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A panoramic photo of the El Cerrito trailer camp in 1944 ran across the top of the Berkeley Gazette’s second section. Here’s part of the view, with Albany Hill in the right rear background.
Berkeley Daily Gazette, July 1944
A panoramic photo of the El Cerrito trailer camp in 1944 ran across the top of the Berkeley Gazette’s second section. Here’s part of the view, with Albany Hill in the right rear background.
 

News

Kalil Wilson & Friends, Friday Jazz Vocals at the Sound Room in Uptown Oakland

Ken Bullock
Thursday July 25, 2019 - 05:14:00 PM

Brilliant jazz singer Kalil Wilson, a North Oakland native, will perform swinging standards, ballads and original songs from his new album 'Time Stops,' this Friday, 8 to 11 p. m. backed by his trio--Grant Levin on piano, Aidan McCarthy on bass and drum prodigy Genius Wilson--at The Sound Room, 2147 Broadway at 22nd Street, Oakland, a block north of the Paramount Theatre and 19th Street BART. Tickets: $20-$25 at www.soundroom.org or (510) 496-4180.


Murder of Eric Garner

Jagjit Singh
Monday July 22, 2019 - 01:13:00 PM

The failure of the Justice Department to charge the arresting officer with aggravated assault, or possibly murder by strangulation, and the female NYPD sergeant, Kizzy Adonim, for not interceding, is profoundly disturbing. There appears to be two sets of police guidelines, one for non-whites and a much milder version for whites. It’s hard to believe a white man would have suffered the same horrible fate as Eric Garner lying face on the pavement. Garner’s offense, - selling cigarettes to earn money for himself and his family. A quiet conversation to deescalate the situation would have resulted in a very different outcome. Garner gasping for breath, cried out “I can’t breathe 11 times” before he fell unconscious. “I can’t breathe” become a rallying cry for activists demanding justice. Garner was not armed and imposed no threat. 

Police guidelines need to be changed. How can the same set of rules be used for subduing an unnamed man selling cigarettes and a dangerous criminal toting a gun threatening to harm the public? Garner was guilty of a very minor offense. The police could have imposed a small fine much like handing a traffic ticket. If a social worker were present there is little doubt the “public nuisance crime” could easily have been averted and Garner would be alive today. African-Americans are severely handicapped by lack of access to education and job training. This travesty demands immediate action.


Climate Science Course Offered

Thomas Lord
Monday July 22, 2019 - 01:05:00 PM

In light of how Council has been discussing greenhouse gas emissions and the climate and ecological emergency, I am challenging all Councilmembers to join me in taking an upcoming online course in the essentials of current, up-to-date climate science as of 2019. This self-paced course will be taught by Michael Mann, a graduate of Cal and Princeton, an internationally famous climate scientist known for documenting a global temperature record covering the past 1,000 years - showing extremely strong proof that our burning of fossil fuels has caused an unprecedented disaster (the "hockey stick" graph). 

You can see details about the course, including a 2 minute video introduction, here. You can also sign up here:

https://sdgacademy.org/course/climate-change-the-science-and-global-impact/ 

To audit the course is free (but requires registration). I would encourage you to join me in signing up ($50) for the option of working towards a certification. This option allows you to have your homework graded, to test for your own benefit your understanding. There are 8 modules in the course; each is estimated to take 4-6 hours to complete. And again: the course is self-paced. You will have a whole year to complete it to be eligible for a certificate. 

As people who help to form public policy, each of us has a duty above and beyond just this course. In this course we'll learn the urgency of reducing emissions, immediately, from today's levels, and by a large amount. But it is up to us, as public servants, to struggle with what the science implies for the specific situation of Berkeley, of the region, of the economy, and of our way of life. It is our responsibility to learn these things and tell the truth to the larger public, and then to *act as if the truth is real*, as climate activists are putting it these days.

On tonight's second reading of the eventual ban on natural gas in new buildings, I'll leave you with this:

Q. How many tons of CO₂ equivalent emissions will this item reduce Berkeley's emissions compared to today's level?

A. 0 (zero). None at all. It is not a meaningful response to the urgency of the emergency that we face. 

I think what was missed last Tuesday was the opportunity for Council to help educate your constituents about the real and present emergency. By analogy: If we were in the throes of an earthquake, with people trapped in rubble, with supplies so endangered that deaths might amplify in coming days -- you would not be crowing for the TV cameras about improvements to the building code. You would not pretend you were responding to the emergency with such stuff. Yet in the context of climate, you sit in a burning building and crow about your thoughts on improving fire safety someday.


Is this MANly true?

Mary Kieffer
Monday July 22, 2019 - 12:59:00 PM

To the citizen’s [sic] of Berkley [sic]; It is all over social media your city government decided to emasculate the words like “manhole” to maintenance hole. Is this true? Did you really convene and decide the term “manhole” was offensive?? Really?? If not, please clear the air so that we-the rest of the country or the sane part of the country stop making fun of you. I’m just sure there are normal hard working adults in this town. I’m sure someone there is shaking their heads saying “please God, not another black eye.”. 

If you did indeed spend time and money to do this, what the heck were you thinking? My Lord, have you had too much dope, sunshine, artificial flavors in the dorito’s [sic] to realize just how stupid you look to the rest of the world? Are you wanting to be the laughing stock of the world? Anyway I was just wondering and thought also you need to know how batshit crazy y’all sound.


Local Housing Crisis in the 1940s Was Met with a Trailer Park Project - It Worked

Steven Finacom
Friday July 19, 2019 - 10:39:00 AM
A panoramic photo of the El Cerrito trailer camp in 1944 ran across the top of the Berkeley Gazette’s second section. Here’s part of the view, with Albany Hill in the right rear background.
Berkeley Daily Gazette, July 1944
A panoramic photo of the El Cerrito trailer camp in 1944 ran across the top of the Berkeley Gazette’s second section. Here’s part of the view, with Albany Hill in the right rear background.

You often here people refer to the current housing shortage in Berkeley as “Berkeley’s worst housing crisis ever”. That’s probably not so. An arguably worse crisis was during World War II when the East Bay was flooded with war industry workers and, because of wartime material shortages and rationing, it was hard to get either construction materials or approval to build new housing. 

In addition to war workers at that time Berkeley was temporarily housing refugees from other countries, the spouses and families of servicemen who were based in the Bay Area—or had shipped out to the Pacific from here—and large numbers of men from the Armed Forces who were either passing through or temporally assigned here for training or active duty. 

There were repeated calls for residents to open up their homes to renters, make their spare bedrooms available, and convert houses into boarding quarters. There was even, in 1942, some possibility rumored that the Federal government might order non-essential residents to temporarily move out of the city so war workers could use their homes (nothing came of that, of course). 


So from about 1941 to the late 1940s there was a huge local housing crunch. One of the suggestions made at the time was to provide spaces to temporarily park trailers where newcomers, particularly war workers, could live. 

For example, in October 1942 a local businessman, G.A. Beukers, made a serious proposal to the City Council “to convert the entire length of Sacramento Street center parking lot from Alcatraz Avenue to Hopkins Street into a trailer camp.” (Berkeley Daily Gazette, October 20, 1942). 

At that time the Sacramento median was asphalt and dirt—a former rail right of way—not landscaped as it is today. He suggested that the City could earn as much as $45,000 from renting the space. 

Official Berkeley turned thumbs down to the idea of a temporary linear “trailer camp” on Sacramento Street, in part because there was fear that people living in trailers would bring unsanitary conditions and crime, and their presence would lower property values. 

Sort of like some of the arguments against recreational vehicle living in Berkeley’s housing crisis today. 

So Berkeley didn’t experiment in the 40s with a trailer park, temporary or otherwise. 

But neighboring El Cerrito did. A dog racing park east of San Pablo Avenue was turned into a large trailer camp ground. 

After a year, the results seemed wholly positive. Thousands of new residents, many of them workers in the Richmond shipyards, had been accommodated—there was space for at least 500 trailers—the park had both local supervision and its own elected self-governing council, and even the conservative Berkeley Gazette acknowledged in mid 1944 that things had gone well. 


Below, I’ve transcribed an article from the July 13, 2019 Gazette so you can read the local view from 75 years ago for yourself. 

— 

El Cerrito Trailer Park is Named Model Community: 

War Experiment Blends Well With City 

Berkeley Daily Gazette, July 17, 1944. Second section 

By Zerelda Owsley 

April 15 of this year marked the first anniversary of a unique experiment in war time living--the Fairmount Trailer Park in El Cerrito. Situated on the grounds and in the buildings of the outlawed dog racing track, more than 500 trailer spots have been home and hearth to almost 5000 persons within the space of a year's time. 

Under the general management of Judge Martyn Turner, the trailer park has a Citizens' Council, headed by Mrs. Frances McLane, which handles internal problems and disputes. Group bathing, washing and ironing facilities, child care, nursery school, 'teen age club rooms, Boy and Girl Scout troops, library and a weekly dance every Saturday night are some of the activities carried on in the trailer park. 

In every patriotic fund drive, the Fairmount Trailer Park has contributed a creditable share of El Cerrito's quota, and in addition, often goes far over the prescribed quota for its population. 

Since its inception more than a year ago, not one major crime has emanated from the trailer park, the most serious charges made against a man for disturbing the peace and investigation of arson. The Citizens' Council members are elected every three months because of the ever-changing population. Mrs. McLane has been chairman of the Council since its initiation in September, 1943, by successive elections. 

One nurse is on hand at all times, with a doctor giving half-time. At the present there is no group insurance plan in effect, but the residents are attempting to work out a plan which will be more successful than one which operated during the first few months of the park's development. 

There are about 1,638 persons in the camp now. Many of the trailers have small picket fences built around them, flower pots grace approaches, and Victory Gardens are thriving in the vacant ground surrounding the park. 

Although space and permanent equipment were provided by the Federal Government, the park is self-supporting now. At a recent breakfast, representatives from 33 different states sat around the table, many of them University graduates from State colleges. 

As an experiment in adaptability, the trailer park has proved that tolerance and reason can adjust almost any problem. With workers leaving and arriving at varied hours, the question of undisturbed sleep became acute quite early. The solution was simple. Certain areas were set aside for various shift workers and, as a consequence, day sleeper areas are combatively more quiet than any section of an average community could hope to attain. Other critical points have been solved with the same common sense and simplicity. 

Juvenile delinquency is no more prevalent in the trailer park than in surrounding neighborhoods. Births, weddings and deaths have occurred in the park and they would in any small section of the United States. 

Marketing, gas shortages, recreation limitations, higher salaries and wages, and other conditions that have created stress in long-established communities have created the same stress in the trailer park. 

But the lawlessness, illness and lack of sanitation that El Cerrito and neighboring cities feared when the Trailer Park was organized have never come to pass. Fairmont Trailer Park is an integral part of El Cerrito, a self-respecting and a respected segment of war time emergency." 

(Note: "marketing" in the second to last paragraph refers to going to the grocery market--that is, shopping for food and other staples.)


In July 1944, a Homefront Disaster Struck the East Bay

Steven Finacom
Friday July 19, 2019 - 10:58:00 AM
The Berkeley Gazette ran days of photos following the disaster, including these two. One shows the landward devastation at the ammunition depot, while the other looks out to the water. The two black arrows upper right point to the remaining, partially sunken, sections of one of the cargo ships. The other ship disappeared in the blast, shattered into small fragments.
Berkeley Daily Gazette, July 1944
The Berkeley Gazette ran days of photos following the disaster, including these two. One shows the landward devastation at the ammunition depot, while the other looks out to the water. The two black arrows upper right point to the remaining, partially sunken, sections of one of the cargo ships. The other ship disappeared in the blast, shattered into small fragments.
from Berkeley Daily Gazette July 2019

Berkeley never experienced an enemy attack during World War II, but in the middle of the night on July 17, 1944 many locals must have thought the town’s time under actual fire had finally come.

