The Week

 

News

Spectacular Eifman Ballet from St. Petersburg at Zellerbach Friday to Sunday

Ken Bullock
Thursday May 30, 2019 - 03:23:00 PM

Cal Performances closes its 2018-19 season by featuring the spectacular Eifman Ballet of St. Petersburg with 'The Pygmalion Effect,' four performances from Friday at 8 through Saturday (2 & 8) to Sunday at 3. -more-


Theater Review & Preview of Festival--'Orphelin 2.0' by Effervescent Théâtre de la Feuille of Hong Kong at the Ongoing San Francisco International Arts Festival

Ken Bullock
Thursday May 30, 2019 - 03:23:00 PM

A bright, energetic theater troupe from Hong Kong, Théâtre de la Feuille, performed their own updated version of the ancient Chinese story 'The Orphan of Zhao' with brilliant mime and acrobatic ensemble work, all in the service of a fine, crystalized sense of storytelling, to open the first full weekend of two for the San Francisco International Arts Festival at Fort Mason on San Francisco's northern waterfront. -more-


Joshua Bell, Steven Isserliss, & Jeremy Denk Perform Trios

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Saturday May 25, 2019 - 03:04:00 PM

Longtime partners Joshua Bell on violin, Steven Isserliss on cello, and Jeremy Denk on piano were reunited Sunday, May 12 for a program of trios under the aegis of San Francisco Symphony at Davies Hall. Featured in this concert were Felix Mendelssohn’s Trio No. 1 in D minor, Opus 49, (1839); Dmitri Shostakovich’s Trio No. 2 in E minor, Opus 67 (1944); Sergei Rachmaninoff’s Trio élégiaque No. 1 in G minor (1892); and Maurice Ravel’s Trio in A minor (1914). Apart from Beethoven’s great “Ghost” and “Archduke” Trios, as well as Schubert’s E-flat Trio, this current program offered what might be called the cream of the crop in trio writing. -more-


Complete video of May 15, 2019 Teach-in at Brower Center, sponsored by Heyday

Harold Adler, videographer
Friday May 24, 2019 - 04:59:00 PM

The footage was shot by Harold Adler, impresario of The Art House Gallery and Cultural Center in Berkeley and longtime photographer and videographer. Link below: -more-


SB 50 - The More HOMES Act

Liat Zavodivker
Wednesday May 22, 2019 - 04:42:00 PM

I am 35 years old and I still live in a rental unit because I graduated into a recession and can not afford the financial risk of home buying. My rent controlled, seismically questionable unit built in 1966 was market rate and is now it is renting for $3000. Year over year of doing nothing has caused the rents to exceed inflation, and the next set of wildfires in California will make this problem even more dire. I have seen many affordable projects get scrapped or delayed due to local control and it's heartbreaking. We must tell exclusionary cities such as Beverly Hills, Palo Alto, and La Cañada-Flintridge to build more homes. It is time to end the era of expensive, luxury single family homes being the dominant type of structure in California and to embrace characters and not neighborhood character. We can not move forward in California or take any leadership in progressive movements until we have ensured a future for the younger people growing up in California. That means increasing the capacity to build affordable and market rate homes near transit. I hope Senator Atkins can bring SB50 to the floor without any more delay so that we can build more homes. -more-


On Working With and Working Against – Open Letter to the Mayor and City Counci

Steve Martinot
Wednesday May 22, 2019 - 04:02:00 PM

Somehow it seems that when we (the people) attempt to participate in making policy for this city, and we point out things that are not quite kosher, or that seem to impose something extraneous, or even perhaps nefarious, something that doesn’t seem to arise from the lives of city’s residents, someone in government will say to us, “Don’t work against us, work with us.” Do you have any idea how hypocritical that sounds? -more-


Berkeley's KPFA is a Private Radio Club

Doug Buckwald
Wednesday May 22, 2019 - 04:37:00 PM

The program hosts at KPFA (94.1 FM) in Berkeley are in the midst of another fundraising drive. They aren't doing well; they are still hundreds of thousands of dollars short of their goal with only a few days left. So, their calls for donations are becoming more strident. -more-


Response to UC Berkeley's People's Park Development Update

Thomas Lord
Tuesday May 21, 2019 - 03:54:00 PM

These criminals must be stopped. Their deceit should not be allowed to stand.

