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Berkeley’s New (but outdated) Data-Free, Developer-Driven Anti-Parking Rules

Zelda Bronstein
Monday February 22, 2021 - 12:52:00 PM

On January 26, the Berkeley council unanimously approved a “parking reform package” that drastically reduced the requirements for parking in most new housing projects. The lot was sold as a transformative twofer that would induce a “mode shift”—plannerese for getting people out of their cars and on to bikes, public transit, and their own two feet—thereby reducing greenhouse gas emissions; and at the same time expedite affordable housing.

The item originated as a 2015 referral from Councilmember Lori Droste. On January 27, Droste tweeted: “It is a thrilling day for climate action and affordability in our city.”

That remains to be seen. What can be said with certainty right now is that it was a moderately thrilling day for housing developers. Onsite (off-street) parking is expensive to build. The council eliminated parking minimums in all new housing projects except in the H (Hills) and ES-R (Environmental Safety-Residential, i.e., wildfire) Districts and the enactment of provisional parking maximums in transit-rich areas of the city. Provisional, because a developer can ask for permission to exceed the maximums. As Droste put it: “We’re not banning parking, we’re just not requiring people to build parking if they don’t need it.” The operative term here is the antecedent of “they”: I take it to be “developers.” In other words, this is developer-driven policy.

It can also be said with certainty that January 26 was not a thrilling day for data-driven decisionmaking. The council approved the changes with scant evidence that they would get people to drive less and no evidence whatsoever that they would lower the cost of housing. 

What Berkeley’s Residential Parking Utilization Study really showed 

On January 27, Droste retweeted Berkeley Housing Advisory Commissioner and California Yimby staffer Darrell Owens’ statement that “[a] recent staff analysis found that nearly 50% of the existing off-street parking spots in housing projects around the city sit empty.” Droste commented: “that’s why we abolished parking requirements and imposed no more than half a building can have parking yesterday.” 

That’s disputable. The staff analysis [see Attachment 4, agenda for Council Special Meeting, January 26 (continued from December 15, 2020), p. 175 of the council packet] was supposedly based on the Parking Utilization Study conducted by Nelson Nygaard Consulting Associates in October 2019. The study focused on multi-unit residential projects of ten or more units, most of them with unbundled parking (on-site but you have to pay for it). According to city staff, the study “showed that only 54% off street parking was occupied. It also showed that 60% of on-street parking spaces near surveyed buildings were occupied—suggesting that on-street parking ‘spillover’ was not a concern.” 

That’s not what the study showed. In a February 3, 2021, memo to the Albany City Council and other Albany agencies, Albany Planning Commissioner Doug Donaldson accurately summarized the findings of the Berkeley study: 

“Albany’s parking standards for mixed-use projects call for 1 space for each unit. A recent study of multi-family residential parking in Berkeley indicates that this would be sufficient, but that removing the parking minimum would significantly increase the on-street parking demand. The study found that the average on- and off-street parking occupancy across 20 properties surveyed was 55% (53% off-street and 61% on-street—this on-street component is important because most of the properties have unbundled parking and many tenants choose not to pay for an off-street space). A search of DMV records indicated that .5 vehicles were registered per unit.” 

In an email, Donaldson observed to me that “Nelson Nygaard did their surveys after midnight and monitored the parking on the streets around the buildings. At that hour there is no turnover and cars parked near the buildings are likely to be associated with those buildings. At least that has been my experience when monitoring 510 Centro in El Cerrito Plaza. Also, Nelson Nygaard had license plate info from RpP permits. That info gave them the addresses associated with each plate.” 

In short, the Berkeley study did find that on-street spillover parking was a concern, though given the empty spaces in the onsite parking, it’s hard to call this “spillover.” No evidence here that unbundling parking dissuades people from owning and driving cars. 

The affordability myth 

The approval of the parking reform package was based on yet another data-challenged premise: the notion that if you reduce or just eliminate parking requirements in residential projects, housing will be less expensive—in other words, that developers’ savings will trickle down to tenants’ lower rents. 

That notion elicited skepticism from Councilmember Susan Wengraf. “What mechanisms,” Wengraf asked, “do we have in place that would lower the cost of housing with lower parking requirements?” 

Pearson replied that lower parking requirements would reduce the costs of production, but that “we cannot be sure that that discount will be passed on to residents.” Interim Planning Director Jordan Klein went further, stating that “the actual price of housing is driven primarily by market rate—like what the market will actually pay for it.” 

Wengraf responded: “I have a fear that this will not result in lower housing costs. Have you done any research in other cities that have imposed these kinds of restrictions on parking” and “is there any kind of analysis on how it turned out in terms of housing costs?” 

None was available at the meeting. Droste said, “There are plenty of studies.” I’ve twice emailed her office asking for links to a few such studies. She has yet to reply. 

Wengraf asked that the council evaluate the reduced parking requirements policy in five years “and see if it’s had any impact at all on housing costs.” Then she joined her colleagues in voting to approve the “reform package.” 

Transit-rich hype 

To be viable, a shift away from private auto use requires the existence of something to shift to. For all their homage to biking and walking, the parking reformers tacitly concede that the key alternative to driving is public transit. That’s why the newly approved parking maximums only apply to new projects in “transit-rich areas.” 

The council’s packet included a map of such areas (unmarked as Attachment 6, appears on p. 188 of the agenda). The map shows parts of the city that are “1/4 Mile from Transit Hubs and Corridors.” Such areas appear to encompass most of Berkeley outside of the high hills, indicated as territory east of Spruce Street and College Avenue. Whether they were ever “transit-rich” is debatable. That they are currently transit-poor is undeniable. 

Councilmember Sophie Hahn represents District 5 (north Berkeley and low hills). At the January 26 meeting, Hahn said, The main line in my district has been discontinued, and I'm worried that it won’t be coming back. We’ve built with the anticipation of a bus line, and it’s not there.” 

City staff tried to assuage such apprehensions. “We’ve heard about a lack of service, without which we can’t expect a shift from private vehicle use….,” said Principal Planner Alene Pearson. “So we asked ourselves: What should come first: a change in behavior, or a change in conditions?” Cue a PowerPointed photo of a chick and an egg. “Do you propose policies that are supported by existing conditions? Or do you propose policies that will influence future conditions?” In this case, staff and the Planning Commission decided to “propose policies that will make change happen.” 

Pearson continued: “[P]rior to Covid, transit was expanding and increasing in use. Remember the double-decker transit buses, the new BART trains, ferry service and bike stations like the ones in Center Street Garage?....The regulations we’re discussing today will be applied to…projects that will not be constructed for at least another two years. We are confident that once Covid is under control, the improved transit service and usage that were in effect before will return.” 

I used to ride AC Transit, Muni, and BART a lot. I do not remember the double-decker buses. I do remember the new BART trains; they were comfortable and attractive. Unfortunately, they were also defective. The day before the council meeting, the San Jose Mercury ran a story under the headline “BART ‘Fleet of the Future’ Hits Software, Reliability Roadblock.” Nico Savidge reported that the new trains’ manufacturer, Bombardier, and BART “once promised they would have more than 600 new cars in service by the end of 2020, with the full fleet of 775 zipping around the Bay Area a year later. Instead, BART has only received 286 cars, and estimates the full order won’t arrive until spring 2023. And that could slip further depending on how long the reliability problems take to fix.” Whatever you think of ferries and bikes, they won’t suffice to transport Berkeley’s residents, workers, and visitors, including people accessing the University. 

Then there’s the claim that before Covid, Bay Area transit was expanding and increasing in use. In February 2020, researchers housed at UCLA’s Institute of Transportation Studies and funded by the Metropolitan Transportation Commission reported that the reality was more complex: “Service is up and patronage is down.” 

“[D]espite a booming economy in 2027 and 2018,” wrote the UCLA team, “the [Bay Area] lost over 27 million annual transit boardings, over 5 percent of all transit trips. Transit patronage in 2019 was back to where it was in 2008. Excluding the two largest operators, the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (Muni) and Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART), regional ridership is less than 90 percent of where it was a decade ago.” 

At the same time, “since 2014 most systems have been adding hours and mileage, in some cases substantially. But just as service supply is on the rise, ridership has again begun to fall. The Bay Area has, therefore, avoided a spiral of service cuts and ridership losses, as happened in other metro areas, but instead faces the perhaps more vexing issue of increased service carrying fewer riders.” 

Now both service and ridership have plummeted. On January 18, Droste tweeted: “In 2015, I proposed reforming our antiquated parking requirements. finally 5 YEARS LATER, it will be coming back to Council.” Thanks to Covid and Work from Home, the new rules, barely a month old, were passé even before they were approved. 

Transit’s future in the Bay Area is currently a huge question mark. Given that uncertainty, this is a moment to wait and see what happens to work and travel in the wake of widespread vaccination. Instead, the council opted for virtue signaling. At least housing developers will be pleased. 

 


Open Letter to the Berkeley City Council
Re: Eliminating Single Family Residential Zoning

Carrie Olson, President, Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association
Monday February 22, 2021 - 11:14:00 AM

This letter sets out our organization’s position on the proposed city council resolution to eliminate all R-1 zoning in Berkeley. The Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association (BAHA) does not oppose efforts to create more affordable dense housing in Berkeley. BAHA’s primary aim is to ensure that whatever housing is built in Berkeley honors Berkeley’s unique architectural heritage.  

The Resolution currently under consideration falls short of effectuating its ostensible goal – creation of more neighborhood diversity and more affordable housing--and will instead in all likelihood result in the demolition of single-family homes in favor of faceless (expensive) condominiums and/or large student residences leased by the University to house its planned 50% increase in student population. Our concerns are grounded in history, namely the development surge of the 1950s and ’60s, during which many of Berkeley’s single-family homes were demolished in favor of ugly apartment buildings that have not stood the test of time (being, among other things, largely seismically unsafe) and that (when built) neither created more neighborhood diversity nor provided more affordable housing. It is also based on information supplied by the University of California, Berkeley (UCB) on its current expansion plans, which – by increasing the student population dramatically -- will fundamentally alter the character of our City and neighborhoods and will further pit Berkeley’s non-student residents against students for affordable housing.  

BAHA urges the City Council to table the current resolution in favor of further examination of how best to open avenues for the creation of denser, more diverse and affordable housing while at the same time ensuring that whatever is built honors Berkeley’s unique architectural heritage. One key place to start is a current and full examination of Berkeley’s current population and residential areas (including racial and economic diversity), who actually is living in or has access to renting in newly constructed apartment complexes, a census of existing under-utilized properties (empty apartment buildings etc.), and the impact of UCB’s current Long Range Development Plan (LRDP), which calls for a dramatic increase in students, on available affordable housing. Whatever plan or resolution that is formulated based upon this study should consider the cultural and architectural history of the City and ensure that the unique architectural character of Berkeley is preserved. 