The sound and vibration of a powerful explosion reverberated through the hills and flatlands shaking buildings and waking hundreds. Anyone outside at 10:18 PM might have also seen a flash of white light above the hills to the east.

Telephone calls poured into the Berkeley Police department. Some thought it was an earthquake, others a bombing attack. A few called for police help, thinking that the shaking that jolted them out of sleep was someone trying to break into their house.

It was none of those things. Instead, in one of the worst Stateside disasters of the war years, a massive explosion had obliterated the Navy ammunition depot and loading dock near Port Chicago, about 15 miles northeast of Berkeley.  

The blast was so immense it was heard up to 50 miles away. Berkeley seismographs recorded the equivalent of a 3.4 earthquake on the Richter scale. The San Francisco Chronicle called it at the time “the most disastrous explosion in the history of the Bay Area”. (SF Chronicle July 17, 1944). More people died in it than in any other “Homefront” disaster during the War. 

During World War II the Bay Area was filled with active military installations. It was the major port of embarkation for troops and supplies going to the Pacific, as well as a cargo ship building center of unprecedented size. Army and Navy installations, ranging from training camps to repair bases, military airfields, hospitals, barracks, and coastal defense fortifications, dotted the landscape.  

Civilian factories churning out materials from naval engines to medicines crowded the industrial districts of San Francisco and the East Bay, including Berkeley. 

In this hive of Homefront activity, the Navy installation at Port Chicago received regular trainloads of military munitions destined for the Pacific theater of the war. Navy teams loaded them by hand onto cargo ships moored by a wooden pier where up to three lines of boxcars could be positioned adjacent to the vessels. 

Just before 10:20 PM on that Monday night, something went terribly wrong during the loading of one ship. Thousands of tons of munitions exploded in an uncontrollable chain reaction. A pilot flying at 9,000 feet above the North Bay reported seeing a vast fireball rising immensely into the night sky, then debris hurtling past his plane.  

The nearby town of Port Chicago was devastated. Debris landed miles from the explosion site. At least 320 people were killed at and around the pier and hundreds were injured nearby, including many civilians in Port Chicago—going about their night routines, gathering in a movie theater to watch a war film, or asleep at home—who were hurt by flying glass, collapsing walls, and the powerful shock itself. 

There were two ships at the munitions dock that night, both of them more than 400 feet long. The Liberty ship E.A. Bryan, already partially loaded with explosives, was blasted entirely into small fragments scattered as far as three miles away. The Quinault Victory, on its maiden voyage and docked at the pier but not yet loaded, was broken into large segments, with the shattered stern protruding from the Bay. 

A locomotive and boxcars parked on the pier disappeared, blown apart along with most of the 1,500 foot wooden pier. Other explosive laden boxcars on shore—some of them stationed protectively between earthen and wooden berms—were damaged, but didn’t explode. Survivors successfully put out a fire that threatened to ignite the cars. 

One Coast Guard firefighting barge moored next to the cargo ships was smashed with its crewmen, and thrown hundreds of feet out into the straits, and another Coast Guard vessel on patrol was seriously damaged and set afire but made it to Mare Island for repairs. 

(Ammunition ship explosions had happened before. December 6, 1917 during World War I two cargo ships, one carrying explosives, collided outside the harbor of Halifax, Nova Scotia. A fire broke out on the ammunition ship, and could not be contained. The resulting explosion threw heavy debris more than three miles, momentarily emptied part of the harbor of its water, created a tsunami, and wrecked several towns. 1,600 people were killed and 9,000 injured, many of them blinded by broken glass; they had been watching the burning ship in the harbor through the windows of homes and businesses.) 

And on July 4, 1944, just a few weeks before the Port Chicago blast, nearly 300 people were killed or wounded when a German ammunition barge carrying munitions destined for occupied Norway blew up in the harbor of Aarhus, Denmark. Berkeleyeans had just read about that disaster in the pages of the Gazette.) 

Local dead 

In the Port Chicago aftermath, two Berkeley men were quickly identified as killed in the blast. One, Thomas David Hunt, age 26, was a civilian engineer and Cal alumnus whose widowed mother lived on Piedmont Avenue. His father, UC Professor Thomas Francis Hunt, was deceased. 

He worked for a construction company and had apparently been on the pier with two assistants, supervising construction of a new pier. Only pieces of his body, along with a notebook belonging to him, were recovered. His only sibling, a Navy flyer, had been killed in a crash in Hawaii in 1943. 

A former Berkeley man, Charles Hobart Reilly, also 26 and now a resident of Albany, was on duty on the Coast Guard fire fighting barge and also died. 

Civil response 

Over the hills, “thousands of Berkeley citizens…were awakened by the blast.” reported the Berkeley Daily Gazette the next day. The first calls to the police were a jumble of confused reports and anxious inquiries. The Contra Costa sheriff’s office in Martinez called the Berkeley police to let them know something had happened, and there would be more information later. 

Then, as commercial radio stations began reporting the likely nature and location of the explosion, the calls turned into offers of help. 

Berkeley mobilized support, including a 1,500 candlepower portable light from the Fire Department which was driven to Port Chicago for night rescue operations. Police officers were stationed on Tunnel Road to direct ambulances with the injured to Berkeley hospitals, and emergency supplies were assembled. 

After Pearl Harbor, the city had long prepared and practiced for civil defense and the Gazette said the response preceded smoothly. 

“Four ambulances and a caravan of cars and trucks, loaded down with medical supplies, including blood plasma, formed in front of City Hall and were about to start for Port Chicago when word was received from the local unit to stand by,” the Gazette reported.  

Local hospitals were mobilized and 150 beds in Berkeley reported ready for casualties, but it does not seem any were immediately sent to Berkeley. Most were taken to military or civilian hospitals closer to the blast site. Berkeley police reported ambulances with “minor casualties” came through the Broadway tunnel but continued on to hospitals in Oakland. 

“Most citizens had something to offer disaster workers” a police spokesman told the Gazette. “We had calls from Blake’s Restaurant offering food crews. All the mortuaries offered their automobile facilities. More than 50 doctors registered their names and offered assistance. A supply company listed ten tanks of oxygen, tents and stretchers plus the use of a truck.. Nurses’ Aides called up and asked what they could do to help.” 

“Police reports show many private citizens called and offered their gas and automobiles to emergency workers.” 

Police cars were dispatched to San Pablo Avenue “to try and regulate the immense flow of ambulances and thrill seekers who started for the disaster scene.” In the absence of freeways, San Pablo was still one of the more direct routes to the shores of the Carquinez Straits. 

The police noted at least three reports of windows broken by the blast in Berkeley. One was a store on the 2300 block of Shattuck, the other two were at homes on the 1600 block of University Avenue.  

Eyewitness reports 


The Gazette despatched reporter Zerelda Owsley, who often wrote human interest stories for the paper, to gather eyewitness coverage. 

She drove to Port Chicago soon after midnight and passed “a ribbon of red lights…one after another Army, Navy, and civilian ambulances wound their way into Oakland. There were few sirens. It was an orderly procession of death and pain.” 

She was stopped by military guards on the highway and couldn’t reach the blast site, but talked to numerous survivors and witnesses and gave a unnamed naval corpsman a ride back to Berkeley. He told her that he didn’t believe many bodies would be found, which was the case.  

“In Port Chicago, not a single building stands undamaged today” she wrote in the next day’s evening edition. “Hotels, restaurants, markets, barber shops and the theater vie with the homes of citizens in presenting a scene of unparalleled destruction.” 

Other military personnel she tried to interview were close lipped. However, the Navy apparently didn’t try to conceal the explosion news. Photographers were soon allowed access to the ruins and an aerial picture was even published showing the site of the demolished pier, shoreline, and a large fragment of the Quinault Victory half sunken in the bay.  

The Gazette carried several of those pictures in the July 19 issue. Since they came from wire service photographers, presumably they were also printed worldwide.  

A racial issue 

The immediate coverage hardly mentioned that mainly African-American sailors and workers had died. One note was a line in Owsley’s article that “Today, I talked to a 26-year-old Negro sailor who saw his buddy die and he himself was one of six out of a barracks of one hundred who came out unscathed.” “My buddy he was killed. He didn’t have a chance. He was just thrown with his bunk right out of the barracks.” 

Finally, two days later, the paper carried a story saying “the Navy has estimated 250 enlisted personnel, most of them Negro sailors, are ‘missing and presumed dead’.” Others missing including an estimated nine Coast Guard personnel, some 70 merchant seamen from the two cargo ships, three railroad workers, about 40 military guards, and nine officers. 

The Armed Services were segregated at the time. African American men and women who volunteered or were drafted for the military were shunted into support jobs. “Most African Americans serving at the beginning of World War II were assigned to non-combat units and relegated to service duties, such as supply, maintenance, and transportation,” despite the eagerness of many to serve in combat. (African Americans in World War II. Fighting for a Double Victory, nationalww2museum.org) 

Long time Berkeley resident and activist Betty Reid Soskin recalled many years later in an oral history that her husband, native Berkeleyan Mel Reid, had enlisted in the Navy but found he would be assigned like other African-American servicemen as a messman—that is, a cook or kitchen worker in a non-combat role, and probably stationed at a training camp on the Great Lakes. He told the Navy he would not follow that course and wanted to be a sailor, and was given an honorable discharge. (Soskin ROHO oral history, page 49). 


By 1945 the racial segregation of tasks and units would slightly ease because more soldiers were needed in combat roles as casualties mounted in Europe, but in mid-1944 it was still strongly in force. At Port Chicago, all African-American crews commanded by all white officers did most of the handling and loading of the munitions. 

Although it’s not clear if any of the African Americans killed at Port Chicago had Berkeley roots, some did have connections. Soskin talked in the oral history about African Americans in the military during the war.  

“The ones I did get to know were some of the servicemen. One of our friends among the servicemen was stationed at Port Chicago and was blown up in that explosion. In fact, some of these young guys were at my house at a party the night before and they went home and we heard the explosion all the way from Berkeley from Port Chicago when that blew up, and we knew that our friends had gone.” (Soskin, ROHO oral history, page 53). 

By Thursday, July 20, just three days after the explosion, the local news was back to “normal”. Gazette headlines included a report of an assassination attempt on Hitler, local traffic accidents, and a feature story about a Berkeley man who picked up a disoriented opossum on the highway in Martinez and brought it to a Berkeley firehouse. By the time he arrived eight tiny baby opossums had also appeared in his car, presumably from the mother’s pouch or fur. 

The possum tale merited a two column front page picture of the little creatures crawling around the lawn of the Claremont Hotel, but there was only one small, single column, story about plans to rebuild Port Chicago and investigate the explosion. It noted that 322 men were now believed dead, but only four bodies had been found—just what the Navy Corpsman had predicted.  

The names of the Navy dead were released and the Gazette printed basic information about five from Oakland and others from San Francisco and Martinez.  

Mishandling 

There was one aftermath to the blast which had important repercussions years later for civil rights in the United States. 

There were reports and accusations that the African American loading crews were not given training for the increasingly complex variety of explosives—including incendiary bombs, depth charges, and torpedoes—they were required to handle. 

The commander of the Port Chicago facility, a Navy captain recalled to active duty, had reportedly kept a chalkboard where he compared the tonnage loaded by each work detachment and some of his officers made side bets with each other on how fast their crews could work. 


The loading process was not fully mechanical, but involved lots of muscle power and manipulation of all different types of volatile materials. Munitions were taken from boxcars onto the pier, and then laboriously lifted by steam winches into the cargo holds of the ships, where they were repacked, often by hand. Observers reported seeing some of the workers having to use crowbars to lever heavy shells out of the tightly packed boxcars. 

The Coast Guard had already warned the handling procedures were not safe and had withdrawn a supervising detail from the pier when the Navy didn’t change the process. 

Also, some of the equipment was reportedly in poor working order including one of the winches on the ships. Survivors of the explosion reported that they heard a “metallic sound” and breaking wood several seconds before the main explosion. That would imply that a piece of equipment—perhaps one of the steam powered hoists on the ship—might have failed, dropping or jostling explosives, and triggering the blast. But all direct evidence of what might have happened went up in fire and fragments moments later. 