Lizardo glosses over, here, the fact that (like Blackwell Hall), the student housing they hope to build will be privately developed and operated for profit. In other words, they plan a theft of public land and a perpetual gouging of students.

The not-for-profit component Lizardo mentions -- "supportive housing" -- will apparently be by a conventional non-profit developer using low income tax credits. That is a slippery way of saying that the supportive housing will ALSO be a theft of public land to provide perpetual private profit (to the tax credit bond holders and lenders). -more-


People's Park Development Update

Ruben Lizardo, Director, Local Government and Community Relations, Office of the Chancellor
Tuesday May 21, 2019 - 02:02:00 PM

At the Le Conte meeting & forum held last Autumn, I mentioned that the campus efforts at People's Park would pick up with the hiring of several leaders in our Capital Strategies Group and subsequent steps they will take identify and secure our development partners.

Michelle Starratt, who has a lot of experience working on affordable housing in the Bay Area through the Alameda County Housing and Community Development, was hired to serve as our Director of Housing Development and Leasing. She is taking the lead on all the housing projects that were identified in the Student Housing Task Force Report the campus released about two years ago. As such she will be the principal leader of the development project at People's Park.

One of the first steps in all of this to identify and select a Non-Profit Developer that will partner with university on the development of the Supportive Housing Component of the multi-faceted development project at People's Park. See the attached the RFQ for more details of the role the Non Profit Developer will play.

The public planning process for the Supportive Housing Component and the other elements of project (smaller park, student housing, commemoration of the park's history) will be get underway once the NonProfit Developer is on board. As I mentioned at the forum, the campus planning process for development projects will include opportunities for community input and review by city staff and leaders.

(Please direct any replies directly to Ruben via email or phone.)

Ruben Lizardo

Director, Local Government and Community Relations
Office of the Chancellor
510-643-5296 Office
-more-


Good Samaritan faces 20 years in prison

Tejinder Uberoi
Tuesday May 21, 2019 - 12:47:00 PM

On 17 January 2018, US Border Patrol agents arrested Dr. Scott Warren, a 36-year old Human Rights Defender and humanitarian aid volunteer with an organization called “No More Deaths.” His crime - coming to the rescue of two undocumented migrants providing them with humanitarian aid in the desert town of Ajo, where he lives. He faces up to 20 years in prison, if convicted on all charges. The arrest came hours after the release of a report documenting the willful destruction by border agents of humanitarian aid supplies at the USA–Mexico border areas. His trial begins on 29 May 2019. I ask concerned readers to demand all criminal charges be dropped and the immediate release of this Good Samaritan so he can continue his vital humanitarian work. Please send an email to Mr. Michael Bailey, United States Attorney, District of Arizona, United States Courthouse 405 W. Congress Street, Suite 4800 Tucson, Arizona 85701 - Email Michael.bailey@usdoj.gov -more-


Measles Exposure at Berkeley Bowl

Annie Steuart (BCN)
Sunday May 19, 2019 - 09:51:00 PM

The city of Berkeley announced Friday that a resident has contracted measles.

While the person is no longer contagious, city officials have advised anyone who visited Berkeley Bowl at 2020 Oregon St. May 7 from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. who is not immune to look for the first stage of symptoms: runny nose, red eyes, cough, and fever. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Round Up The Usual Liberals

Becky O'Malley
Friday May 24, 2019 - 05:43:00 PM

Received from a friend who lived many years in the Bay Area, but now lives in North Carolina:

“You might want to take this guy on.

From the New York Times:

America’s Cities Are Unlivable. Blame Wealthy Liberals.
The demise of a California housing measure shows how progressives abandon progressive values in their own backyards.

Here’s the link she sent to the story, which was posted online on May 22 but just appeared in my print paper this morning, May 24:

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/22/opinion/california-housing-nimby.html

The title of the print version is even dumber than the online original: Nimby Liberals Make Cities Unlivable.

