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New: Update on COVID-19 (Coronavirus)

Brent Stephens, Ed.D. Superintendent, Berkeley Unified School District
Thursday February 27, 2020 - 04:15:00 PM

I’m writing to share with you the latest information the District has about COVID-19 (coronavirus). There are still currently no confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Berkeley or Alameda County. While handling the spread of a serious contagion like the COVID-19 is primarily a job for public health agencies, I want to assure you that leadership at Berkeley Unified School District is closely monitoring information coming from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and continuing to seek regular updates from Alameda County Department of Public Health, Alameda County Office of Education (ACOE) and the City of Berkeley Public Health Officer, Dr. Lisa Hernandez.  

The CDC reports that person-to-person spread of COVID-19 appears to occur mainly by respiratory transmission. The California Department of Public Health advises the following steps to prevent the spread of all respiratory viruses: 

  • Wash hands with soap and water.
  • Avoid touching eyes, nose or mouth with unwashed hands.
  • Avoiding close contact with people who are sick.
  • Staying away from work, school or other people if you become sick with respiratory symptoms like fever and cough.
As a reminder, here are guidelines the District provides to parents for determining when your child should stay home from school.  

  • If your child feels ill enough that he/she would not be able to benefit from attending school.
  • If having your child at school would significantly put others at risk for contacting your child’s illness.
  • If your child has vomited in the last 24 hours.
  • If your child has had a fever in the last 24 hours.
As always, the health and safety of our students and staff remain our number one priority, and as such we will continue to communicate information about COVID-19 as the situation develops. 

 

 


New: People’s Park is Berkeley’s most famous landmark and provides irreplaceable open space

The People’s Park Historic District Advocacy Group
Monday February 24, 2020 - 06:34:00 PM

Berkeley is one of the most densely populated cities in California and open space is needed, particularly in the extremely crowded south campus area.

Historians, preservationists, students, neighbors and concerned citizens have come together to form the People’s Park Historic District Advocacy Group to document and preserve the open space of People’s Park and the historic resources encircling it.

Although there is no denying that truly affordable housing is needed, People’s Park is Berkeley’s most famous landmark and is valuable, irreplaceable public open space for the densely populated south campus area. We oppose construction on People’s Park. Our group, which formed in the summer of 2019, is moved to action by the following issues: 

· People’s Park, a designated City of Berkeley Landmark, is the centerpiece of 11 surrounding landmarked properties, each recognized for local, state, and/or national significance. 

· These landmarks, collectively, reflect the historic beginnings and development of both the University of California and the City of Berkeley. 

· Berkeley is one of the most densely populated cities in California and has a need for open space, particularly in the extremely crowded south campus area. The lack of park acreage in Berkeley has been noted for well over a 100 years. 

· People’s Park, created by the free speech and community activism of the 1960’s, today opens up a clear vista upon the 11 iconic properties, ranging from the pioneer John Woolley House (1876) to one of the great monuments of American architecture, the First Church of Christ, Scientist. 

· The open urban space and the surrounding historic properties have all, together, suffered from disruption, turmoil and instability but share together the potential for transformation as an irreplaceable asset and community resource.  

· Now is the time to call upon the university and the city, together, to acknowledge and to enter into dialogue to preserve and improve People's Park as the heart and soul of a historic district that will provide much needed open space in the Southside, as well as celebrate a shared place of local, state and national distinction.  

We call on the chancellor to join us in celebrating the significant historic and cultural landmarks woven into this unique neighborhood and invite everyone to work together with us to support the People’s Park Historic District as a creative, grassroots, community-based, user-developed initiative. Other sites are available for housing; we oppose construction on the open space of People’s Park. 

To add your support or ask questions, contact us at peoplesparkhxdist@gmail.com. 

 

Endorsers 

David Axelrod, attorney 

Paul Kealoha Blake, co-founder East Bay Media Center 

Jim Chanin, civil rights attorney 

Tom Dalzell, author, union lawyer 

Michael Delacour, People’s Park co-founder 

Carol Denney, writer, musician 

Lesley Emmington, Berkeley resident 

Clifford Fred, former Berkeley Planning Commissioner 

Jack Hirschman, former Poet Laureate of San Francisco 

Bonnie Hughes, former Berkeley Arts Commissioner 

Sheila Jordan, Alameda County Superintendent of Schools Emerita 

Meghan Kanady, UC Berkeley Landscape Architecture graduate student 

Joe Liesner, activist 

Seth Lunine, educator, researcher 

Tom Miller, attorney and President, Green Cities Fund 

Osha Neumann, lawyer 

Revolutionary Poets Brigade 

Marty Schiffenbauer, former Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board Commissioner 

Bob Schildgen, writer 

Dan Siegel, civil rights attorney, ASUC president (1969-70) 

Harvey Smith, public historian, educator 

Margot Smith, retired social scientist, activist 

Elizabeth Starr, environmental advocate 

Zach Stewart, landscape architect for Berkeley Shorebird Park and Willard Park 

Lisa Teague, People’s Park Committee member 

Daniella Thompson, architectural historian 

Mel Vapour, co-founder East Bay Media Center 

Max Ventura, singer, activist 

Steve Wasserman, publisher and executive director, Heyday  

Anne Weills, civil rights attorney 

Charles Wollenberg, California historian, writer


Restoring Integrity from Traitorous Corruption: Warren Can Do It

Bruce Joffe
Monday February 24, 2020 - 02:26:00 PM

He betrayed our Kurdish fighters against ISIS. He defended Putin and disparaged our Intelligence Agencies which unanimously reported that Russia interferes in our elections. He replaced dedicated professionals with political puppets in our nation's Intelligence, Justice, and Treasury departments. He's lied to us over 17,000 times. He obstructs justice, coddles Russia, and extorts our allies.

These crimes, and so many more, should motivate fair-minded Republicans as well as Independents and Democrats to vote against such traitorous corruption. Any Bernie, Biden, Buttigieg, Bloomberg, or Klobuchar could win and remove him from office. But only Warren can win AND govern effectively to cleanse the putrefaction.

Elizabeth Warren has the competence and courage to restore integrity from trump's corruption. Warren has the compassion and commitment to repair the social safety net. Warren has the smarts and moderate demeanor to win a political majority for the comprehensive changes that most Americans want and need. 

Some political pundits claim that although Elizabeth Warren is best suited to be our next President, she is "too radical," "too far left," to win Middle America's votes. But, a large majority understands that current Republican leadership has gone way too far "right," where the top 1% is served while the rest of us scramble. 

Most Americans feel that the economy is rigged for billionaires who don't pay their fair share of taxes, leaving the rest of us to pay for necessary government services. Warren stands for a 2% property tax on billionaires' assets over $50 million. 

Most believe our election system is rigged for oligarchs who control the messages, the legislation, and the candidates with unlimited campaign contributions. Warren stands for changing this unfair system. 

A majority knows they are getting ripped off by private health insurance companies. Warren proposes a transition to Medicare for All. 

Most people want affordable college education that benefits students and fulfills our country's need for educated citizens. Warren has a plan. 

Elizabeth Warren is not radical left, she's central, offering the substantial changes we need to repair the damage being done to us daily.


Trump’s visit to India

Jagjit Singh
Monday February 24, 2020 - 02:22:00 PM

Expressing his “profound affection” for India, President Trump gushed “I love Hindu”. The puzzling adoration of Indian masses at home and abroad for India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi is matched by India’s curiosity or “affection” for President Trump.

Preparations are in full swing for “Namaste Trump” Back from his triumphant “Howdy Modi” visit to the US, Modi is pulling out all the stops to make Trump’s visit memorable and boost his sagging popularity at his many controversial policies. A full range of security arrangements have been made employing more than 4,000 security personnel and elite paramilitary forces.

Mr. Trump has been promised an adoring crowd of 10 million flag waving locals from Ahmedabad which has a population of only 8 million!

Mr. Trump secretly envies Modi’s tight grip on society where free speech is nonexistent. Even innocent comments on Facebook can invoke Modi’s wrath and result in jail time. India’s culture of impunity exists for senior party officials facing charges of murder, rape and extortion. Such charges are routinely dismissed.

For example, charges of murder and kidnapping have long dogged Amit Shah, Mr. Modi’s closest confidant and India’s home minister, but the judge in his case mysteriously died soon after Mr. Modi became prime minister in 2014; the terrified succeeding judge promptly acquitted Mr. Shah.

Mr. Trump broad-brushing immigrants as “rapists and murderers” is similar to Mr. Shah’s denunciation of Muslim immigrants as “termites”. 

Outrage has accompanied Trump’s excessive cruelty separating children from their parents at the US-Mexico border, but a similar policy in the Kashmir Valley has been accompanied by a deafening silence. While Fox News usually provides unconditional support and cover for Trump’s bizarre behavior and utterances, Modi enjoys universal support from most T-V channels and newspapers collectively called “Modi’s toddies”. A few courageous reporters who criticize Modi receive unrelenting hostility and are quickly silenced. An autocrat’s paradise! 

India’s long tradition claiming to be a secular state has vanished. 

The heroes of India’s freedom movement and the universal messages of peace, tolerance and harmony of India’s great religious leaders have long been forgotten in the march towards tyranny and political sycophancy.


The Big Con: Affordability facts that politicians will never tell you

Bob Silvestri
Sunday February 23, 2020 - 09:53:00 AM

Statistics are like lawyers. You can find one to support your position no matter how ridiculous.

As the final part of an ongoing series on “affordability,” this article looks into the biggest elephant in the room: statistics that have been abused by every federal and state administration for the past 40 years, about the cost of living.

What the heck is going on?

Trying to apply the rules of finance to the world, today, is like trying to apply the rule of law to Bill Barr’s Justice Department. It makes your head hurt because it’s disconnected from reality.

Tesla, a company that has annual earnings of about $24.8 billion is “valued” by the market as a $145 billion company, even though it does not make a profit. Meanwhile, General Motors has annual revenues of about $137 billion and made $8.1 billion net profit and is valued by the market as a $49.6 billion company. Granted, Tesla’s growth rate is currently projected to be three times that of GM’s, but when Tesla gets as big as GM, it’s not going to be growing that fast, anymore. Tesla is presently valued at more than Honda, Ford, and General Motors, combined.