Civil rights aftermath 

Uninjured African American survivors from the loading crews who had not been on the docks were quickly taken by the Navy to the Mare Island Navy Yard in Vallejo and put in barracks there. They were given no leave and no opportunity for transfer between duties. On August 8 they were marched out to start loading an ammunition ship. When the destination became clear, they stopped marching en masse.  

Ultimately 258 sailors—all African American—refused to load ammunition and were imprisoned in what the Navy and the press characterized as a “mutiny”. Fifty were later tried in a mass Navy court martial on Yerba Buena Island, within sight of Berkeley. 

The trial was attended by future Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, then the general counsel for the NAACP. After the men were convicted and sentenced to up to 15 years of hard labor, Marshall organized a nationwide petition and letter writing campaign objecting to not only the sentences but the unfair and biased procedures of the court martial. 

The campaign reached as far as the White House, where Eleanor Roosevelt informally encouraged the Secretary of the Navy to reconsider the matter. The Navy ultimately reconvened the courts-martial, but then affirmed the convictions.  

Still, the issue of discrimination and unequal treatment of African-Americans in the military had been prominently raised. In 1946 the last of the sailors who had been courts martialed were released, long before their sentences ran out. The same year the Navy became the first of the Armed Services to fully de-segregate. 

Postscript 

As an ironic local follow-up to the Port Chicago disaster, during the Cold War that followed World War II civil defense planning for the Bay Area designated various rural communities where urban residents should congregate if there was a nuclear attack.  

Berkeley, of course, would be a prime bombing target because of what is now the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the prominence of the campus in atomic research. 

Berkeley was assigned the then small town of Antioch, just east of Port Chicago, as a place to shelter and assemble if a nuclear attack threatened or occurred. 

So in the 50s and 60s tens of thousands of Berkeleyans—many of them still with memories of that night in 1944—might have found themselves trekking towards elusive safety near the site of a disaster where an explosion the magnitude of a small nuclear bomb had once flashed across the local landscape and sky. 


Opportunity Zones: Opportunities Wasted

Bob Silvestri
Friday July 19, 2019 - 12:41:00 PM

I recently attended the 2019 Opportunity Zone Expo in Los Angeles. This sold out event was billed as the largest gathering of experts in the country on the subject of investment in an “opportunity zone (OZ),” using a “qualified opportunity fund (QOZ).”

It was held in the ballrooms at the LA LIVE - JW Marriott Hotel in downtown. Keynote speakers included California Secretary of State Fiona Ma, U.S. Congressman Alex Mooney, Former Nevada Attorney General Adam Laxalt, and former U.S. Congressman Keith Rothfus. The Expo was opened with an enthusiastic videotaped welcome by Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti.

Event panels and breakout sessions had names like Capitalizing on opportunities: financing, sourcing and investors; Following your money: Choosing the best investment and protecting your capital; When to head out: understanding your fund and exit strategies; and Right place, right zone: identifying promising zones and why.

The 1,000+ attendees overflowed the well-appointed facility. Each panel was standing room only, filled with a sea of mostly male participants talking about deal flow, rates of return, whether partnerships or C Corps were the best investment structure, and so on. And on the dais of each session sat developers, fund managers, investment bankers, financial advisors, tax accountants, and incisively articulate, high-priced Washington DC lawyers, comparing bragging rights about their assets under management (from the low hundreds of millions to the tens of billions) available for office, commercial, retail, hotel, resort, industrial, and high density luxury housing development.

You know, just regular folks.

I jest, but make no mistake about it these were some very smart people. And they are precisely the people you want to have sitting around the table with you, figuring out how to address affordable housing needs, environmental protection and social justice – and how to make money doing it. These are the people who are really good at figuring that out. The only problem is if we let the unbridled pursuit of profits be their only guide, we end up with results that throw everything else under the bus.

There was no doubt that the OZ Tax Code is a game changer that could supercharge investment in real estate. But at the end of the day it became equally clear that this would probably be just another case of the rich getting richer.

Don't get me wrong. I have nothing against anyone getting rich. In fact, I'm absolutely all for it, especially if they get rich doing right by others. But if they're getting rich as the result of a gift from the government (taxpayers), then there have to be commensurate public benefits. Otherwise, it always ends up leaving the rest of us holding the bag.

So what are opportunity zones and qualified opportunity funds, and why should you care?  

Opportunity Zones and Qualified Opportunity Funds  

Opportunity Zones and the use of Qualified Opportunity Funds are the result of a relatively small provision in the 2018 Federal Tax Reform Bill. Simply put, the law establishes “opportunity zones” (land parcels in every state and city that designate where the tax code wants to incentivize investment) to provide a way for private investors, who have an unrealized capital gain in one type of investment, to be able to move those gains into a new investment (in real estate / new business creation) within one of those designated opportunity zones. And if they do this reinvestment of deferred capital gains within very strict timelines and using a financial entity called a “Qualified Opportunity Fund,” they can defer all taxes on the capital gains on their original investment until 2026, and if that new opportunity zone investment is maintained for 10 years or more, the investor can pay zero taxes on all those gains… forever.  

As I said in a previous article, this an extremely big deal and a huge investment incentive. It is based on the economic calculus that business creation and capital investments in these designated areas will ultimately have a multiplier effect, the results of which will produce far more wealth than the cost of the tax forgiveness. It is an effort to tap private capital for investment in low income and under-developed census tracts. At least that’s the theory. But the qualifying question remains, wealth for whom?  

The specific parcels that ended up being designated on the national maps were decided by the Governor’s office of each state.  

The overall intentions in the Tax Law were a step in the right direction. But there is one gigantic problem. The whole exercise is a monumental case in point of what happens when you have legislation written predominately for business interests by business interests: the tragedies of the commons that flow downstream are enormous and remain unpaid by those reaping the financial rewards.  

What is most disheartening is that the opportunity to do this right was completely ignored. And that is why you should care. 

Maximizing the efficient use of private capital for public benefit? 

Lately, I’ve been writing about the importance of the “efficient” use of capital, and the men and (the occasional) women at this event were clearly really good that doing that, thus the hyper-enthusiasm and “S.R.O.” attendance. I would conservatively estimate that this event’s participants were within 1 or 2 degrees of separation from over $1/2 trillion of investment capital. So, one would assume that since the Tax Law purports to target lower income census tracts and under-developed areas (e.g., brownfield sites, old rail yards, etc.) it’s all good news, right? 

Not so fast. 

As I sat and listened to the panels of experts and advisors throughout the day, I began to have the uncomfortable feeling that I had entered a parallel universe. Everyone was extremely positive, you couldn’t find a more energized group of people. But public benefit considerations were completely missing from the discussions: with holes in the exuberant narratives big enough to drive a truck through. 

Finally, at one of the afternoon sessions, a silver-haired speaker up on the dais, made the following comment to his colleagues, almost as a half-joking aside. He said, “You know I was telling my daughter about all this the other day and she looked at me and said, that all sounds great, dad, but what are you doing for the people in those communities?” 

And he said this in a way that clearly showed that this was a totally new concept for him: that he should bother thinking about the connection between the multi-billion dollar investment fund he ran and the impacts of its investments on the communities he was “investing” in. In his way of thinking, investment was always a good thing. 

The others on the dais sort of hemmed and hawed, awkwardly mulling that over for a moment, until one finally concluded, “Yes, I think that’s something we’re going to have to deal with, going forward,” as if to suggest that it was yet another obstacle to doing business, an annoyance, and just another cost that they needed to begrudgingly throw some money into the investment return calculations to account for. 

With only one or two notable exceptions, the majority of the audience seemed to concur. It would be another challenge and cost of doing business, but by no means an integral part of anyone’s development plans. Many even acknowledged that the opportunity zone legislation pretty much guaranteed displacement and gentrification of existing communities. But, they concluded that’s just how it is. 

It was then that it became clear to me what was wrong with this whole picture. The Opportunity Zone legislation was not just about doing “business as usual” with extra tax incentives. It was, as one CPA on a panel put it, “tax advantages on steroids” without any requirements for public benefits, whatsoever. 

In my recent articles, I’ve been arguing that we should be tapping private capital instead of taxing private capital in order to address affordable housing challenges. The OZ regulations were clearly a chance to do that, except Congress flat out blew it. 

Opportunities squandered 

You can’t pick up a newspaper these days without reading about the affordable housing crisis or the impacts of climate change. So why were the opportunity zone regulations written without any public policy goal requirements? Why aren’t its tax benefits tied to creating affordable housing, or mitigating environmental impacts, or providing public transportation, or using green building methods, or protecting existing residents from displacement and unwanted gentrification? Or what about jobs creation, worker education and training, paying a living wage, or environmental preservation and restoration? There are also no provisions in the legislation to benefit local residents or local, community-serving businesses. And there is no consideration given to the unique challenges that smaller, local developers face. 

Apparently, we are just collateral damage. 

If we’re going to give the investment banking / development community what one tax expert on a panel called “the biggest tax benefits in recent U.S. history,” don’t we want the outcomes to be tied to the biggest socioeconomic challenges we face? Why just give it all away? 

How else are we going to pay to mitigate the impacts of this new development – with drinking water taxes like our new Governor wants to do? 

At present, none of these issues are addressed in the OZ regulations. And that’s a tragedy, because it would have been relatively easy to create a point scale system, whereby the more public benefits a development provided the greater the tax benefits the investor would receive. We had a golden opportunity to address a long list of public policy goals, which has been squandered for no purpose other than to enhance private profits. 

When are we going to stop giving away the store in the misguided belief that “the market” will solve everything on its own? 

It won’t. 

Worse still, we have the attention of some of the best and brightest problem solvers in the financial industry, and we’ve wasted that once in a lifetime opportunity. If there’s any way to make a buck doing the right thing, I’m confident this group would find it. But they need the guidance of well-crafted tax law to do it. 

The shortcomings of the OZ tax scheme 

The list of what is wrong with the OZ legislation is long, but here are a few examples. 

Maps are dumb 

The opportunity zone incentives are based on maps of every parcel in the entire country. These “top down” maps were drawn by bureaucrats in Washington DC and Sacramento, sitting around looking at census statistics. The result is counter-productive, because no one in Sacramento is smart enough to look at a map from 10,000 feet and tell what is or is not a real estate investment opportunity or even more ridiculously where and what types of uses should or should not be built. It's like a form of reverse "red-lining." 

Investment opportunities in communities are a fluid phenomenon that are in a constant state of change, depending on an ungainly list of things like competition, market demand, terms of purchase, local conditions, government regulatory changes, interest rates, available financing, the economy and the whims of millions of people who are not always rational actors. That is why on-the-ground brokers and developers know best what is or is not the place to build this or that type of use at any given time. That is why if given specific incentives to develop specific types of uses (such as affordable housing), they will be best at figuring out exactly how to do that profitably. 

For example, in a number of Bay Area cities that I’ve studied, the opportunity zone maps only identify only single family zoned neighborhoods as opportunity zones. But areas with existing multifamily zoning nearby are not included. Dumber still, adjacent commercially zoned areas (where mixed-use would likely be preferable and potential jobs could be created right next to existing housing) are not included either. 

Looking at the maps, one has to ask what genius made these decisions. 

“Opportunity investments” not “Opportunity Zones” 

The “market” knows how to efficiently allocate capital and maximize return better than bureaucrats and planners, regardless of what type of development is allowed. We should have legislation that lets them do that. However, if we want to solve our current socioeconomic challenges, the gift of tax deferral and forgiveness needs to be tied directly to development of things we need, such as affordable housing and using green building methods, or mitigations against community destroying gentrification and the wholesale displacement of the residents of low income communities. 

The OZ legislation fails to do that. 