Don’t bother to try to comment on the Times site, because comments are already closed, with a sizable majority branding the piece as nonsense. You’re welcome to submit your rants instead to opinion@berkeleydailyplanet.com.

This op-ed is part of a long tradition in Manhattan-based publications of viewing California from the perspective of the old New Yorker magazine’s Map of the World as Seen from 9th Avenue. To this we can now add “Map of the Bay area as Seen from Silicon Valley”, in the perspective of one Farhad Manjoo, who for many years produced sycophantic coverage of the latest Valley tech gimcracks for the Times, but has now graduated to doing gee-whiz op-eds on other topics. -more-


The Editor's Back Fence

Planet Vacation Continues

Becky O'Malley
Sunday May 19, 2019 - 08:37:00 AM

We're still on break here, but some valued contributors have sent good things, so I've posted at least some of them. See you soon! -more-


Public Comment

Building Peace in People's Park

Carol Denney
Friday May 24, 2019 - 05:08:00 PM
Smith-Fernwald dorm site

On May 8th of 1978 the University of California's Associate Vice Chancellor for Business Affairs J. H. (Ted) Chenoweth signed a Letter of Agreement with People's Park's neighbors, gardeners, project participants and users affirming the use of the park as "primarily reserved for educational, research and recreational purposes." It included a suggested mechanism for disputes resolution, maintenance, and additional issues. It was the first of three agreements over 1978 to 1979. In his outgoing letter to Vice Chancellor Kerley, Chenoweth stated "I expect to remain active as a member of the People's Park Council" to assist with "communication and coordination." He is not the only original signer who lives nearby, ready to assist with a framework for the park's future. -more-


Open Letter to the New York Times

Alfred Crofts
Friday May 24, 2019 - 04:50:00 PM

Editor, New York Times:

The opinion piece by your recent appointment to the editorial section, Mr. Manjoo, misses the point entirely in his support for SB 50.

The housing crisis in California is caused by gross imbalance in high paying tech jobs overwhelming the area’s resources. Normal incomes simply can’t compete with tech salaries. -more-


U.C's. Authoritarianism vs. People's Park Participatory Democracy

Harry Brill.
Friday May 24, 2019 - 04:54:00 PM

I hope you read the recent Planet article by Thomas Lord for exposing the basis of UC Berkeley's antagonism to People's Park. As he noted, the University is quite willing to hurt students and people generally to exploit public land for private gain. The University claims it wants to build housing for students in People's Park. But as Lord reminds UC there are plenty of other spaces on the campus to provide student housing. -more-


Housing at North Berkeley & Ashby BART Stations Should be 100% Green and Affordable.

BCA Steering Committee
Friday May 24, 2019 - 05:33:00 PM

The letter below was sent to Berkeley City Council members:

The BCA Steering Committee is writing you to support plans to develop affordable housing on Berkeley's BART stations and minimize the carbon footprint of these dwellings.

The for-profit housing market has built and continues to build abundant market-rate housing in Berkeley. However, in many cases, this market-rate housing is not housing Berkeley’s residents but is rented out as short term housing. -more-


Trump, a Clear & Present Danger

Tejinder Uberoi
Friday May 24, 2019 - 05:30:00 PM

The President acting the role of “bad cop” warned North Korea with nuclear destruction, boasting about “a fury like the world has never seen”. Excited by the possibility of being nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize, if he could reach a peace accord, the President abruptly changed his role to “good cop,” claiming he and the North Korean leader were “in love” but sadly Kim Jong-un rebuffed his advances. -more-


Save Our Historic Downtown

Carol Denney
Sunday May 19, 2019 - 08:20:00 AM

"Signs are an extremely visible part of the streetscape, and should reflect the quality of goods and services begin offered Downtown. They should communicate an image of excellence, distinctive craftsmanship, and creativity, and should reinforce the unique and historic character to Downtown." --City of Berkeley Sign Ordinance

The city's sign ordinance is a monument to an earlier commitment to avoiding garish flashing, blinking, ugly signage warring with an historic downtown. Which is why Mayor Jesse Arreguin decided to exempt the IKE "wayfinding" digital kiosks from the entire ordinances careful restrictions and design review. They look like giant cell phones, taller than a human being, they require ripping up the sidewalks wherever they are installed, it takes two years to "uninstall" them by contract if merchants are unhappy with them, and your only opportunity to "provide input" regarding their placement is next Thursday at 11:00 am at the Brower Center, a time when most merchants, workers, and residents are otherwise occupied.

