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A Few of the many birds to be seen at Berkeley's Aquatic Park
Bill Woodcock
A Few of the many birds to be seen at Berkeley's Aquatic Park
 

News

Alice Paul: Author of the Equal Rights Amendment
1885-1977

Alta Gerry
Saturday August 15, 2020 - 03:18:00 PM

While planning an East Coast poetry reading tour, I learned that Alice Paul was in the Greenleaf Extension Home in New Jersey. I contacted the facility and requested a visit, which was granted. We decided on ten o’clock on a weekday.

The day I arrived, I was told they were expecting me and that she was ready. She was sitting up behind a small table. I introduced myself and sat facing her. We exchanged pleasantries, and then I asked how things were going. “I don’t understand why my letters get no response!” she was distressed by the lack of response to the letters she had been writing to Congress about the Equal Rights Amendment. We talked about how women needed to be elected to Congress. There were a few men who were supportive, but in 1977. there were no groups of women legislators to turn to for support. I said I would talk to the manager of Greenleaf and see if there were a problem with the mail.

A nurse came in asking who I was. An interview had been arranged, and the writer had arrived with a photographer, expecting to see Alice. What was I doing there? I explained that I was from California and had asked to visit her while on a reading tour. I also was willing to leave, which reassured everybody, and I told Alice I would ask about the confusion regarding the mail and get back to her about what I learned. 

I went to the front desk and asked to see the person in charge. I told her "Miss Paul continues to be perplexed as to why her letters get no response” and did she have an idea of any problems? 

The woman said, “She’s such a dear. Full of energy every morning with a new idea of which Senator should be contacted." 

I nodded, “So she is writing letters?”  

“Well,” the woman said, “the nurse just pretends to write them. Miss Paul thinks she is writing to Senators. They aren’t letters to family or anyone real.” 

I took out my notebook, “Is there a way I can hire a private secretary to come regularly to help her with her correspondence?” 

The woman looked startled, “Well, I suppose so.” 

I continued, “How would I do that? Can you recommend someone for me to contact?” 

“Oh, yes! We have a wonderful woman who comes when someone needs to contact family or for legal matters; she would certainly be able to do what you’re asking.” 

“Great. Can we start next week, say, 2 mornings of 3 hours each?" I made a note of her name and contact information. 

Before leaving, I knocked at the door of the interview room, and said, “I’m leaving now; just want to say goodbye.” I walked over & took Alice’s hand and said, “I’ve hired a private secretary for you. She’ll be coming next Tuesday to work on your correspondence. I’ve requested 2 days a week at 3 hours each visit.” Alice nodded, "Thank you.”  

“It’s an honor to meet you. I’ll call in a couple of weeks to see how it’s going.” 

As I left, Alice was talking with Robert S. Gallagher. That interview appeared in American Heritage in February, 1974. It is available online. 

The secretary I hired was excellent; she did as we requested and the letters got to their destinations and mail began to arrive for Alice Paul within weeks. Some were from Congress; one from a suffragist she had worked with in 1919. Her friends were afraid she had died, as all their mail to her house had been returned. 

Of the surviving Suffragists, six were well enough to plan a visit. They came together, and spent hours with Alice. Soon after their visit, she died. 

I was crying, hearing about her death, worrying that the excitement may have been too much. 

My Mom consoled me, “Everybody should get a party before they die.” 

Alice Paul had worked both in England and America to get the vote for women. No country in the world had women’s right to vote when they began, and it took years of marches and meetings and getting arrested to get support from President Wilson. She told interviewer Robert S. Gallagher that she expected that the right to vote would be approved by Congress, and was optimistic that it “could be done in a year...We would explain it to every congressman, and the amendment would go through... But it took us seven years.” 

The focus had been on the vote, and once accomplished, many suffragists returned to private life. 

Alice Paul and a handful of other women’s rights activists turned their attention to the Equal Rights Amendment. 

"We hadn’t been able to get a lawyer, so I drafted one in simple ordinary English.”  

This is the Equal Rights Amendment Alice Paul wrote : 

Men and women shall have equal rights throughout the United States and every place subject to its jurisdiction. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.


Opinion

Public Comment

Open Letter to Berkeley Parks Commission:
Threat to Aquatic Park from Speculative Development Proposal

Charlene M. Woodcock, Berkeley resident
Saturday August 15, 2020 - 04:57:00 PM
A Few of the many birds to be seen at Berkeley's Aquatic Park
Bill Woodcock
A Few of the many birds to be seen at Berkeley's Aquatic Park

I write to ask that you vote to separate the park improvements from the proposed development at 600 Addison and that you urge the city to reject the development.

This seems to be some sort of replay of the terribly inappropriate proposal for the property directly adjacent to Aquatic Park on the east that was presented to the city in 2017. It poses a similar threat to the health of Aquatic Park as highly-valued bird habitat and a place of respite for Berkeley residents, and in the longer term a resilience zone for the city against sea rise. This project would require the destruction of many mature trees, and the two huge buildings would almost totally fill the existing built site and its parking lot as well as the adjacent property to the south, now benignly storing soil and wood chips.