The OZ legislation ensures gentrification, displacement and concentration of poverty 

Because the Opportunity Zone maps intentionally outline parcels in low income census tracts, but include no affordable housing or other public benefit requirements, they absolutely guarantee that if housing is built in those areas, it will be luxury housing and result in displacement and gentrification. Or if any affordable housing is built – to be in compliance with local in-lieu requirements -- the OZ approach absolutely ensures that low income people will remain concentrated in existing low income neighborhoods, contradicting the stated public policy goal of providing affordable housing throughout the SF Bay Area. 

For example, Marin County has almost no opportunity zone areas identified, because we are not a low income census tract. That’s really dumb and proof why maps are dumb to begin with. So as written, the Opportunity Zone legislation ensures the status quo. It guarantees that no investor will have any incentive to build affordable housing in Marin, which is precisely where we want and need it to be built. 

If our goal is to have affordable housing built in every community throughout the region, then there have to be incentives to make that happen... everywhere. 

The OZ legislation offers nothing to small entrepreneurs and local developers 

One thing that became abundantly clear at the OZ event was that the Opportunity Zone rules are complex. As such, the “opportunities” are largely inaccessible for the average local developer. It’s not that the law excludes anyone from taking advantage of its benefits and it is likely that some of these benefits will prove valuable to smaller development projects once all the technical regulations are released. But the price of admission will be steep. 

The panelists strongly advised that anyone considering entering this investment landscape needs to hire the best possible legal and tax advice money can buy, because there are so many uncertainties. The panelists also readily admitted that the regulations favor the biggest and best funded development and investment banking / fund advisor interests, who can afford appropriate legal representation. 

So, how would a small to mid-sized developer or an agency in a small city stand a chance of getting in this game without the benefit of a high-priced Washington DC-based law firm essentially lobbying for them? 

Scrape and built is favored? 

It appears that the legislation is written to heavily favor “scrape and build” development projects, which it refers to as “substantial improvement.” And because the OZ legislation includes onerous time period provisions within which an investor must invest and actual construction must begin (a maximum of 30 months for everything including receiving entitlements), it seems the law is mostly targeted to fund “shovel ready” projects at a large scale. 

Most small to mid-sized developers need considerable time to put their deal and financing together, while major funding aggregators are building up war chests from their major clients to be ready to fund projects on short notice. 

Some panelists also suggested that in some instances an IRS private letter ruling might be required to green-light a project, which assumes that a small developer could afford that kind of high-priced legal counsel. 

Investment benefits only go to those who have capital gains to defer 

It’s pretty clear that beneficiaries of the OZ legislation will be predominately the very wealthy, because the only kind of capital that qualifies for the tax benefits is unrealized capital gains. Anyone wanting to just invest cash in an affordable housing project, for example, does not qualify for the tax benefits (I consider this a major flaw, particularly as it relates to smaller projects that are more difficult to finance). 

The OZ legislation works well for large asset management and investment advisory firms, who are amassing pools of capital, but how many small developers or small city agencies know individuals who have a few million in unrealized capital gains lying around, to invest? Probably very few, which is a problem, because there’s little chance that any of the funds aggregating billions of investment dollars will even look at a project for a 25 unit apartment building or anything that is not of institutional size (150 units or more).

I assume this is all well and good for MTC and the corporate interests that brought us the CASA Housing Compact, but once again, this does next to nothing to increase the capital available for smaller, infill affordable housing development that we so desperately need.

Legislation gone wild? 

The whole thing is just upside down. My guess is that 90% of all the tax benefits will go to the very top and 90% of the impacts will be unnecessarily borne by everyone else. The OZ legislation is business as usual and offers little to help us solve our affordable housing challenges from the ground up, in a community-serving and environmentally sustainable way. 

Because this tax giveaway fails to create a nexus between market forces and public policy goals, it all but guarantees that the rich will get richer, extracting wealth out of our communities, while the rest of us will pay the costs of the impacts by way of increased taxes and fees and penalties that will be needed to fund those same unfulfilled public policy goals. 

Some will argue with this... something about the importance of letting "animal spirits" run free, or whatever. But my bet is that our short-term and often too-clever schemes need start considering the bigger picture if there is any hope of preserving our liberal democratic institutions in the future. 

 


Bob Silvestri is a Mill Valley resident and the founder and president of Community Venture Partners, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit community organization funded only by individuals in Marin and the San Francisco Bay Area. This article appeared on January 31 on the Marin Post: 

 


Opinion

Editorials

Getting Along

Becky O'Malley
Monday July 22, 2019 - 11:57:00 AM

Xenophobia. It’s a fifty-dollar word with, for good reason, Greek roots. It means fear of foreigners, and it goes all the way back in the western tradition to the ancient Greeks and their Roman successors.

It’s not limited to the western tradition either. There’s plenty of xenophobia in the rest of the world, ancient and contemporary. For a while, some hoped that it was fading, at least in some quarters, and that it had been vanquished by modern internationalism.

Even Disneyland, not known as a shrine to liberalism, has had for decades the ear-worming anthem “It’s a Small World, Isn’t It?” President Barack Obama is the child of international exchange, as is Senator Kamala Harris, though both have voluntarily embraced the USA’s historic African American culture created by the descendants of those who were enslaved here.

Well, perhaps not 100% voluntarily. Racism is a special gloss on xenophobia, marked by onus against dark-skinned people in particular. Those infected by racism regard Black and Brown foreigners, regardless of culture, as barbarians, another Greek word, labelling them as uncivilized. Obama and Harris experience the prejudice against African Americans despite their backgrounds . 

The xenophobic tradition seems to be baked into human nature. It’s not surprising to see it exhibited by the truly uncivilized vulgarian who is now the president of the United States, but even the apparently civil can be infected by it 

Once upon a time I was walking around historic London and happened upon a kindly-seeming vicar in his charming little churchyard. He delivered a learned lecture on the origin and architecture of his church, and then without provocation launched into a vitriolic lecture about the savage nature of the Irish. Needless to say, I did not introduce myself by my married name. 

There’s a book called “How the Irish Became White”, and though some of its premises are dubious the title illustrates a path to privilege which is open to some immigrants but not others. Many ethnic groups were despised by those here when they came, but gradually assimilated into the dominant White sector because they were able to blend in visually. 

It’s interesting to see that today’s white supremacists are adopting the language and rituals of the Know-Nothings, who hated Catholics and Jews when they first arrived in the 19th and 20th centuries. My husband’s maternal great grandfather, raised a Quaker, was roundly denounced in the small Dakota town where he lived in the early 20th Century because he sold land to Slavic Catholics to build their church. 

Every day this week we have seen the unseemly spectacle of technology being used by a man two generations away from some immigrants and serially married to two others to denounce members of the U.S. House of Representatives with similar backgrounds. Ironically, the ancient Romans regarded his presumptive distant ancestors, the tribal Germani, as primitive barbarians. It wasn’t that long ago that there was prejudice here against German immigrants like his grandfather, as any reader of Little Women can discover. 

Not, of course, that he reads books. 

I notice in the opinion section of Sunday’s New York Times that two ordinarily reliable columnists, Maureen Dowd and Nicolas Kristof, seemed to be struck almost speechless by the week’s spectacle. Their horror is engendered not so much by Trump’s appalling behavior, which has become the norm, but by the spinelessness of the party formerly known as Republican, the heir to the likes of Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt and even on their good days Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon. Trump makes Ol’ Tricky Dick look like a statesman, Ronny like a mensch. 

But after you’ve said that, what else is there to say? When you look around the world, you see a whole array of equally tragicomic figures running other countries. The new head of the Ukraine is a professional comic, and might not even be a bad guy. The president of Guatemala is another comedian, with not much else to recommend him. Soon-to-be British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is another clown, though only semi-pro . And then there are the not-funny tyrants, e.g. Duterte of the Phillipines . 

So Planet Earth’s in the hands of hooligans, and our very own hooligan-in-chief is entertaining himself by hurling racist epithets at a quartet of young women of color. 

But actually, not to worry. 

If perchance we good guys can get our act together, we’ve got Trump outnumbered. If sensible women and progressive dark-skinned people stick together, it might not be too long before some semblance of sanity is restored to the world. (Though this optimistic prediction ignores the fact that Duterte is a person of color and Theresa May is a woman…) 

With climate change breathing down our collective necks, we must rely on Dr. Johnson’s famous observation: “Depend upon it, sir, when a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight, it concentrates his mind wonderfully.” 

So, we (men, women and others, of all complexions) have about two weeks to get our act together. Time to concentrate. 

Here’s another quote about hanging, this one from an American, Benjamin Franklin: “We must, indeed, all hang together or, most assuredly, we shall all hang separately.”  

If those powerful old white guys who think they can control the fate of the world don’t learn to work with the black, brown and non-male majority, we’ll all be in the soup together. You’d hope that even a few corporate Republicans would be worried enough to just get along. 

 


Public Comment

Comments on the Draft Environmental Impact Report for Berkeley's Adeline Corridor Plan

Michael Katz
Friday July 19, 2019 - 10:09:00 AM

The Adeline Corridor Plan's Transportation element is ill thought-out and unacceptable.

This DEIR proposes to reduce Adeline Street's transportation capacity by 33%, simply to create a curiously ill-defined "Public Space Opportunity Area," which "may include landscaped areas, plazas and programmed events." The authors arrogantly wave away the lost capacity as "excess right-of-way.";

Adeline Street is – like it or not – a vital transportation corridor in and out of Berkeley. It serves buses as well as private cars, and enables commuting by Berkeley residents who need to work in other cities to support ourselves.

What responsible planning document would propose to cut 33% of capacity with no specific offsetting goal? It seems clear what's happened here: There is no goal, and no real planning.

This document simply reflects the casual anti-automobile bias of its Berkeley-dwelling consultant (Philip Erickson), who has an amply-expressed personal axe to grind; and of certain planners on the City's staff. Just block 33% of the carrying capacity; force the remaining evil motorists into artificial congestion; and...um, we'll do...you know, something with the repurposed land that previous generations' real planners had laid out to serve transportation needs.; 

So procedurally, this DEIR element reflects both conflicts of interest and a lack of professional analysis or results. It seems to embody specific consultant and staff goals, rather than the public's aspirations or input. I should note here that I'm writing as a daily bicycle and public-transit commuter. However, I value transparency in policy-making, and honesty in evaluating environmental impacts. 

In terms of those environmental impacts, I see no real gain from forcing traffic into artificial congestion. Conversely, there are real CEQA-relevant detriments. Slower-moving traffic is less-efficient traffic. Therefore, this plan proposes to worsen pollutant emissions – a local impact directly affecting South Berkeley's underserved communities of color – and to magnify Berkeley's carbon footprint. 

Especially with no clearly-defined goal for the converted space, the environmental detriments of drastically narrowing Adeline arguably outweigh any benefits. This element should not be pursued or implemented. 

It's very odd that Berkeley residents are being informed of this DEIR just 48 hours before the deadline for comments. I would like to thank the Mayor and his office for at least getting the word out (in his July 17 newsletter) before the public was entirely excluded from this process. 


Michael Katz is a Berkeley resident. This was submitted as a comment to the Draft EIR on the Adeline Corridor Plan,


Conned Followers of a Cowardly Bully

Bruce Joffe
Friday July 19, 2019 - 12:26:00 PM

While economic indicators keep rising, employee wages stagnate. Where does all the wealth that workers create go? To the top 1% of the top 1%. Working people are stressed. They can hardly make ends meet. They are only one illness or one car breakdown away from drowning in quicksand of debt. They are stressed. And angry.  

A coward who bullies the weak, Trump harnesses that anger by talking like a tough guy. Real tough guys, men and women who carry the super-rich on their backs, were raised to "suck it up," to be tough or else be seen as losers. So they hold festering resentment and smoldering anger inside. The bullying coward points at innocent immigrants to blame. 

His followers don't see that their plight is because an undeserving few take nearly all the wealth they've produced. He calls low-paid workers "losers." His believers are conned to suck it up, blame the "others," but don't ever question why the super-rich have so much while they have so little. That's the con. 

Watcha gonna do? Resist? Or continue sucking it up?