This defies common sense. What ever happened to the efficient market theory?

Now consider that the U.S. Federal Reserve is incessantly talking about easing interest rates and being ready to flood the markets with cash (quantitative easing) at the slightest sign of economic “weakness,” at a time when all the major stock market averages are making all-time highs, almost dialy.

This has never happened before in the history of modern finance. And, it is enabling bad actors in the markets, propping up insolvent, “zombie” companies that have no business continuing to exist, and encouraging wild speculation in stock and bond markets around the world. 

What has also never happened is that banks have been tightening lending standards for individuals even as the federal government is flooding them with cash. This is leading to the public increasing savings from their paychecks, even though interest rates are going down. 

While pundits spin elaborate theories about all of this, one thing is glaringly obvious. This represents a climate of uncertainty and fear at a time when the government is telling us there’s nothing to fear. 

Someone has it wrong. 

As fascinating as all this might be, you may be asking, what does any of this have to do with “affordability” and the average person being able to afford to live a middle class lifestyle? 

The answer is it’s all symptomatic of an economy that our government has been Jerry-rigging for decades to persuade the public into accepting what might be called “modern indentured servitude:” a life that is the equivalent of being a “debt mule” to feed an economic system based on a lust for unlimited consumption, that rewards those who control assets over those who contribute labor. 

It’s a system in which stock market valuations are now directly tied to many other major systemic financial problems, such as unfunded pension obligations that stand to bankrupt more and more American cities in the next major downturn. It’s a system that is increasingly brittle. 

Perhaps that is what the Fed is so worried about. 

Affordability and personal bankruptcies 

Amidst our record-breaking "prosperity" recent Harvard University Study reports that 

“Medical expenses account for 62% of bankruptcies. Out of these, 78% of bankruptcy filers had medical insurance. With rising health coverage costs and co-pays, a serious hospitalization can cause severe debt. Once savings has been exhausted, the only option left to deal with medical bills may be bankruptcy.” 

The February 14, 2020 edition, the Guardian) notes that 

“Millions of Americans can’t afford the prescription drugs they require to survive, forcing them into bankruptcy, trips to Mexico or cutting off utilities.” 

In a recent article published in the Atlantic, The Great Affordability Crisis Breaking America, author Annie Lowrey contends that our country's decreasing affordability is a consequence of the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis. 

Regarding the past ten years, she writes, 

“This crisis involved not just what families earned but the other half of the ledger, too—how they spent their earnings. In one of the best decades the American economy [2008 to 2018] has ever recorded, families were bled dry by landlords, hospital administrators, university bursars, and child-care centers. For millions, a roaring economy felt precarious or downright terrible. 

“Viewing the economy through a cost-of-living paradigm helps explain why roughly two in five American adults would struggle to come up with $400 in an emergency so many years after the Great Recession ended. It helps explain why one in five adults is unable to pay the current month’s bills in full. It demonstrates why a surprise furnace-repair bill, parking ticket, court fee, or medical expense remains ruinous for so many American families, despite all the wealth this country has generated. Fully one in three households is classified as “financially fragile.” 

There’s little doubt that she is correct about some of the reasons for rising wealth inequality. And much of this has been used to reinforce the political arguments behind the removal of local control of planning and zoning laws in California. Yet, as compelling as her article often is, it devolves into a superficial analysis that doesn’t really get to the “why” of it all. 

We need to ask ourselves, how can it be that according to private sector reporting, almost half of our households are living on the edge (have only $400 in emergency savings), when according to federal government statistics, wages are going up, unemployment is at an all-time low, and the number of families living in poverty is going down. 

How does one reconcile claims that U.S. families are steadily being lifted out of poverty (from roughly 20% in 1963 to 12% today, according to the U.S. Census, and 20% to as low as 3% by conservative think tanks), while simple inflation-adjusted economic analysis shows that the average wage-earner is making less than they did 40 years ago, because inflation has been steadily eating away at the value of those earnings? 

This suggests that the “rich man poor man” divide is not as simple as being just about education, lack of equal opportunity, tax laws, race, or other issues. Perhaps, it’s more deeply embedded in the statistical data upon which our financial and fiscal policies are based. 

What if, over the past 40 years, the data that these claims are based on are the result of intentional manipulation of financial facts to make things look better than they are, to the point that the statistics themselves are now a major part of the affordability problem? 

If this is true, it would explain a great deal about the affordability crisis and tell us that the U.S. economy and its prosperity are not anywhere near as healthy as everyone wants you to believe. 

What is "poverty?" 

Since 2012, The Robin hood Foundation, a New York-based nonprofit, has been working with the Columbia University Center on Poverty and Social Policy to assess poverty in New York City. Their findings have been that although one out of five people experienced poverty in 2018, one in three experienced what they called “material hardship.” This means that they could not afford necessities, such as food, rent, or medical care. 

Studies like these suggest that across the country, almost half of American families fall into this “on the edge of poverty” category, even though according to government statistical measures, they are doing fine. 

The government’s published statistics, based on the U.S. Census Bureau’s estimates, say that the U.S. poverty rate is only 12.3% (39.7 million families). 

For 2020, the U.S. Government has set the poverty level for a household of four as an annual income of $26,200 ($12,760 for an individual). That equates to making $13.01 per hour, working a 40 hour work week for a year. It means that any family making more than that is not, statistically, poor (and more importantly, ineligible for a raise or certain types of government assistance). 

Does anyone honestly believe that a family of four making $27,000 per year (officially, not in poverty) can even survive on that annual income, particularly if they live in any of our country’s major metropolitan areas? 

The truth is that the government wants to keep the annual income threshold for poverty as low as possible. It allows them to pay out less in poverty assistance programs, make the federal deficit look lower, and a lot more. 

The CPI 

When questioned about why the official poverty level is set so low, the government’s argument is that the poverty figures are backed up by decades of data that comprise the Consumer Price Index (CPI). 

The Federal Reserve keeps detailed records of annual inflation rates dating back more than one hundred years, which it uses to make its case that they are faithfully keeping up with inflation to help American families make ends meet. The federal poverty thresholds are updated every year to reflect changes in the annual average CPI. 

The CPI is a statistical inflation calculation that drives numerous public benefits payments: everything from social security payments to public assistance programs, and contractual wage and benefit increases for a wide variety of employees, public and private. 

According to the CPI, in 1980, the U.S. Government’s poverty threshold for a non-farm family of four persons was $8,414. Using the 2020 number of $26,200, this means the U.S. Government believes that based on the CPI, the costs of living have only risen approximately 310% since 1980. 

Does anyone actually believe that the cost of necessities has only risen 310% since 1980? 

Real data 

A common sense analysis of the data indicates that the CPI has been under-calculating the overall cost of living by a lot for a very long time. Let’s consider some common sense examples. 

Real-Inflation-Chart-5-copy.jpg 

 

Family Expenses Compared to CPI 1980 to 2020 

Housing 

When it comes to housing affordability, a lot of people will find it surprising that despite all the noise being made by the media and YIMBY housing advocates about the “housing crisis,” one of the only things that actually remains close to the U.S. Government’s guidelines (310% inflation since 1980) is the cost of rental housing. And yes, even in San Francisco. 

Between 1980 and 2020, the average cost of renting a 2 bedroom apartment in San Francisco went up about 321%: from about $1,400 per month to $4,500 per month, today. And it’s actually been going down in the past 12 months. 

However, the cost of housing ownership is a completely different story. The average cost of purchasing a home in San Francisco in 1980 was roughly $175,000. Today, it’s closer to $1.3 million

That’s an increase of approximately 800%. 

Consider that in a major job center like San Francisco or New York City, where the average two bedroom apartment rent is about $4,500 per month, the annual housing expenditure of a family of four living equates to earning $54,000 per year in after-tax income

This means that per Federal Guidelines a family of four that is not statistically in poverty, making $27,000 per year, needs to spend 200% of their total annual income just on rent! Even if they lived in the lowest rental cost neighborhood in all of San Francisco, downtown, with the average monthly rent of $2,932 per month ($35,184 per year), they'd need to spend 150% of their annual income just for housing. 

How is that family of four not magnitudes beyond being poor? And how do they pay for anything else they need in their lives? 

It's true, there's nothing that says the government has to ensure that everyone can live in San Francisco. But clearly, our government's methodologies to arrive at the inflation in housing costs are nonsensical. 

Healthcare 

Looking at healthcare, in 1980, according to a study by the Kaiser Family Foundation, the average annual healthcare cost (using Medicare expenditures as a comparative measure) was about $1,108 per person. Today it’s close to $12,800. 

That’s an increase of over 1,000%. And that doesn’t look at insurance costs, which are going even faster. 

As noted in The Rising Cost of Health Care by Year and Its Causes, 

“In 2017, U.S. health care costs were $3.5 trillion. That makes health care one of the country's largest industries. It equals 17.9% of gross domestic product. In comparison, health care cost $27.2 billion in 1960, just 5% of GDP. That translates to an annual health care cost of $10,739 per person in 2017 versus just $146 per person in 1960. Health care costs have risen faster than the average annual income.” 

College Education 

In 1980, according to the Department of Education, the average annual cost of tuition, room and board, and fees at a four-year post-secondary institution was $9,438. Today, that cost is approximately $36,000 per year. 

That’s an increase of 380%, not too much more than the CPI assumptions. 

However, at the more desirable colleges and universities, the annual cost is close to double that amount, (an increase of about 700%), which helps explain why total student debt has reached almost $1.5 trillion. 

So, if the truth about the rise in the cost of living is so much greater than the government says it is, why is the CPI so far off? 

The CPI re-examined 

Since the 1970s there has been nothing more feared by the government than inflation. That last time inflation reared its ugly head it took the Federal Reserve raising the prime rate to 18% to bring it to a halt. But, the powers-that-be have since discovered that no inflation is also a bad thing, because inflation serves a valuable “political” purpose: it can hide a lot of bad public policy and bad financial decisions, politically motivated giveaways, and bailouts to buy voter support. 

As a result, the CPI has become highly politicized and has been tinkered with over the past 40 years to make things appear to be better than they are. This has been used to justify tax cuts for the wealthy, pile new taxes and fees on the middle class, reduce public assistance programs, balance the budget, and whatever else lawmakers need. 