In the past few years several new five-story apartment buildings have been built along University Avenue just a block from the park, adding several hundred new residents. This alone should be cause to protect and enhance the park, rather than allowing a huge increase in the built density of the adjacent site to the east. More than 80 mature carbon-absorbing trees would be destroyed including 10 Coast redwoods in good condition and a Coastal Live Oak, since the development covers virtually all available space. Obviously, such a large, dense development would totally change the character of the park that runs alongside it, now bordered by the lake and a tranquil, wooded space enjoyed by families, hikers, rowers, and birders. The Park saves a bit of Berkeley’s natural setting and provides an important bird habitat. It also, importantly, provides resiliency in the face of climate change and sea rise, which we need in the open areas close to the Bay such as that targeted by the proposed development.

If the Parks Commission is not already actively working with the Zoning Board to establish a formal resiliency zone in the flatlands of Berkeley nearest to the Bay shoreline, surely that should be done as soon as possible, to discourage future inappropriate building projects such as this from wasting city commissioners’ time.

In 2017, I recorded numbers of birds seen in the park over the summer. Above is a photo by Bill Woodcock taken then of some of them.


Fatal Drug Overdoses Hit a Record High in 2019

Nickolaus Hayes
Saturday August 15, 2020 - 05:31:00 PM

Preliminary data released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention indicated the number of fatal drug overdoses hit a record high last year, reversing the progress made in 2018. In 2016, for example, more than 100 people were dying every day because of an opioid-related overdose, and over 11 million people misused prescription opioids, per Drug Rehab Services. The data released by the CDC show that within 50 states and the District of Columbia, overdose deaths are occurring in everyone at different degrees of severity. The number of Americans who died from a drug-related overdose surged to over 70,000 in 2017. However, by 2018 the number declined by 4.6%, which was the first decrease in almost 30 years. 

The progress made in 2018 was erased in 2019, and the number of overdose deaths increased by the same number, 4.6%, from 2018 to 2019. Approximately 37 states and the District of Columbia reported an increase in drug-related overdose deaths in 2019. The state of South Dakota reported the biggest increase at 54%. In 2018, more than half of the overdose deaths involved synthetic opioids such as fentanyl. The CDC also indicated that the number of overdose deaths involving cocaine and methamphetamine increased from 34.7% in 2017 to 45.4% in 2019. Fentanyl was responsible for most of these overdose deaths, which included fentanyl mixed with cocaine. 

Overall, the data suggest that 2020 could be worse because of the pandemic, government restrictions, self-isolation, stay at home orders, job loss, and financial struggle. Even data that was released by the White House was suggesting that America already saw an increase in the number of drug-related overdose deaths in 2020. If the trend continues and it seems that it is, 2020 will be the sharpest increase in annual overdose deaths since 2016. 

There are countless reasons why people choose to abuse drugs or alcohol. Unfortunately, many Americans are feeling more despair, anxiety, stress, and other issues caused by the pandemic and the on-going civil unrest. It has been a collision of two significant issues involving the stress of uncertainty with the pandemic and the uncertainty of your future, whether with work, school, or future goals. Social isolation has been devastating, and it made it more difficult for people with substance use disorders to manage their conditions, and it increased the likelihood of overdose. 

It was a domino effect because, at the beginning of the pandemic, many of the outpatient and inpatient treatment facilities had to suspend their in-person services, which limited access to care. Countless residential programs shut their doors and left addicts with nowhere to go. The year has been unbelievable, and it seems almost impossible to predict what will happen next. Behind everything, opioids continue to destroy families and rip communities apart. For example, the Shelby County Health Department in Tennessee reported 391 suspected overdoses from April 7, 2020, to May 7, 2020—58 of which were fatal. 

The Franklin County Coroner in Ohio reported the first four months of 2020 showed 50% more deaths than in the same period of 2019. Milwaukee County’s Emergency Medical Services Division in Wisconsin reported March and April 2020 displayed a 54% increase in drug overdose calls when compared to 2019. The numbers for 2020 are showing these problems are going to persist, and it will result in more funding to help treatment centers survive. However, there have been past trends with funding and support being reduced and allocated elsewhere. 

Between 2009 and 2013, some states during those fiscal years cut at least $4.35 billion from their budgets for mental and behavioral health services. As of 2020, some states are already reducing their funding for mental and behavioral health services due to economic losses because of the pandemic. The state of Oregon, for example, is preparing to cut $69 million in 2021, and other states like Colorado, Florida, New Jersey, and Utah made similar cuts. The most vulnerable in the country has been made even more vulnerable. By the end of 2020, there will be more people addicted to drugs and more people who have suffered from a fatal or non-fatal drug overdose. The need for substance abuse treatment will increase, and countless programs are funded at the state and federal level, which could make it difficult to help those in need if there is no funding. 

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Nickolaus Hayes is a healthcare professional in the field of substance abuse and addiction recovery. He utilizes his experience in his writing to provide an expert viewpoint. His primary focus is spreading awareness by educating individuals on the topics surrounding substance abuse  


Sources- 

https://www.addicted.org/opiates-detox-treatment-programs-in-the-united-states.html 

https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/drug-overdose-data.htm 

https://files.constantcontact.com/a923b952701/dbf0b5a5-f730-4a6f-a786-47097f1eea78.pdf 


11, August 2020 Hiroshima

Tejinder Uberoi
Saturday August 15, 2020 - 05:29:00 PM

Seventy-five years ago, the U.S. dropped the world’s first atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima causing shock waves, radiation and heat rays resulting in the agonizing death of some 140,000 people, Three days later, the U.S. dropped a second atomic bomb on Nagasaki, killing another 74,000 people. Multiple generation birth defects followed. Secret records have shown how the U.S. gov’t and Hollywood secretly colluded to produce a sanitized version to justify the atomic bombings. 