Former, Never to be Forgotten Students of the 50's at Berkeley's Lincoln School

Jeanne Holmquist
Friday July 19, 2019 - 12:28:00 PM

And..here I be, at the ripe (?) age of near ninety!

My fondest memories are of the beloved 43-some second graders at Lincoln School…circa, 1955+ and I continue, lovingly see their faces and remember them!

As a new teacher, in th’olden days…even before Kennedy,”people’s park” and integration of the schools in Berkeley..I had the most sincere joy of being in the classroom with Bobby Tom, Audrey Nobori, Shirley Curry, Yasafumi Hamamoto,Patsy Cornilius,and 43 other darlings whose names I still recall along with their photos and letters…Eddie Mack,Jocelyn,Tommy,Alfred Boling,Jackie Nickleson, and and and!!!!!! 

Willie Mays came over, at our invitation one afternoon! In 1965, thanks to the administrators, I was given the green light to take50 some youngsters, ages 9 -16 via busses, to the SF Opera House to be in the DRESS CIRCLE to hear the great DIVA,Marian Anderson in her final concert. She even came over to our Lincoln School a few years prior..and Columbus School, too! 

How precious are my memories of each of you 2nd graders, then later at our 9th grade school, then..at the BHS senior graduation at the UC Campus! 

That beloved Dr. Harriett Wood-Jenkins, first Black principal of Berkeley, and then (of NASA) and of our Lincoln School Faculty,’58-’79,Emerson School, Administrator. I recall the joys of all of you Berkeley kids. She is now UP in a blessed space with our principal,Bill Rhodes,custodian Marcel Guest,secretary Tina Thomas. 

Most of all I shall always treasure the gift you, students of Lincoln, Columbus Schools gave to me! The gift of love and trust and sharing of your lives with this aged old educator.


Send Him Back

Jagjit Singh
Friday July 19, 2019 - 10:28:00 AM

Since you began campaigning for the presidency in 2016 your campaign of “hate America” began by insulting the first African American, Barack Obama, falsely accusing him of being un-American demanding to see his birth-certificate. After you became President with the help of your Russian friend, Vladimir Putin, you railed on hordes of caravan criminals and rapists invading our country. Then your vented your anger at poor trade deals which has driven a large number of our great American farmers on the verge of bankruptcy. You demonstrated your scorn for the nuclear agreement with Iran which has caused enormous suffering to the Iranian people in spite of Iran’s strict adherence to the deal. You attacked an American war hero, the late John McCain, for voting in support of the Affordable Care Act. You squandered $550,000 per hour of taxpayer money to mobilize tanks, fighter jets and Air Force One on July 4 to ingratiate yourself on your never ending vanity projects. You rewarded the Republican Party National Committee with special VIP access. This is a clear violation of the Hatch Act that bars taxpayers from funding partisan events. Mr. President, you are a very angry man. If you hate this wonderful country so much, why don’t you leave for from whence you came and MAGA?


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE: Do Not Take the Bait

Bob Burnett
Friday July 19, 2019 - 10:04:00 AM

On Sunday, July 14th, Donald Trump began a barrage of racist tweets that has stirred up yet another political storm. Four Democratic female congresswomen of color were attacked by Trump. They accused him of following an “agenda of white nationalists” and asked that Americans “do not take the bait” of his divisive rhetoric. Are Trump's tweets another manifestation of his poor judgement or part of a sinister plan? 

On July 14, Trump tweeted: "So interesting to see ‘Progressive’ Democrat Congresswomen, who originally came from countries whose governments are a complete and total catastrophe, the worst, most corrupt and inept anywhere in the world (if they even have a functioning government at all), now loudly and viciously telling the people of the United States, the greatest and most powerful Nation on earth, how our government is to be run. Why don’t they go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came." It was understood that the "Progressive Democrat Congresswomen," Trump referred to are Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York; Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts; Rashida Tlaib of Michigan; and Ilhan Omar of Minnesota. All are women of color. Only congresswomen Omar, who is from Somalia, was not born in the US. 

The congresswomen called Trump’s remarks a “blatantly racist” attack on elected leaders, and an attempt to distract from the corrupt and inhuman practices of his administration. “This is a disruptive distraction from the issues of care, concern and consequence to the American people that we were sent here with a decisive mandate from our constituents to work on,” said Pressley. They urged American voters, "do not take the bait." 

There's always a danger of crediting Trump with forethought. Trump's tweets may not have been strategic but rather the random actions of a disturbed mind -- cognitive dyspepsia. Nonetheless, if Trump's actions were part of a sinister plan, he could have several objectives: 

1.Divide Democrats: In the past few weeks, the Washington press has talked of a "split" between House Speaker Pelosi and the four female congresswomen identified by Trump: Ocasio-Cortez, Omar, Pressley, and Tlaib -- nicknamed "the squad." Trump may have intended his remarks to accentuate this split: "The Dems were trying to distance themselves from the four 'progressives,' but now they are forced to embrace them. That means they are endorsing Socialism, hate of Israel and the USA! Not good for the Democrats!" 

Trump's tactic isn't working. On July 16th, the squad joined all Democratic members of the House -- and four Republicans -- in condemning Trump's racist remarks. On July 16, congresswomen Ocasio-Cortez appeared on the CBS Morning News (https://www.washingtonpost.com/powerpost/ocasio-cortez-downplays-tensions-between-pelosi-and-the-squad/2019/07/17/8a1a31a4-a88d-11e9-9214-246e594de5d5_story.html?utm_term=.86d1bcc32ebe) and downplayed reports of tension between Pelosi and the squad. 

2. Draw a broad distinction between Democrats and Republicans: In the 2020 presidential campaign, if Donald Trump can't point to his accomplishments he can paint imaginary distinctions between Democrats and Republicans. For example, Trump hasn't built his wall and his immigration policy, in general, is a disaster. Nonetheless, on the campaign trail, Trump will claim that Democrats are "for open borders" and would let dangerous people into the country. 

This tactic is working with Trump's base. They are chanting, "Send her back," at rallies. 

3. Distract from the failures of the ICE raids. Beginning on July 1st, Trump promised that on Sunday, July 14th, ICE agents in 10 large cities -- such as New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles -- would apprehend 2,000 undocumented immigrants who'd been ordered removed from the United States. The raids occurred but the total number of ICE arrests was miniscule. 

This tactic is working. The MSM isn't talking about the failed ICE raids. 

4. Distract from Trump's recent failures, in general. Trumps tweets began on Sunday, July 14th, after a week when he had suffered a series of losses. On July 7th, the British tabloid, the Daily Mail, published a confidential memos from the British ambassador to the United States: "For a man who has risen to the highest office on the planet, President Trump radiates insecurity." "I don't think this Administration will ever look competent." 

During the week of July 8, there were press reports about the inhumane conditions at the border detention facilities -- some observers likened them to "concentration camps." Then, Trump lost his effort to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census. Next, his Labor secretary, Jeffrey Acosta, was forced to resign. Then the ballyhooed ICE raids fizzled. (And, on July 16th, North Korea threatened to renege on commitments made to the United States on denuclearization.) 

Once again, Trump's tactic of distraction is succeeding. The press isn't talking about "Trump the failure" but instead about "Trump the racist." 

5. Distract from the Jeffrey Epstein indictments. Since (alleged) pedophile and procurer Jeffrey Epstein was rearrested, on July 6, there have been rumors that Donald Trump is overwrought about the consequences of new information about Epstein's New York activities. Trump and Epstein were once close friends. In 2002, Trump described Epstein as a “terrific guy” who is “a lot of fun to be with;" “It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do.” 

Writing in the Palmer Report (https://www.palmerreport.com/analysis/rape-accusation-donald-trump-roaring-focus/19296/) Robert Harrington reminds us that in 2016, "Jane Doe" accused Trump of raping her, when she was 13, at Epstein's New York mansion. Counterpunch (https://www.counterpunch.org/2019/07/17/epstein-jane-doe-and-trump/) reported: "[Jane Doe's] lawsuit included witness corroboration of her account that she was raped by both Epstein and Trump. The lawsuit was dropped days before the November election after the claimant had been threatened" These writers note that Epstein kept videos of "episodes" in his New York mansion -- videos that were seized by the FBI -- and speculate that some of these may include Donald Trump. 

If Trump is attempting to distract us from this, it's not working. Epstein's case is still banner news for everyone except, it appears, his base. 

 

How sick are Republicans? Will they "take the bait" and ignore evidence that connects Trump to Epstein? Perhaps Trump's base prefers "Trump the racist" to "Trump the predator." 


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


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Mindfulness Supported by Medication

Jack Bragen
Friday July 19, 2019 - 11:12:00 AM

In my three-plus decades since I was diagnosed with Schizophrenia, I've found that meditation and/or mindfulness will not cure the condition. Meditation and mindfulness could, to a limited extent, improve brain structure. However, the origin of a psychotic condition is in the human brain, as an organ in the body. Mindfulness primarily helps the mind, which is merely a nonphysical product of the brain's function. 

An analogy: going on a ten-mile run every morning doesn't cure Type I Diabetes. Type I, (as opposed to type II, which could actually be helped by a ten-mile run) is an organic lack of production of insulin. If you have Type I, you have to take insulin, period. Exercise, no matter how much you do, is not a substitute. 

When medicated, a person with mental illness has an opportunity to better the function of the mind and emotions through mindfulness. The mindfulness could be seen as the walls of a house, while the medication could be seen as the concrete foundation. To do well, we probably need both medication and meditation. 

If you are on psych meds for three years and practice mindfulness with a lot of focus, you could have good results. If you then discontinue medication because you believe the mindfulness fixed your problem, the result will likely be disastrous. 

Additionally, a full-blown psychotic episode often erases the progress made in meditation practices. That is something you'll discover when you are back on medication and recovering from the inevitable relapse. 

Medication works imperfectly. This is unlike the scenario of taking Synthroid for hypothyroidism. In the case of thyroid, the chemical match is exact or nearly so. On the other hand, brain research hasn't discovered enough about schizophrenia to accomplish treatment at that level. That is why many people with severe mental illnesses don't function at a level considered normal. Sometimes mindfulness can help fill the gap. 

Although mindfulness can potentially help mentally ill people, the illnesses often make it harder to meditate. It is harder to approach mindfulness when the brain is yet, to an extent, malfunctioning. Extra effort and extra focus will help, but not entirely. In some instances, if life gets too frustrating or difficult, we just need to take a break, from whatever it is we're doing that seems to be difficult. 

Life isn't perfect. Meditation can help. And for people with severe schizophrenic illness, medication is a must

A person taking psych medications can reach meditative attainment. The more years we go with uninterrupted treatment and an uninterrupted regimen of meditation, the better off we may be. We don't have to do as well as, or compare ourselves to, other meditation practitioners. We are making progress if we are doing better than we would otherwise. 

We won't at all times have the ability to meditate. In some instances, we are going to feel crappy, and there is no way around it. 

Mindfulness can help us deal with life situations that require behavior changes. And that alone makes it worthwhile. Mindfulness, if practiced enough, with enough skill, can allow us to deal with adverse and unfair circumstances, in a constructive, problem-solving mode. It can allow us not to feel sorry for ourselves, and to instead do things that work to better our lives. 

The above isn't automatic, since mindfulness is no more than a tool. It is a tool that works according to how it is used. And having a tool is better than not having a tool. If we entirely lack mental resources to deal with hard situations, it could be a temptation to resort to street drugs or destructive behavior. 

I credit not having resorted to drugs with the fact that I've studied meditation since early adulthood. I began my studies by reading "Handbook to Higher Consciousness" by Ken Keyes Jr. I also studied the writings of D.T. Suzuki, namely "An Introduction to Zen Buddhism." I've studied "The Miracle of Mindfulness" by Thich Nhat Hanh, who I believe is still alive. And I've studied many other works. In the 1980's, I went a few times to the Berkeley Zen Center. And I've been involved in many other activities. 

However, the main form of mindfulness I've practiced has been an exercise in which I've done journaling in combination with learning (on my own) about the workings of my mind.  

