papageno, and soprano Patricia Westley sang Papagena in their recognition scene from Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte. Perhaps the vocal highlight of the evening was provided by soprano Meigui Zhang who beautifully sang the role of Gilda in a number from Verdi’s Rigoletto, which also featured a fine performance from baritone Jaeman Yoon as the vengeful jester. The 2018 Merola Grand Finale concluded with all the Merolini joining to sing “Già che il caso ci unisce…Bevo al tuo fresco sorriso,” from Puccini’s La Rondine.