Chief scientist, of the bomb Robert Oppenheimer, describes his dark role - “Now I have become Death, the destroyer of worlds.” quoting the Bhagavad Gita. Authors and journalists Greg Mitchell and Robert Lifton (’Atomic Cover-up and Hiroshima in America’), challenge the official narrative and argue the atomic bombing was totally unnecessary. What is conveniently omitted from the official American justification is Russia’s declaration of war on Japan on August 9th leaving no option but Japan’s imminent unconditional surrender. Following the bombings, the Truman government aided by a compliant media, went into feverish damage control to mitigate the aftermath of the bombings. All film footage and other evidence was immediately confiscated. 

Hollywood eagerly jumped into the act releasing a propaganda movie to allay public misgivings about the enormous civilian population that died. 

Reports have since emerged that the U.S. government secretly filmed the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, not just from the sky, but the devastation on the ground, brought the film back to the bomb making scientists at Los Alamos, who were unable to comprehend their science would be used to commit such appalling atrocities on a civilian population. The films would be highly classified for decades. Appalled on what they had seen, several scientists produced a counter narrative documentary in the MGM movie,” The Beginning of the End”. Leading scientists who turned against the bomb were surveilled, followed, and their phones tapped, by the FBI. 

The film ‘Atomic Cover-up’, explores how both the Japanese footage and the American footage was suppressed for decades, because it just showed the catastrophic impact on the civilian population. Have we learned anything from our past mistakes? Sadly, no! 

YouGov and The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists found that more than a third of Americans would support a nuclear strike on North Korea, if North Korea tested a long-range missile capable of reaching the U.S. We still maintain a ‘first strike policy’ and given the temper tantrums of the stable genius President this could mean the death of millions of civilians. 

For more go to, http://callforsocialjustice.blogspot.com/


Medical Leave Jobs: Tough On Women

Harry Brill
Saturday August 15, 2020 - 05:09:00 PM

International comparisons of social and political services provided to a nation’s citizens is certainly not flattering to the United States. The US is the only industrial country without a medical leave policy. In many countries where employees want to take care of a seriously sick family member they are paid for some of the time taken off from work. In the United States federal employees are allowed up to 12 weeks of time off. However, the caretakers, who are mainly women, are unpaid.  

Before we can consider what options working women have as caretakers, let us first take a look at their personal and economic situation. Not least, caring for sick or elderly family members is still, according to the research, mostly women’s work. Also, many of these women who work as caretakers have to cope with exhaustion, isolation, and depression. So working as caretakers can be quite draining. 

Their very low income compared to male earnings adds to their tension. Women make up more than 2/3rds of the low wage workers. That is, they earn a poverty wage of $11 or less. And their unemployment rate exceeds 15 percent. Although women make up 46 percent of the workforce they experience 54 percent of the jobs lost.  

In addition, many of their obligations often include very difficult non-wage responsibilities -- childcare, caring for the elderly, taking care of sick relatives, cooking, and cleaning.  

In the United States, although the role of the federal government is minimal, six states, Washington D.C. and San Francisco provide some medical leave options. They offer in the aggregate medical leave service to 14 percent of the American public. On the whole, these programs are not very generous. Rhode Island, for example,allows employees only up to 4 weeks of care. San Francisco employers can limit the paid sick leave to 72 hour, which on a full time basis would be less than two full days.. In short, the paid sick leave programs do not suffer from being too generous. 

The state which offers among the best medical leave programs is California. In brief, employees can take up to eight weeks to care for a family member. Governor Newsom in June increased the number from six weeks. Also, caretakers can receive up to 70 percent of their salary. But even the best programs are inadequate. It is not just because salaries take a substantial cut. The duration of service is often shorter than needed. 

Of course states and cities should do what they can. But only the federal government can provide the resources that are needed. However, just more is never enough. The spending must be based on ethical and humane considerations, which so far have been absent.


Columns

ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Throw a Bone to Mental Health Consumers

Jack Bragen
Saturday August 15, 2020 - 05:27:00 PM

A few concessions ought to be given those afflicted with life-changing, mind altering diseases. Many of us don't have anything gratifying to anticipate--and it would be nice if we could get a few perks in our lives. Maybe this could take the form of a part time job, one that is within our ability to perform, without it being humiliating and bottom of the barrel. Maybe this could take the form of an annual extra three hundred dollars in our measly SSI checks. Or maybe this could take the form of a trip to a museum--this field trip was once common for mentally ill people in groups but has evaporated along with the other good things we used to get. 

Contrary to the beliefs of some ascetics, some clergy, and some beginning Buddhists, gratification is a necessity. If there is no gratification, the body loses its power. When the body loses power, the mind, heart, and soul start to give out. Do monks live longer? Some do, but only the ones who find their lives gratifying. 