(If the reader is interested in beginning mindfulness practices, I recommend you read any book by Thich Nhat Hanh.) 

Medication is also no more than a tool. It is not a good thing or a bad thing. It can often restore the capacity for basic sanity. It will not solve your problems. It has side effects. A reader wrote to me claiming that medication shrinks the brain. I could not disprove that. However, if the alternative to medication is that I'm going to be permanently locked up and not functional in society, my choice is to take the chance of the medication, since without it, I'd have no chance at life. 

(E. Fuller Torrey, a psychiatrist vilified by many mental health consumers, laments that there is a lack of progress in the development of better medications to treat schizophrenia. It is clear, to anyone who can think, that the current medications could massively be improved upon.) 

So, we have tools: medication and meditation. Medication works through a substance ingested into the body and meditation works through the efforts of the practitioner. Meditation can take years to develop to the point where it becomes a substantial help. It is a skill like any other skill, except that it is largely invisible. It can be discerned when someone is better able to handle a challenging situation. 


Jack Bragen is author of "An Offering of Power: Valuable, Unusual Meditation Methods." 

 

 


ECLECTIC RANT: Bracing for Immigration Raids

Ralph E. Stone
Friday July 19, 2019 - 12:24:00 PM

The San Francisco Bay Area and other cities across the country are bracing for threatened federal raids on undocumented immigrants. 

It is a sad commentary when our president is basing his reelection strategy largely on a blatant racist, anti-immigrant campaign. During his presidential campaign on into his presidency, Trump has attempted to dehumanize and intimidate migrants trying to enter the U.S. through our southern border. 

As Trump once said, “These aren’t people. These are animals.” And he is treating them like animals by locking them up in concentration camp-like facilities, separating children from their parents. These migrants are escaping poverty, drought, corrupt authoritarian governments, and gang violence. Meanwhile, Trump has exacerbated the problem by cutting aid to Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador where many of these migrants originate. 

If Trump’s campaign strategy is successful that says as much about his followers as it does about Trump.


SMITHEREENS: Relections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Friday July 19, 2019 - 10:21:00 AM

Barbara Lee Speaks for Me

Rep. Barbara Lee has long been an outspoken critic of war and intolerance so it was no surprise that she would be pushing for a Congressional resolution to censure Donald Trump following his recent outbursts of racist bile directed at four members of Congress who happen to be women of color.

Rep. Lee had a further message for Trump:

The voices of women of color have been ignored for far too long — but not anymore. We have the most diverse Congress in our nation’s history and I won’t let Trump diminish the accomplishments of women of color with the vile, disgusting, and racist things that come out of his mouth.

Or in this case, his thumbs. . . .

The Squad, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib, and Ayanna Pressley, had the guts to fight back against Trump and now they’re faced with his racist comments suggesting they go back to their own broken countries.

All of my sisters in Congress are American. They swore an oath to protect the United States, and by holding Trump accountable, that’s exactly what they’re doing. 

Word of the Week Award 

Today's "Word of the Week Award" goes to Associated Press journalist Kathy Gannon who, reporting from Kabul on the progress of Afghan peace talks, wrote that the ongoing discussions between the Taliban and the government were "aimed to produce a new level of consensus among Afghanistan's fissiparous society." 

Definitions of "fissiparous" include: "divisive, tending to break or split up into parts" (not good) and "fissionable, reproducing by fission" (even worse). 

Berkeley Faces Climate Crisis, Wildfires, and 5G 

The July 16 meeting of the Berkeley City Council continued to make progress on its 2006 Measure G goal of reducing greenhouse-gas emissions 33% by 2020 (and 80% by 2050). The city, currently 18% shy of this first goal, is set to embark on an ambitious program to replace all gas-burning appliances with all-electric homes and offices. 

Natural gas is responsible for 27% of the 620,000 metric tons of climate-heating pollution Berkeley currently produces every year. Offsetting this greenhouse-gas burden would require planting 730,000 acres of new forests. 

Berkeley is on track to become a pioneering leader in Green Buildings with a Building Savings Ordinance, incentives to pay for clean-energy upgrades, and transfer tax rebates for "green retrofits." 

Wildfires 

Two PG&E reps shared a powerpoint presentation explaining how the energy utility plans to shut down its power grid during high-fire situations. It became clear that responding to PG&E's shutoff could be as challenging as responding to the aftermath of a major earthquake. 

Because of the nature of the grid, the PG&E team explained, responding to a grassfire in Orinda could black-out distant communities at no immediate risk. A major fire in the woodland hills could leave distant cities without power for days or weeks. 

District 6 Councilmember Susan Wengraf asked how her elderly constituents were expected to survive without access to electricity-dependent medical devices. PG&E's response: buy gas-fueled electric generators and turn on your computers and smartphones for the latest news. 

But how do you recharge phones and laptops without electricity in your sockets? PG&E's response: The utility plans to set up tents with recharging stations that people can drive to. Where would these tents be located? PG&E is still working on that. 

One obvious solution that PG&E curiously failed to mention: Resident can equip their homes with off-the-grid solar panels backed up by Tesla Powerwall batteries. 

5G 

More than a dozen speakers lined up to address Consent Item 9, which calls for amending the City's Wireless Telecommunications Ordinance and Aesthetic Guidelines in hopes of blocking the "rollout" of thousands of 5G wireless radiation transmitters across the city. 

Under Section 704 of the 1996 Telecommunications Act, cities are prohibited from challenging the expansion of any corporate telecom projects based on health or environmental concerns. (This patently unconstitutional law is currently being challenged in a US District Court lawsuit.) 

Under current guidelines, 5G transmitters can only be banned from the vicinity of fire stations. This exemption only came after union complaints that firefighters exposed to wireless radiation from nearby transmitters were experiencing headaches, sleeplessness, depression, anxiety, fatigue, and cognitive impairment. These symptoms vanished after the transmission towers were removed. 

For more background on the health and environmental impacts of 5G wireless radiation, view this investigative report by KPIX reporter Julie Watts: 

 

Brand Names that Pop Out 

There's a "male enhancement" product on the market with a perfect brandname: "Extenze Plus." It's a great name because it works in both the temporal and longitudinal sense. (Google confirms that there's a similarly branded "long-lasting" product called "Prolong Plus." And there's another brand—"Alpha Strike Male Enhancement"—that manages to connect sex and violence.) 

Extenze is described as a "dietary supplement." According to a whopping amount of small print, the ingredients include: black pepper berries, white pepper fruit, ginger root, tribulus extract, maca root, yohimbe bark, muira puama bark, stinging nettle root, Hope flower extract, boron and pumpkin seeds. 

There is the familiar caveat that the FDA hasn't evaluated the pills and "this product is not intended to … treat, cure or prevent any disease." 

Possible side effects? Lots of 'em, including: hair-loss in men, facial hair-growth in women, "aggressiveness, irritability, and increased levels of estrogen." 

The oddest bit of advice appears in all-cap letters and reads: "Do not use if pregnant, lactating or nursing." 

So Why Didn't Trump Join the National Guard? 

In a televised UK interview with Piers Morgan, Donald "Bone Spurs" Trump explained why he didn't participate in the Vietnam War. Unlike the conscientious draft resisters who refused to fight and went to jail (or fled to Canada), Trump revealed that he was a conscientious draft avoider

"I was never a fan of that war. I thought it was a terrible war," Trump harrumphed. Asked for specific objections, the best Trump could come up with was: "I thought it was very far away." 

For the record: Ho Chi Minh City is 8,987 miles from Washington, DC. Yemen is 7,286 miles from DC. Sudan is 6,552 miles from DC. Tehran is 6,319 miles from DC. Iraq is 6,169 miles from DC. Syria is 5,960 miles from DC. Libya is 4,849 miles from DC. Colombia is 2,377 miles from DC. 

"Amongst the Cleanest Climate There Are…" 

Trump also told Morgan that the "United States right now has amongst the cleanest climate there are based on all statistics." 

As CNN fact-checkers pointed out: "This is not true. According to something called the Environmental Performance Index, the US actually ranks 27th in environmental quality"—behind the UK, Spain, Greece, Taiwan, Cyprus, and Portugal and just edging out Slovakia, Lithuania, Bulgaria and Costa Rica. 

Trump Dumps on the EPA 

Under Donald Trump's thumb, the Environmental Protection Agency has become the Environmental Pollution Agency. Examples abound. 

At the behest of his oil-gas-and-coal backers, Trump has ordered the EPA to abandon Obama-era regulations designed to double automobile fuel-efficiency goals. 

In July, Trump's EPA took steps to weaken long-established rules that invited public feedback on the environmental impact of industrial expansion, thereby curtailing the public's ability to challenge how much pollution nearby factories and powerplants are allowed to spew. 

Trump's EPA recently overrode warnings from scientists and environmental groups and approved use of a powerful insecticide linked to the "evisceration" of the world's endangered bee populations. Already in serious decline, the US has recorded a 40% colony loss over the past year. (We won't know how many bees will die because Trump's Agriculture Department just announced suspension of its Honey Bee Colonies Report owing to a "budget shortfall.") 

To top it all off, Trump ordered his aides to stage a celebration of his "environmental legacy." It proved to be an exercise in "fake news." The progress cited was actually rooted in measures instituted before Trump's presidency and, as the Associated Press pointed out, "in some of the particulars, they were wrong. For example, the air is not cleaner under Trump." 

Trump Toys with Becoming "President for Life" 

According to a report in the June 16 Washington Post, Donald Trump has tweet-hinted that he's open to occupying the Oval Office well beyond the Constitutionally limited two terms. 

Trump's potentially impeachable tweet included gratuitous swipes at the New York Times and Washington Post and added: “The good news is that at the end of 6 years, after America has been made GREAT again and I leave the beautiful White House (do you think the people would demand that I stay longer? KEEP AMERICA GREAT), both of these horrible papers will quickly go out of business & be forever gone!” 

Trump made a similar remark at an event in April, when he told a crowd that he might remain in the Oval Office “at least for 10 or 14 years” and, last year, Trump told Republican donors at his Mar-a-Lago estate that he'd like to follow the example of Chinese President Xi Jinping, proclaiming: “He’s now president for life. President for life! No, he’s great. And look, he was able to do that. I think it’s great. Maybe we’ll have to give that a shot some day.” 

In a Real Democracy Leaders Are Chosen by Popular Vote 

Tired of the Electoral College? Fed up with presidential campaigns decided by the Supreme Court? The National Popular Vote bill would guarantee the Presidency to the candidate who receives the most popular votes in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Imagine: if every vote in the US were equal, every vote in every state would count. 

Thanks to our winner-take-all state laws, two of our last three presidential "winners" (George W. Bush and Donald Trump) actually lost the popular vote. 

Good news. A record 4 states have enacted the National Popular Vote bill so far in 2019. The bill is already law in 16 states. These states have 196 electoral votes—only 74 short of the 270 needed to activate the bill and thereby guaranteeing the Presidency to the candidate receiving the most popular votes in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. 

Bad news. The NPV's Republican opponents have bolstered their lobbying machine in hopes of blocking the path to the 270 critical votes. 

There's more to learn at the National Popular Vote web site where you can find 14 illuminating videos and answers to 131 myths about the NPV. 

Comic Gags that Made Me Choke 

I'm a long-time fan of Garry Trudeau's Doonesbury strip—especially the Sunday samplings that specialize in skewering the Orange Demon in the White House—but the June 30 installment troubled me. It depicted Trudeau's fictional daredevil, the "Red Rascal," showing up in Tehran and swinging a sword to dispatch Iranian leader Hassan Rouhani—at the behest of Trump's hawkish advisor John Bolton. 

Since Trudeau's website invites feedback, I expressed concern that the "satirical" assassination of the leader of a foreign country could (1) serve to "normalize" the possibility and (2) could further trouble Iran's leaders. 

I have a related problem with Mark Tatulli's Lio, whose macabre exploits occasionally involve depictions of nuclear missiles and mushroom clouds. 