Our specific comments are as follows: 

  1. The Resolution will not effectuate its goal of creating more neighborhood diversity and affordable housing, but instead will create a land rush to convert R-1 parcels into multi-unit condominium buildings or student housing, neither of which will be available to Berkeley’s current low-income residents.
  2. The language of the Resolution is ambiguous and incapable of being implemented as written, and consequently, if passed, will end up in prolonged litigation that is expensive, pointless, and unnecessary.
  3. The Resolution is based on the false assumption that removing R-1 zoning would cause the construction of affordable housing and create racial diversity (as opposed to economic diversity) in the Hills and other current R-1 districts. In all likelihood, removing the R-1 zoning would cause single-family homes to be razed in favor of condos for high income individuals; not creation of numerous rental units for the working poor.
  4. The Resolution is based on a misunderstanding of the key purpose behind retaining R-1 zoning, namely designating an area for residential versus commercial purpose; removing residential zoning could result in manufacturing or commercial property use in these areas.
  5. Berkeley currently does not have the infrastructure or geographic layout capable of sustaining a huge surge in population and high-rise buildings in all R-1 areas of the City.
  6. The Resolution provides no data about who lives where in Berkeley now and how long they have stayed in any given area. It also provides no references to land use studies demonstrating a connection between removing residential zoning and thereby recovering or creating racial and socioeconomic diversity in a city.
  7. Even if the Resolution caused the construction of new rental units, recent history demonstrates that new rental housing in Berkeley is being consumed by University; the solution is not to build more rentals that the University will take over but work to limit student population so non-students have chance at securing rental units.
  8. Homes in R-1 areas are naturally turning over as owners die or are moved to assisted living. The Resolution would create the scenario where the neighbors of all these houses will find that they are suddenly faced with teardowns and multi-unit condos or rentals as new neighbors. Most people do not invest in single-family homes and risk such major changes in their neighborhood’s aesthetics because of unexpected and arbitrary changes in city zoning.
  9. The Resolution as proposed will in all likelihood result in demolition of historic and cultural resources in favor of lot-line-to-lot-line condo boxes. Many of the properties in the R-1 districts include large lots with architectural gems, including gardens designed in the early 1900s by nationally recognized landscape architects. Losing these properties, many of which are landmarked, in an ill-conceived and factually unsupported zoning change to carve up the properties and turn them into multi-unit condos or rentals will cost Berkeley many of these important historic assets and with them, part of what makes Berkeley unique.


Open Letter to Berkeley Council Members

Thomas Lord
Monday February 22, 2021 - 03:29:00 PM

I write in reference to agenda items 18 and 19, regarding the banning of gasoline burning cars, and about item 29, regarding a resolution to end so-called exclusionary zoning in Berkeley. I shall not mince words in this open letter to you. I will focus on item 29 to start. 

The argument put forward in the zoning item rests on three feet: (1) a historical argument that the item proposes to combat racism by reversing some zoning law, (2) an economic argument that this will improve housing affordability, and (3) an environmental argument that this would be tremendous progress in meeting the challenges of the urgent climate emergency. 

Each of the three arguments made in the memo are not merely wrong, but are so wrong they force the question: is this incompetence or malice? 

You have, no doubt, seen the very beginnings of rebuttal to the historic arguments. These will not be my focus, others have got this. The ethnicity or race of co-sponsors is no defense. The recitation of history is at best wildly distorted and pointing at very silly conclusions.  

The economic argument for the proposed upzoning rests on a table that purports to report the median incomes of Berkeley households, broken down to the building typology (number of units) and year of construction of each household's residence. The source cited (incorrectly) is "Public Use Microdata Samples" from a Census Bureau American Community Survey ("ACS") 5 year data set. 

Facially, the table is an absurdity. The ACS data tables literally contain no information from which such alleged median household incomes, broken down to that level of granularity, could possibly be computed. The table is a textbook example of a complete statistical fabrication. Allegedly, at least 6 of you have reviewed this item, presumably with the help of your staffs. Allegedly it is the product of over a years work. Somehow, the total fabrication of that table - central to the argument in the memo, evaded your attention or concern? It's a breathtaking display of shear incompetence or malice - who can say for sure which. 

Of greater concern to me is the environmental argument put forward. Once again, YIMBY-oriented council members have cited a paper (Jones et al.) coming from the Coolclimate group at Cal. Once again, these members have misrepresented what question the paper tries to answer, and have advanced wildly over-reaching (and self-serving) interpretations of the paper. That this seems to be the beginning, middle, and end of Council's awareness of the climate emergency here in 2021 is mortifying. You people - and I do not use these words lightly - are helping to cause genocide. There is no way around that fact. 

Greenhouse gas emissions - and thus the actual extraction and burning of fossil fuel - must now fall very, very rapidly if even your own children and grandchildren are to have a future. If fossil fuel burning in this region is not very nearly over by the end of this decade, all hope is truly lost. Though old, I will likely live to suffer from your very bad choices. Several of of you will live long enough to lament your casual inattention to the greatest and most well documented of planetary emergencies of all time. Every child you know, you sentence to unspeakable horror. It is impossible to exaggerate how profoundly irresponsible, harmful, deadly, and criminal is the the lack of seriousness with which you approach this emergency. You are the city council that at long last, after all these years, that has finally forced me to give up any semblance of respect for you -- to in fact regard you as people engaged actively in a planetary scale genocide. 

Of course, in this context, both items that fantasize about banning internal combustion engine vehicles in 2045 are equally obscene. There is simply no way to read them but as the work of people who are either consciously attempting global genocide, or who are entirely oblivious to the incredibly massive amount of accessible, globally discussed actual science about the emergency we are in. Seeing your performance, I have come to better understand and appreciate why Greta Thunberg, given a global stage in 2018, said "Your house is burning. I want you to panic." Panic is not a breakdown. Panic is a clarity. When you are in a burning building, and you panic, you can finally become clear about what is and what is not of existential importance. We need leaders in that kind of woke panic. We don't need - and are greatly harmed by - your bullshit, bluff, and bluster about climate. 

See you in hell, Thomas Lord (District 2)


Berkeley City Council Adopts Reforms

Bay City News
Wednesday February 24, 2021 - 09:49:00 PM

The Berkeley City Council on Tuesday adopted a set of police reforms, over the objections of the Berkeley Police Association, which represents officers in the city's police department. ; "These groundbreaking reforms are aimed at eliminating unnecessary police stops and holding officers accountable," Mayor Jesse Arreguin said on social media after the council vote.  

Arreguin cited figures from the Center on Policing Equity that concluded Black people are 6.5 times more likely to be stopped by Berkeley officers than white persons while driving and 4.5 times more likely to be stopped while on foot. 

New policies will include eliminating stops for low level offenses, requiring written consent for all consent searches, and ending requests for parole or probation status. 

"This is a big problem for community safety," Arreguin said. "Biased policing has implications for community trust. And communities that are less trusting or fearful of police are less safe because they do not report crimes." The police association, in a letter sent to the council before its vote Tuesday, said neither it nor officers on the beat were consulted during the creation of the new policies.  

"At stake is the safety of Berkeley citizens and its police officers as the proposed reforms will turn officers into filing clerks, gutting their much-needed time on the streets within our community," association President Sgt. Darren Kacelek said in the letter. "We want to work with our elected leaders and partners to strengthen the police-community relationship, but it can't be a one-way street as the process of these recommendations suggest."  

Arreguin, however, said that eliminating unnecessary stops "will free up public safety resources enabling police to focus on priorities like violent crime."


Opinion

Editorials

Development Speculators Try Pandemic Putsch in Berkeley

Becky O'Malley
Sunday February 21, 2021 - 08:51:00 PM

Putsch, noun, a plotted revolt or attempt to overthrow a government, especially one that depends upon suddenness and speed.

It’s a word that has historically acquired very ugly connotations because of its association with the Nazis, but it can also be used in somewhat less ominous contexts. Putsches major and minor happen from time to time. Attempted putsches can be seen everywhere from PTAs to congressional committee chairs.

At the moment it looks like we are in the middle of what we might label a “Pandemic Putsch”, a takeover orchestrated by ambitious politicians on behalf of some speculative financiers who contribute to their campaigns.

While local residents have been pre-occupied with coronavirus-inflicted crises as mundane as stockpiling toilet paper and as consequential as avoiding being evicted, developers who specialize in land speculation and their wannabes have been making best efforts to avoid the controls that years of general planning were supposed to be regulating. They seek exceptions to every local land use rule, with only one hard and fast criterion: The project has to “pencil out”, i.e. it must provide the speculative capitalist with an obscene rate of return. And since they can't game all the rules, they're pushing to change them. 

Since this is being written in Berkeley, by and for Berkeley residents, we’ll concentrate on what’s going on here, but the same thing is happening all over California, and in Bloomington, Austin, Vancouver and London, to choose a few venues at random. 

The cover for the accelerated development activity, the spark that fuels the flame that are engulfing our older urban and suburban cities, is provided by the shift from local government by citizen consensus to sovereignty by soundbyte. Weighty decisions that used to be discussed in Berkeley at lively public hearings, sometimes punctuated by colorful demonstrations, are apparently being settled off-camera in the age of Zoom. 

Public comments on Zoom are limited to one minute per person, subject to being axed by the presiding official mid-sentence. Online, faces and protest signs are hidden, with the patently false claim that showing the assembled online audience is technically impractical, which anyone who participates in online organizations recognizes as dubious. Names can be faux, a rule particularly attractive to the YIMBY claque marshalled by Twitter to call in from San Francisco or Sacramento or wherever they live. 

Examples of how this works can often be observed online. 

First, last Thursday morning, if you had the right kind of high-tech setup and a fast dialing finger, you might have gotten a look at a prime example of the Pandemium Putsch in action. 

The Berkeley City Council's Land Use and Housing committee discussed a proposal by four councilmembers to permit construction of four dwelling units on lots currently zoned for single family homes. Mayor Jesse Arreguin and Councimembers Droste, Kesarwani and Taplin have been the prime proponents of this legislation. 

Many, many Berkeley residents tried to call in and failed, since the COB Zoom license limited citizen participation to 100 callers, and those comments were the new normal: one-minute soundbytes, totally inadequate for discussion of what would be a major dramatic change in the city’s fabric. 

If you’d like hear what went down, you can listen to the audio here if you’re on the privileged side of the digital divide. Never mind the large percentage of Berkeleyans who don't even have smart phones, let alone computers. 

Second, at its next meeting,Tuesday at 6 pm, the Berkeley City Council will debate a resolution to support elimination of what sponsors are hoping to label exclusionary zoning—i.e. single family zones. 

