Full Text

 

News

Berkeley's Ismail Ramsey Nominated for U.S. Attorney

Eli Walsh, Bay City News and Planet
Tuesday November 29, 2022 - 09:26:00 PM

Private practice attorney Ismail Ramsey has been nominated to be the next U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of California, President Joe Biden announced Tuesday. 

Ramsey is a founding partner of Ramsey and Ehrlich LLP, the Berkeley-based law firm where he has worked since 2006. He also served as an associate at San Francisco's Keker and Van Nest law firm from 1997 to 1999 and 2003 to 2005. He also served as an assistant U.S. attorney for the Northern District of California between 1999 and 2003. 

Ramsey is one of two U.S. attorney nominees announced Tuesday by the White House. 

"These individuals were chosen for their devotion to enforcing the law, their professionalism, their experience and credentials, their dedication to pursuing equal justice for all, and their commitment to the independence of the Department of Justice," the White House said in a statement. 

Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Alex Padilla, D-California, lauded the nomination of Ramsey and called him "an outstanding individual" with "a wealth of experience and expertise." 

"We look forward to working with our Judiciary Committee colleagues to swiftly confirm his nomination," the senators said in a joint statement. 

Ramsey is a graduate of Harvard Law School, the University of California, Berkeley, and Harvard College. He is also a U.S. Air Force veteran. 

He grew up in Berkeley and is a graduate of Berkeley High School.  

His father, Henry Ramsey Jr., served on the Berkeley City Council, was an Alameda County judge and later dean of Howard University's law school. 

If he is confirmed, Ismail Ramsey will replace acting U.S. Attorney Stephanie Hinds, who has served in the role since Feb. 2021, when previous U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of California David Anderson announced that he would step down following Biden's inauguration. 

The Northern District encompasses 15 counties, including the Bay Area cities of San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose.


Hundreds of UC Faculty Pledge Support for Striking Academic Worker

Michael Burke, EdSource
Tuesday November 29, 2022 - 07:48:00 PM

As 48,000 academic workers across the University of California enter a third week of striking, hundreds of full-time faculty in the system pledged Monday to join the work stoppage and not teach or submit grades until the strike ends.

More than 200 faculty members across UC's campuses had signed the pledge as of Monday afternoon.

"As long as this strike lasts, faculty across the system will be exercising their right to honor the picket line by refusing to conduct university labor up to and including submission of grades -- labor that would not be possible without the labor of all other academic workers as well as university staff," the faculty pledge states.

The striking academic workers -- including teaching assistants, graduate student researchers, academic researchers and postdoctoral scholars -- are asking for better pay, benefits and job security. The strike involves four separate bargaining units, all of which are represented by United Auto Workers.

UC and UAW bargained for ten consecutive days between Nov. 14 and Nov. 23 before taking a break for the Thanksgiving holiday, a UC spokesman told EdSource on Monday. Negotiations resume this week. 

The timing of Monday's faculty pledge is key, said Simeon Man, an associate professor of history at UC San Diego and one of the organizers of the pledge. 

Seven of UC's nine undergraduate campuses are on the quarter calendar and are now in their last week of classes, with final exams scheduled for next week. At UC's two campuses that are on the semester calendar, Berkeley and Merced, instruction ends next week and finals are scheduled for the following week. 

With the strike ongoing, the ability of faculty to hold those final exams and submit grades is in jeopardy. Final grades are typically due shortly after finals, though some campuses have extended those deadlines. 

In a systemwide letter to faculty, UC Academic Senate leaders acknowledged that there may be "unavoidable and understandable delays in grading this term," given that teaching assistants typically play a large role in grading. The Academic Senate leaders said faculty can take advantage of the extended deadlines for grades and said faculty can also hire temporary readers to help with grading, though they acknowledge that doing so may not be practical. 

The Academic Senate leaders also suggested that faculty consider making final exams optional rather than canceling them altogether, since some students may need to take the exam to raise their grade. 