In a private study by Cornerstone Wealth Management, in 2011, it notes that starting in 1983, the government significantly changed the way it calculates CPI. And the government has continued to make major changes since that time, such as comparing their estimates of basic costs of necessities such as utilities less often (on an 8 year cycle versus a 4 year cycle), changing how they measure healthcare costs to follow government bureaucrat’s estimates (the National Association of Insurance Commissioners) rather than actual pricing and a long list of other changes. 

In the study, examining the period from 1983 to 2011, the authors note, 

“John Williams at Shadow Government Statistics estimates that if we calculated inflation today the same way we did during Carter’s administration, CPI would be closer to 10% rather than the 1.5% calculated as of 12/31/10 by the government.” 

That’s a big difference. Just three of the CPI changes they considered in this study were: 

(1) The removal of actual home prices and the use of something called the “owner’s equivalent rent" (a government estimate), instead; 

(2) The introduction of something called “Hedonics,” which stopped using the actual costs of goods and instead used a formula to estimate a product’s value related to technological advances (i.e., per Moore’s Law), which dramatically lowered the "costs" of many 21st century necessities: smartphones, computers, internet connections, etc.; and 

(3) The introduction of the concept of “product substitutions,” which is a guesstimated assumption that as the price of products goes up, consumers will simply substitute the thing they need with something cheaper. 

Tell me, how does that work with nutritious food and clothing and prescription medicine for your kids? 

This trend to use formulas and unsubstantiated assumptions instead of actual prices has now moved the CPI into the realm of wishful thinking and politicized goal fulfillment, rather than being a real gauge of inflation. 

But, as you can see, these “new and improved” methods have huge political benefits if you want to keep government costs down and keep the public thinking that everything is fine, so they’ll pay their taxes and vote for new bond measures, and keep believing that “prosperity” is just around the corner if they just keep consuming more and keep taking on more and more unsustainable debt, the way the government itself is doing. 

Total-Debt-to-GDP-RIA-St-Louis-Fed.png 

Perhaps, the most absurd abuse of the CPI is what the Federal Reserve is doing right now: claiming that the CPI, which they know full well is being “managed” to appear much lower than it actually is, represents an excuse to continue to rain money on financial markets under the premise that inflation actually needs to be higher! 

What!? 

This means that while the government is working to artificially decrease the CPI, to keep it far below actual costs to cook the books, the Federal Reserve wants to cut interest rates to increase inflation above that artificially low level. 

This is insanity. 

Meanwhile, 70 millions baby boomers heading into retirement are finding that the savings that they were told to accumulate all their lives, are worthless: $1 million in a "safe" savings account pays out $10,000 per year: no wonder personal debt is at an all time high. 

In the hands of politicians, the CPI, the most closely watched measure of inflation, has become the tool of choice to manipulate the appearance of inflation. They have done this to the point that what CPI now “measures,” if you can even call it that, bears little resemblance to what it measured 40 years ago. 

This leads one to wonder just how much current inflation is being understated. 

As noted by Michael Lebowitz and Lance Roberts in their analysis, MMT Sounds Great In Theory…But 

"Prior to 1998, inflation was measured on a basket of goods. However, during the Clinton Administration, the Boskin Commission was brought in to recalculate how inflation was measured. Their objective was simple – lower the rate of inflation to reduce the amount of money being paid out. 

"Since then, inflation measures have been tortured, mangled, and abused to the point where it scarcely equates to the inflation that consumers deal with in reality.

This, of course, has had a profound impact on how we measure profits, success, growth, entitlements, public programs, the “correct” level of interest rates, and affordability. And not for the better. 

The federal government’s intentional perversion of CPI promotes a systemic mismatch between what taxpayers pay into benefits programs, such as Medicare, and what the government pays out to taxpayers as benefits, such as Social Security. For example, this year’s social security benefits will rise by just 1.6%, based on CPI, while the cost of Medicare Part B insurance that the government charges taxpayers will rise by 6.7%. 

Heads they win, tails you lose. 

This may answer the Tesla valuation conundrum. Ironically, by manipulating the CPI to mask real inflation changes in every aspect of the real world, it’s possible that, today, the valuations on the major stock exchanges may be the only thing that reflecting rapidly rising inflation. 

All this is being subsidized by the government's relentless debauching of our currency. The money supply is currently growing not because of economic growth and demand (as it should) but simply due to the demand for money to speculate, do stock buy-backs, and a long list of other "non-productive," capital wasting uses, which is a whole other story. 

All this explains why, amidst all our supposed “record-breaking prosperity,” the cost living for middle class families is so out of whack with what the government is assuring us it is. 

The cold hard facts 

If the government were to come clean about the real costs of living, the impacts would result in the biggest financial earthquake we’ve ever seen. And kicking that can down the road with endless money printing (quantitative easing), endless manipulation of data, pushing interest rates to move into negative territory, and other such shenanigans will only ensure that the magnitude of that earthquake will someday be greater. 

Today, decreasing affordability and the simultaneous reductions in public services[1] are a national problem. And this is not limited to high-priced cities. The cold hard facts are that more and more American families are falling further and further into unacknowledged poverty. 

This might explain another troubling statistic. 

While everyone is arguing about the need for affordable housing, hundreds of towns and cities across the country are shrinking in population. People are leaving and these towns and cities are actively tearing down housing

Even though it is more expensive for residents to move to and live in a major metropolitan area, even after adjustments relative to wages paid, this phenomena is happening because in these cities, there is no longer enough critical mass of wealth and no longer a thriving middle class to create jobs. 

Our nation’s “affordability crisis” is the direct result of a hollowing out of our society, facilitated and under-written by 40 years of the Big Con: a statistical lie that allows the government to increase taxes, while reducing the benefits and services, and declare that we are witnessing increasing prosperity using an accounting sleight of hand. 


[1] This includes public services to treat the sick, the mentally ill, substance abuse, etc. 


CLICK HERE to read PART I 

CLICK HERE to read PART II 


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. Please consider DONATING TO CVP to enable us to continue to work on behalf of Marin residents.


Opinion

Editorials

The New Mantra:
Boom, Berkeley, Boom

Becky O'Malley
Friday February 21, 2020 - 05:42:00 PM

What pages of last Sunday’s Chronicle did you read?

(That is if you still indulge in print journalism…)

If you started on Page 1, you’d be at the space reserved for longish-form think-like features, often headlined to shock the bourgeoisie over their Sunday morning bagels, e.g. “Chaos upends school, and district does little.”

The Berkeley front page story was below the fold in print, with a title less shocking but still a tad edgy: “Changing priorities fuel Berkeley building boom.”

Historically the Chronicle has seldom tapped Berkeley news unless it fit the classic Beserkeley narrative. This article was no exception, but in reverse, more of a man bites dog story. It could have been headed “Berkeley: not crazy anymore!”

These excerpts are the Cliff Notes version of the apparent changes to Mayor Jesse Arreguin's perspective since he was elected: 

…"[T]he evolving dynamics are on view at the City Council level — where a progressive majority that was expected to curtail new market-rate construction instead is urging it on. This includes Mayor Jesse Arreguín, who entered public life as a pro-tenant member of the rent stabilization board . . . “My position is that we don’t have enough market-rate housing, and we don’t have enough affordable housing,” said Arreguín, Berkeley’s mayor since 2017 . . .

“Sometimes this means thinking differently about things that once might have been controversial…

“Arreguín and other council members even support the university’s effort to redevelop People’s Park, a scraggly green on Cal land created during the student protests of 1969, with dorms and supportive housing for formerly homeless people . . .bbbbb “…[W]hen the approval of an 18-story residential tower at 2190 Shattuck Ave. was appealed last year to the City Council — opponents were upset that the tower would crowd views of the bay from the foot of the Campanile — the mayor was part of the 6-0 majority vote to let the tower proceed.” 

So that’s the mayor's new take on what Berkeley needs, as reported by John King, the Chron’s urban design critic. King used to live in North Berkeley in a single family neighborhood midway between two BART stations and near the North Shattuck Gourmet Ghetto, and perhaps he still does. Arreguin is now running for re-election with the endorsement of many former opponents who want more market rate construction in Berkeley. 

But there’s an alternate universe in Berkeley, the one inhabited by people who can’t wait long enough for those market rate apartments espoused by Arreguin and his current allies to trickle down to their income level. That would be those Berkeleyans commonly called homeless, including residents who call tents and RVs home. 

These unhoused people were the subject of a different article in last Sunday’s Chronicle, in the Bay Area section, which featured Councilmember Kate Harrison, who was elected on the same progressive ticket as Arreguin but has not jumped on the market-rate housing bandwagon. 

She has recently sponsored an outdoor emergency shelter plan, and is also proposing safe parking sites for people living in RVs: 

But this article reported that “ ... in Berkeley, not everyone on the nine-member council likes the outdoor plan.” 

“I think we can do better,” Councilmember Rashi Kesarwani. one of two council members who abstained on the vote to provide tent sites, was quoted as saying. District 8 Councilmember Lori Droste also abstained. 

Sarah Ravani reported that “Kesarwani said she wants to help as many homeless people as possible, but she considered the plan half-baked because it lacks a location, long-term funding and an exit plan into permanent housing.” 

In John King’s front page report, Kesarwani and Droste are portrayed roughly as adherents of the same “build a lot and housing happens” school of city planning which he attributes to the mayor. But neither of these stories really focuses on how the clash between two belief systems that is playing itself out all over this country is exemplified now in Berkeley.. 

In one camp are true believers in the efficacy of markets as taught in their high school economics class or possibly in Econ 101. They fervently hope that things will sort themselves out if we just let the market take its course. The other camp thinks that some form of socially supported housing and some regulation of the private housing market will be required to guarantee housing as a human right--that the market alone can't do it. This camp could be called Social Democrats (as Bernie Sanders should be). 

Each Sunday article represented only one of the two theoretical groups. Better reporting would have analyzed how the two views intersect and sometimes conflict. Too much discussion of such topics tosses around epithets like NIMBY and YIMBY without considering the causes of what is simplistically called "the housing crisis". 

A central problem is what’s sometimes called commodification and sometime financialization of housing. 