Old folks who have been around since the early 1970s are well aware that the speculators' real target now is acquiring the land under the remaining single family homes in South and West Berkeley, just as it was in that era. At that time single family zoning was backed by progressives, led by Berkeley’s African American Mayor Warren Widener and councilmembers including Ron Dellums, in order to protect the Black homeowners who had bought their houses in the neighborhood around San Pablo Park. 

They’d been redlined out of the Berkeley Hills by duplicitous real estate agents and restrictive covenants, and the value of their home investments in the flats, where some had been able to buy, was being threatened by the “cash register multiples” which were being promoted for the expanding student population and by “white hippies” who wanted communal group houses instead of family homes. 

Now the same pattern is emerging again, with variations. Those who don’t remember history are happy to repeat it. 

But now a lot of my peers who were in Berkeley in the 70s are still around to set the record straight, as they have been doing on NextDoor, Berkeleyside and elsewhere. The attempt to conflate single family residential zoning in the flats with direct racial exclusion in the hills by restrictive covenant was called blackwashing by one writer, akin to the greenwashing name for phony environmental claims by developers. 

Berkeley Councilmembers Bartlett, Droste, Robinson and Taplin have aready expressed their support for the resolution, and the Mayor is on record endorsing the pseudo-historical concept on which it’s predicated, so it’s clear what the decision will be—and it looks like the deal’s gone down. But just in case, Vice-Mayor Droste has told her YIMBY followers that she expects this item to come up around 9 if they want to call in from wherever they are to tell Berkeley what to do. 

The predatory development speculators are gathering in Sacramento too, with the benefit of about a half-million dollars from only one of the several YIMBY fronts and leadership by Senators Scott Wiener and Nancy Skinner. But that’s a story for another day. 

Meanwhile, you could call in to the Berkeley City Council meeting on Tuesday to see what's happening and speak your piece.

The agenda packet for the full city council meeting can be found here

The resolution is item 29 on the agenda. 

Zoom: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81676274736 

And also, if you write a letter to the council, send the Planet a copy at opinion@berkeleydailyplanet.com. 

 

 

 

 


The Editor's Back Fence

Updated: Four More Now Posted

Becky O'Malley
Thursday February 25, 2021 - 10:36:00 PM

As promised, today we have four excellent new submissions in the "Extra" section.


Public Comment

A Berkeley Activist's Diary, Week ending Feb. 21

Kelly Hammargren
Sunday February 21, 2021 - 09:35:00 PM

There is a lot to be learned from what happened in Texas this last week. While Texans are rightly angry with Ted Cruz taking off to Cancun to avoid the crisis, I’ve been thinking it would be nice to send some of our City elected officials to Cancun to sit out the rest of their terms as a damage control measure.

Land use, zoning, housing and infrastructure grabbed all the attention this week from Tuesday through Saturday. 

Mayor Arreguin was evidently expecting enthusiasm for the ferry and pier at the Tuesday Council Worksession, since when it didn’t come, he dismissed the public comments, saying, “ I just want to represent that the people that come to our meetings. [While] we respect the comments, they don’t always reflect the vast majority of opinion in the Berkeley community…” 

Berkeley is literally in the WETA (Waterfront Emergency Transportation Authority) boat because the old pier wasn’t maintained and had to be closed. WETA will build a new pier on the condition of adding ferry service. 

A ferry to and from San Francisco sounds sort of romantic, a bygone era, and is presented as a reasonable commuter alternative to BART, bus or simply driving. No one is talking about how long it will take to get across the bay by ferry, just how much taxpayers are subsidizing ferry service, or if Berkeley will be on the hook for financing if the ridership doesn’t materialize. The consultant said fares at $10 per trip cover only 58% of the operating cost. The assumption is being made that after a ferry commute, riders will hang out at the marina and fill out the lagging marina fund. Brennan Cox said that ferries are popular on the east coast and he doesn’t understand why there is not more enthusiasm. I would like to suggest that other forms of transportation are less time consuming, more convenient and it looks like will be less costly. 

The pier/ferry presentation followed the report that 92 people were served/housed during the pandemic homeless outreach effort. Sadly, there are hundreds more living on the street. 

The other Tuesday meeting, the first meeting of the week, was the best, with a presentation for Community for a Cultural Civic Center Park Subcommittee by Margo Schueler on infrastructure. Every time I hear Margo speak I leave with another layer of new knowledge, i.e. the brick permeable surface on Allston between MLK and Milvia should last 85 to 100 years whereas asphalt streets deteriorate and need replacement every 10 – 15 years. There are other benefits too. Bricks slow traffic, lower urban heat, give air to the tree roots enhancing survival, decreasing sidewalk and street uplift, and permeable paving directs water into the ground underneath, decreasing the need for watering. Allston brick was laid by hand, but there are machines that do it. And, Michigan and Iowa are the leaders in permeable paving, because of lower maintenance during the winter. 

Thursday morning, so many people tried to attend the Council Land Use Committee meeting that the number of attempted attendees exceeded the zoom meeting limit of 100. Some texted Sophie Hahn that they couldn’t get in and she in turn shared the problem with her colleagues and city staff. 

When the meeting limit couldn’t be expanded, Christopher Jensen, the Assistant City Attorney, was consulted regarding whether the meeting needed to be canceled and rescheduled and whether any action could be taken. Mr. Jensen’s conclusion was that exceeding the zoom room capacity was no different from exceeding room capacity in an in-person meeting. However he failed to remember that when in-person attendance exceeded capacity people were able to hear the meeting as it happened, and were allowed into the meeting room to give public comment. In a zoom meeting people are just shut out. No action was taken as public comment filled the meeting. 

The agenda items garnering such attention were TOPA– Tenants Opportunity to Purchase Act--which was postponed until March, and the Quadplex Zoning proposal from Councilmembers Droste, Taplin and Kesarwani with Mayor Arreguin as Co-sponsor. Declaration of a terrible housing shortage is at a constant roar, with the solution as unbridled building with ministerial approval, even while we are surrounded by a glut of vacant market rate units and construction of mixed-use projects (commercial first floor with housing above) proceeds at a feverish pace. There were move-in-today-lease signs in Downtown Berkeley in attempts to fill vacant units even before the pandemic caused the exiting of students. 

The Quadplex zoning proposal, the main meeting event, allows for building of up to four units on one lot with no limits on the number of bedrooms in each unit. Another proposed benefit for the developer/contractor of the quadplex is that when there is ministerial approval (basically sign-off by someone at the Planning Department counter, no public review, no Zoning Adjustment Board, no Design Review Commitee) tenants would not need to be notified, so if TOPA ever passes, the tenant purchase opportunity will slip away. 

In Patrick M. Condon’s book Sick City: Disease, Race, Inequality and Urban Land, page 12 he writes, “…the smartest people in the development game are the land speculators, men and women who make a handy living out of hunting up land that might soon be ‘improved’ by the provision of a new highway, a new transit station or a change in allowable land use…” [emphasis added] 

My cynical side says the ordinances to eliminate single family housing zoning and to establish quadplex zoning are just-in-time “changes in allowable land use” for speculators to scoop up foreclosures for a handy profit when the protections established during the pandemic expire. Top it off with calling people who question or resist “racists” for a perfect mix. That might summarize Darrell Owens, representing Councilmember Droste at last Saturday’s meeting sponsored by Berkeley Neighborhoods Council. 

The special meeting was called to focus on item 29, Resolution to End Exclusionary Zoning in Berkeley, under Action items in the Tuesday evening, February 23 City Council meeting agenda. The supposedly Exclusionary zoning is single family homes. https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2021/02_Feb/City_Council__02-23-2021_-_Regular_Meeting_Agenda.aspx 

As always, I conclude my weekly Activist Diary with what I’m reading. On a recommendation from my sister, I interrupted my week’s plans to read the novel American Dirt by Jeanine Cummins. It was a page turner of fleeing violence to enter the US illegally. Don’t pick up this book if you have a long to-do list, as none of that will get done until you finish, at least that is what happened to my week. A companion to this account is one of our 2020 book club choices, A Line Becomes a River: Dispatches from the Border by Frances Cantu, the account of a border patrol agent. 

I’m running out of library time on The Age of Surveillance Capitalism by Shoshana Zuboff and Under a White Sky, the Nature of the Future by Elizabeth Kolbert, author of The Sixth Extinction. The Age of Surveillance Capitalism is a deep accounting of collecting our personal data and how that data is used to forecast and manipulate behavior. If you know anyone who played Pokeman that chapter will definitely grab your attention.


Use Zoom Better for Citizen Action

Linda Franklin
Sunday February 21, 2021 - 10:26:00 PM

Since the city has moved to Zoom meetings, the city can do better to allow participation by using Zoom's features. The current manner of conducting meetings leaves residents with the impression that our participation is not wanted or valued.  

  • Use your large capacity Zoom account for topics which you know to be controversial. While many council committee meetings may not be well attended, the number of emails and social media shares should have alerted the authors of the Quadplex item to the level of interest in this topic. Higher capacity zoom accounts are inexpensive for the city. For just $50 more a year than you are currently paying, you can have a capacity of 300 participants.
  • Livestream events to Facebook, You tube or a custom Facebook Live, YouTube custom streaming service. and post this information in advance, so folks who want to listen but don't need to speak can still participate. It is inexcusable that you didn't livestream the Land-Use meeting, after people were locked out due to capacity. Most folks who tried to log in would have given up.
  • Show us residents the zoom participants. Let us know how many callers are waiting to speak.
  • Open the chat and post important links there (such as the link to the supplemental agenda material. If the city believes that public comments would become inappropriate, Zoom allows you to either delete inappropriate comments or make the chat one way... host only.
  • If using the webinar format you have many other features you are not utilizing including polling, Q&A and post survey links to get more feel of your callers opinions.
Finally, I was disappointed that many folks calling in today to support the Quadplex item were allowed to spend their time attacking the character and values of the folks calling in to ask for improvements to the item. Furthermore, their attacks were not admonished by the chair. It's a shame that the pro-development camp didn't have something more useful to say about the proposal itself.


Why the Word "Fascism" is Appropriate

Steve Martinot
Monday February 22, 2021 - 12:22:00 PM

Can you imagine? There were five instances of police brutality against black people by the Berkeley police during 2020. A town of 115,000 people. Extended to the whole country, that would be in excess of 12,500 black people brutalized by government agents in that year. And that wouldn’t include Latinxs, or Asians, or Native Americans. Or white people. 

These five incidents were presented in a video by Copwatch, using material from street videographers and informed commentary. Here is the link to it. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDcHot1-DH4&authuser=0] Some of the scenes look like they are right out of a World War Two movie. 

But we can’t call it "fascist." There would be howls of objection. “How can you say that, this is a democray.” Everyone is talking about the need to save “our democracy.” Mention the f-word and you’ll get cut off. “Thank you, next speaker please.”  

Here are some highlights from the Copwatch presentation. 