Write to the city manager and express concern (manager@cityofberkeley.info) if tearing up the sidewalks is not your idea of an appropriate use of scarce public funds. We're supposed to have a say in the location of these monstrous giant flashing cell phone-like monoliths, and my personal request is the 4th Street Denny Abrams plan - just say no. Apparently the city has decided to agree to leave 4th Street out of this electronic, data-mining imposition. Speak up for your downtown and your nearby commercial district and ask for the Denny Abrams plan. In the meantime consider that, for instance, in the historic town of Raleigh, North Carolina, the citizens just flatly said no. Other towns did the same, for aesthetic reasons or because data- mining is just, well, at least rude.

And if a sizeable amount of us are honestly so lost that we require (despite having a lot of cell phones around) "wayfinding", I would suggest a magical technological innovation: a map. -more-


The Immigration Issue & The Politics of Deceit

Harry Brill
Sunday May 19, 2019 - 08:14:00 AM

It is certainly a challenging problem for progressives on how to address the gap between themselves and conservatives. The difficulty is not just due to the immense ideological differences. Progressives have to confront the considerable deception employed by many conservatives. -more-


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE: Joe Biden’s Presidential Strategy

Bob Burnett
Friday May 24, 2019 - 05:17:00 PM

On April 25th, former Vice-President Joe Biden launched his 2020 presidential campaign. On May 18th, Biden gave his first campaign address in Philadelphia (http://www.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/1905/18/cnr.05.html), making clear what his strategy will be. His campaign is not policy based, it is personality based. Joe has taken the role of the anti-Trump. -more-


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Our Faculties

Jack Bragen
Friday May 24, 2019 - 05:09:00 PM

People with psychiatric disabilities cannot take for granted that we will always have our full faculties. While most people seem to assume their minds aren't playing tricks on them or failing them in other ways, people with mental illness cannot make that assumption, for numerous reasons. -more-


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Sunday May 26, 2019 - 10:32:00 AM

Weed Culture Goes Straight

We knew this day would come, 'way back in the Sixties. That was when the Underground Press revealed a major tobacco company had taken out a patent on the name "Acapulco Gold" (a widely popular variety of pot). Now, in the Tens of a New Century, we have alternative weeklies that are filled with pot news and weed ads celebrating the availability of a growing range of commercial marijuana products.

Even so, a recent two-page spread in the East Bay Express has raised the bar for ad firms working to engage new customers with targeted print media "pot spots." The pioneering hippies and potheads of yesterday would surely be appalled, but there it was: A photo of a clean-shaven, white Millennial, dressed in a neatly pressed business shirt and tie, contemplating a well-rolled reefer clamped firmly in his right hand. The high-minded ad copy read:

"Smoke for the job you want… Not the one you have.

Unlock your creativity with our CBD-rich daytime flowers, designed to get you into that successful headspace without the overwhelming high."

So forget that cup of morning Joe and dispense with the post-work mug of brew.

It you want to succeed in today's competitive business world, just inhale, get high, and get hired!

-more-


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Sunday May 19, 2019 - 09:18:00 PM

PG&E Profiteering

California Public Utility Commissioner Michael Picker and CPUC spokeswoman, Terrie Prosper recently laid down some bad news: If PG&E is allowed to burden customers with the estimated $30 billion in liability costs for the 2017 wildfires linked to the company's equipment failures, we can expect average utility rates to rise by $25 per month.