Those of us who aren't monks may need some material things about which to be gratified. We should not neglect this impulse. This includes the desire to have money. While this doesn't mean we should steal money or harm people, it does mean that we should seek legitimate avenues to find gratification, and not just "meaning" (in the spiritual or philosophical sense). 

Mentally ill people work. The job is that of struggling with cognitive issues, social issues (including rejection by society), body issues (such as medication side effects, greater health risks and premature aging)...additionally dealing with the work of managing our disorders to remain stabilized, and many more things, that mentally ill people face and most people do not. So, to tell us, "Get a job," shows a complete lack of understanding. This is even though many of us do in fact "get a job" and work at that job despite the prognostication of treatment practitioners and others--that we can't. 

We ought to be rewarded for our efforts, not punished for things we didn't create. Many of us aren't after anything really big. Those who are, are said to have "delusions of grandeur." A mentally ill person saying they're trying to become a famous author--"delusion of grandeur." 

I am happy to say that the field of writing is mostly a level playing field. Most editors with whom I've interacted haven't cared one way or another that I have schizophrenia. I also haven't announced it to them. Editors want good writing. 

Politics? Not a level playing field. Not when Russia handpicks a puppet President and rigs our election system to get him into office. But I'm not interested in going into politics and couldn't handle any of it. 

Kamala Harris? A fabulous choice. Maybe, if and when she is VP or later becomes President, I'll write to her and ask her to throw a bone to us mentally ill people. I would expect she will have some empathy.


ECLECTIC RANT: Russia’s Dubious claim to a Coronavirus Vaccine

Ralph E. Stone
Saturday August 15, 2020 - 05:21:00 PM

Russia claims to have a coronavirus vaccine — Sputnik-V. The director of the Gamaleya Research Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology in Moscow, where the vaccine is being developed, has yet to publish any results from large-scale human trials or published data from earlier trials, which typically involve three phases to check a drugs safety, efficacy, and dosage.  

Gamaleya may have jumped dangerously ahead of critical, large-scale testing that is essential to determine if a possible covid-19 protection is safe and effective.  

As Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, opined, I hope that the Russians have actually definitively proven that the vaccine is safe and effective. I seriously doubt that they've done that.”  

I cant wait to hear Trumps response to the news. Now that Russia claims to have a vaccine, will Trump announce that his good friend Putin will supply the vaccine to the U.S. just in time for the election? Remember, Trump has been touting hydroxychloroquine, which has proven an ineffective — and possibly even dangerous — treatment for Covid-19. Why then would he hesitate to champion Sputnik-V?


THE PUBLIC EYE: Trump at the Tipping Point

Bob Burnett
Saturday August 15, 2020 - 04:47:00 PM

On August 8th, Donald Trump's 2020 presidential campaign reached a critical juncture in the struggle to stabilize the U.S. economy. Faced with an epic financial crisis, Trump had a leadership opportunity, a chance to bring Republicans and Democrats together to develop a realistic recovery plan. Instead Trump opted for a political stunt, signing four faux "executive orders." It was a "tipping point." In his 2000 book, "The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference," Malcolm Gladwell defines a "tipping point" as a moment when there's a critical change of social perspective because a key determinant has reached critical mass. For a long time, Trump's political strength has been his perceived handling of the economy. Now he's lost that. 

The Economy: In June, the U.S. officially entered a recession (https://www.cnbc.com/2020/06/09/the-us-is-officially-in-a-recession-will-it-become-a-depression.html). In the first quarter the real GDP decreased by 5 percent and in the second quarter it decreased by a whopping 32.9 percent -- the worst plunge ever recorded. 

The current unemployment rate is 12.1 percent but that doesn't count Americans who have given up looking for work. To get back to where we were before the pandemic, the U.S. economy has to add 30 million jobs. 

The Washington Post (https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2020/08/13/recession-is-over-rich-working-class-is-far-recovered/?) detailed a new labor study that says the U.S. is in the midst of a "K-shaped" recovery: "As much of the economy has moved to work-from-home mode, the shift has mainly benefited college-educated employees who do most of their work on computers." Workers whose wages are over $32/hour have seen jobs increase. All other workers have seen employment decrease: "Employment is still 20 percent below pre-pandemic levels for workers earning under $14 an hour, and 16 percent down for those making $14 to $20 an hour." 

Donald Trump doesn't understand this. He does not have a plan to deal with this recession. The latest Quinnipiac pollindicates that only 44% of people approve of the way Trump is handling the U.S. economy. To date, it's his lowest rating -- on this parameter. 