####### 

In one video, a black man is sitting on the ground in a storefront doorway, in broad daiylight. Four cops stand around, ten feet back from him, talking to him. A fifth cop has a popgun raised at his shoulder (short barrel, one-inch diameter, for shooting “non-lethal” beanbags or rubber rounds). The man is trying to explain something to these cops. His body language says "no." He gestures say "urgency." Without warning, the cop with the popgun fires. The man screams, a low pitched masculine scream, and falls over on his side. The other four cops descend on him quickly. Wounded by the shot, he can now be approached. We don’t see what happens next. 

We later find out that all he refused to do was lie down on the ground, face down, so they could handcuff him – the way the cops had held George Floyd, handcuffed and face down, as they killed him. 

Who is this black man sitting in the doorway of an abandoned liquor store on a Saturday (3/14/20) during a pandemic? He is the scapegoat, the man through whom the cops as a team will sanctify themselves. 

Why is he the scapegoat? Because he is a member of a subjugated group (lower pay, no housing protection, higher death rate from the pandemic, segregated education and health care, etc.), a group whose role is to obey, to be commanded and humiliated so that they no longer see themselves as people. “Lie on the ground face down; prostrate yourself.” 

The second aspect of this event is the team of cops. Five of them stand around, refusing to touch this man. They do not help him up so they can arrest him and put him in their squad car. They were the ones who told him to lie down in the first place, so they could arrest him. They didn’t attempt to arrest him while he was standing up. You don’t treat scapegoats that way. 

They call themselves the police. But they are the “armed service” of society. Not the “armed services.” That is something else. Its headquarters is in the Pentagon. They are the “armed service.” Maybe it is more familiar in Spanish. El Servicio Armado. That has the more recognizable initials: SA. 

The third aspect of this event is the cops’ response to his refusal to lie down. They shoot him. When he refuses, they use weapons. Their first task was to dehumanize him by ordering him to prostrate himself. Their second task was to incapacitate him so they could arrest him. For that, they use weapons. 

He offers no threat, yet they deal with him through levels of technology. 

The police demand to have weapons (they say) to defend themselves (they say) against an armed public (they say) that is hostile and aggressive toward them. But this man is not. He is compliant to the point of sitting on the ground, but he will not prostrate himself. So we see why the police have weapons. It is not defensive. Their weapons are for aggressive purposes -- to kill or maim the non-compliant. 

The SA is that part of governance to which we [people] cannot say no. They shot this man because that is what the SA does in order to establish its control. Control is not done with discourse (too democratic), or law (too equitable), or reason (too non-hierarchical). It is done through dehumanization, using commands and weapons. 

####### 

A second such event in the Copwatch video: same year, same town, same pandemic, same economic crisis, same blackness of victim. 

A homeless black man, feeling hungry late in the evening, goes into a CVS, picks up a sandwich, a milk, a potato salad, and goes to the cashier. He empties his pockets -- a dollar, some change, and a return item. It doesn’t amount to the 12 dollars his factory-made dinner will cost. But it is all he has. He puts these things on the counter as an offering and leaves. Someone hits the panic button. The sliding doors lock. He pulls out a bicycle chain, and threatens to break through the glass door to the outside. Someone hits a different button, and the door opens. He leaves. He is not going to grovel for a lousy factory-made sandwich. And the store will lose nothing. The sandwich is insured. 

But he wasn’t even "stealing." He was attempting to reduce the economic situation to the level the economic situation had reduced him. Isn’t that what they call equity? 

But the panic button had alerted the cops. They find him outside, and shoot him in the mouth. Someone must have told them he had stolen "food." 

It is the same scapegoat. He has a different name, but not something the housed people who work "social control" care about. And it is the same SA. They arrive with guns drawn. They will torture him by destroying his ability to eat, rather than let him eat his sandwich. 

The cops didn’t tell him to take the sandwich back. They had license to shoot him because he had already been disobedient. He had disobeyed the price printed on the sandwich. That is what the SA does. When you disobey, they shoot you. 

These cops do not have weapons for their defense. No one is attacking them. But they do not just have weapons for offense. They also use their weapons for "message." 

The message is: “You want to steal food; we will make it impossible for you to eat.” It is something that only a gestapo-like contempt for people could think up. 

A militarized police is the darling of those who dream of autocratic rule. What is the dream of the Berkeley City Council that they can’t even express an opinion about the police chief’s inability to curb the militarization of his police force? When a proposal for a “no confidence” vote was put on the agenda, even though it was about opinion, they said they could not “make policy” for the police in that way. Which side are they on? 

Do you suppose that white people are treated the same way? Or did Jim Crow just change his name? (To SA?) 

####### 

A scapegoat is a prop in a theatrical performance by a group sanctifying itself before a mirror. In the US, there are white people who use the scapegoat to purify their supremacy. The SA is a relation of force and social control between that self-sanctifying group and the props they set in that mirror for themselves. The SA tries to hide behind the rhetoric of law enforcement. But that is not what it is about. It is about weaponry, and the terror it can generate by pointing guns at people and pulling the trigger. 

####### 

A third case, nighttime, Dec 17, 2020, 9:20 pm, a traffic stop in West Berkeley. Another black man. Another scapegoat. 

The cops flash their lights for the car to stop. It starts to stop and then doesn’t. It chugs ahead a block ot two and starts to stop again. It does all that again. Evidently, the driver had some problems with his car. Almost enough for the cops to conclude that he was trying to escape. Apparently they did. The two cops in the squadcar order him out of the car. They don’t even demand his license and registration. He’s black, so isn’t he already on the far side of the law? 

But he is a big man in a small car. He doesn’t respond quickly enough to the commands to "step out of your vehicle, sir". So they decide to pull him out. These two cops open his door and start to try to pull him out. They don’t talk to him. They yell, and curse him out. They punch him a few times. He still doesn’t get out of his car. 

What’s wrong with this picture? For some reason, every other time there is a traffic stop, the cop says, “remain in your vehicle, sir.” Not this time. Why not? Well, of course, it’s a black man. A scapegoat. They aren’t going to treat him like a person, and give him a ticket. No, they want him out of the car so they can handcuff him. This is the SA. 

But he’s bigger than the two of them can handle. More cops arrive. Eventually there were 8 cop cars on the scene. With two cops on the passenger side of the car with guns drawn, and three at the open driver’s side, they progress to the next step. Weapons. Is it finally becoming clear why the police want weapons? 

This one cop takes a long baton, and starts to hit this man. It’s as if he’s taking baseball practice. He hits the driver again, and again. They stop and try pulling him out again. Then they hit him again. When they finally get him out of the car, they throw him on the ground and handcuff him. Then they pick him up. He leans against the hood of the cop car, and starts to keel over. 

It’s the usual scene. A scapegoat, the SA, and weapons. Did someone just bring up the issue of “our democracy”? 

####### 

There are two more incidents on the Copwatch video. One of them is a real nut case. 

A single cop is parked in a supermarket parking lot, and sees a couple of black teenagers loading stuff into a car in front of a CVS across the avenue. The car had been pulled up to the front doors, and stuff was being loaded into it. The cop decides that this is a heist in progress, drives across the avenue, and rolls up on the black teenagers loading the car. The cop then advanced on these kids with gun drawn. The driver has his hands in the air. He’s 19 years old. The cop yells a few contradictory commands, and tells the kid to get in the car. The kid finds this unexpected, but gets in the car. So there they are, some black kids in a car in front of a store and a white cop point a gun at them. 

The driver opens the door to ask something. “Stay in the car,” comes the preemptive command. The kid starts the car. The cop is looking at the plates, looking at the car, doing nothing but holding a gun on some kids. There’s no complaint; nobody from the store says anything to this cop. There had been no heist except in the cops fevered imagination. The cop is yelling to “turn off the car.” You don’t “turn off cars.” That’s an absurd expression. But the cop is yelling it anyway, louder and louder. The car starts to drive away, and the cop pumps three shots into the car, not caring that there are people in that car who could have gotten killed. 

Five felonies were committed by that cop in one short minute. The worst was shooting at a moving vehicle. But that’s the way they are trained; you see a black man, you issue commands, when they ask why, you shoot. No disagreement or non-compliance will be allowed. Back in the old days, that used to be called dictatorship. Today, with the largest prison system in the world, the US refers to it as “SWAT tactics.” And we are not allowed to call it fascist. 

Can you imagine, four instances of brutality against black people by the police in one small town of 115,000 people in one year? That would amount to 12,500 black people brutalized by the police over the whole country for that year. That wouldn’t include Latin@s, or Asians, or Native Americans. Or white people. 

All of this occurs in a society in which there are people in the streets demanding justice for the victims of police brutality. And the police response is to continue dealing with people through dehumanizing commands and a use of weapons. If people have to get out in the street in order to get justice, then there is none. If there was law enforcement, the law would be enforced, even on the cops. But the SA are not interested in law enforcement. They are interested in social control. That’s what they were interested in during the 1930s. That is what they are interested in today in Berkeley. That is what fascism means.


Iran Nuclear Deal

Jagjit Singh
Monday February 22, 2021 - 12:39:00 PM

Contrary to the fantasy of “the shining city on the hill”, successive US administrations have delivered punishing blows to the world (Vietnam, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan. . ) 

Recently, President Biden released a policy position on Iran stating it is “under review” which is likely code language for a “do nothing” policy. American politics invariably play to their domestic audience and I fear Biden is already expressing weakness to deflect likely criticism from republicans. What is urgently needed is a bold policy to undo the monumental blunders of the Trump administration who reneged on the Iran nuclear accord sending a message to the world that America’s signature on international agreements is worthless. 

History is replete with examples of US presidents acting out of fear when confronted with perceived foreign or domestic threats. For example, President Johnson dispatched half a million American troops to Vietnam out of fear of being accused of being soft on communism. President George Bush and his advisors crated a catchy slogan to launch the disastrous war in Iraq and ensure Congressional acquiescence- “are you with us or against us” prompting a majority of democrats to vote for the Patriot Act and the Iraq war. The republican “Swift boat “attack dogs nearly destroyed John Kerry’s political career smearing him as a coward ignoring the fact he was a decorated war hero with 3 Purple Hearts. Israel, Saudi Arabia and their proxies in Congress will exert maximum pressure on the Biden administration to dissuade them from resurrecting the Iran nuclear accord. 

Biden and the democrats excoriated Trump for withdrawing from the JCPOA and promised to promptly rejoin the deal if elected. But Biden now appears to be hedging his position in a way that risks turning what should be an easy win for the new administration into an avoidable and tragic diplomatic failure. Unless Biden acts swiftly, the presidential elections in Iran, scheduled for June, will likely elect a hardliner making a rapport with the US extremely more difficult.Biden must, therefore, restore the nuclear Iran agreement without preconditions, lift the crippling sanctions and release $120B in frozen Iranian assets. Bernie Sanders, Biden’s competitor for the democratic nomination, simply promised, "I would re-enter the agreement on the first day of my presidency." Biden should heed Sanders' wise words.