Faculty joining the work stoppage, including by not submitting grades, say they are exercising their legally protected right to do so under the Higher Education Employer-Employee Relations Act. 

Marisol LeBron, an associate professor in feminist studies and critical race and ethnic studies at UC Santa Cruz, this fall is teaching an intro to critical race ethnic studies class with about 200 students. She hasn't been teaching her class nor has she been grading assignments or giving out new assignments since the strike began on Nov. 14. Right before the strike, her students turned in their second assignment of the quarter, but she doesn't have teaching assistants to grade them. This week, students were supposed to be assigned their final paper, but LeBron emailed them Sunday night to let them know that she wouldn't be able to assign it. 

LeBron added that those types of "serious disruptions to student learning" will only escalate as the strike continues, saying that "we're now in the territory where this becomes a grade strike." That means students may not receive letter grades at all for the quarter, which creates problems especially for those students who worked hard for a good grade and who may be planning to apply to graduate school. 

"But the thing that I've been stressing to my students is that the disruption is not the fault of the teaching assistants and is not my fault, but is the fault of the administration," LeBron said. "It's the decision that the administration has made essentially to not bargain in good faith with these workers." 

The bargaining units say they have made some progress, including by securing stronger protections against discrimination and harassment as well as protections from unjust discipline. But negotiations have stalled in some key areas, particularly around wages for graduate student workers. UAW Local 2865, which represents those workers, says it made its most recent wage proposal for graduate student workers 11 days ago but hasn't received a counterproposal from UC officials. 

The UC spokesman, Ryan King, said in a statement that the two sides have conducted more than 50 bargaining sessions since the spring and "secured 95 tentative agreements" in that time. But, King added, they "remain apart on key issues related to tying wages and pay increases to housing costs and tuition remission for nonresident international students." 

UC is seeking a private mediator to help with negotiations, King added, but UAW has resisted that. 

The striking academic workers have the support of the UC Student Association, which represents students across UC, including undergraduates. UCSA adopted a resolution supporting the strike and has called on students to not go to class during the strike. 

Man, the UC San Diego professor, said UC officials are counting on full-time Senate faculty to submit grades by the end of the quarter, which he said would take away one of the "most powerful tools" that striking workers have. 

"I think the UC administration is counting on Senate faculty to willingly end the strike. I think it's important for faculty to know they do not have to do this. We want to mobilize faculty across the UCs to basically stop being used to break up the strike," Man said. 

On Monday, academic workers held strike events across the state, including outside the UC central president's office in downtown Oakland as well as on the UCLA, UC Irvine, UC Riverside, UC San Diego and UC Santa Barbara campuses. 

"UC's failure to bargain fairly and efficiently is putting education and research at risk," Rafael Jaime, president of UAW Local 2865, said in a statement Monday, referring to UC's lack of a counterproposal on wages for graduate student workers. 

UC maintains that its latest wage proposal is "fair and generous" and "would place our student employees at the top of the pay scale among the nation's leading public universities." The UAW units, however, say that UC's proposals amount to an effective wage cut because the rate of increase is less than inflation. 

LeBron, the associate professor at UC Santa Cruz, said faculty such as herself that have joined the work stoppage see the workers' demands as "fair and reasonable." She pointed to the high cost of living in Santa Cruz and other UC campuses, particularly Berkeley, Los Angeles, San Diego and Santa Barbara. Many academic workers at Santa Cruz, ​​LeBron said, commute between two and three hours to campus because they can't afford to live nearby. 

LeBron added that it's impossible to teach her ethnic studies course this fall without her five teaching assistants. 

"They're the ones who put in the most face-to-face time with the students. They're the ones who know the students' names. They're the ones who are communicating with most of the students," she said.