The Democratic Stimulus Response: To understand where we are now, it's useful to reconstruct how we got to this point. On May 15th, the Democratically-controlled House of Representatives passed HR 6800, the Health and Economic Recovery Omnibus Emergency Solutions or "Heroes" Act. This includes:
1. $1.13 trillion of emergency supplemental appropriations to federal agencies, as well as economic assistance to governments at the state, local, tribal and territorial levels.
2. $485 billion in safety net spending, including the expansion of unemployment benefits, increased Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, increased funding for utilities payments and job training for low-income individuals, and a 25% increase in aid to disabled veterans.
3. $435 billion for additional rebates, which would include an additional $1200 stimulus check per individual.
4. $382 billion for health care, which would include reimbursing health care providers for lost revenue, covering the COBRA premium costs for employees laid off between March 2020 and January 2021, increasing funding for testing and contact tracing, eliminating cost-sharing for coronavirus treatment, and increasing funding for health agencies and centers.
5. $290 billion to support small businesses and employee retention, with modifications to the Paycheck Protection Program. This would expand employee retention credit, provide credits for employer expenses, extend and expand paid leave (such as paid sick days, family and medical leave), and provide a 90% income credit for self-employed individuals.
6. $290 billion to reduce income taxes.
7. $191 billion for student loan relief and funding for higher education.
8. $202 billion for housing-related costs and expenses, including the establishment of a emergency rental assistance fund and a homeowner's assistance fund. Some eviction and foreclosure moratoriums would be expanded as well, being extended for up to another year and expanding the moratorium to cover all renters and homeowners rather than specific cases as previously done in the CARES Act.
9. $190 billion for hazard pay for essential workers.
10. $32 billion for communication systems (such as the U.S. Postal Service), $48 billion for pensions and retirement relief, $31 billion for agricultural spending, and $25 billion for limited business loss deductions. 

The HEROES act allocated $3.4 trillion for relief from the pain caused by the pandemic. The bill wasn't perfect, but it provided a good starting point for discussions with Republican legislators. 

The May Republican Response: After the HEROES bill passed the House, President Trump and Senate Majority Leader McConnell declared it "dead on arrival" at the Senate. Republicans proposed a "pause" before they considered an additional stimulus package: Sen. McConnell remarked, “I don’t think we have yet felt the urgency of acting immediately,” and a White House spokesmen noted the administration had “a little bit of a luxury to watch and see” before further action on the economy and public health. 

At the time -- late May -- the official Republican position was that the pandemic was winding down and the economy was ramping up. (During the next 60 days, Donald Trump played golf 15 times.) 

The July Republican Response: In mid-July Republican Senators finally began to work on a response to the HEROES act. Even though they started with a modest proposal they were divided. (The initial Republican proposal included a second round of stimulus checks, a reduction to the federal jobless benefits, funding for schools and universities to reopen, more money for the Paycheck Protection Program and liability protections for businesses, hospitals and education institutions operating amid the pandemic.) Unfortunately, roughly half the Republican Senators had become deficit hawks and resisted any further stimulus action because they bemoaned increasing the Federal deficit. 

McConnell and company punted to the White House. 

The Trump Administration response: On July 20th, the Trump Administration began negotiating with Democrats on a response to the HEROES bill. Trump assigned Treasury Secretary Mnuchin and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows. (Senate Majority leader McConnell was not involved because his caucus is split; Donald Trump was not involved because he does not talk to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi -- Trump last spoke to Pelosi on October 16, 2019.) 

The negotiations went on for two weeks but did not result in a compromise bill. There are many differences between the Democratic and Republican positions but the foremost two are the size of the unemployment benefits and economic assistance to governments at the state, local, tribal and territorial levels. Republicans favor lower benefits because they believe that the current level of benefit, $600 per week, "disincentivizes" workers from returning to their jobs -- that is, the Trump position is that workers are staying home because they are lazy rather than the obvious: either it's not safe for them to return to work or their jobs have disappeared. Trump: "There was difficulty with the $600 number because it really was a disincentive." (Salon reports that well-connected conservative groups, like the Chamber of Commerce and Club for Growth, lobbied to slash the unemployment benefit (https://www.salon.com/2020/08/07/right-wing-groups-took-millions-in-pandemic-aid--and-spent-millions-lobbying-for-unemployment-cuts/ )). 

Republicans do not want to provide economic assistance to state and local governments because they consider them to be poorly run. (Trump: "What [Democrats] really want is bailout money for states that are run by Democrat governors and mayors, and that have been run very badly for many, many years -- and many decades, in fact.") 

Trump's "Executive Orders": On August 8th, Donald Trump responded to the HEROES bill with four sham "executive orders."
1. Unemployment benefits: Trump reduced benefits to $300 a week for a brief period. (The $44 billion in new funds—whose reapportionment is constitutionally murky, at best—will run out in around a month.)
2. Student Loan Payments:Trump deferred these payments until the end of the year,
3. Eviction Ban. This order doesn't actually ban evictions; Trump settled for asking officials to “consider” whether a ban is even needed. The executive order provides no financial support for the 30-40 million renters currently at risk of eviction. Instead, it instructs administration officials to see if they can locate additional money to help out.
4. In addition: Trump delayed collecting payroll taxes (which fund Social Security and Medicare) from workers making under $104,000 per year.Although some workers would see their paychecks temporarily increase under the second executive order, they'll still owe that extra money back at the end of the year barring congressional action. 

Feedback: Republican Senator Ben Sasse blasted Trump's action, “The pen-and-phone theory of executive lawmaking is unconstitutional slop. President Obama did not have the power to unilaterally rewrite immigration law with DACA, and President Trump does not have the power to unilaterally rewrite the payroll tax law.” [Emphasis added] 

Summary: The website 538 (https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/what-economists-fear-will-happen-without-more-unemployment-aid/) predicts dire consequences if $600 in federal unemployment aid isn't renewed by September 1st: "decline in personal consumption, increased food insecurity, a wave of evictions, and more job losses." 