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE:What Happens Next

Bob Burnett
Monday February 22, 2021 - 12:42:00 PM

A month into the Biden-Harris administration, we've reached an inflection point: the conclusion of Donald Trump's second impeachment trial. While there were not enough Senate votes for conviction, public sentiment turned against Trump. The outcome has consequences for Biden-Harris, Trump, and the 2022 election.

The latest ABC News/Ipsos Poll (https://www.ipsos.com/en-us/abcnews-impeachment-poll ) indicated that 58 percent of respondents felt Trump should have been convicted at the trial (84 percent of Democrats, 65 percent of Independents, and 14 percent of Republicans.) 57 Senators voted for conviction, including 7 Republicans. After the trial, Republican Senate Minority Leader, Mitch McConnell said: "Former President Trump's actions preceding the riot were a disgraceful dereliction of duty... There is no question that President Trump is practically and morally responsible for provoking the events of that day. The people who stormed this building believed they were acting on the wishes and instructions of their President. And their having that belief was a foreseeable consequence of the growing crescendo of false statements, conspiracy theories, and reckless hyperbole which the defeated President kept shouting into the largest megaphone on planet Earth."

Going forward, what can we expect? 

The Biden-Harris Administration wisely got out of the way of Trump's impeachment proceedings. They should continue to do this and get on with their "to do" list: dealing with the Coronavirus pandemic, stabilizing the economy, insuring that all Americans have the right to vote, protecting the environment, rebuilding U.S. infrastructure and on and on. 

President Biden's (implicit) attitude should be "the previous President screwed up everything and I've got to work full-time to right the good ship America." That is to say, the Biden-Harris Administration shouldn't mount an additional effort to go after Trump. Nonetheless, the Federal Attorney for the District of Columbia has mounted an effort to identify and charge leaders of the January 6th insurrection; if he -- Michael Sherwin or his successor -- finds sufficient evidence to charge Trump, then he should do this. 

Donald Trump has lost momentum. Trump lost the 2020 presidential election by 7 million votes (in the election, 37 percent of voters identified as Democrats, 36 percent as Republicans, and 26 percent as Independent; Biden got 94 percent of Democratic votes, 6 percent of Republican votes, and 54 percent of Independent votes.) Since then, Trump hasn't done anything positive to increase his base of support. As he left office, Trump's approval rating was at 29 percent (https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2021/01/20/how-we-know-the-drop-in-trumps-approval-rating-in-january-reflected-a-real-shift-in-public-opinion/ ). A recent poll indicated that 26 percent of Republicans want Trump to get out of politics (https://www.newsweek.com/majority-americans-want-trump-completely-removed-politics-poll-finds-1569156). 

Like a wounded bear, Trump has retreated to his cave -- Mar-a-Lago. A charismatic leader in hiding. 

The 2022 election: Most Republicans believe Trump will emerge from his Florida cave and be a factor in the 2022 midterm election. Nonetheless, it's unlikely Donald will ever again have the power he had when he occupied the White House. Over time his influence will diminish. 

1.Trump needs media attention. At the moment, he doesn't have it and is unlikely to get it soon. From the moment Trump announced his presidential candidacy -- June 16, 2015 -- he got slavish media attention; that lasted for five and a half years. In the White House, Trump had press briefings -- stopping on November 3, 2020 -- and daily Twitter bursts -- stopping on January 8, 2021. (It appears that Donald has been permanently banned from Twitter.) 

Over the next few months, Trump's lack of media attention will erode his base support. 

2. Trump has no base outside the Republican Party. (Where roughly 70 percent support him.) The 2020 election proved a candidate cannot win a national race without garnishing support outside his Party. 

Trump's reduced base is a long-term impediment to his dream of regaining power. And a problem for the Republican Party in general. 

3. At the moment, Trump is the Republican "kingmaker." For most political contests, Donald can determine who the Republican candidate will be. If a 2022 GOP candidate is deemed to not be sufficiently "Trumpian," Trump can decree that that candidate be primaried. For example, Alaska Republican Senator Murkowski voted for Trump's conviction on February 12th. She's running for reelection in 2022. In the Alaska Republican primary, Trump will support someone to run against her. 

Nonetheless, in most states, Trump's kingmaker influence will have limited utility. In a few overwhelmingly Republican state, such as Alabama, Trump's anointed candidate will win the general election. In the most competitive states, Trump's imprimatur won't be the determining factor. For example, in 2022, Republican Senate seats are up in North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. In these states Trump can determine who the Republican candidate will be, but that candidate will not be able to win unless they attract Independent votes. "Trumpism," alone, won't help these candidates win. 

4. Unless you are a Trump devotee, "Trumpism" is associated with failure. Donald Trump is stained by his inability to deal with the Coronavirus pandemic and his traitorous leadership of the January 6th insurrection. For the electorate, in general, being Trump's anointed candidate is not a good thing. That suggests that to the extent 2022 Republican candidates are Trump acolytes, the GOP is heading for defeat. 

5. In 2022, being Trump's anointed candidate won't guarantee you a surge of GOP votes. In 2020, Republicans got an unexpectedly large turnout -- 74 million votes (the largest for a losing presidential candidate). For this reason, Republicans expect to have a similar surge in 2022. That's overly optimistic. The surprising 2020 GOP turnout was due to Trump's presence on the ballot. He won't be on the ballot in 2022 and many Trump loyalists won't turn out. 

Furthermore, in 2020 the traditional Democratic ground game was neutered because of the pandemic. That won't be the case in 2022. 

6. Going forward, Trump will not be an effective leader of the Republican Party because he is too self absorbed. Trump has only effectively campaigned for himself; he has no track record of directly helping other Republicans. He wasn't effective in 2018; Democrats regained control of the House of Representatives. In 2020, Trump wasn't effective in Georgia's January 4th special Senate elections. 

7. Trump doesn't stand for anything. "Make America great again" has morphed into "Make Donald Trump great again." In 2022, that's not going to help most Republican candidates. 

In 2016, Trump had a limited policy agenda: immigration ("build the wall"), clean up Washington ("drain the swamp"), and (amazingly) bring competence to the White House ("I'm a successful CEO"). In 2021, Trump has no policy agenda; he has grievances: "the election was stolen;" "the deep state conspired against me;" "Mitch McConnell betrayed me," etcetera. Therefore, in 2022, when Trump supports a Republican candidate, he will support them on the basis of their support for Donald Trump not their positions on particular issues. That's not a winning combination. 

Summary: Donald Trump has been diminished. Nonetheless, he continues to be a power within the Republican Party. That's a problem for Republicans, not for Democrats. 


 

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


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: New Subject: Survival Instincts

Jack Bragen
Sunday February 21, 2021 - 10:19:00 PM

The instincts that cause human beings to survive are numerous, multifaceted, and intertwined. In my life, the survival instinct that evolution gave most people, has worked both for and against me. It has also sometimes worsened my symptoms of mental illness, and yet at other times has been grounding. 

The survival instinct, when it is not quite right, can stymie a person's endeavors toward success. You could be on the verge of a milestone or an essential step, and the excitement of it can be frightening, and this fright being one instance of a survival instinct. When this happens, a person could sabotage their own efforts. For many of us, success is too scary. It can mean becoming someone else or something else than you have been. It can feel safer to remain in a mire of deprivation and of barely getting by. 

Yet, if the mind is compromised, which is a completely different scenario from above, the survival instinct can still work for or against us. It can prevent doing something ill-advised and irreversible. Yet it can also be misdirected and can cause us to act improperly toward cops or innocent bystanders. 

The survival instinct can cause a "fight or flight" response. This served me in one instance in which my housing was in jeopardy, and I needed to immediately shower and do something to fix an urgent problem related to remaining housed. The survival instinct motivates me on a continuous basis to do the tasks needed in life, as an independent disabled man. 

Physical and mental fatigue, as well as becoming stressed out can be seen as survival mechanisms. When the body takes over and decides that you need to rest, it is probably in your best interest, unless something is up that's absolutely vital and that you can't miss. In a job situation, if the job pushes me too far beyond what I can handle, which includes about 95% of my work attempts, the instinct is to get out. This is self-preservation. There are valid reasons that I do not have conventional employment. 

Too much fear and too much worry over a long stretch of time take their toll on the body and mind. Yet, some amount of worry and stress are necessary. The human body functions on some amount of apprehension and some amount of comfort. To go too far in either direction is unbalanced. 

The capacity for pain is essential to survival. There is an extremely rare birth defect in which a child is born who does not feel pain. They do not develop normally and do not have a clue of how to prevent harming themselves. They need to always wear a helmet, and they need constant supervision. 

I will add that mental pain and/or emotional pain are essential. Certain types of mental pain are intended, in my observation, to prevent overstraining the central nervous system. Pain also helps us get to sleep. Sleep is essential to the maintenance of the brain. 

When Buddhists reach "attainment" a state in which, purportedly, they have transcended all pain, it does not mean that pain is absent. It merely means that, on another level, they are not involved in their pain. Buddhists who are enlightened may also need some level of worry, in order to keep their brains working and to keep engaged with essentials. 

Buddhists, if advanced in their practice, don't often panic. But when they do, it is probably for a very good reason! 

Sometimes mental illness is caused by trying to circumvent the survival mechanisms to achieve some other objective. In some instances, we equate something purely symbolic with survival. The survival mechanism is changeable, and when it is changed toward something inappropriate, it can trigger symptoms of mental illness, especially in combination with other factors, such as a genetic predisposition. 

Psychosis can be caused by many things. When a person's psychosis is persistent and will not cease without introducing medication, they are likely to be mentally ill. Too much fear can trigger an increase in symptoms. Symptoms can generate unnecessary fear. Then we are in a vicious cycle. And this sometimes causes a person to spiral into a relapse. 

A psychiatrist said that valium is good for schizophrenics. This is not often given because it is habit forming. Comparatively, antipsychotics are a lot less fun to take. A patient is hooked on benzos when they are constantly asking for a higher amount. Benzodiazepines are sometimes prescribed because the survival mechanism is generating unnecessary anxiety that interferes with living. Being too afraid of everything could be something evolution gave us, but if often interferes with doing necessary things we need to do to survive independently. 


Jack Bragen is a fiction, commentary, and self-help author. He lives in Martinez, California with his wife, Joanna Bragen.


ECLECTIC RANT: Closing the Guantánamo Bay Detention Facility

Ralph E. Stone
Monday February 22, 2021 - 12:13:00 PM

Resuming a project begun under the Obama administration, following a review process, President Joe Biden will seek to close the Guantánamo Bay Detention facility, opened in January 2002 to hold people suspected of ties to al-Qaida and the Taliban.