Here's why: In the aftermath of the company's declaration of bankruptcy, many PG&E stockholders are starting to move their investments elsewhere. So, in order to "encourage investors" to provide PG&E with more capital, the CPUC has proposed raising the guaranteed return on equity to stockholders from 10.25% to 16%. To many, it looks like more evidence that the CPUC is in the pocket of PG&E. -more-


ECLECTIC RANT: State Anti-Abortion Laws

Ralph E. Stone
Sunday May 19, 2019 - 08:24:00 AM

Alabama became the eleventh state to pass anti-abortion legislation. Now eleven of the 22 states with both a Republican governor and legislature have passed anti-abortion laws. I expect it to be eventually 22 of 22. -more-


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: What it Feels Like to Take Antipsychotics for 35 Years

Jack Bragen
Sunday May 19, 2019 - 08:16:00 AM

In my first months of taking antipsychotic medication, in 1982, the side effects made me incredibly miserable. I took Stelazine and then Prolixin. The dosages at the time were not huge, yet, it was bad enough that it resembled a chemical straitjacket. -more-


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, May 26-June 2

Kelly Hammargren
Saturday May 25, 2019 - 10:33:00 AM

Worth Noting and Showing Up:

Tuesday – 2:30 pm Agenda Planning committee for June 11 City Council meeting and 6:00 pm City Council Regular meeting

Wednesday – 6:30 pm Adeline Corridor Draft Plan presentation

Saturday and Sunday – 16th Berkeley World Music Festival noon – 8:00 pm



Sunday, May 26, 201

Roses in Bloom Acoustical Series, 3 – 5 pm at Rose Garden

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/CalendarEventMain.aspx?calendarEventID=16112

Monday, May 27, 2019

Memorial Day Holiday

Tax the Rich Rally, with music by Occupella, 5 – 6 pm at the Top of Solano in front of the Closed Oaks Theater, Rain Cancels -more-


Peter Sellars & Los Angeles Master Chorale Present Orlando di Lasso’s LAGRIME DI SAN PIETRO

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Sunday May 19, 2019 - 08:29:00 AM

Orlando di Lasso (1532-1594) was a prolific and renowned composer in the international style of Renaissance polyphony. So international was this style that Orlando di Lasso himself was known by several versions of his name: He was called Roland de Lassus in French, Orlando di Lasso in Italian, and Orlando Lassus in Latin. Born in what is now Belgium, he seems to have traveled to Italy early in life; and in his early twenties he worked for Ferrante Gonzaga of Mantua, traveling with his patron to Sicily and Milan. He also worked in Naples and Rome, serving as maestro di capella in Rome’s St. John Lateran Church in 1555-6. Then he went to Munich, where he resided at the court of Duke Albrecht V of Bavaria, whose family he served as a singer-composer for over thirty years. -more-


The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, May 19-26

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Sunday May 19, 2019 - 08:07:00 AM

Worth Noting:

SATURDAY AND SUNDAY - Himalayan Fair – CANCELED DUE TO RAIN

Monday Malcolm X is a City Holiday. The rest of the week is packed.

Tuesday evening – At 7 pm two meetings Wildfire Preparedness at Northbrae Church and Adeline Corridor Plan Presentation at South Berkeley Senior Center

Wednesday evening – 5 pm Redesign of the Transfer Station (Recycling Center) and I-80 Interchange at 6:30 pm

Thursday afternoon – 2 pm City Council Budget and Finance Committee – proposed budget FY 2020 & FY 2021

Saturday afternoon – 2 pm, If you missed the May 14 presentation on Fire Evacuation, it is repeated May 25.



Sunday, May 19, 2019

Himalayan Fair – CANCELED DUE TO RAIN

Roses in Bloom Acoustical Series, 3 – 5 pm at Rose Garden – no notice of cancellation yet

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/CalendarEventMain.aspx?calendarEventID=16112

Monday, May 20, 2019 – Malcolm X Day City Holiday

Tax the Rich Rally, with music by Occupella, 5 – 6 pm at the Top of Solano in front of the Closed Oaks Theater, Rain Cancels

Tuesday, May 21, 2019 -more-