We are at a tipping point . Trump did not respond to the HEROES bill; he tried to stage a photo op and failed. Republican legislators don't have a response to the HEROES act. America needs another stimulus bill and the Republicans can't get their act together. 

On Trump's watch, the recession will turn into a depression. Americans won't forget. 


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

 


Smithereens: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Saturday August 15, 2020 - 04:40:00 PM

Knockin' on Heaven's Doors

I find myself missing the row of multicolored doors that used to stand alongside the Epworth United Methodist Church on Hopkins Street. A celebration of the LGBTQ movement, the artwork was accompanied by a message that read: "God's Doors Are Open to All."

The display has been gone for several months now. I remember crossing the street one day and discovering that the doors, in fact, could not be opened—none of them were equipped with doorknobs.

I guess, that's the way the Bible (and St. Peter) would have it. If you want to be admitted to Heaven, you have to knock first. 

SIgns of the Times: Tresses in Distress 

The sign in the front window of the five-star Hair salon on the 1700 block of Solano Avenue is still glowing brightly but the salon itself is dark. Sharing the front window, below the glowing, neon word "Hair," is a wry, hand-printed sign that reads: "Salons will be allowed to reopen once we've all gone bald from the stress of it all." 

A Hot New Plague: The Fryingpandemic 

Has it been hot enough for you this week? Well, according to several new scientific reports, it's only going to get worse. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reports that sea temperatures have increased to the point that whales, sea turtles, and other ocean animals are fleeing north in search of cooler waters. "Thermal displacement" has driven some desperate maritime creatures to relocate a thousand miles from their traditional habitats. 

The situation is no better on land. The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) predicts that failure to curb greenhouse gas (GHG) pollution will push global temperatures to the point that "unbearable heat" will become lethal—in rich and poor nations alike. The NBER predicts this disturbing (but largely ignored) increase in heat-related mortalities could soon become the leading cause of deaths worldwide—exceeding the number of deaths from all global infections combined

"Green Hydrogen" to the Rescue 

Burning coal, gas, and oil to create electricity is no longer sustainable. Fortunately, there is an attractive new alternative to "decarbonizing" Earth's energy needs—"Green Hydrogen" (GH). Thanks to the increasing numbers of more-efficient and less-costly wind and solar energy plants, the process of using electrolysis to separate water molecules into oxygen and hydrogen has accelerated the promise of GH-powered economies. 

Germany, Britain, Australia, Japan, Portugal, and The Netherlands have all announced plans to transition to GH power. Meanwhile, the Trump Misadministration continues to promote coal mining, gas extraction, oil drilling, and increased carbon pollution. 

The European Union has embraced GH power as essential to attaining its European Green Deal goal of eliminating all GHG by 2050. The European Commission has called GH "a priority area" for meeting Green Deal goals. The International Energy Agency has called GH one of the decade's "breakout technologies." 

Harvesting hydrogen with electricity from clean, renewable energy currently costs around three times as much as using electricity from fossil-fuel-powered generators but increasing efficiencies and falling costs promise to make "Clean Hydrogen" cheaper than carbon-dependent "Black Hydrogen" within a few decades. 

Andronico's Return: Sort Of 

Many of us have had this experience (and, with the ongoing pandemic it's only going to increase): You head over to a favorite store, shop, or restaurant, only to find it suddenly, inexplicably, irretrievably shuttered. A major landmark in your life has become a memory. 

Over my years in Berkeley, I've seen it happen many times: without warning, a place that I've visited so often that I could sketch a detailed floor plan from memory, goes missing. It's like a sudden death in the family. 

I can remember when there was a COOP Auto Garage on University Avenue. I can remember when there was a COOP grocery store on Shattuck. (That store later became an Andronico's outlet—until it was transformed into a Safeway in 2017.) 

But recently, something unusual occurred. 

Twice. 

In February of this year, the Safeway at 1550 Shattuck suddenly morphed back into an Andronico's while the Safeway on Solano (the location of the original Andronico's founded by Frank and Eva Andronico in 1929) was reincarnated as the Andronico's Community Market. (A third Andronico's on Telegraph Avenue closed in 2011.) 

(As it turned out, this was mainly a matter of Safeway "rebranding" two properties it still owns. According to press reports, Safeway acted without consulting the Andronico family.) 

It's OSH, By Gosh! 

And then there's OSH, the former Orchard Supply Hardware store on Ashby Street in West Berkeley. 

On August 22, 2018, Orchard Supply announced it was closing all its stores. This was a big shock since we'd been making regular OSH-stops for years. OSH was where we went whenever we needed to paint a wall, build a piece of furniture, repair the plumbing, replace a broken salad bowl, or find a gardening tool. We always knew where to look for exactly what we needed. And then there was the spacious outdoor patio filled with potted plants and gardening supplies. 

So it was an unexpected surprise—near-shy of a miracle—when OSH reappeared in January of this year. The new operation—Outdoor Supply Hardware—not only revived the original "OSH" title, it also preserved the store's basic layout. Upon entering, we knew exactly where to go to find the power tools, the food containers, the storage cabinets, and the garden rakes. 