A total of 780 prisoners have passed through Guantánamo, and the 40 remaining include alleged Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and his four co-defendants. About a quarter of the remaining prisoners are facing criminal charges in various terrorism cases, but most of the others have never been charged and are being held indefinitely. Guantánamo has cost U.S. taxpayers more than $6 billion despite finalizing only one conviction in nearly two decades.

Bidens options are limited without help from Congress. In 2015, Congress passed, and Obama signed, with objections a National Defense Authorization Act—the annual bill that sets the budget for the Pentagon—that included provisions barring the transfer of detainees from Guantánamo to the U.S. This transfer restriction has continued in subsequent NDAAs. 

Even though the Democrats have Senate and House majorities, it will be difficult for Biden to close Guantánamo. Under Obama, a number of key Democrats opposed transferring detainees even to supermax prisons or military brigs on U.S. soil because they fear it would be a threat to Americans. Yet, a number of dangerous criminals in the supermax prison in Florence, Colorado, include Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, the leader of Mexicos Sinaloa drug cartel; Terry L. Nichols, Oklahoma City bomber/domestic terrorist, serving 161 consecutive life sentences; Ramzi Yousef and Mohammed Salameh, two of the 1993 World Trade Center bombers serving two life sentences; Ted John Kaczynski, aka the Unabomber,” serving eight life sentences; Dzhokhar A. Tsarnaev, aka the Boston bomber; and Mamdouh Mahmud Salim, al-Qaida cofounder, serving a life sentence. No one has ever escaped from this prison. 

 

During World War II, the U.S. housed, fed, and worked over 425,000 German POWs in 700 camps in 46 states with little or no risk to the populace. Most of the camps were low to medium security camps, not prisons, although some of the camps had to be designated segregation camps,” used to separate the Nazi true believers” from the rest of the prisoners.  

 

The Guantánamo Detention Facility should be closed. Its very existence undermines U.S. credibility. On the 19th anniversary of its establishment on 11 January, 2002., United Nations human rights experts stated that the U.S. must immediately close the facility: Guantánamo is a place of arbitrariness and abuse, a site where torture and ill-treatment was rampant and remains institutionalized, where the rule of law is effectively suspended, and where justice is denied.” 

If the Guantánamo Bay Detention facility is closed down, why not return Guantánamo to the Cubans? Consider that the U.S. occupation of Guantánamo dates back to the passage of the Platt amendment to a U.S. Army Appropriations Bill of 1901, which gave the U.S. the right to intervene militarily in Cuban affairs whenever the U.S. decided such intervention was warranted. Cubans were given the choice of accepting the Platt Amendment or remaining under U.S. military occupation indefinitely. The U.S. has intervened militarily in Cuban affairs at least three times. U.S. intervention endowed Cuba with a series of weak, corrupt, dependent governments until the triumph of the Cuban revolution in 1959. In 1903, the U.S. used it to obtain a perpetual lease of Guantánamo Bay, a blatant example of U.S. gunboat diplomacy. The current Cuban government consider the U.S. presence in Guantánamo to be illegal and the Cuban-American Treaty to have been procured by the threat of force in violation of international law.  

Clearly, the Guantánamo Bay Detention facility should be closed but Biden’s task in accomplishing this will be a daunting one.


Smithereens: Reflections on Bits and Pieces

Gar Smith
Sunday February 21, 2021 - 10:04:00 PM

The Times Mocks Trump's Demise

One couldn't hope for a more fitting news item to mark the end of Donald Trump's Reign of Error than the ballyhooed demolition of his failed Plaza Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City. The New York Times aimed a few more parting darts at Trump's sagging ego when they wrote off the explosive destruction of this monument to debt and mismanagement with a lede sentence that basically translated to "Meh."

Typically, the demolition of a major high-rise would draw spectacle-hungry press attention and huge crowds. Not so much this time. As Times reporter Tracey Tully wrote: "It was not the biggest or the best implosion ever. An auction for the right to detonate the dynamite. . . fizzled."

As Atlantic City Mayor Marty Small put it: "Today is truly a great day in the great city of Atlantic City."

Hopefully, the final collapse of this 39-story eyesore will serve as a metaphor for Trump's failed ambitions. In the aftermath of his attempted anti-democratic rebellion, may the all the remaining monoliths bearing his name eventually be reduced to piles of smoking rubble. 

The GOP's Pistol-packin' MAGA Mamas 

Georgia Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene once proposed that removing Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi could be accomplished with "a bullet to the head." Speaker Pelosi has every right to be concerned at the news that MTG wants to carry her personal firearms into the Capitol's hallowed halls. And it's not just the green (not Green) rep. from the Peach State who's got bullets on the brain. GOP comrade-in-arms and fellow QAnon advocate Lauren Boebert (a first-time rep from Colorado) is also insisting that she has a right to carry her personal arsenal onto Capitol grounds—despite long-standing rules banning such practices. At least Boebert has some personal history to back up her claim: She comes from the town of Rifle where she owns an open-carry diner called the "Shooters Grill." 

More Bad Data Points 

An NPR/Ipsos poll has found that 17 percent of Americans polled believe the QAnon conspiracy that Democrats are Deep State-allied, blood-sucking pedophiles. Another 37 percent of the respondents said they weren't sure, one way or the other. That's a majority—54 percent. 

How the Pandemic Benefits the Pentagon 

Here's another downside of the COVID pandemic lockdowns and job losses. From Foreign Policy magazine: 

"A meager job market has given military recruitment a boost around the world, the Wall Street Journal reports. In Canada, applications to join the armed services surged 37 percent over the last nine months of 2020 compared to the previous year. Australia reported a 9.9 percent annual increase in applications. The United Kingdom met its military recruitment targets for the first time in seven years and in the United States, 92 percent of eligible personnel re-enlisted, compared to just 83 percent the previous year." 

To which, World BEYOND War director David Swanson adds: "Plus, if you join up, you're basically joining an ongoing super-spreader event in which 1/3 of US troops decline to get vaccine while 0% are allowed to decline to bomb children." 

US Cops Killed 376 Unarmed Citizens in 2020 

The February issue of The Progressive notes that America's "peace officers" killed a record number of fellow citizens in 2020. More than a third of the 1,000 victims (376) were unarmed: more than half (568) were "people of color." The magazine features a two-page spread of photos showing 13 unarmed Black victims of police bullets (including Breonna Taylor and Andre Maurice Hill). In only one of these cases was a police officer arrested and ordered to face trial. The accused officer, Michael Owen Jr., stood apart from the others: he was the only officer who was Black. 

‘We the People’ Gone From White House Website?

It appears that the "We the People" petition system—a popular open-government tool created by the Obama Administration—has disappeared from the White House website. Here's the way it worked: If you posted a public petition and it gathered 100,000 signatures, the White House was required to provide a public response. 

When Donald Trump trudged into the Oval Office, he pulled the plug on "We the People" but the public outcry over the loss of the wildly popular sounding-board was so intense that Trump was forced to restore the petition page—which promptly began to fill with anti-Trump complaints. (One petition. demanding that Trump release his tax returns, garnered 1.1 million signatures.) Trump's response was, well, not to respond. He literally ignored "We the People." 

Now that Joe Biden has settled into the We the People weblink used to take visitors to a display of all the active petitions. (Here is an archive of what it looked like before Biden took office.) Now, however, the link just drops people off on the front steps of the White House main page. 

On February 15, a staff writer at AntiWar.com reported on the mystery: "I explored the [White House] website and could not find any mention of it. The link used to appear in both the 'Contact' and 'Get Involved' links, but it is gone from both. I have seen nothing about this in the media .… Wikipedia says that the system was taken down the day Biden took office." 

As of February 18, We the People was still missing-in-action. As Antiwar.com put it: "This is a terrible event, and it must be publicized, and Biden must be made to reverse this decision." 

Publishers Clearing House Closes In 

I'm still getting increasingly fervid letters from Publishers Clearing House letting me know that "in just days!" I will be eligible for win "$5,000 a week for life." (Now upgraded to "$10,000 a week for life.") Two days ago, an envelope arrived (from PCH's "Department of Contest Dispatch," no less!) alerting me to prepare to respond to another envelope set to arrive "in days." As with every other mailing PCH sends out, this one was stuffed with scores of printed "buy-this" offers for magazines, wearables, and household knickknacks. The main offer this time was "Microwave Bowl Huggers!" described as an "Incredible Best Seller!" 

PCH proclaims that it's not necessary to buy anything to win. But I finally succumbed when I discovered an offer for a "9-in-1 Tactical Pen" that was not only a writing tool, but a flashlight, police whistle, bottle opener, screwdriver, self-protection device and an emergency escape tool. It was a bit disappointing to discover the TacPen had been shipped with a dead battery. 

Yesterday, the latest promised envelope arrived in my mailbox—a bright yellow and oversized bundle that carried an enticement ("Special Double Prize Upgrade In This Notice") and a warning ("Final Step Required. You are now only ONE (1) STEP AWAY from being in COMPLETE COMPLIANCE with winner selection standards"). "Winner Selection Imminent," it proclaimed in bright red letters. "Must be awarded February 28." 

And what's up for purchase in this round? Eviscerating the envelope, I discovered 50 product coupons and 24 magazine subscriptions on tap. Among the buyables: The Egg-Pod Microwave Egg Cooker. A Sit and Be Fit Diabetes Workout DVD. Gel-Bead Air Fresheners. A Vinyl Tub Mat Hair Catcher. A Kitchen Slicer and Chopper. A Decorative Bill-paying Organizer. A Power-Blaster Hose Nozzle. A Set of Five Amish Cookbooks. An Ultrasonic Pest Repeller. A Lighthouse Wall Clock. A Die-Cast Replica of a 1966 Chevrolet Corvette. 

Karmic Strips 

On Valentine's Day, 10 of the Chronicle's 23 Sunday Comics referenced the holiday—with more than 100 variously sized hearts scattered across four pages of newsprint. (Note: The count included two heart-shaped pizzas.) The first panel of Greg Evans' LuAnn strip was somewhat remarkable for featuring a twenty-something couple in bed, apparently naked. But it was the "heartless" strips that really scored on Valentine Sunday. 

Gary Trudeau's Doonesbury dared to call out a popular (and heavily advertized) "memory enhancing" drug by name. In the strip's second panel, a TV ad declares: "Prevagen is the only placebo proven to stimulate denial in older adults with memory loss. . . . Ask your pharmacist if spending $1,100 a year on Prevagen is right for you." (Trudeau must have a good team of libel lawyers standing by.) 

And in Pearls Before Swine, Stephan Patis targeted unregulated capitalism in a six-panel presentation that begins with Rat excoriating people who complain about poor working wages. "I did research and, guess what," Rat proclaims: "Since 1978, the average American worker had an 11% increase in compensation. So, take that you whiny little peons!" 