Errata: This Week's Items from Last Week

Becky O'Malley
Monday November 28, 2022 - 09:33:00 PM

Due to some editorial confusion too difficult to explain, the following links will take you to articles posted over last weekend which rightfully belong in this week's issue:

Superb Singing Highlights LA TRAVIATA at San Francisco Opera Reviewed by James Roy MacBean 11-27-2022

ON MENTAL WELLNESS: It's Chaos, Don't Personalize It Jack Bragen 11-27-2022

ECLECTIC RANT: Gun Control, the Third Rail of American Politics Ralph E. Stone 11-27-2022

THE BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S CALENDAR: November 27-December 4, 2022 Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition 11-27-2022


Opinion

Public Comment

SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces: SmitherMutts&Cats

Gar Smith
Monday November 28, 2022 - 09:01:00 PM

Save Ukraine's Homeless House Pets

Owing to the onerous wreckage of war, Giving Tuesday has gained a new focus. The following plea was posted by Greater Good Charities:

"Without your help, pets in Ukraine won't survive the winter. Farmland in Ukraine has been seized and grain stores have been destroyed, leading to global food shortages. Pets who have been stranded or abandoned in the war-torn country are starving. This Giving Tuesday, help save the lives of thousands of pets with your donations."

Politics and Pets: Cats Versus Dogs

That item got me thinking. Are most pet-owners conscientious liberals who believe in care-taking and animal companionship or conservative authoritarians who like to bark orders, give commands, and demand obedience as they parade their animals on a leash?

According to a University of California Press study titled Pets and Politics: Do Liberals and Conservatives Differ in Their Preferences for Cats Versus Dogs?, "states with the highest percentage of cat owners in America tend to be liberal-leaning, and states with the highest levels of dog owners tend to be conservative-leaning." Other findings (as of 2010): "Over 48 million [US] homes have at least one dog, over 31 million homes have a cat, and over 1 million homes have at least one fish."

How does this translate into current politics?

"We found that 7 of the 10 states in which former President Donald Trump had the most support were also among the 10 states with the highest percentage of dog owners." 

"Self-reported dog people tend to score higher on SDO and competitiveness than self-reported cat people." The SDO scale stands for "Social Dominance Orientation," which is defined as "the preference for hierarchy, hierarchical group structures, and the domination of higher groups over lower groups." 

A related Right Wing Authoritarianism scale rates individuals with "a strong belief in authority and a need to follow the leadership of authority figures." RWAers tend to be dog people since "dogs are seen as more loyal and obedient than cats." 

Studies have affirmed that dog-people score "higher on Conscientiousness and lower on Openness to Experience, compared to 'cat people.'” 

Another difference between GOPs and DEMs. Democrats tend to rescue pets from animal shelters while Republicans tend to purchase animals off-the-shelf—paying with cash at a pet store.g 

Fashion Plates 

A collection of personalized license plates spotted around town: 

A grey Tesla: LUVVVVV (Wait! I thought LUVVVV is "What makes a Subaru a Subaru.") 

A tan Toyota 4Runner: TESSTAD (Dad gives tests? The car is co-owned by Tess and Tad?) 

A silver RAV4 Electric Toyota: It had a normal plate but the frame triggered a double-take. It read: "Summa Cum Laude / Accidental College." 

Bumper Snickers 

Horn Broke: Watch for Finger 

I'm only driving this way because I'm pissed off 

Want to See God? Keep Texting While You Drive 

EARTH Without ART Is Just 'EH' 

Dogs Have Masters; Cats Have Staff 

Chicken Pot Pie: My 3 Favorite Things 

I dream of a world where chickens can cross the road without having their motives questioned 

The Poetry of Sports Headlines 

While the SF Chronicle is known for inserting puns into its daily dose of news headlines, the Chronicle's sports pages feature headlines salted with athletic abbreviations, league lingo and playbook gab — a combo that creates a special kind of poetry. Some recent samples: 

Transfer portal shakes up Pac-12 while providing lift to Cal. 