What a rare experience, to lose something real and to be left with nothing but memories—and then to see the past recovered, in exacting detail. As a large sign outside the building put it: "We're back in the neighborhood and it just feels right." 

So who's to thank for this unusual commercial resurrection—a store restored? The Central Network Retail Group (CNRG). The company's abbreviation, CNRG, couldn't be more apropos. CNRG could be license-plate-code for "synergy" and, magically enough, the definition of that word is: "the interaction or cooperation of two or more organizations, substances, or other agents to produce a combined effect greater than the sum of their separate effects." 

The Internet of . . . Whatever 

BigTelecom's Lords of Interconnection love to promote the wonders that will follow from the introduction of The Internet of Things—homes that study and record everything human homeowners are doing and not doing while "improving" their lives with "smart" devices like fridges that tell you when to toss out the old broccoli and microchipped diapers that send a electronic alerts when they need to be changed. These arguments in favor of "smartifying" modern life have prompted some skeptics to re-dub this promotional onslaught as "The Internet of Things No One Asked for and Nobody Really Needs." 

Now the Sunday Chronicle's forward-looking Throughline supplement has offered another less-than-convincing reason to embrace the life-changing revolution that is the IOT. In it's August 9 edition, the Chron asked Linda Gurll, the director of San Francisco's Department of Technolgy, for an example of the wonders that people could look forward to with the advent of expanded broadband fiber connectivity. Gurll's response: "Imagine a day when the Internet Of Things extends to your garbage bin, so that sanitation crews know exactly where trash is piling up and can deploy resources accordingly." 

Do Ants Sleep? 

It used to be that a heavy winter downpour would be followed by an invasion of ants flooded out of their homes and forced to forage in the cupboards of the nearest human habitats. But this has been a dry year, with little rain, and here it is—in the middle of summer—and we've got ants popping up—day and night—in our cupboards, in cereal boxes, on counter tops, in bathroom sinks and on toilet tops. 

While it's all a bit annoying, this antagonistic aversion to the anarchic antics of ants ("anti-antism"?) raises a few novel questions, including: "Do ants ever sleep?" 

The answer is a qualified "yes." According to the BBC, the queen ant gets to snooze nine hours a day while the worker ants have to get by on less than half of that down time. But it gets worse. It turns out the workers are so much in demand that they are only allowed to take occasional "power naps" that seldom last more than a minute. That factors out to around 250 nap-breaks in a day. Researchers have found that, even the queens don't get a full night's rest. Like the workers, the queens' nine hours of insect slumber are the total of as many as 60 separate six-minute naps taken over the course of a day. 

How can you tell if a queen is just dozing? According to The Journal of Insect Behavior, if they are just nodding off, "their antennae [are] half raised and their mouths agape," while if they are in a deep sleep, "their antennae [are] retracted and mouths closed," and, if they begin to "quiver," that's a sign they may have entered a "dreaming" state. (So far, insect scientists have no idea what ants may be dreaming.) 

While worker ants can live as long as six months (baring an encounter with a human thumb or a blast of Orange Oil) some ant queens are known to have reigned for as long as 45 years. 

A Moment at Heathrow 

Last year, before air travel was grounded by the coronavirus, we found ourselves waiting with a crowd of other travelers at London's Heathrow Airport. As I looked around, I spotted a mischievous youngster who was teasing his dad, much to the amusement of both. After watching their smiles and facial mugging for a few moments, I noticed the boy was using American Sign Language. 

I took a closer look and discovered the boy's father, mother, and sister were also all signing away, in a graceful, fun-filled, loving and totally silent conversation. They never spoke a word but their bonding spoke volumes. They continued joking and jesting to pass the time. Mother and daughter amused one another by taking selfies while wearing an inflatable neck cushion (1) on their heads like a Princess Crown, (2) a rubbery wig, and (3) a smartly titled cap that evoked the headwear of the British Royals. All this levity and never a word was needed. 

I wondered how it happened that a whole family wound up sharing this so-called "disability," They were such a wonder, I found myself wishing they might become the focus of a BBC documentary. 

I found this related video online. It gave me some more insight into what it's like to be part of a "deaf family." One problem I hadn't considered: it's a challenge to carry on a conversation when you're driving the family car. 

Meals a la MEA 

The flight from Heathrow marked the first time we traveled on Middle Eastern Airlines (MEA). We immediately noticed some improvements over flying United. Instead of the array of plastic food containers used by US carriers, MEA's friendly red-suited flight attendants brought food in paper boxes. On US airlines, a vegetarian meal generally translates as "pasta." On MEA, it meant a veggie sandwich with fresh lettuce, tomatoes, mushrooms and a large, unpeeled orange. Real finger-food that you have to peel with your own real fingers! We had to give MEA one "eco-ding," however: The orange juice came in a plastic cup. 

MEA Culpa 

As our flight continued over Austria, Greece, and Turkey, we noticed another contrast with flying United. MEA's in-flight magazine was basically a perfect-bound collection of commercial advertising—front-to-back. Even the cover featured a commercial—a full-page ad for Dolce & Gabbana. 

So, when I saw the Table of Contents promised "Articles for Kids" I yelped with enthusiasm: "Look! They've got special section with stories for children! What a great idea!" 