This phenomenon first caused the great recession of 2008 and is now contributing to homelessness. Real estate is no longer about providing homes—it’s about how scarcity turns everything into an investment opportunity. Affordable housing developers must compete with multinational oligarchs for building sites, and LLCs openly buy and re-sell building permits with the help of paid fixers (as attempted in Berkeley's failed Harold Way project.) Foreclosed homes are snapped up by speculators. 

This is true in Berkeley, in New York City, in San Francisco and in Charlotte and in Vancouver and in Austin, though each locality believes itself to be unique. 

Until Berkeley and other cities like these take into account all of the market forces at work, which are much more complex than just the two party supply-demand model, they will continue to experience the distress of their homeless citizens. 

 

 

 

 

 

 


The Editor's Back Fence

How am I voting??

Becky O'Malley
Sunday February 23, 2020 - 09:25:00 AM

Undecided people keep asking how to vote in the March primary, with only a bit more than a week to make up their minds. Me, I'm voting for Elizabeth Warren because I think she would make a good president: smart, good political ideas, not as old as some. For more details, see a previous editorial.


Public Comment

Measure E Stands for Equal Pay

Margot Pepper
Saturday February 22, 2020 - 01:50:00 PM

Three crucial measures on the March 3 Primary ballot—E, G and H—will maintain Berkeley’s high quality education. But the measure that will do most to change conditions in Berkeley Schools is Measure E. For the past decade, since the financial crisis—because Berkeley does not receive as much revenue from the state as neighboring districts—teachers have received only minimal raises that have not kept pace with neighboring districts. With these districts passing parcel taxes that can be used to raise teachers’ salaries, Berkeley’s compensation has slipped to near the bottom compared to other Alameda County schools. In a competitive market for highly qualified educators, Berkeley’s relatively low salaries are making it difficult to recruit and retain their talented teachers, destabilizing schools and hurting students. 

If passed, Measure E would not only maintain Berkeley’s student achievement at high levels, it would represent a step forward for equal pay for women. At Berkeley Unified School District (BUSD) women make up the overwhelming majority of teaching staff as they do in public schools across the nation. According to the National Center for educational statistics, the percentage of female public school teachers increased from 75 percent in 1999–2000 to 77 percent in 2015–16. At the elementary level, where pay was still lower, even higher percentages were female. 

The fastest way to achieve equal pay is to raise wages in female-dominated workforce sectors. In the United States, public school teachers are part of an undervalued, underpaid workforce that is predominantly female. Other professions dominated by women include domestic workers, homecare workers, nannies and nurses. These sectors define an indispensable “Can’t Without Us” (No Se Puede Sin Nosotras) movement, since strikes by any of these sectors can shut down significant portions of the society. 

Studies by the Institute for Women’s Policy Research (IWPR) demonstrate that jobs predominantly held by women pay less on average than jobs predominantly held by men. In Alameda County where Berkeley is situated, women make on average 78 cents to every dollar their male counterparts earn, slightly lower than the nationwide average of 79 cents to the dollar in 2019 (NBC.) EdBuild determined that the average cost-adjusted starting teacher salary was at best $10,000 lower than the average starting salary for college graduates that include men. Measure E will boost educator pay 7% after years of little or no raises. Combined with the nationwide movement to bring dignity to the profession in Districts like Oakland, Los Angeles, Arizona, Colorado, Kentucky, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Washington, Denver and West Virginia, Measure E would contribute to improving working conditions and reducing the gender equity gap. In this way, one can think of Measure E as the measure for Equal pay for Equal work for women.  

If Berkeley’s Measures E doesn’t pass by the two thirds required of new taxes, teachers will have to sit back down at the negotiating table. Today, a starting salary teacher can only afford to spend $1246 a month on housing. This is a few dollars short of what is needed to rent in Modesto, California. The most optimistic commute from Modesto to Berkeley is 90 miles. It is common for teachers to commute to BUSD from Vallejo, Pinole and Hayward. And at least one elementary education teacher will be commuting from Sacramento by train next year to reduce her rent. Long commutes force teachers to leave much earlier to avoid traffic instead of interfacing with the community. They also can’t participate in special school activities, vital committees and meetings. 

It’s not surprising that BUSD saw significant attrition of teachers at the end of the 2018-19 school year and was not able to staff all of its positions this year and last year according to school officials. One Spanish immersion teacher is considering an early retirement to join family in Mexico where her dollars will stretch farther. Other teachers have left to teach in neighboring districts with higher pay. Unfortunately, lower pay has impacted the substitute pool as well, with middle and high school staff having to fill short-term emergency assignments themselves by taking on extra students or periods. At the elementary level, unfilled substitute jobs routinely compel principals to divide students among three or four unlucky teachers.  

Besides the fact that Measure E only taxes home owners and provides an exemption for very low income owners, the benefits of similar parcel tax measures in Berkeley have outweighed taxpayer cost. These include less crime and lower insurance premiums. An unintended benefit of school parcel taxes like E has been soaring property values.  

“One of the reasons the city of Berkeley has such high values relative to Oakland is because of the perceived quality and reputation of the schools,” says Teresa Clarke, Berkeley Zoning Commissioner.  

Property values for similar houses just blocks from one another, separated only by the Oakland-Berkeley border demonstrate this phenomenon quite vividly. According to Zillow, a four bedroom three bathroom house with 2,812 square feet at 3057 Hillegass in Berkeley is worth $2,800,000 A larger (3200 square feet,) more desirable four bedroom, four bathroom house just around the corner, in a quieter part of the same block at 6468 Benvenue is worth $2,240,758 or $559,000 less because it is situated in Oakland. The median list price per square foot in Berkeley is $724, which is higher than the San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward Metro average of $500. That’s $224 dollars more per square foot. That’s quite a return indeed on just the 12.4 cent per square foot measure E will cost. Ironically, the Berkeley educators partially responsible for this bonanza have been punished financially by such growth, rather than rewarded. Passing Measure E will make it more likely that they can live nearer to the schools where they teach. A “No” vote might decrease property values by devaluing schools in the long, run but not nearly enough for teachers to return.  

Wouldn’t it be wonderful if this Women’s Day, March 8—5 days after the primary—Berkeley educators were able to celebrate a huge step toward gender pay equity, knowing they are valued by their community? Regarding voting “yes” on all the three measures, Rosa Parks PTA volunteer Stacey Lewis puts it plainly: “Berkeley just can’t afford not to.” 


Margot Pepper is a Mexican-born author whose books include a memoir, Through the Wall: A Year in Havana, and the dystopian science-fiction thriller, American Day Dream. Her work has been published internationally by Canada’s The Scoop, Prensa Latina, Utne Reader, Common Dreams, Monthly Review, Z-net, Counterpunch, Dollars & Sense, NACLA, City Lights, SF Bay Guardian, Rethinking Schools, and elsewhere.  


Selling Marijuana at Berkeley’s Busiest Intersection

Glen Kohler
Saturday February 22, 2020 - 01:23:00 PM

Two weeks ago I attended a presentation at the West Branch of the Berkeley Public Library by a fellow who runs a business selling pot in this town. Asked to move his business for the second time because it was too close to schools and children, he now seeks to occupy a large space at University Avenue and San Pablo Avenue that used to be a pet supply store—on the same block as the Berkeley Public Library’s West Branch, where school kids go to read, attend events, and access the Internet.

After hearing what the marijuana seller had to say, along with two local businesses and some neighborhood residents, I came away thinking this isn’t the best idea in the world. 

This business is asking everyone in town to make a big, continuous sacrifice. I don’t live near University Avenue at San Pablo, but I drive through it pretty often. It is one of the most congested intersections in town. The marijuana store will add over a thousand more vehicles a day to the already-sluggish mass of traffic—affecting not only the immediate neighborhood, but everyone in Berkeley who wants to get on or off the freeway at University Avenue—as well as anyone who goes through this intersection heading North or South on San Pablo. 

Future plans of the marijuana business include a lounge for on-site weed consumption. In its present location people smoke or ingest marijuana on site and leave the business high on pot. After toking up, members of the ‘marijuana club’ are required to leave the premises after 30 minutes. This brief interval gives customers enough time to get well and truly stoned before stepping onto the sidewalk—or getting into their cars—to clear the room for more customers to get high, go into the neighborhood and cars, ad infinitum. 

In ten hours of operation 20 groups of freshly-loaded customers can hit the streets. Given the power of today’s pot products, they can be very high indeed. Does anyone want them getting into their cars at University and San Pablo? Because really, there is nowhere to hang out around there when you’re high…. 

Exhibit 1: California Penal Code 647f: “[A person is guilty of disorderly conduct if] found in any public place under the influence of intoxicating liquor, any drug, controlled substance, toluene, or any combination of any intoxicating liquor, drug, controlled substance, or toluene, in a condition that he or she is unable to exercise care for his or her own safety or the safety of others, or by reason of his or her being under the influence of intoxicating liquor, any drug, controlled substance, toluene, or any combination of any intoxicating liquor, drug, or toluene, interferes with or obstructs or prevents the free use of any street, sidewalk, or other public way.” 

Exhibit 2: This business will employ full-time security personnel inside and outside of the premises. What prospective acts by patrons of this business—or people who come to this area to target said weed-carrying patrons, or the contents of the business iteself—makes this formidable presence necessary?  

The strength of Berkeley’s police force is already too small to adequately police our community. It doesn’t make sense to add a huge attractive nuisance to this highly visible corner. 

The defunct pet food store is three times larger than the business’ current premises, which means that the current volume of 800 – 1,000 customers a day may increase by a factor of two or three, to be added to the dense traffic in this busy, very slow, intersection—and the parking lot in the center of the block occupied by the pet food store and the Berkeley West Branch Library. 

If getting high on the premises is allowed by a compliant Mayor and City Council, Berkeley residents, including school-aged children going to and from the public library, will have to negotiate sidewalks and streets clogged with out-of-area stoners. 

Exhibit 3: Legal Liability. Just as a bar and/or its employees are legally responsible for injuries to and caused by patrons permitted to leave the bar too intoxicated to drive, the pot business—and perhaps the City of Berkeley itself—will be a target for legal actions if high-flying marijuana customers come to grief driving while high in this congested traffic area; wandering into moving traffic; or committing inadvertant or intentional acts that result in injuries or losses. 