Resting starters watch as New Orleans delivers rout. 

Americans stoke knockout hopes after clutch draw. 

Dons' men stay perfect; Krimili sparks women. 

Bosa wears out Chargers with ironman game. 

Seat growing hotter for Stanford's Shaw. 

Young core left withering on sideline. 

Pelicans beat Grizzlies. 

Return to Sender? 

A couple of back-to-back mail-back questions: 

It makes perfect sense that local property taxes are paid to an Alameda Tax Collector named Henry Levy (as in "levy, verb: to impose a tax or fine; to collect monies due") but why are local water bills to EBMUD sent to a Payment Center in Los Angeles? 

Diablo Canyon and Biden's Billion-dollar Bailout 

On November 21, Joe Biden announced he was ordering the US Treasury to give PG&E $1.1 billion to continue operating California's degraded Diablo Canyon nuclear reactor until 2025. (Note: Biden's Billion isn't a loan or a subsidy—it's an outright gift!) The aging reactor, which has far surpassed its 40-year operational lifetime, has been troubled by breakdowns and mishaps. 

If Biden had offered this gift as a give-back to the country's taxpayers (and their non-tax-paying children) everyone in the US would be getting about $3.06 in extra pocket change. If that money were handed out to qualified homeowners, 100,000 Americans could have installed solar panels on their roofs. 

With the ability to generate 2240 megawatts, the Diablo Canyon site can serve the needs of 3 million people. And each of those 3 million energy consumers has just seen Biden hand over approximately $367 of their tax dollars to pay PG&E to operate its troubled and unprofitable reactor. 

Biden on Hate 

The GOP has two main complaints it uses to throw shade on Democrat candidates in the last election—out-of-control inflation and out-of-control crime and violence. 

While inflation was a worldwide problem not unique to the US, the levels of American violence have out-paced every other country on Earth that is not currently engaged in war—or dealing with the threat of attack from US and/or NATO forces. There have been more than 600 mass shootings in the US so far this year. But you don't hear the GOP grousing about gun violence and gun-abetted crime when it comes to these high-body-count crimes. Even when the truth is spelled out in the very name of the most dangerous of these weapons. "Assault rifles!" The deadly truth is spelled out—right there in the corporate ads. 

When Biden recently spoke out about the Club Q mass-shooting in Colorado Springs, he proclaimed "We cannot and must not tolerate hate." 

If you think about it, this all-too-common statement is fundamentally flawed. A similarly constructed sentence might proclaim: "If there's one thing I can't tolerate, its intolerance." Or, to put it in grosser terms: "We must hate hate." 

Imagine a Day without a Mass Shooting 

The Brady PAC—a gun control group founded after Ronald Reagan's press secretary Jim Brady was shot in the head during the assassination attempt on the president—has a few data points to share: 

155% more people are shot in incidents where assault weapons are used.
• Since the assault weapons ban expired in 2004, there's been an 183% increase in massacres and a 239% increase in fatalities.
67% of Americans support a ban on assault weapons.
NRA-backed extremists in Congress are doing everything in their power to protect gun sales and block a ban. But with a gun safety majority in the Senate, we have the chance to fight back and FINALLY pass this critical and life-saving legislation. 

Shoot for the Moon 

Live Views of the Moon and the Earth from the Artemis Mission 

 

Watch live as the uncrewed Orion spacecraft completes a six-week mission around the Moon and back to Earth. During #Artemis I, Orion will lift off aboard the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, and travel 280,000 miles (450,000 km) from Earth and 40,000 miles (64,000 km) beyond the far side of the Moon, carrying science and technology payloads to expand our understanding of lunar science, technology developments, and deep space radiation. 

g


Berkeley City Council Congratulates Itself After Racist Texts Surface

Carol Denney
Wednesday November 23, 2022 - 11:02:00 AM

Berkeley Councilmember Bartlett recently used the revelation of racist Berkeley police texts to salute himself and the people of Berkeley in an article in the November Berkeley Daily Planet[1] claiming the people of Berkeley "have committed and recommitted to defend the constitution, and our freedom by ending racist policing." 