When it comes to a country like the nuclear-armed-and-coup-plotting USA, neither nuclear war nor regime-changing assassinations are laughing matters. 

Nuke News: NATO Slip-up Reveals US A-bombs in EU 

NATO has a long-term policy that it will neither "confirm nor deny" the presence of US nuclear weapons in EU countries. On July 16, however, the Belgian newspaper De Morgen published part of a NATO document (from the rapporteur of the Defense and Security Committee of the NATO Assembly) that spilled some precious nuclear beans. 

The NATO document, titled "A New Era for Nuclear Deterrence? Modernisation, Arms Control, and Allied Nuclear Forces," revealed that the Pentagon has secretly stashed its nuclear bombs in six nations. 

A message Smithreens recently received from Pieter Teirlinck with the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) included this key sentence: 

"Within the NATO context, the US forward-deploys approximately 150 gravity bombs, specific B61 gravity bombs, to Europe for use on both US and Allied dual-capable aircraft. These bombs are stored at six US and European bases—Kleine Brogel in Belgium, Büchel in Germany, Aviano in Italy and Ghedi-Torre in Italy, Volkel in The Netherlands and Inçirlik in Turkey." 

Teirlinck provided the following chronology: the document "was dated 16th April, discussed on 1th of June in Bratislava. 11th of July it was published again but this specific passage was altered to a more general passage." Teirlinck also provided a Screenshot of the passage (in Dutch). 

London's The Independent, one of the newspapers that shared the story, also revealed that there are now "roughly 150 US nuclear weapons stored in Europe."


Arts & Events

Blake Pouliot Solos In Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Monday July 22, 2019 - 01:14:00 PM

Twenty-four year-old Canadian violinist Blake Pouliot made a splashy debut with San Francisco Symphony on Thursday, July 18, at Davies Hall. I don’t know, however, which was more splashy, his skill as a violinist or his fashion statement. Blake Pouliot walked on stage wearing tight-fitting, shiny, silver pants, a three-quarter sleeve-length black T-shirt, and a black sash wound around his neck and hanging down over his left shoulder to his waist. He looked for all the world like a rock star; and his pants, in either satin or lamé, were reminiscent of pants Elvis Presley wore.  

Wielding his bow, Blake Pouliot tore into the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto like a rock musician wielding an electric guitar. Of grace and delicacy there was precious little in Blake Pouliot’s performance of this Mendelssohn classic. But of speed and drive there were plenty. The first and third movements, of course, call for a fair amount of speed and drive, so these sections of the work came off reasonably well, given that guest conductor Brett Mitchell seemed to collude with Blake Pouliot in emphasising these qualities. However, the second movement, a slow Andante, seemed flat. It had none of its usual shimmering quality, which I liken to the play of sunlight on ripples of water. In Blake Pouliot’s hands, however, there was no sunlight and no magical shimmering. It was just flat and dull. 

At the conclusion of Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto, after taking his bows, Blake Pouliot addressed the audience, saying in a boyish voice how much he enjoyed being in San Francisco. Then as an encore he played the song “The Last Rose of Summer.” Here, for once, Pouliot showed he could play with grace and delicacy; but why he didn’t infuse these qualities into Mendelssohn’s beautiful Andante I simply can’t fathom. Could the fault here lie as much with conductor Brett Mitchell as with soloist Blake Pouliot? Who can say? 

Bookending the Mendelssohn were two works by Hector Berlioz. Opening the program was the Hungarian March from Berlioz’s opera La Damnation de Faust. This brief orchestral work begins as a jaunty march, which features first reeds then brass and strings. As it develops, however, it becomes ever more boisterous, even bombastic, ending in an all out, bring the house down, fortissimo climax. 

The second half of the concert was devoted to Berlioz’s Symphonie fantastique. I confess that I have never cottoned to this work, which strikes me as emanating from an overheated, perfervid mind ordering on delusional schizophrenia. Here Berlioz attempted to write music depicting his obsessive love for a woman he had only seen on stage as an actress in a Shakespeare play in 1827. The object of his obsessive passion was the English actress Harriet Smthson, to whom Berlioz sent dozens of impassioned love letters (in a French she could not understand). Miss Smithson never responded. So Berlioz began composing Symphonie fantastique in attempting to put his obsessive passion into music. This work’s first premiere went unnoticed by Harriet Smthson. But when Barlioz revised it for the work’s second premiere in 1832, he somehow impressed Miss Smithson; and though she spoke little French and he little English, they were married in 1833. This unlikely marriage, however, quickly proved unworkable, and they were eventually formally divorced after a tumultuous eleven years in 1844. 

Symphonie fantastique is comprised of five sections. The first, “Reveries, Passions,” I find utterly inchoate, quite simply, all over the place. In notes he attached to the score, Berlioz wrote of his obsessive idée fixe, of melancholic reverie, unmotivated joy, delirious passion, fury and jealousy, tenderness, tears, and religious consolation. In short, it’s too much. The second section, “The Ball,” begins with a lovely, almost Viennese waltz, which gradually, however, turns manic once the idée fixe returns in flutes and oboes, upsetting the serenity of the waltz. 

The third section, “Scenes in the Country,” opens with a duet, first heard in English horn and oboe, between two Swiss shepherds in a ranz des vaches. Later, this piping is taken over by two flutes over violins. The overall mood here in serene and bucolic. However, the music suddenly turns jagged and anxious as worries and presentiments about the lover’s obsessive passion intrude. Then the timpani suggest thunder rumbling in the distant mountains, as this section ends. In the fourth section, “March to the Scaffold,” the lover takes opium, falls asleep and has a nightmare. Here the Symphonie fantastique diverges into phantasmagoria. He dreams he has killed the woman he loves, for which he is led to the scaffold to be hanged. He dreams he is about to witness, as Berlioz writes, using capital letters, “HIS OWN EXECUTION.”  

The fifth and final section, “Dream of a Witches’ Sabbath,” offers unremittingly ghoulish music, with screeching clarinets. Later, bells introduce a burlesque of the Dies Irae in tubas and bassoons. Finally, the idée fixe returns one last time, now jumbled together with the burlesqued Dies Irae, closing the Symphonie fantatstique in a frenzy of demonic energy and strident sounds. 

Where guest conductor Brett Mitchell is concerned, I think his best work was in the Symphonie fantastique. Mitchell encouraged the orchestra to bring out the extreme, even excessive, qualities of this music, but he also managed to keep things under control throughout. Mitchell was less successful, I found, in the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto, where, teamed with soloist Blake Pouliot, they overemphasised the speed and drive of this work to the detriment of the grace and delicacy of the beautiful Andante. Given that this was Brett Mitchell’s local debut, I’d have to say that, at least on the merits of his account of Berlioz’s Symphonie fantastique, I’d welcome hearing him return here at some time in the future. As for violinist Blake Pouliot, well, I’m not so sure. 


Merola Opera: The Future Is Now, Yet Again

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Friday July 19, 2019 - 11:16:00 AM

At Merola Opera’s Schwabacher Concert on Thursday evening, July 11, at San Francisco Conservatory of Music, I was reminded of the slogan Merola Opera has used over previous years — “The Future Is Now.” Well, that formulation is surely appropriate for this year’s bumper crop of Merola’s young singers. At this Schwabacher Concert the level of vocal artistry demonstrated by the Merolini was consistently at a very high level. For listeners, it’s quite exciting to hear young singers at or near the beginning of their careers, who go on stage with a full orchestra and limited but effective costuming and staging, and sing their hearts out in stirringly beautiful vocal display. 

For this year’s Schwabacher Concert, extensive scenes from five operas were performed by different casts of singers. Opening the program was Act 1 from Puccini’s La Rondine, which featured soprano Amber R. Monroe as Magda. Monroe’s voice is impressively rich and full, though her high notes can be shrill. Her voice is so powerful I’m not sure which roles are best for her, though Turandot comes immediately to mind. As Magda, Amber R. Monroe delivered a stirring rendition of Prunier’s unfinished song, Chi bel sogno di Doretta. In the role of Prunier, tenor Victor Starsky was impressive, both vocally and dramatically. But the real star of Act ! of La Rondine may well be the soubrette role of Lisette, here gorgeously sung by South Korean soprano Hyeree Shin. Lisette may be Magda’s maid, but this woman has a mind of her own; and she takes no nonsense from anyone, especially not from her secret lover, Prunier. Also worthy of mention were baritone Jeff Byrnes as Rambaldo and tenor Salvatore Atti as Ruggero. 

Next on the program was Act 1, Scene 4 from Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor. The role of Lucia was splendidly sung by soprano Chelsea Lehnea, who brought great intensity (and a hint of the madness that later overcomes Lucia) in her portrayal of the superstitious but passionate Lucia. Here, Lucia surreptitiously meets her beloved Edgardo, only to learn she must endure a long separation. Tenor Salvatore Atti was an able Edgardo opposite the tall, imposing Chelsea Lehnea as Lucia, never lacking in vocal presence. In the role of Alisa, Lucia’s confidante, mezzo-soprano Alice Chung gave an impressive foretaste of the riches she later delivered as Azucena in Verdi’ Il Trovatore.  

The second half of the program opened with Act 2, Scenes 3 and 4 from Richard Strauss’s rarely performed Die schweigsame Frau/The Silent Woman. The plot of this comic opera by Strauss is quite similar to that of the much better known Don Pasquale by Donizetti. Here the older man foolishly in search of a young wife is nobly sung by bass Stefan Egerstrom in the role of Morosus. Soprano Hyeree Shin was outstanding as the young girl who assumes the name of Timidia and pretends to be shy and innocent in order to lure Morosus into a marriage proposal he will soon regret. In the role of the scheming Barber, baritone Laureano Quant was vocally impressive while surreptitiously managing the pretense as an eminence grise. 

Next came Act 4, Scenes 3 and 4 from Gounod’s Faust. In the title role, tenor Salvatore Atti gave a fine performance, one embodying the hesitations in Faust’s feelings about his responsibility towards Marguerite, whom he has impregnated. As Marguerite, soprano Anna Dugan had little opportunity to show off her vocal talents, though they were briefly in evidence here. Bass-baritone Andrew Dwan was a forceful, manipulative Mephistopheles, and baritone Laureano Quant was a vocally impressive, angry, vengeful Valentino, Marguerite’s brother. 

Rounding out the evening in splendid fashion was a lengthy excerpt of most of the last act of Verdi’s Il Trovatore. Here soprano Anna Dugan truly came into her own as Leonora. Dugan’s voice is a richly colored soprano with a full-bodied mid-range combined with spot-on high notes. 

Dramatically, Dugan sang with great intensity, skilfully embodying all he conflicting emotions Leonora goes through as she tries to save the life of her beloved Manrico. As Count di Luna, baritone Jeff Byrnes was convincingly evil. Tenor Victor Starsky was outstanding as Manrico. Starsky, too, sang with great intensity, and he let out all the stops in this vocally demanding role. 

In the role of Azucena, mezzo-soprano Alice Chung was stupendous! Her husky voice is admirably suited to the role of this tormented Gypsy woman; and Alice Chung sang with great gusto and enormous vocal range. So uniformly excellent were all four singers in this lengthy excerpt from Verdi’s Il Trovatore that one could easily imagine these were leading international opera stars and not young artists in the Merola training program. 

Throughout this concert, the Schwabacher Summer Concert Orchestra was robustly led by conductor Craig Kier, who brought out the fine orchestral moments while always attentive to guiding the singers in matters of tempo and dynamics. The staging by Jose Maria Condemi made fine use of minimal props while emphasizing movement and expressive gestures from the singers. 

So, yet again: the future is now. Don’t miss the Merola Grand Finale on Saturday, August 17, at the Opera House. Moreover, there’s an added bonus production of a new opera by Jake Heggie, If I Were You, the first ever opera to be commissioned by Merola in its 62-year history. If I Were You will receive four performances, August 1, 3, 4 and 6 at Herbst Theatre. 