Among the Residents at the meeting were a few cheerleaders, including the owner of the barbecue on San Pablo, who anticipates more customers, and the owner of the parking lot in the center of the block, who gave his okay. There were also some people who live nearby who expressed serious misgivings. One woman doen’t want the extra traffic and out-of-area interlopers. Another woman was also uneasy about a lot of people unknown to the neighborhood coming around who might affect her personal safety. 

Exhibit 4: The parking lot between the old pet store and the .99 cent store serves quite a lot of Berkeley residents of limited means, and seniors, who rely on .99 cent for affordable household supplies and food stuffs.  

It is already difficult for cash-strapped households to find parking at peak hours; it will become seriously over-crowded by adding a high-volume stream of pot customers.  

Is it sensible or right to deprive individuals of limited means access to essential supplies they cannot otherwise afford? 

Liquor stores and bars are situated away from the most-used intersections. Should a marijuana bar be situated next to a public library used by school children? 

Does it make sense to make already heavy traffic even worse? 

These concerns may as well be put to Berkeley’s City Council members before the upcoming Council meeting on Tuesday, February 25 at 7:00pm, when they will consider whether to grant this business permission to let customers get high right there on University and San Pablo. 

They already have all the permits they need to relocate next to the library, thanks to the wham, bam, thank you ma’am, streamlined relocation procedure due to get its second reading (and enactment) on: 

Tuesday, Feb. 25th, 2020 

In the Old Adult School, School District Board Room 

1231 Addison Street, Berkeley, CA 94702 

After that they will still need a use permit for the smoking lounge—and will probably get that and anything else they want—unless enough Berkeley residents show up and express another point of view. 

Concerned citizens can also call and write to: 

Mayor: Jesse Arreguin, 981-7100, mayor@cityofberkeley.info 

District 1: Linda Maio, 981-7110, lmaio@cityofberkeley.info 

District 2: Cheryl Davila, 981-7120, cdavila@cityofberkeley.info 

District 3: Benjamin Bartlett, 981-7130, bbartlett@cityofberkeley.info 

District 4: Kate Harrison, 981-7140, kharrison@cityofberkeley.info 

District 5: Sophie Hahn, 981-7150, shahn@cityofberkeley.info 

District 6: Susan Wengraf, 981-7160, swengraf@cityofberkeley.info 

District 7: Kriss Worthington, 981-7170, kworthington@cityofberkeley.info 

District 8: Lori Droste, 981-7180, ldroste@cityofberkeley.info 

 

 

 

 


Open Letter to the New York Times

Robert Brokl
Saturday February 22, 2020 - 12:51:00 PM

Re: Build build build build build build build build


Another one of your pieces of developer/builder propaganda passing as a news article. OK, I get it that the government currently (federal, state) won’t or can’t commit to building truly affordable housing in places like California to help those that need it, but you’re pushing another version of trickle-down. Build everywhere, and some will go to the truly needy. Ever heard of income inequality? Maybe Reagan’s tax cuts had something to do with it.

The YIMBY “movement” is tech and building industry-funded, and your heroine, Sonja Trauss, couldn’t even get elected to supervisor in San Francisco. But such a charming photo of her and her child, and such a deceptive one of the potential development site in Lafayette. Such an artfully placed blighting board, just in case we were distracted by the rolling, green hills.

Bias, bias, bias. 


Barr Must Resign

Jagjit Singh
Saturday February 22, 2020 - 02:13:00 PM

The attorney general’s response to President Trump's outrage over the sentencing of Roger Stone, his former campaign 2016 advisor, is pure Kabuki Theater feigning dismay but agreeing to review the case. The Republicans seem to have taken a vow of silence uncomfortable in confronting the truth and their own hypocrisy. 

But in a predicable turn of events, Barr agreed to review Roger Stone’s sentencing and Michael Flynn’s case even though Flynn freely admitted lying to federal prosecutors. 

Responding to the attorney general’s cozy relationship with the president, more than 2,000+ DOJ Ex-Officials have called for AG Barr to resign. 

The justice department must free itself from the suffocating tentacles of the White House. Clearly federal justices no longer have confidence in the independence and integrity of their leader. Under the circumstances, Barr should take the honorable position and resign.


Columns

ECLECTIC RANT: Trump: the Making of a Lawless Autocrat

Ralph E. Stone
Saturday February 22, 2020 - 01:46:00 PM

An “autocrat” is someone who insists on complete obedience from others; an imperious or domineering person.

President Donald Trump is fond of autocrats, including Turkish President Recep Tuyyip Erdagon, Muhammad bin Salman; Hungarian President Viktor Orban; North Korean leader Kim Jong Un; Russian President Vladimir Putin; Egypt’s Abdel-Fatah al-Sisi, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, and Brazil’s President Jair Balsonaro. Now Trump is an autocrat himself.

How did this happen? Well he rose to this exalted status mainly by two enablers, Attorney General William Barr and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY). Also, he made the Republican Party his party and he has a loyal following by validating their prejudices.

Trump recently claimed that he, not Barr, is “the chief law enforcement officer” of America. Barr, of course, is Trump’s kind of Attorney General because he believes that the Executive Branch is first among the three branches of government. With Barr’s acquiescence, Trump has politically weaponized the Justice Department. Now the Justice Department represents Trump’s interests, not the country’s. 

As a result, Trump is now above the law. He cannot be indicted per a legally dubious Department of Justice memo. That’s why Special Counsel Robert Mueller did not even consider indicting Trump. Thus, a president gone rogue, according to Barr, can only be reined in by impeachment and an election. Impeachment didn’t work; Trump was acquitted by the Senate. That leaves the upcoming November 2020 election. 

Barr has been intervening in criminal matters involving Trump’s friends and former associates and launched a campaign to punish his opponents. As a result, the head of the Federal Judges Association is taking the extraordinary step of calling an emergency meeting to address the intervention in politically sensitive cases by President Trump and Barr.  

On February 16, more than 1,100 former Justice Department employees signed a public letter urging Barr to resign over his handling of the case of President Trump’s longtime friend Roger Stone — and urged current department employees to report any unethical conduct. 

The Republicans have a majority in Congress As Majority Leader, McConnell and his Republicans blocked the admission of witnesses and documents at the impeachment trial.  

Almost 400 House-passed legislation is now pending in McConnell’s “graveyard” with no chance of passage by the Senate while McConnell is majority leader. An election security bill is among the pending bills. But why would McConnell and his fellow Senate Republicans want more election security when they are likely to be beneficiaries of any foreign interference in the 2020 election? 

The Congressional Republicans have sold their souls for two conservative Supreme Court Justices, 187 other conservative federal judges and counting, a tax “overhaul” favoring the rich, and, possibly, the overturning of Roe v. Wade. 

November 3, 2020, will be the last chance to remove Trump. It won’t be easy; Trump is flush with cash, his poll numbers remain about the same after his impeachment acquittal, In addition, gerrymandering, voter suppression, and likely foreign interference will aid Trump.


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Some Cognitive Strategies for Psychosis

Jack Bragen
Saturday February 22, 2020 - 01:54:00 PM

b Antipsychotics have a substantial limiting effect on the brain's level of energy. Antipsychotics produce an impairment, introduced to compensate for psychosis, which is worse by far than having a limit on the level of functioning. You can not do very much when you take antipsychotics. They prevent functioning at a competitive level in most employment. They make it difficult to survive in demanding circumstances. Antipsychotics introduce an abnormality, intended to treat a worse abnormality. 

If you have taken antipsychotics for a long time, such as a year or more, it is doubtful that you can stop taking these powerful, brain-altering drugs. Keep in mind that you were given these drugs for a reason. A mental health professional, such as a psychiatrist, believed that you needed to take these medications to be okay. 

You should realize that fairness and unfairness must be excluded from a decision to continue taking medication as prescribed. If you stop these meds, it is likely that you will become very sick. 

In addition to medication, you may benefit from cognitive exercises and strategies. 

A first example: If you have voices, you should not engage in a conversation with them. Instead, you should mentally label them as a symptom. A second strategy: Incorporate an assumption that your thinking is subject to errors due to the condition. When you assume that your thinking could be wrong, this brings up the mind's self-correction mechanisms. 

Filling the mind with content unrelated to "the self" is a strategy that can alleviate many delusions. This could be thought of as distracting oneself. If you assign your mental resources to content that does not connect with delusions, it will bring significant relief from them. Most delusions of a paranoid person concern what appears to be happening to oneself. For example: "There's a conspiracy to get me." Notice the "me" is in that sentence. Or, "I am going to run for Congress." This is generally a delusion of grandeur. Notice the "I" word in that sentence. If you fill the mind with content that gets you apart from your perception of self, it will help in the quest to alleviate delusions. 

Learning to unconditionally accept yourself as a valid person, (and this is accomplished through cognitive exercises) will make it easier to release a delusion. "Handbook to Higher Consciousness" by Ken Keyes Jr., a book which describes a variation on American Buddhism, says: "Love everyone unconditionally, especially yourself." This means that you do not have to do a lot of things to make yourself worthy of love. Just give it to yourself. The "how" of this comes after the intellectual understanding of this. 

(Concerning Keyes and "unconditional love": You do not let just anyone into your living room or into your life. You continue to have boundaries and protect yourself. However, in the process of this, you do not throw yourself or others out of your heart. This means that you do not condemn or hate others or yourself. It does not mean that you become a human doormat.) 

Learning to evaluate a thought is another strategy. Sometimes you can ask someone whom you know and trust, whether they believe your thought is real or a delusion. If they say it appears to be a delusion, you should consider that maybe it is. (This is not something you can try with anyone you do not know very well, since doing that is not appropriate, and, depending on who it is, it could freak them out.) 

And there are many more strategies. Since this is a weekly column that I am choosing to make as a 600 to 1000-word essay, I do not have space to describe them all here. 

However, keep in mind that by being medicated, a psychotic condition is not cured. Medication potentially slows things down to a point where you can deal with them. When your mind is slowed down, it gives you a chance to parse through thoughts and stimuli and to decide what is real and what isn't. 