Asked how much CEO pay has changed, Rat replies: "I'm sure it's about the same. Here it is. Since 1978, CEO pay has grown . . . 940%" 

In the last panel, Rat is shown standing atop a table, brandishing a pitchfork and a torch and threatening to "foment a revolution." 

How to Write About Iran 

In a recent posting on McSweeney's (passed along by a professor and peace-activist in Iran), Ladane Nasseri (a former Middle East correspondent for Bloomberg) offers a 20-point checklist for Western reporters who are assigned to write articles about Iran. Some examples: 

• "Always refer to Iran as the 'Islamic Republic' and its government as 'the regime' or, better yet, 'the Mullahs.'" 

"Never refer to Iran's foreign policy. The correct terminology is its 'behavior.' When US officials say Iran 'must change its behavior' and 'behave like a normal country,' write those quotes down word for word. Everyone knows that Iran is a delinquent kid that always instigates trouble and must be disciplined," 

"To illustrate your article, pick a photo of brown, bearded men screaming with fists punching the air…." 

"If your article is about Iran-US relations (and even if it is not), include a photo of a woman in a head-to-toe black chador…." 

How to Write About Russia 

Another classic piece of media foreign policy propaganda is writing about Russia and reducing the country and all its vast diversity to the singularly creepy phrase: "The Kremlin." 

To the Western ear, "The Kremlin" has an inherently malevolent vibe—like a combination of "criminal" and "gremlin." 

When I first started reading newspapers, I couldn't understand why "The Kremlin" was to be feared. Photos of The Kremlin showed an ornate collection of colorful spires that seemed intent on implying something alien, secretive, and sinister. As a child, I always thought it looked the towers looked fun and festive. I had to struggle to reinterpret the image as representing something "evil." The US press continues to use this image to instill feelings of insecurity, never bothering to point out that what readers are looking at is the Cathedral of St. Basil the Blessed — a Catholic Christian church. For a broader look at The Kremlin (a UNESCO World Heritage Site), you can watch the following video. (And, if you can, ignore the grinning fool posing alongside a mock atomic bomb.) 

 

At least the US news media have stopped using Cold-War-era cartoons of the "Hammer and Sickle" (innocent symbols of agriculture and industry) covered with blood to make them look like recently employed Gladiatorial weapons. 

Putin on the Ritz: Putin's Palace 

Despite being nearly killed in a poisoning attack, Russian dissident Alexei Navalny refuses to step down in his criticism of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Although Navalny was recently sentenced to more than two years in prison, he managed to stun Russia with the release of a detailed video that documented a massive, $1.35 billion palace overlooking the Black Sea that he charged was secretly built for Putin's private pleasure. 

 

The video—which Navalny researched, wrote, and narrates—has now been viewed more than 100 million times online. The video provoked massive protests and police crackdowns across Russia. If Karl Marx were alive today, he would be red-faced over this manifestation of ruling-class opulence. After days of official silence, Putin's judo partner and fellow billionaire Arkady Rotenberg stepped forward to say that the mansion was his, not Putin's. 

ICMI, all four episodes of Navalny's extended documentary are available online (with English translation). 

 

¡Larry Flynt, Presente! 

A few words of praise to mark the death of Larry "Skin" Flynt, a feisty rogue who was much more than a magazine-publisher-turned-billionaire-pornographer. Flynt also was a First Amendment absolutist who delighted in publishing photos and cartoons that would make Charlie Hebdo cringe. 

I used to freelance for Flynt's bare-all magazines, Hustler, Chic, and Oui—publications that gave new meaning to the phrase "photo-spread." I enjoyed having the freedom to tackle anti-establishment exposés in hopes of titillating progressive change among Flynt's community of devoted red-neck-and-blue-ball readers. Flynt not only excelled in uncovering the bodies of buxom babes and bumptious boys—he also delighted in uncovering political corruption and corporate intrigue. And he paid well: $2,000 for feature pieces ($8,000, adjusted for inflation). 

My Hustler articles ranged from exposés of mega-church faith healers to profiles of nuclear power critics. One feature story ("Nuclear Disasters: How They Lied to You") contained gruesome, never-before-published photos of victims of US radiation accidents. (I discovered the photos in a small trove of government documents archived on the UC Berkeley campus.) I shared the photos with Hustler because I knew no other magazine would dare publish them. (There were some extremely disturbing photos that I didn't share—also because I knew Larry would publish them.) One photo that accompanied the article showed a government worker whose arm was amputated after radioactive plutonium particles lodged in a cut on his finger. The photo triggered a lawsuit when the family of the worker claimed "invasion of privacy." Hustler was use to being the target for lawsuits but he had a record of winning in court. Flynt prevailed in this one, too. I learned a lesson: You know your legal team means business when it's led by a lawyer named "Slade." 

Flynt won the shocked admiration of Vietnam war protesters when he published an issue with a Hustler cover that promised: "The Most Obscene Photos We've Ever Printed." The photos turned out to be images of the bodies of dead US soldiers sprawled on the ground in Vietnam. 

In 1978, Larry was shot by a white supremacist and left paralyzed from the waist down. He spent the rest of his days working out of a one-of-a-kind gold-plated wheelchair. When the gunman was eventually arrested and condemned to death. Flynt spoke out against the death penalty. "As I see it," Flynt stated, "the sole motivating factor behind the death penalty is vengeance, not justice, and I firmly believe that a government that forbids killing among its citizens should not be in the business of killing people itself." 

After the attempted assassination, Flynt moved his operations from Columbus, Ohio to Los Angeles and, whenever my reporting prompted a legal threat, I would fly down to the Hustler office on Century Park East to meet with Larry's lawyers. 

On one occasion, my editorial director burst into a meeting to announce: "Hey! Larry's visiting the office. Do you want to meet him? He's in the bathroom, taking a s---!" 

I demurred, but now I wish I had accepted the invite. It might have provided a fitting finish for this memorial tribute. 

Fly Me to Cancun 

Satire from Founders Sing 


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, Feb. 21-28

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Sunday February 21, 2021 - 10:00:00 PM

Worth Noting:

Busy week ahead with 20 city meetings and 3 community meetings listed packed into four days.



Monday – At the Council Agenda and Rules Committee, 2:30 pm item 20 is a housing measure allowing ministerial approval of 76 ft (7- story) projects, projects with density bonus restricted to 100% affordable housing including households from low to moderate income (100% AMI - area median income). Percent of units allocated to levels of income is not defined in proposal

Tuesday – City Council meetings at 4 pm Fair and Impartial Policing Working Group Report and 6 pm Regular meeting item 29 eliminates single family home zoning.

Wednesday – is packed, just check the list.

Thursday - 600 Addison is a proposed commercial building (R&D) that abuts Aquatic Park. The project plans include 924 parking spaces plus a shuttle driven through Aquatic park every 15 minutes for 8 hours/day.



If you have a meeting you would like included in the summary of meetings, please send a notice to kellyhammargren@gmail.com by noon on the Friday of the preceding week. To see commentary on last weeks’ city meetings check www.berkeleydailyplanet.com after Sunday. 

 

Sunday, February 21, 2021  

No meetings or events found 

 

Monday, February 22, 2021 

Agenda and Rules Committee, 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm, 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86534890913 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 (toll free) Meeting ID: 865 3489 0913 

AGENDA Planning for March 9 City Council Regular meeting: CONSENT: 1. Settlement Stahlschmidt v. COB $75,533, 2. Commission stipend $100/meeting adjustment for qualifying annual household income < 50% Alameda Co AMI with annual CPI inflator, 3. $48,994 Kitchen electrification grant from EBCE for North and South Berkeley Senior Centers, 4. Amend contract add $270,000 total $630,000 with United Site Service for additional portable toilet and handwashing stations for period of 2 yr with option to extend for 3-12 month periods, 5. Contracts $1 million each with AnchorCM and Park Engineering, Inc for on-call Capital Improvement Projects at Berkeley Waterfront 4/1/2021 – 6/30/2024, 6. Loan agreement $5,500,000 for replacement D & E docks at Berkeley Marina, 7. Grant Application $500,000 Environmental Enhancement and Mitigation Project (EEMP) to plant urban forest trees, 8. Amendments to BERA to regulate Officeholder accounts and to change donations to nonprofit organizations made in the name of the entire City Council (not individuals), 9. Council discretionary funds to HelpBerkeley, 10. Budget Referral Rapid Flashing Beacons (RRFB) at 6th and Addison, 11. Budget referral George Florence Park Traffic calming (10th Street between University and Allston), 12. Resolution Supporting HR 25 Calling for Federal Investigation on Sedition at US Capitol and Expulsion of Complicit Members of Congress, 13. Support SB 260 Climate Corporate Accountability Act, 14. Resolution in Support of Establishing Statewide Targets for 100% Zero-Emission Vehicle sales, 15. Council discretionary funds to Kala Art Institute, ACTION: 16. Confirm “At-Large” Appointments to Reimagining Public Safety Task Force, 17.a&b. Amend Source of Income Discrimination Ordinance to establish Enforcement Procedure – Council Land Use Committee made qualified recommendations to a. with referral to 4 x 4 committee to explore enforcement alongside fair chance ordinance, 18. Support Vision 2025 for Sustainable Food Policies (increasing plant based food) Council Committee Health, Life Enrichment recommends adopt resolution as amended, 19. Declare 3/21/2021 – 4/10/2021 as Cesar Chavez-Delores Huerta Commemorative Period, 20. Affordable Housing Overlay allowing ministerial approval for 100% low to moderate income 7-story projects with exemptions in high-risk fire areas and 10’ density bonus to projects in R-1, R-1A and R-2 zones, 21. Budget Referral to allocate Transportation Network Companies Tax (Uber, Lyft, etc.) to Bicycle Boulevards and Street Repair Programs, 22. Resolution Clarifying Eligibility for Historic Landmark Designation for Residences of Notable Residents, 23. Referral to CM to Prioritize Establishment of Impact/Mitigation fees to address impact to public right of way (roads, sewer, waste, etc.), 24. Affirm COB Support for People of Tibet, INFORMATION REPORTS: 25. Berkeley Economic Dashboards Update, 26. Peace and Justice 2021-2022 Workplan, 27. Youth Commission Workplan, REFERRED ITEMS FOR REVIEW: 8. Impact COVID-19 on meetings, 9. Scheduling Closed Sessions, 10. Systems Realignment, 11. Amendments to BERA (Berkeley Election Reform Act) Officeholder Accounts, Office Budget Expenditure Policies, 12. Commission Reorganization (packet 450 pages) 

 

Children, Youth and Recreation Commission, 7 – 9 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/97922865566 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 979 2286 5566 

AGENDA: 8. Aquatics Programming, 9. 0-5 Programming, 10. Review Summer Programming and Fees, 11. General Fund Overview, 