 


Summer History and Architecture Walks in Berkeley This Month

Steven Finacom
Friday July 19, 2019 - 10:56:00 AM

The Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association (BAHA) has started a series of Summer guided walking tours. The first tour was this past Sunday, but three more are scheduled over the next three weeks.
As of this writing space is available on all three walks. The guided walks all cost $15 each and all take place on Sundays from 1 to 3 PM.
On Sunday, July 21, UC Berkeley librarian and mystery fiction expert Randal Brandt will lead a walk in south central Berkeley focusing on sites associated with important literary figures. Homes of notable authors and editors will be visited (seen from the street), along with sites that figure in local fiction. The notables discussed include famed science fiction and mystery editor and writer Anthony Boucher and pioneering fantasy and science fiction writer Marion Zimmer Bradley.
On Sunday, July 28, two current UC students who have studied campus architecture and history will lead a walk through the UC campus visiting and describing an eclectic array of buildings and how they came about, and discussing their designers.
Finally, on Sunday, August 11, I'll co-lead a walk with "Quirky Berkeley" author Tom Dalzell entitled "Around People's Park". We'll not only discuss the history and future of the Park--which turned 50 this year--but the unprecedented array of landmark and architecturally distinctive buildings that surround the Park on adjoining blocks.
You can sign up for the walks at Eventbrite. Go here.
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/baha-summer-2019-walking-tours-4-separate-ticketed-events-tickets-64262602173
The walk descriptions are provided. Click on the green "Tickets" icon to purchase. There's also a phone number to call if you have questions or problems making a reservation.
(Disclosure: the author is president of the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association).


The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, July 21-28

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday July 20, 2019 - 10:39:00 AM

Worth Noting and Showing Up:

Monday the Mayor’s State of the City Address is sold out. It will be live on his Facebook page,

Tuesday is the last City Council meeting until September 10. The Agenda appears unbearably long. While most of it is on consent, the action items include RV permitting - Item 38. Is a one-time annual permit for a 2week RV parking permit and 39. is for a 3-month RV parking permit and temporary safe parking site. Item 40. the Update on Policing Stop Data states policing stops have declined but contains no actual data and recommends creation of a task force. The last item is the Pipeline (housing) report with the number of multi-unit projects approved, built and low-income units within the projects. The report confirms what is visible on the street, not enough affordable housing is being built and there is an excess of market rate (overpriced) units. 

Sunday, July 21, 2019 

No City meetings or events found 

Monday, July 22, 2019 

Mayor Arreguin State of the City Address, 6 pm sold out, it will be live streamed on Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/berkeleymayor/ 

Community Health Commission – Cannabis Subcommittee, 11 am, at 2000 University, Au Coquelet, Agenda: Draft Cannabis Recommendation 

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

Zero Waste Commission, 7 – 9 pm at 1326 Allston Way, Willow Room, City of Berkeley Corporation Yard, Agenda with approximate times: 7:45 pm Presentation Telegraph Ave Reusable Cup Pilot Program, 8:05 pm Preview Ecology Center Resourceful web application, 8:15 pm City Solid Waste and Recycling Transfer station, 8:25 pm Single Use Foodware Ordinance Implementation including signage and public education, 8:45 pm. Reduction of flammable vegetation - Fire Fuel Chipper and Debris Bin Program information, https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Zero_Waste_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

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

Tuesday, July 23, 2019 

Mental Health Commission Site Visit Subcommittee, 12:30 pm at 2180 Cypress Room, 1st Floor, Agenda: Consumer Feedback Session 

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

Berkeley City Council, at 1231 Addison Street, BUSD Board Room, 

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

Closed Session with Legal Counsel, 5:00 pm, Agenda: 1. Blake v. City of Berkeley, Case No. RG17870367, 2. City of Berkeley v. Regents of University of California, Case No. RG19023058 

Regular Meeting, 6:00 pm – 11:00 pm, Agenda: CONSENT: 1. Expand control of flavored tobacco, 3. 2020 Council meeting schedule, 5. Affordable Housing - Use a portion of tax-exempt bonds for reimbursement of expenditures for the projects – expected obligation $175 million, 6. Animal Care Mutual Aid in Disasters, 7. RFP, 8. Amend contract with Resource Development Assoc (RDA) total $54,500 to build database for Mental Health Division Homeless Outreach and Treatment Team (HOTT), 9. Mental Health Services Act Annual Update, 10. Amend contract with Merritt Hawkins adding $100,000 (total $149,990) for recruitment of psychiatrist, 11. Amend 7 contracts increasing total to $2,162,700 thru June 30, 2020 for Mental Health Services Act Community Services, Supports, Prevention and Early Intervention, 12. 5 yr contract for $1,363,735 with AMCS for Zero Waste Management Software System, 13. 5 yr contract for $487,249 with Assetworks for a Fleet Management Software 14. Add $42,216 (total $76,811) to Communication Strategies contract for developing requirements and needs assessment for Voice over IP support and maintenance, 15. Special use permit with US Forest Service for Tuolumne Camp, 16. $365,000 contract with Left Coast Land Clearing for hazard mitigation Tuolumne Camp, 17. $584,354 contract with Leslie Heavy Haul, LLC for Tuolumne Camp Tree Hazard Mitigation, 18. Contract for $468,706 and $70,000 Contingency (total $538,706) with McNabb Construction, Inc for George Florence Park Playground Renovation – 2121 Tenth St, 19. Grant Application – Trees Build Community Program, 20. Amend Contract add $55,000 total $250,000 Asphalt Repairs-Resurface City Parks, 22. Authorize modification of Measure T1 Phase 1 project list removing King School Park Bioswale project and adding 13 priority sites identified by Green Infrastructure plan (6/18/19) and Public Works Commission, 23. Selective Traffic Enforcement Program Grant, 24. 2019-202 Alcoholic Beverage Control Grant, 25. Add $50,000 and extend contract to 6/30/21 with Restoration Management Co. for on-call remediation and restoration services, 26. 3 yr contract $450,000 with Stockton Tri Industries for Front Loading and Rear Loading Container Purchase, 28. Increase amended contract by $31,161 (total $351,317 plus $6,000 contingency) with W.A. Rose Construction for exterior Stucco Demolition Work at the Central Library, 29. Defendant’s Side Agreement to facilitate Consent Decree Compliance, 30. Preferential Parking Permit Update, 31. Prioritize street light replacement and street improvements by high-collision street first, 32. Transfer $550,000 to Rent Board to amend contracts with Eviction Dense Center and East Bay Law Center and anti-displacement services for low and moderate-income Berkeley residents, 33. . Designate Ohlone Greenway and West Street Bike Path as linear City Parks, 34. Support CA SB 464 Dignity in Pregnancy and Childbirth, 35. Support AB 1279 Housing development, ACTION: 36. Amendments to Berkeley Election Reform Act, 37. Substantial Amendments to Annual Action Plans for Use of Emergency Solutions Grants (ESG) Funds allocating maximum allowable amount towards shelter and street outreach and away from rapid rehousing – (Hearing scheduled for 6 – 7 pm according to the Community Calendar), 38. 2-week RV Permitting Process – allows one time/year 2-week permit, 39. ID Locations for Managed Safe RV Parking on City-Owned Land, Development of 3-month “Grace Period” Permit Program, and request that State Lands Commission Permit Temporary Safe Parking Site at Berkeley Waterfront, 40. Update on BPD Stop Data Collection, Data Analysis and Community Engagement, 41. Wage Theft Prevention, D. Pipeline Report, INFORMATION: 43.Update Measure T1, 44. Parks, Recreation, Waterfront – Audit Status Report, 48. 2020 Public Art Plan and Budget, 49. B.M.C. 13.79.050 Report 103 Tenants accepted buyout agreements to vacate their tenancy March 2016 – June 2018, 50. Zero Waste Commission Work Plan, 51. Audit Plan FY 2019, 2020. To include performance audits housing/homelessness, street repairs, climate change response.  

Wednesday, July 24, 2019 

Civic Arts Commission, 6 – 8 pm at 1901 Russell St, Tarea Hall Pittman South Branch Library, Agenda: 4.a. Berkeley Big People, b. Extend Display of “Home” at Downtown BART, c. Purchase 6 Artworks by Stephen MacMillan, d. Affordable Housing for Artists 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/CivicArtsCommissionHomepage/ 

Energy Commission, 6:30 – 9 pm at 1947 Center St, Agenda: 4. Electric Mobility Roadmap, 5. Climate Action Fund Referendum, 6. Building Electrification 

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

Police Review Commission, 7 – 10 pm, at 2939 Ellis, South Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: 8. Subcommittee Reports a. Lexipol Policies, b. MOU Compendium, c. Standard of Proof, 9. Surveillance Use Policies, Acquisition, Technology Use & Community Safety GPS Tracking, 10. c. PRC Participation in Tuesday, Aug 6 National Night Out, d. Lexipol Policies – Hate Crimes, Information Technology Use, Private Person’s arrest,  

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

Thursday, July 25, 2019 

Community Health Commission, 6:30 – 9 pm at 2939 Ellis St. South Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: Presentation: City Public Health Division update by Dr. Jose Ducos, Action Cannabis Recommendations 

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

Mental Health Commission, 7 – 9 pm at 1947 Center St, Basement Multi-purpose Room, Agenda: 4. Discussion and possible Action on video of Berkeley Police Dept presentation to the Police Review Commission 

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

Zoning Adjustment Board, 7 pm at 1231 Addison St, BUSD Board Room, Agenda: 1486 University application withdrawn, remaining item 2151 ½ Stuart St – convert 212 sq. ft. of garage area to habitable space, add 174 sq. ft. habitable space, create 6th bedroom in existing rear dwelling by raising unit 1’5” and shifting it 1’4” eastward. Staff recommend approve 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/zoningadjustmentsboard/ 

Friday, July 26, 2019 

Mental Health Commission – Mobile Crisis Response Subcommittee, 5:30 pm at 2939 Ellis St. South Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: Review Needs Assessment for Mobile Crisis 

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

Saturday, July 27, 2019 

Music in the Park – Morchestra and Morgan Maudiere’s 4 piece Jazz Band, 12 noon – 3 pm, Civic Center Park  

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/City_Manager/Press_Releases/2019/2019-07-16_Music_Concerts_in_Berkeley_Parks___Big_Band,_Blues,_Hip_Hop_and_more.aspx 

Sunday, July 28, 2019 

No City sponsored events or meetings found 

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Public Hearings Scheduled – Land Use Appeals 

2325 Sixth St (single family residence) – public hearing 9/24/2019 

Notice of Decision (NOD) With End of Appeal Period 

1111 Allston Way (single family dwelling) – 7-8-2019 

2198 San Pablo Ave (new mixed-use development) – 7-8-2019 

0 Euclid Ave- Berryman Reservoir (denial of telecom facility) 

Landmarks Preservation Ordinance Notice of Decision (NOD) 

1619 Walnut 

1915 Fourth St 

2580 Bancroft 

Remanded to ZAB or LPC With 90-Day Deadline 

1155-73 Hearst (develop 2 parcels) – referred back to City Council – to be scheduled 

2701 Shattuck (construct 5-story mixed-use building) – ZAB 6-30-2019 

 

 

WORKSHOPS 

Sept 17 – Arts and Culture Plan, Zero Waste Rate Review, Adeline Corridor Plan 

Oct 22 – Berkeley’s 2020 Vision Update, Census 2020 Update, Short term Rentals 

Nov 5 - Transfer Station Feasibility Study, Vision Zero Action Plan, 

Unscheduled – Cannabis Health Considerations 

 

Unscheduled PRESENTATIONS 

Referral Response: Explore Grant Writing Services 

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To Check For Regional Meetings with Berkeley Council Appointees go to 

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

 

To check for Berkeley Unified School District Board Meetings go to 

https://www.berkeleyschools.net/schoolboard/board-meeting-information/ 

 

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

http://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/whats-ahead.html and in the Berkeley Daily Planet under activist’s calendar http://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com 

 

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