A good clinical psychotherapist can be of help. A good therapist will not only ask questions, but they will listen to what you say. They will function as a mirror in that they will tell you what you have told them, with possible clarification, and they may interject an opinion about it. Therapists that assume anything you say is delusional, subnormal, or garbage, are not examples of good therapists. A good therapist should be able to take you at your word, unless strong evidence suggests otherwise. 

Therapists may be able to help you pinpoint delusions. Family and/or close friends may be able to help in a similar manner. Writing down your thoughts in a journal, not intended for anyone else's viewing, can help you to reflect on these thoughts, and decide whether the material is delusional. With experience, it will become easier to pinpoint a delusion. When you have done that, the power of the subconscious mind will work on your behalf, and it will take some of the power back from the delusion and hand it back to you.  

Just remember that being adequately medicated is the prerequisite to maintaining a basic grasp of reality. If you decide that you are not mentally ill and you do not need medication, such a decision, if not correct, will have bad ramifications affecting your future. 

*** 

I am including a link to a book I wrote that has consistently sold since 2012, "Instructions for Dealing with Schizophrenia: A Self-Help Manual." If you would like to consider buying a copy, click here.


SMITHEREENS: Reflection on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Saturday February 22, 2020 - 01:11:00 PM

From the Halls of Montezuma to the Shores of Burundi?

I recently printed out a map of the planet and set about highlighting all the countries on Earth that are currently "hosting" US forces. The source data includes foreign deployments ranging from less than 20 soldiers to more than 2,000 troops. (There currently are 225,000 US soldiers stationed in other people's countries, with 12,000 of them stuck in Afghanistan.)

But counting the number of "Pentagonized" countries turned out to be too large a chore. Instead, I opted to seek out only those nations that did NOT have US forces embedded on their soil. That job went much faster: It turned out there were only 11.

Here is a list of the less-than-a-dozen nations where no one is saluting a US flag: Belarus, Benin, Bhutan, Eritrea, French Guiana, Gambia, Iran, Lesotho, North Korea, South Sudan, and Western Sahara.

This list may soon become even shorter given US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's February 1 visit to Belarus. Pompeo has offered the traditionally Russia-aligned nation a bounty of American-sourced energy—as Pompeo put it: "100% of the oil you need at competitive prices.”

Find the Dinosaur

A juvenile brontosaurus was recently spotted in the bushes near a corner home in West Berkeley. If you'd like to track it down, here are some clues as to its location:

(1) "Yes, ___, There is a Santa Claus."

(2) "Ode to Joy" is found in Beethoven's _____ Symphony.

 

Why Must Soldiers and Their Families Have to Resort to Charity? 

A new TV spot now airing features Mark Wahlberg soliciting funds to help the families of soldiers killed in America's Global War on Terror. Donations to the Tunnel to Towers Foundation (TTF) are designed to raise $250 million to acquire 1,000 secure homes for "Gold Star Families." 

As CEO Frank Siller says in a TTF video: "This is our contract with our military: that when you go to serve our country . . . and you do not come home, we are going to give [your family] a mortgage-free home." 

The TV spot asks viewers to send $11 per month to support families of dead veterans—a tidy total of $132 a year. 

This is a worthy charitable goal but here's my question. Where is the Pentagon? Where's the US government? When it comes to housing the families of dead soldiers, the US is "missing in action." 

Why, in the self-styled "richest nation on Earth," must vets and Gold Star families have to rely on charitable organizations like the TTP or the Wounded Warriors Project (whose top executives were fired after a "lavish spending scandal" involving "parties, hotels and travel")? 

Instead of prattling about the US being "the home of the brave," politicians might wish to take action to provide homes for the brave. While dead soldiers have their names inscribed on walls, surviving soldiers often find themselves abandoned on city sidewalks, dressed in rags. 

Once Upon a Time, Victors Were Spoiled 

From the earliest days of the Republic, the US (like the Roman Empire before it) had a practice of rewarding military service with gifts of land (much of it stolen from Indigenous inhabitants). For nearly a century—from 1775 to 1855—the US government handed out "Bounty Land Warrants" to soldiers who fought in and survived the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Mexican War, the "Indian Wars," and "other military actions." (Some states also granted ex-soldiers an exemption from paying taxes.) 

Perhaps it's time for Congress to consider a bill to provide "Bounty Home Warrants" to today's veterans and their survivors. That could help put an end to the embarrassing spectacle of America's abandoned "sidewalk soldiers." 

Another way to end the growing scourge of homeless vets—end Washington's endless wars. 

How Smartphones Are Warping Human Anatomy 

Researchers in Australia and elsewhere are reporting a freaky new disorder: X-rays reveal that people engaged in obsessive smartphone use are growing "horn-like structures" inside their skulls. The younger the subject, the larger the growths. 

According to the journal Scientific Reports, an examination of around 400 adults, ages 18 to 86, revealed a proliferation of “prominent exostosis … emanating from the external occipital proturbance.” The disorder is also referred to as "enthesophytes" or increased external occipital protuberance (EEOP). 

Or, to render it in trending English: "bone spurs in the brain." 

Scientists believe these boney hooks (also called "Dowagers' hump") are the result of repetitive motions and sustained poor posture—specifically, the familiar, prolonged, downward gazing head-tilt of smartphone users. A BBC article also expressed concerns that new technologies are transforming the human skeleton in unexpected and harmful ways. 

 

Beyond War: Seeing One Another as Family 

An inspiring new initiative is being launched by a group called Humanizing Our Neighbors. HON takes its mission from a quote attributed to Pablo Casals: "The love of one's country is a splendid thing. But why should love stop at the border?" 

As HON explains: "It is very hard to go to war against your neighbors if you see them as real humans. The point of this project is to put that barrier of humane acknowledgment ("Now, I see you!") in the way of any more war." 

It's a simple concept. People around the world are invited to step into the HON website and leave behind photos, poems, brief greetings and short (10-15 second) videos of themselves, their friends, children, and extended families. (There is a "translate" option to enable universal communication.) 

HON is a project of Women Against Military Madness and Tackling Torture at the Top. Here's one of the posted videos: 

 

Trump Could Lose Election by 5 Million Votes & Still Win a Second Term 

We don't live in a democracy. Hilary Clinton beat Donald Trump by 3 million ballots in the popular vote but Trump was declared the winner in the Electoral College. Looking ahead to the next presidential contest, election pundits are predicting that the Democratic candidate can rake in 5 million votes more than Trump in 2020 but Trump can still claim a second term. Thanks to the Electoral College. 

 

Save Democracy: Support the National Popular Vote 

It's time for our country to graduate from the Electoral College. It's time for us to become—if not a real democracy, at least a Representative Republic. And it won't take a Constitutional Amendment to do it. 

On January 13, 2012, the Department of Justice approved the National Popular Vote (NPV) bill under the Voting Rights Act. The NPV will take effect when enacted into law by states possessing 270 electoral votes (a majority of the 538 electoral votes). To date, the NPV has been enacted into law in 16 jurisdictions possessing 196 electoral votes and will take effect when enacted by states possessing an additional 74 electoral votes.  

The National Popular Vote bill has now passed a total of 41 state legislative chambers in 24 states. The National Popular Vote bill has been introduced in all 50 states. To see what we can do in California, click here

Give PR and DC the Vote! 

Puerto Rico has been part of the US for nearly 120 years but its 3.6 million American citizens are not allowed to vote in US federal elections. Similarly, in the District of Colombia, 712,000 Americans—living in the nation's capitol!—are not allowed to vote. 

Neither DC nor PR is allowed political representation—no senators, no representatives. Puerto Ricans pay for social security programs that they are not allowed to use because PR lacks statehood! That's taxation without representation. In 2012, 61% of Puerto Ricans voted for statehood over other alternatives. On October 30, 2019, Jenniffer González-Colón (Puerto Rico’s sole non-voting member of Congress) introduced a bill to create a path for the US territory to become the 51st state. (That's unlikely to happen under Sen. Mitch McConnell's watch.) 

Meanwhile, the residents of the nation's capital are represented by a single, non-voting House Delegate. Ironically, DC was granted full congressional representation in the 1790’s, but it lost the right to vote for representatives in 1801. The continuing campaign to win the District's right to vote is being headed by FairVote.org and DC Vote

Another Reason to Kick 'Doomsday Donald' Out of Office 

On August 2, 2019—mere days before the 74th anniversary of the US atomic bombing of Hiroshima—Donald Trump withdrew the US from the historic Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty with Russia, leading many to fear the "swift demise" of nuclear weapons abolition efforts. 

In response to Trump's actions, The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists' "Doomsday Clock" was moved closer to Midnight than ever before—a mere "100 seconds to midnight." 

Today, while the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (aka "New START") remains in force, it also remains a target of Trump's belligerence. Recently, Russian President Vladimir Putin offered to extend the treaty immediately. Trump has not responded to the offer. New START (which "limits" the number of US and Russian nuclear weapons to 1,550) remains in force until 2021. If the Electoral College allows Trump to steal a second term, the chances of global nuclear annihilation will skyrocket. 

Standing Up for Peace and Planet 

On April 27, the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty Review Conference will convene at the United Nations headquarters in New York. On April 24-25, thousands of representatives from dozens of US and international anti-nuclear and peace organizations—including more than 800 survivors of the US atomic war on Japanese civilians—will gather in New York's Riverside Church (site of Martin Luther King Jr.'s, historic "Beyond Vietnam" speech) to convene a World Conference for Nuclear Disarmament, Climate, Justice and Peace. On Sunday, April 26, activists from Asia, Europe, North America, and the Global South will gather at Union Square for a march to Dag Hammarskjold Plaza across from the UN Building. For a complete list of speakers and activities, click here

An Airport Connection: Waiting in Vein 

If you ever find yourself in Panama City's Tocumen International Airport awaiting a connecting flight, prepare for a surprise when attempting to connect to the air terminal's wifi network. 

In order to access the network, you will be invited to "click on one of our banners." On the day of my visit, there were three options. Two were identical ads for Digicel but it was the third that surprised me: It was an invitation to donate blood! 

The ad advised: "You can be a blood donor if you are between 18 and 65 years old, weigh more than 50 kilos and enjoy good health." Presumably there was a conveniently located blood-donation station nearby. (I wasn't ready to go supine to get online so I stashed my laptop and opted for a cup of Juan Valdez espresso instead.) 