Councilmember Harrison did the same thing on November 17, 2022, issuing a statement saying, "We do not know if these offensive comments and actions extend beyond the time period and team implicated in the text threads, but the texts validate real concerns in our community and underscore the importance of the Mayor’s Fair and Impartial Task Force and Reimagining Policing efforts on which I served." 

They're both wrong. The evidence of Berkeley's racism lies in plain sight ignored by a complicit City Council obediently passing anti-homeless legislation on cue[2]. It's obvious in our legislation[3] as documented by Berkeley Law School's Policy Advocacy Clinic's report issued in 2015 comparing the spectacular mountain of Berkeley laws targeting homeless people with that of other California cities. 

The Berkeley Law School's Policy Advocacy Clinic group issued another report[4] September 18, 2018, showing that publicly funded Business Improvement Districts "Exclude Homeless People from Public Space with Taxpayer Dollars." These well documented studies go unremarked by the Berkeley City Council. 

Harrison's statement goes on to suggest that the interim police chief be at the helm of an investigation into the racist texting glinting in the current news cycle, an investigation she is apparently content to have overseen by the same council and mayor whose blindness about decades of discriminatory police practices has been underscored yet again - by a whistleblower instead of any city agency with appropriate purview. 

The recent revision of the Police Review Commission didn't notice, let alone address, these racist practices, nor did the recent "reorganization" of the city's commissions which the current city councilmembers did not oppose. Without the whistleblower's intervention, the racist legislation, texts and the culture that enabled them would have gone unnoticed, the same way only a bystander's accidental video posted on YouTube revealed an assault on a homeless man by one of the Downtown Berkeley Association's (DBA) "ambassadors" in March of 2015.[5] 

When that video went viral, the apologies flowed like the publicly funded wine which more traditionally lubricated the Downtown Berkeley Association's yearly public event routinely summarizing its benefits to the community, a community which to this day has yet to require a serious complaint system or serious oversight of any kind. Merchants know that if they want to "disappear" a single individual or a tent group, all they have to do is signal an ambassador and the magic happens whether it is constitutional or not; the publicly funded merchant associations oversee their own complaint process - if they exist at all[6] - without objection from the mayor or council. 

District Four's Kate Harrison, in particular, played a starring role in email discussions between herself and the DBA's Director John Caner as they discussed Streetplus's "Pilot Program" arming Berkeley's "ambassadors" with pepper spray, batons, and handcuffs. No citizen commissions were included in this email discussion which turned the "Hospitality/Cleaning Ambassador services" into a group which makes its own arrests.[7] 

This recipe works for the wealthy. Courts which used to exhibit a modest obligation toward civil rights violations by police have doubled down on pressuring the poor to take pleas or face lengthy pre-trial incarceration, especially now as the pandemic backs up an already overloaded court system. Those of us routinely discriminated against by prejudice against targeted individuals, whether activists singled out for political purposes[8] or poor people pushed into public spaces for wont of any safe space to harbor, have individual stories to document the human toll taken on a community that should know better. But the systematic studies of police stops, arrest records, and discriminatory legislation ought by now to have put an end to the "bad apple" assessment both Bartlett and Harrison recommend. 

In recent decades the war on the poor, on open space, and on independent thought is so profound that the current Rent Board slate takes a "loyalty oath" to qualify for candidacy, apparently without embarrassment. Commissions are reconfigured to as to pose no challenge to a developer/status quo-driven council with no incentive to listen to constitutional issues. When the "ambassadors" were caught systematically removing legally posted public posters in the downtown area, no one got fired.[9] Even today the DBA boasts on its own website about providing unconstitutional services to remove and relocate people behaving in perfectly legal ways, such as sleeping, which is a human necessity, not a crime.[10] 

The pressure on the police to promote discriminatory practices in policing comes straight from various Business Improvement District's (BID) property owners and BID staff who don't just promote discriminatory legislation such as anti-panhandling, anti-sitting, and anti-poor laws to a complacent city council - they sit with small groups of councilmembers[11] and officials and help create the original legislation, often without bothering to allow it to visit the various commissions which in better times would have an opportunity to temper their excesses. 