But, when I checked the section, I discovered it was devoted to the following "articles": Disney Princess Dolls ($20), Barbie Make-up Kits ($15) and Spiderman Watches ($50). 

There also was a full-page ad for IQOS, described as a "heat-not-burn smoke-free" vaping device that the promoters claimed was being used by "close to 7.3 million smokers around the world." So who's behind IQOS? According to the very small type: "Phillip Morris International Services." 

Shake-up in the Postal Service 

I think I know what caused the 5.1-magnitude quake that shook the East Coast on August 9. It was triggered by Founding Father Ben Franklin spinning in his grave. 

Franklin, the first US Postmaster General, just got word that this cherished position has been handed over to Louis DeJoy, a GOP fundraiser and Trump loyalist. 

No only is DeJoy the first postmaster general in nearly 20 years with no USPS experience, he also enters the office with a major conflict of interest—according to the Washington Post, DeJoy and his wife have invested as much as $75.3 million in the some of the Postal Service's leading competitors, including United Parcel Service and JB Hunt Trucking! 

Like other Trump appointees (cf. Andrew Wheeler at the Environmental Protection Agency and William Perry Pendley at the Bureau of Land Management), DeJoy's mission is to destroy the very agency he's been appointed to head. 

Fearful that voting-by-mail could increase the number of anti-Trump votes in November's election, Trump has set DeJoy loose to sabotage the Postal Service by slashing overtime, ordering a freeze on hiring, removing mail-sorting equipment, leaving mail to languish in distribution centers for days, slowing delivery of "crucial services," and replacing seasoned administrators with new, inexperienced managers. 

Here's a petition you might want to sign: Remove Trump's Postmaster General 

Signing Off 

One of the benefits of becoming a news network anchor is that you get to introduce your own personal "sign-off"—a memorable catchphrase at the end of the broadcast. Walter Cronkite was famous for his signature sign-off: "And that's the way it is." And then there was Edward R. Morrow's "Good night and good luck." Charles Osgood, who was a welcome presence on two different media platforms, had this salutation for his TV viewers: "See you on the radio." On NBC, every Huntley-Brinkley Report ended with the collegial exchange: "Good night, Chet. Good night, David." When Dan Rather took over for Cronkite, he chose to sign-off with "And that's a part of our world." Hugh Downs and Barbara Walters took turns telling their ABC audiences "We're in touch, so you be in touch." 

NBC's Lester Cook recently has been closing his Pandemic Era newscasts with the phrase: "Take care of yourself… and each other." But the strangest parting words now live on air come from the anchor for Deutsche Welle's English language newscasts (on Channel 22) who closes each newscast with the observation: "From now 'til then, remember: Tomorrow is another day." 


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, August 16-23

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday August 15, 2020 - 03:15:00 PM

Worth Noting:

A very quiet week ahead with City Council on recess and most Boards and Commissions either on recess too or blocked from meeting during the pandemic. Two City meetings are scheduled for Thursday August 20 and Cheryl Davila has open office hours on Saturday August 22 from 11 am – 1 pm.



Thursday, August 20, 2020

Design Review Committee, 7 – 10 pm

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/designreview/

Videoconference: https://zoom.us.j.99173152669

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 991 7315 2669

2352 Shattuck – Final Design Review – demolish 2 existing commercial buildings; split lot into two and construct two 8-story mixed-use buildings with 206 units (including 15 Very Low Income units) 11,460 sq ft open space commercial space, 19,530 sq ft usable open space, 89 parking spaces. 

600 Addison – Preview advisory comments– demolish buildings and structures to construct R & D campus containing 2 buildings, total 521,810 sq ft and 1044 parking. 

 

Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board, 7 – 11 pm 

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/rent/ 

Use the above link for video and teleconferencing information 

Videoconference: not available 

Teleconference: Meeting ID not available 

Agenda: Not posted - check for agenda after Monday 

 

Saturday, August 22, 2020 

Cheryl Davila open office hours, 11 am - 1 pm 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81766682075?pwd=NzRXQW1naUdlNmN5eU1lMDR4U3Fjdz09 

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 81766682075 Password: 372587 

_____________________ 

 

Public Hearings Scheduled – Land Use Appeals 

1346 Ordway, TBD 

Notice of Decision (NOD) and Use Permits With End of Appeal Period 

1451 Catherine 8/24/20 

800 Dwight 8/20/2020 

118 El Camino 8/13/2020 

2410 Grant 8/24/2020 

28 Hillcrest 8/25/2020 

1231 Oxford 8/25/2020 

2750-52 Prince 8/18/2020 

2720 San Pablo 8/18/2020 

1201 Second 8/18/2020 

2012 Shattuck 8/18/2020 

https://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 

Sept 29 – Digital Strategic Plan/FUND$ Replacement Website Update, Zero Waste Priorities, Vision 2050 

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

 

Unscheduled Workshops/Presentations 

Cannabis Health Considerations 

Presentation from StopWaste on SB 1383 

Systems Realignment 

 

Previously Schedules and Unscheduled Items Removed From Lists 

Sept 22 – Navigable Cities, Crime Report (per Mayor Arreguin the Crime Report will be rescheduled to a regular City Council meeting, the date is not available. The last crime report was in March 2019) 

Ohlone Territory 

 

_____________________ 

 

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,