;


Arts & Events

Guitarist Miloš Performs with Members of 12 Ensemble

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Monday February 24, 2020 - 02:34:00 PM

On Friday, February 21, Montenegran guitarist Miloš and friends gave a concert at Berkeley’s First Congregational Church. Performing with Miloš on many pieces in this concert were violinists Eloisa-Fleur Thom and Alessandro Ruisi, violist Matthew Kettle, cellist Max Ruisi, and double bassist Toby Hughes, members of 12 Ensemble. The concert opened with 12 Ensemble performing a selection from Johann Sebastian Bach’s Goldberg Variations. Then Miloš came on stage to join 12 Ensemble in Luigi Boccherini’s “Fandango” from his Guitar Quintet No. 4 in D Major. This familiar piece was given a rousing performance. Next came two Spanish Dances for solo guiitar by Enrique Granados, the familiar Andaluza and the not-do-familiar Oriental. Following these works came two pieces by Manuel De Falla, the energetic “Dance of the Miller,” from The Three-Cornered Hat, and a hauntingly beautiful folksong, “Nana,” performed by Miloš with 12 Ensemble from Seven Spanish Folksongs. Next was an Anonymous Spanish Romance, perhaps the highlight of the entire concert. This familiar work is a staple of the guitar repertory, and it has sometimes been attributed to Tárrega, Fernando Sor, or Narciso Ypes. Played by Miloš with 12 Ensemble, this Romance was ravishingly beautiful. Next came Libertango by Argentine composer Astor Piazzola, which closed out the first half of the program. 

After intermission, Miloš returned to lead off with Prelude No.1 by Heitor Villa-Lobos. He gave this work a surprisingly fast, dramatic interpretation, one that emphasised virtuosity over nuance. Following this was a Milonga from Emilio Pujol and a samba-based piece by Isaias Savio, “Batucada” from Escenas Brasileiras. Then Miloš was joined by violinist Eloisa-Fleur Thom for Caffe by Astor Piazzola. Following this Miloš was joined by 12 Ensemble in The Sound of Silence by Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel plus a piece by Radiohead, Street Spirit (Fade Out). To close out the printed portion of the program, Miloš performed four songs by the Beatles. Miloš soloed on Yesterday, then was joined by 12 Ensemble for Eleanor Rigby, The Fool on the Hill, and Here Comes the Sun. As an encore, Miloš played Somewhere Over the Rainbow.


The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, Feb. 23 - March 1

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coaltion
Saturday February 22, 2020 - 01:20:00 PM

Worth Noting and Showing Up:

The weekly summary of city meetings with agenda highlights for February 23 – March 1 is exceptionally long with the City Council Agenda Committee on Monday and City Council Regular meeting on Tuesday absorbing a lot of space.

Search for Director of Library Services (DOLS) – There are two opportunities to attend the Community meetings on the process and to comment on the ideal candidate profile with Pam Derby from CPS HR Consulting.: Monday 12:30 – 2 pm and Tuesday 6 – 7:30 pm, For more detail and available appointment times for comment in addition to noted public meetings check: https://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/about/board-library-trustees

Monday – The Planning Commission / ZAB subcommittees are meeting on the Zoning Ordinance revisions. The agenda attachment with the revisions is 265 pages.

Tuesday - The Council meeting includes two appeals followed by the Surveillance Reports. It is also the same evening of the last Democratic primary debate if you haven’t made up your mind yet and an interesting looking talk for parents of young children on climate.

Wednesday – The Joint Subcommittee for the Implementation of State Housing Laws (JSISHL) agenda is on establishing objective housing/development standards. The LeConte neighborhood meeting is open to residents living in other Berkeley neighborhoods.



Sunday, February 23, 2020

Presidential Forum on Economic Justice for Black Americans – Earn My Vote, 4 – 8 pm, Beebe Memorial Cathedral, 3900 Telegraph , Oakland, free event, organizers Patricia Brooks 510.590.1107, Ben Bartlett 310.428.4803, Eventbrite lists 4-8 pm, Facebook post lists 4-8 pm and in details lists 1-5 pm, check with organizer to confirm.  

https://www.facebook.com/events/188545615747394/ 

Monday, February 24, 2020 

City Council Health, Life Enrichment, Equity & Community Committee, 10 am, at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor Redwood Room, Agenda: 2. Listening session Homeless, 3. Healthy Checkout (removing junk food from checkout, 4. a.&b.Sales and serving of Sugar-sweetened beverages on City property a. Commission recommends prohibiting at City events and in City vending machines, b. City Manager recommends majority healthy choices, 5. a.&b. Smoke free multi-unit housing, a. make complaint process easier, increase staffing for enforcement, referrals on whether to include cannabis b. City Manager requests referral for financial and legal analysis 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Home/Policy_Committee__Health,_Life_Enrichment,_Equity___Community.aspx 

Community Meeting - Search for Director of Library Services (DOLS), 12:30 – 2 pm, at Tarea Hall Pittman South Library, 1901 Russell, Agenda: Community meeting on process and candidate profile, https://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/about/board-library-trustees 

Parks and Waterfront Commission and Public Works – Adopt A Spot Subcommittee, 1 – 2 pm, at 2180 Milvia, 1st Floor Chinquapin Room, https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Parks_and_Waterfront_Commission.aspx 

Agenda and Rules Committee, 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm, at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor Redwood Room, Agenda planning for March 10 Council meeting, CONSENT: 1. Contract 3-15-2020 to 3-14-2023 with option two 1 yr renewals for $2.7 million over 5 years with Blaisdell’s Business Products for Office supplies, small equipment and office furniture, Contract $100,000 thru 6-30-2022 with Resource Development for results based accountability to evaluate mental health programs, 3. Loan $7.1 million to BRIDGE Housing for acquisition and predevelopment of proposed affordable housing project at 1740 San Pablo, 4. Establish standing list of City’s Labor Negotiators, 5. Contract add $20,000 total $65,000 with Cadalys, Inc for software for BESO (Building Energy Saving Ordinance), 6. Contract add $65,081 total $365,773 (term 5-15-2013 to 6-30-2021) with SSP Data Products, Inc. for Barracuda Backup Solution with Hosted Cloud Storage, 7. Accept donation $9,500 from Friends of Ohlone Park for Ohlone Park Mural Garden, 8. Grant application for $150,000 to National Fitness Campaign for Fitness Courts, 9. Contract add $125,000 total $1,386,771 with 2M Associates for Tuolumne Camp Project, 10. Contract add $40,000 total $280,000 with APB General Engineering for Hillview Road and Woodside Road drainage improvement project, 11. $457,000 to purchase 2019 John Deere Co. 644L 20 Ton Hybrid Wheel Loader with Pape Machinery, Inc, 12. Oppose S.2059 – Justice for Victims of Sanctuary Cities Act of 2019 with letters to Feinstein, Harris, Lee and Trump, 13. Support AB 1839 – CA Green New Deal, 14. Support AB 2037 – Hospital Closure Notification, 15. Allocation U1 General Fund Revenues, 16. Support Reviving Berkeley Bus Rapid Transit, ACTION: 17. Electric Bike Share Program Franchise Amendment with Bay Area Motivate, subsidiary of Lyft for shared electric bikes, 18. Disposition (sale) 1631 Fifth Street, 19. Vision Zero Action Plan, 20. a.&b. Smoke Free Multi-unit Housing Ordinance Policy and enforcement, 21. Use Portion Cannabis Tax Proceeds to fund subsidies 1000 Person Plan (homeless) 22. Ronald V. Dellums Fair Chance Housing Access, 23. Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act, 24. Update definition “Research and Development,” 25. Ballot Initiative to increase City Council Salary, 26. Referral to City Manager to study feasibility of 1890 Alcatraz (city owned) as site for African American Holistic Resource Center and affordable housing, 27. Affirm support for People of Tibet, 28. Allocate Car Fees for street improvements, INFORMATION REPORTS: 29. Economic Dashboards and Demographic Profile Update, 30. 2019 FY 4th Quarter Investment report, 30. 2020 FY 1st qtr report, 32. Audit Status Report from Public Works towards 2020 Zero Waste Goal, 33. Audit Status report from Public Works on Zero Waste Activities, 34. Proposed Navigable Cities Framework for access for People with Disabilities from Commission, REFERRED & UNSCHEDULED 8. Telecom Ordinance, 9. Council Rules and Procedures, 10. Compulsory Composting and Edible Food Recovery, 11. Officeholder Accounts, Increase Compliance with Short-term rental Ordinance, Grant Writing Services, Kitchen Exhaust Hood 

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

Children, Youth and Recreation Commission, 7 – 9 pm at 2800 Park St, Frances Albrier Community Center at San Pablo Park, Agenda: 8, Census Presentation, 9. 2020 Vision Presentation, 11. BUSD Special Taxes and Infrastructure Bond Measures. 

http://www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/Children_Youth_and_Recreation_Commission/ 

Commission on the Status of Women, - Santa Rita Jail Subcommittee, 7 – 8 pm at 2000 University, Au Coquelet, 4. Safety Cells and Pregnancy procedures, 

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

Housing Advisory Commission, at 2180 Milvia, 1st Floor, Cottonwood Room, 

11 – 11:15 am, Social Housing Subcommittee,  

11:15 am – 12:15 pm, Housing Impacts of the Climate Emergency Subcommittee,  

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

Planning Commission Subcommittee meets concurrently with Zoning Adjustment Board Subcommittee – Zoning Ordinance Revision Project, 7 – 9 pm at 1947 Center, Basement, Agenda: last subcommittee meeting before [revised] zoning ordinance is finalized for public review, working draft of Baseline Zoning Ordinance https://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Planning_and_Development/Level_3_-_Commissions/Commission_for_Planning/2020-02-24_ZORP_Item%2005.pdf (265 pages) 

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

Zero Waste Commission, 7 – 9 pm at 1326 Allston Way, Willow Room, City of Berkeley Corporation Yard, Agenda: 3. Subcommittee report Design Guidelines for New Construction, 4. Ideas to educate public about food waste, 5. Changes to items currently accepted in compost program (i.e. milk cartons) 

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

Tax the Rich Rally, with music by Occupella, 4 – 5 pm at the Top of Solano in front of the Closed Oaks Theater, Rain Cancels 