 

Police Review Commission – Warrant Service Subcommittee, 10:30 am 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84233073529 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 842 3307 3529 

AGENDA: 4. Review BPD draft policy 606, Service of Warrants, a. Presentation on Service of Warrants, b. draft policy 606 

 

Zero Waste Commission, 7 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87051994628 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 870 5199 4628 

AGENDA: 4. Public comment, 6. Staff updates Solid Waste and Recycling Transfer Station CEQA Study, Mattress Recycling, Treated Wood Waste State Legislation, SB 1383 Rulemaking, Single us Foodware & Litter reduction, Discussion/Action 1. Community Conservation Centers regarding Mixed Plastics 

 

Tuesday, February 23, 2021 

Loan Administration Board, 2 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84546367195?pwd=dHlORzBPV21UOXNIS3pjc1Y2UkJlQT09 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 845 4636 7195 

AGENDA: B) Program Review State of COVID-19 Resiliency Loan Program - $800,000 available to lend, C) Action items: a. Children’s Community Center $50,000, b. Heyday Books $80,000, c. Venus Restaurant (Shattuck) $100,000, d. Susie’s Salon $150,000, e. IMM Thai Street Food $150,000, f. Barbarian Grub and Ale $150,000 total $680,000 ($38,000 over available funding) 

 

City Council – (the login and links are the same for the 4 pm and 6 pm meetings) 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81676274736 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 Meeting ID: 816 7627 4736 

Council Special Meeting 4 pm  

AGENDA: 1. Report and Recommendations from Mayor’s Fair and Impartial Policing Working Group, 

Council Regular Meeting, 6 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81676274736 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 Meeting ID: 816 7627 4736 

AGENDA CONSENT: 1. Home Occupations Ordinance 2nd reading, 3. $210,000 for Mildred Howard Sculpture Commission, 5. Contract add $564,480 and extend 3 yr to 6/30/24 with Jackson & Coker for Lums Tenens Psychiatrists, 6. CA Community Housing Agency (CalCHA) Middle Income Rental Housing Program – authorize CM to enter purchase option agreements with CalCHA for middle-income rental housing, 7. Contract add $118,610 total $820,937 and extend to 6/30/22 with NextGen Health Care Information System for Electronic Health Records, 8. Contract add $77,050 total $102,025 with RevolutionCyber to develop policies and procedures for City’s Data Safety Program, 9. Contract $530,000 with Presidio Network Solutions, LLC, 3/1/22-6/30/22 for network equipment hardware, software and installation, 10. License Agreement Patpatia & Assoc for 125-127 University, 11. Lease Agreement with Patpatia & Assoc for 125-127 University, 12. Contracts $150,000 each with Interface Engineering, Inc and Salas O’Brien Engineers for On-call Citywide Electrical Engineering Services, 13. Contract add $3,556,756 total $11,089,951 and extend to 12/31/22 with LAZ Parking LLC to manage City-owned off-street parking facilities Telegraph Channing, Oxford & Center Street Garage, 14. PO $468,700 with Pape Machinery for 1 John Deere 644L Hybrid Wheel Loader, 15. PO $1,200,000 4 Tractor Trucks, 16. Agreement w/Union Pacific for construction of safety improvements at Gilman and Camelia, 17. Service Animals Welcome Training, 18. Refer to City Attorney to finalize ordinance to prohibit us of City Streets for Operating, Parking or Idling Combustion Vehicles by 2045, 19. Refer to City Attorney to finalize ordinance to prohibit sale of Gasoline, Diesel and other carbon-based transportation fuels by 2045, 20. Amend BERA to prohibit Officeholder Accounts, 21. Form subcommittee OGC and Agenda Committee on Relinquishments and grants from Councilmembers’ budgets, 22. Oppose new US Base Construction in Henoko-Oura Bay of Okinawa, 23. Initiate Just Transition to a Regenerative Economy to Address Climate Emergency FITES recommends vote of no action, 24. Create and Support an Adopt an Unhoused community Program – committee recommendation refer to CM to consider inclusion in Adopt a Spot, 25. Budget and Finance Committee recommended no action on Property Tax Equity Measure and for Councilmembers Harrison and Bartlett to submit item on broader policy issues, 26. Allocation Measure P Funds to Lease and Operate Supportive Housing Project “Step Up Housing” at 1367 University, 27. Virtual Holocaust Remembrance Day Event, ACTION: 28 a. Appeal 1850 Arch, 20b. Appeal 1862 Arch, 20c. dismiss appeals, 29. Resolution to End Exclusionary Zoning in Berkeley, INFORMATION REPORTS: 30. FY 2022 Budget Development, 31. Short Term Referral Quarterly Update, 32. Anti-Displacement Initiatives, 33. FY 2021 Public Art Plan and Budgets, 34. CEAC 2021 Workplan, 35. HAC 2021 Workplan 

 

Wednesday, February 24, 2021 

4x4 Joint Task Force Committee on Housing: Rent Board/City Council, 3 pm 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Home/4x4_Committee_Homepage.aspx 

Videoconference: 

https://zoom.us/j/95567664573?pwd=WW5iSjU0ZHhRWUgyUkthTUtsVVNIUT09 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 955 6766 4573 Passcode: 352762 

AGENDA: 5. Update Amendments to Demolition Ordinance, 6. Habitability Plans Modeled After LA Practice, 7. Review SB 91 and impact on Berkeley Eviction Moratorium, 8. Update Amendments to Relocation Ordinance. 

 

Civic Arts Commission, 6 – 8 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86147520326 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 861 4752 0326 

AGENDA: 7. Action items a. 2021 Work Plan, c. Letter to Council regarding vandalism of William Byron Rumford Ststue, d. new name Civic Center Visioning Subcommittee 

 

Disaster and Fire Safety Commission, 7 

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/s/96526127677 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 965 2612 7677 

AGENDA: 5. Measure FF Oversight Recommendation, 6. Forming Subcommittee on ADU, Parking and Safe Passages Program, 7. Vision 2050, 8. Cerritos Canyon, 

 

Energy Commission, 5 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/94434847226 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 944 3484 7226 

AGENDA: 7. Presentation and discussion of Vision 2050 and Implementation 

 

Independent Redistricting Commission, 6 pm 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/redistricting/ 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83353968374 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 (toll free) Meeting ID: 833 5396 8374 

AGENDA: 2. Selection one At-Large and five alternate At-large Commissioners, 

 

Human Welfare & Community Action Commission, 6 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/94180404326 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 941 80404326 

AGENDA: 8. Review of COB funded agency Program and Financial reports, a. Bay Area Outreach and Recreation Program – Recreation Services for the Disabled, 

 

Police Review Commission, 7 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87070468124 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 870 7046 8124 

AGENDA: 3. Public Comment on agenda and non-agenda items, 9. A. BPD response to request to memorialize in written policy instructions agreed to on inquiring about supervised release status of detainees and when searches are allowed, b. Update to new Police Accountability Board and Office fo Director of Police Accountability, 

 

Remillard Park Community Meeting, 6 – 7:30 pm 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/96625955701 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 966 2585 5701 

AGENDA: Play Area improvements, Fire Fuel Reduction efforts, Fence surrounding park 

 

East Bay Gray Panthers, 1:30 pm 

https://www.eastbaygraypanthers.org/panther_events 

 

Thursday, February 25, 2021 

City Council Budget & Finance Committee, 10 am https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Home/Policy_Committee__Budget___Finance.aspx 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84483146470 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 (toll free) Meeting ID: 844 8314 6470 

AGENDA: 2. Potential Measure P 2022 Allocations (priorities and keeping fund solvent), 3. Disposition Referrals, Projects, Audits, 4. Permit Service Center Fund, 

 

City Council Closed Session, 4 pm 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2021/02_Feb/City_Council__02-25-2021_-_Closed_Meeting_Agenda.aspx 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82372242662 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 or 1-877-853-5257 (toll free) Meeting ID: 823 7224 2662 

AGENDA: Conference with Labor Negotiators, unions: IBEW, Local 1245, SEIU 1021 Community Services and Part-time Recreation Activity Leaders, Public Employees Union 1, 

 

Commission on Disability Special Disability 

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

AGENDA: Not posted, check after Monday for links and agenda 

 

Mental Health Commission, 7 – 9 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/96361748103 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 963 6174 8103 

AGENDA: 3. Special Care Unit Update, 5. Recommendations for Jail Diversion Strategies and Community Services – (disparate treatment by race whether person receives services or jailed), 6. Emergency Mental Health Response in January 2, Incident involving Vincent Bryant, 

 

Zoning Adjustment Board, 7 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/97648826034 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 976 4882 6034 

AGENDA: 2. 2317 Channing – demolish existing 2-story medical building and construct 4-story residential building with 17 dwelling units, Staff Recommend Approve, 

3. 600 Addison – demolish existing buildings and construct research and development campus containing 2 buildings, 461,822 sq ft gross floor area and 924 parking spaces, Project Preview 

 

Community for Cultural Civic Center, 12 - 1 pm 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88153954875?pwd=WGxqRndONmE1N0FCOTdMd2FBMHhhUT09 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 881 5395 4875 

Email johncaner@gmail.com to be added to the email list 

 

Community for Cultural Civic Center – High School Student , 4:30 pm 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83640647988 

Teleconference: 1-669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 836 4064 7988 

Email johncaner@gmail.com to be added to the email list 

 

Friday, February 26, 2021 - Saturday, February 27, 2021 - Sunday, February 28, 2021 

No City meetings or events found 

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Public Hearings Scheduled – Land Use Appeals 

1850 Arch (add bedrooms) ZAB – 2/23/2021 

1862 Arch (add bedrooms) ZAB – 2/23/2021 

1200-1214 San Pablo 3/23/2021 

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

570 Colusa 2/22/2021 

1205 Cornell 2/22/2021 

2421 Fifth 2/23/2021 

31 Florida 3/2/2021 

2440 Grant 2/23/2021 

1901 Marin 2/23/2021 

2220 McGee 2/23/2021  

1 Orchard Lane (LPO) 2/9/2021 

917 Page 2/23/2021 

86 Rock 2/22/2021 

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 

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WORKSESSIONS 

March 16 – 1. Capital Improvement Plan (Parks & Public Works), 2. Digital Strategic Plan/FUND$ Replacement Website Update, 3. FY 2021 Mid-Year Report and Unfunded Liabilities Report (tentative) 

May 18 – (tentative) – 1. Bayer Development Agreement, 2. Affordable Housing Policy Reform 

 

Unscheduled Workshops/Presentations 

Cannabis Health Considerations 

Berkeley Police Department Hiring Practices (referred by Public Safety Committee) 

Update Zero Waste Priorities 

Civic Arts Grantmaking Process & Capital Grant Program 

Systems Realignment 

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

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