Our current mayor, Jesse Arreguin, won't even allow ceremonial recognition of People's Park's admission to the National Register of Historic Places, apparently terrified to even symbolically affirm years of dedicated scholarship by dozens of historians, naturalists, students, professors, and activists. If it doesn't suit the machine, it disappears, with our current City Council's blessing. 

The police should know better, to be sure. But they don't set discriminatory policy independently. The Downtown Berkeley Association's first poster was that of an outstretched hand - surrounded by a red circle with a line through it. It went up all over town. On that day, decades ago, the same handful of us objected, protested, and continue to do so today.[12] And on that day, as today, the council searched for scapegoats and evaded its own complicity. 

* * * 

outstretched-hand-final.jpg 

 



[1] https://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com/issue/2022-11-13/article/50065?headline=My-Statement-on-the-Recent-Allegations-of-Misconduct-by-the-Berkeley-Police-Dept---Councilmember-Ben-Bartlett 

[2] https://www.berkeleyside.org/2021/11/18/berkeley-parking-laws-will-force-rv-dwellers-to-move-on 

[3] Berkeley Law Policy Advocacy Clinic, California’s New Vagrancy Laws, The Growing Enactment and Enforcement of Anti-Homeless Laws in the Golden State, https://www.law.berkeley.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Californias-New-Vagrancy-Laws.pdf 

[4] Berkeley Law Policy Advocacy Clinic, "UC Berkeley Study Finds that California’s Business Improvement Districts
Exclude Homeless People from Public Space with Taxpayer Dollars" 

[5] A Berkeley Ambassador was fired after a YouTube video surfaced showing him repeatedly striking a homeless man. ABC7 News · Mar 26, 2015 

 

[6] The DBA created its own complaint system after viral video documented an "ambassador's" assault on a homeless man, but the system is overseen by the DBA itself. 

[7] May 8, 2020 email discussion between Kate Harrison, John Caner, Laurie Rich of the Brower Center, Perty Grissett of downtownberkeley.com, and Steve Hilliard of StreetPlus.net. 

[8] The writer, Carol Denney, was arrested 11/8/1991 at a City Council meeting and accused of physically assaulting the Chief of Police, Dash Butler, until Channel 7 news footage proved at trial that both the City Manager, Michael Brown, and the Chief of Police, the two witnesses against her, were lying; both men lost their jobs. 

[9] August 2012, East Bay Media Center and Pepper Spray Times videotaped legal poster removal by ambassadors; photos available upon request. 

[10] https://www.downtownberkeley.com/ 

[11] District 4 Councilmember Kate Harrison emails May 8, 2020 

[12] Sunday, May 22, 2011, the world's first Chairapillar, a sitting protest with chairs, https://youtu.be/1K1O7vLxcIE 


Arts & Events

A BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S DIARY: Week ending November 27, 2022

Kelly Hammargren
Monday November 28, 2022 - 04:04:00 PM

I don’t know how complete my diary will be next week as I’ve been summoned to report to jury duty on Monday. My first reaction was, did you not look at my age? I’m closer to 80 than 70, but then our President just turned 80 this week. Bernie Sanders is 81 and Noam Chomsky is 94. 