Tuesday, February 25, 2020 

Community Meeting - Search for Director of Library Services (DOLS), 6 - 7:30 pm, at West Branch Library, Agenda: process and candidate profile, https://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/about/board-library-trustees 

An evening with Mary DeMocker author of The Parent’s Guide to Climate Revolution: 100 Ways to Build a Fossil-Free Future, Raise Empowered Kids, and Still Get a Good Night’s Sleep, 6:30 pm – 8 pm, at 1731 Prince St, Malcolm X Library (enter on Prince), 

https://350bayarea.org/event/an-evening-with-mary-democker-author-of-the-parents-guide-to-climate-revolution-100-ways-to-build-a-fossil-free-future-raise-empowered-kids-and-still-get-a-good-nights-sleep 

Joint Powers Financing Authority Special Meeting, 5:45 pm, at 1231 Addison Street, BUSD Board Room, Agenda: Refinancing 2010 certificate of Participation originally issued to finance Animal Shelter Project 

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

Berkeley City Council, Tuesday, 6:00 pm – 11:00 pm, at 1231 Addison Street, BUSD Board Room, Agenda: CONSENT: 1. Election Reform Act 2nd reading public financing of elections contribution limit to qualify 30 unique contributors $10 each or more total $500. Contribution limit $50/individual, candidate cannot contribute more than $250 to self (includes spouse, domestic partner, unemancipated children), 2. 2nd reading wage theft prevention, 3. 2nd reading regulations & operating standards cannabis business, 5. Formal Bid Solicitations and RFP, $13,085,000, 6. Contract $313,800 with Worldwide Travel Staffing for Nurse Registry Services March 1, 2020 – June 30, 2023, , 7. Contract $500,000 with Van Meter Williams Pollack for Professional Planning Services to Prepare Zoning Standards and EIR for Ashby and North Berkeley BART Stations, March 1, 2020 – July 31, 2021, 8. Amend Agreement with CA Dept of Transportation (Caltrans) for maintenance of the State highways within the City of Berkeley will address roadway and traffic signal improvements, 9. Contract $388,489 (includes 10% contingency) with APB General Engineering for Sanitary Sewer Rehab and Replacement, 10. Permit Fee Waiver for PG&E for Undergrounding existing overhead electrical facilities and electric service conversions in Utility Undergrounding District No. 48. (Grizzly Reak/Summit), 11. Asylum for Survivors of Domestic Violence, Affirm Berkeley’s Commitment to our asylum-seeking residents, 12.&13. Council donations, 14. Schedule Special City Council Meeting on Ohlone History and Culture, 15. Support S.2012 (Feinstein) Restoring Local Control Over Public Infrastructure Act of 2019, 16. Support SB-431(Mobile phones), SB-801 (back-up battery packs), SB-802 (allow diesel-powered generators during declared disasters) support people whose lives would be endangered with emergency power shutdowns, 17. Referral: Street Lighting Near Campus, ACTION: 18. Issuance $38,000,000 General Obligation Bonds for Measure O Affordable Housing, 19. Refinancing 2009, 2010 General Obligation Bonds (Measure FF), 20. Issuance and sale of lease revenue bonds to refinance outstanding Refinance 2010 Certificates (originally issued to finance Animal Shelter Project), 21. a.,b.,c. appeal 1582 LeRoy convert Hillside School to residential use, 22. ZAB Appeal 2422 Fifth St, 23. Surveillance Technology & Acquisition Reports, License Plate Readers, GPS Trackers, Body Worn Cameras, INFORMATION REPORTS: 23. City Manager Response to audit of Code Enforcement Unit, 24. Mayor Arreguin is President of ABAG, Regional Leadership and Goals for 2020. 

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

Democratic Primary Debate, 5 – 7 pm on CBS, last Democratic debate before California primary voting on March 3, Biden, Bloomberg, Buttigieg, Klobuchar, Sanders, Warren, 

https://www.elle.com/culture/career-politics/a26992483/democratic-candidates-primary-debates-2020-election/ 

Wednesday, February 26, 2020 

4x4 Joint Task Force Committee on Housing: Rent Board/City Council, 3 pm, 2180 Milvia, 1st Floor Cypress Room, Agenda: 6. Possible enhancements Short Term Ordinance, 7. Options for expanded rental registration, 9. Updates elevator ordinance, relocation ordinance, City enforcement AB 1482, Tenant Opportunity Purchase Act. 

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/rent/ 

Civic Arts Commission, 6 – 8 pm at 1901 Russell, Tarea Hall Pittman South Branch Library, Agenda: 6. Action items 2542 Durant final Art Plan, Public Art Ordinance, 7. Presentation Turtle Island 

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

Disaster and Fire Safety Commission, 7 – 9 pm at 997 Cedar St, Fire Department Training Center, Agenda: 4. Notification of recidency in designated high risk fire areas, 5. Phase 3 Study , Undergrounding Utilities, 6. Special Tax assessment for Wildfire Prevention, 7. October Power Shutoff, 8. Public Process to update Wildfire Fire Code, 9. Public Outreach Emergency Preparedness, 10. Expand Automatic Gas Shut-off, 

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

Energy Commission, 6:30 – 9 pm at 1947 Center St, Agenda: 7. Presentation-discussion of BESO (Building Energy Saving Ordinance) evaluation, 8. Climate Fund Concept, 9. CEAC referral on Sustainable Mobility, 

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

Joint Subcommittee for the Implementation of State Housing Laws, 7 – 9 pm at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor Redwood Room, Agenda: 10. Objective Standards for Shadows (includes solar), 11. Objective Standards for Design, 12. Objective Standards for Density, 13. Draft report for Council 

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

Police Review Commission, at 2939 Ellis, South Berkeley Senior Center, 

5:30 pm, Use of Force Subcommittee 

7 – 10 pm, Regular Meeting – 8. Subcommittee Reports (discussion & action) a. Lexipol Policies, b. Standard of Proof, c. Use of Force, 9. MOU Compendium agreements, 10. B. compliance with body-worn camera policy, c. Use of force training 

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

Le Conte Neighborhood Association, 7:30 – 9 pm, at Life Adventist Church 2236 Parker, (South of Ellsworth) Agenda: 1. Proposed Up-zoning for Telegraph AreaThe new Southside Plan, by Planning Commissioner Mary Kay Lacey. 2. Development Proposals for South Shattuck: Eastern Hardware/Model Garage and Walgreens sites, and a quick update about 3000 Shattuck, by Janis Ching. 3. Berkeley for Assessment Tax Equity, an advocacy group, exposes inconsistencies in city’s levying of property tax, by Lilana Spindler and Laura Menard. 4. Community Announcements 

Thursday, February 27, 2020 

City Council Budget & Finance Committee, 10 am, at (TBD usually) 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor Redwood Room, Agenda: 2. Add $2.5 million from transfer tax to 115 Pension Trust Fund, 3. Short-term rental policy enforcement staff costs that exceed enforcement fees and penalties shall be covered thru short-term rental taxes collected, remaining 2/3 to Affordable Housing Trust Fund, 1/3 Arts Fund, (Cannabis cryptocurrency tax not on agenda-future mtg) 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Home/Policy_Committee__Budget___Finance.aspx 

Zoning Adjustment Board - Cancelled 

Mental Health Commission, 7 – 9 pm at 1947 Center St, Agenda: 3. Presentation Berkeley Crisis Services, 6. Recommendation “May is Mental Health Month” 

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

Wellstone Democratic Renewal Club, 6 pm Potluck, 6:45 pm meeting, at 390 27th St, Oakland, Humanist Hall, Agenda: Update CA Single Payer, Will Police Review Commission Reform be on Nov Ballot, 7:15 Panel on Don’t Attack Iran, U.S. and Middle East 

Friday, February 28, 2020 

Stop the Money Pipeline, Chase Bank protest rally, 11 am – 1 pm, at Oakland. 

https://350bayarea.org/event/stop-the-money-pipeline-february-protest 

Saturday, February 29, 2020 

Recreation Division Job Fair, 11 am – 3 pm, at 2800 Park St, Francis Albrier Community Center, San Pablo Park, Part Time Seasonal & Temporary Positions Available, Minimum age 18 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/CalendarEventMain.aspx?calendarEventID=16783 

Sunday, March 1, 2020 

Ben Bartlett Councilmember District 3 & Mayor Jesse Arreguin Office Hours, 2 - 4 pm, at 3250 Adeline, Vault Cafe 

_____________________ 

 

Public Hearings Scheduled – Land Use Appeals 

0 Euclid – Berryman Reservoir TBD 

2422 Fifth St – mixed-use building 2-25-2020 

1581 LeRoy Ave – convert vacant elementary school property – LPC & ZAB 2-25-2020 

Remanded to ZAB or LPC With 90-Day Deadline 

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

Notice of Decision (NOD) With End of Appeal Period 

1237.5 Carrison 3-10-2020 

1660 Lincoln 3-12-2020 

30 Roanoke 2-25-2020 

2421 Seventh 3-12-2020 

1760 Sonoma 2-27-2020 

20 Stevenson 2-25-2020 

1914 Stuart 2-25-2020 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/planning_and_development/land_use_division/current_zoning_applications_in_appeal_period.aspxhttps://www.cityofberkeley.info/planning_and_development/land_use_division/current_zoning_applications_in_appeal_period.aspx 

 

LINK to Current Zoning Applications https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Planning_and_Development/Land_Use_Division/Current_Zoning_Applications.aspx 

 

WORKSHOPS 

March 17 – CIP Update (PRW and Public Works), Measure T1 Update 

May 5 – Budget Update, Crime Report 

June 23 – Climate Action Plan/Resiliency Update, Digital Strategic Plan/FUND$ Replacement Website Update 

July 21, Sept 29 – no workshops scheduled “yet” 

Oct 20 – Update Berkeley’s 2020 Vision, BMASP/Berkeley Pier-WETA Ferry 

 

Unscheduled Workshops/Presentations 

Cannabis Health Considerations 

Vision 2050 

Systems Realignment 

_____________________ 

 

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/ 

 

_____________________ 

 

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 

 

If you wish to stop receiving the Weekly Summary of City Meetings please forward the weekly summary you received to kellyhammargren@gmail.com,