I always say, people age at different rates and so do bodies and minds. Age was the subject of my morning podcast. Reagan was showing signs of dementia in his second term (age 73-77) and Adam Schiff wrote in his book Midnight in Washington: How We Almost Lost Our Democracy and Still Could of the mental decline of Robert Mueller III (age 74 when Mueller report was released) 

When Elton John walked on and off the stage in 2019 in Vegas, then 72, he was no longer capable of the cartwheels and flips I saw him do across the stage at the end of his performance at Hollywood Bowl nearly 50 years earlier, when we were both in our early twenties. But as he sat down at the piano starting the evening performance, the music was richer and more dynamic. I said to my friends he walks like an old man and plays like a young man. 

If the Paradise City Council had listened to Mildred Eslin in 2014, the 88 year-old woman who was the lone voice in opposition to narrowing the road (road diet) in and out of Paradise, would that same road have become the “kill zone”, as it was labeled after the 2018 fire? Would 85 people have died? How prescient were her words, “The main thing is fire danger, if the council is searching for a way to diminish the population of Paradise, this would be the way to do it.” 

Vision Zero (reducing traffic deaths to zero) / road diets are the latest fashion in city planning. In “Artificial Gridlock: Who Put the ‘Die’ in LA Road DIEts?” published in L.A.’s online City Watch, Liz Amsden wrote that the LAPD reported that 294 people were killed in traffic collisions in 2021, 22% more than in 2020 and a 58% increase in pedestrian deaths since Vision Zero was launched. 

Road diets work in some places and not others. Dwight is much easier to cross at California with the reconfiguration. 

The main message is, road diets don’t work everywhere, and when they are on emergency access and evacuation routes, disaster isn’t far behind. That is the warning that Margot Smith has been making, and Liz Amsden lays it out clearly in her article with this: 

“As implemented in the United States, road diets have proven to be dangerous, doing the opposite of what they're supposed to – causing more accidents and fatalities, while slowing emergency responders from reaching people. 

It took an ambulance and fire engine nearly four minutes to travel four blocks to where a motorcyclist lay pinned under a semi due to the Venice Boulevard road diet.  

A road diet on Foothill Boulevard in the Sunland-Tujunga neighborhood during the 2017 La Tuna Fire, the biggest in Los Angeles in half a century, created a bottleneck for evacuations and blocked access by police and fire.  

The Sunland-Tujunga Neighborhood Council passed a motion to return the boulevard to four lanes, two in each direction to avoid a repeat, but the City ignored the request, and to add insult to injury has added another road diet, this one to La Tuna Canyon Road which is the sole route through hilly wildfire-prone terrain.  

Firefighters, paramedics, and police officers in Los Angeles and elsewhere have confirmed lane reductions, particularly so-called “road diets,” have significantly increased response times. Ask any first responder – even 30 seconds delay can mean the difference if someone lives or dies. 

The Paradise fire was so deadly because three years earlier a Complete Streets road diet narrowed the main road from four lanes to two creating total gridlock when residents attempted to flee the advancing flames. The fire department called it their kill zone. Places where there have been similar lane removals are being called death traps for fires still to come.  

Imposing solutions that worked in another country or even from another area of Los Angeles without addressing underlying needs and local concerns will never work in a city with so many geographically diverse neighborhoods.  

The goal of getting people out of their cars is based on the theory that people can readily shift to other ways of commuting. That is just plain balderdash for Los Angeles, which is an enormous, spread-out city with limited viable public transportation options.  

“Every road diet also exacerbates the problem of drivers cutting through side streets and residential neighborhoods, past schools and parks.”  

https://citywatchla.com/index.php/cw/los-angeles/24745-la-traffic-who-put-the-die-in-road-diets 

Fashion and fads are hard to break. Adeline, Telegraph, Hopkins are all mapped as emergency access and evacuation routes and are in some stage of planning for a road diet. Siegal & Strain is pushing a road diet for MLK Jr Way. Councilmember Taplin’s proposal for University Avenue listed in the draft agenda for December 13 makes five. If there is one takeaway, it is in the title “Who Put the DIE in Road DIEt.” If you follow the link, the “DIE”extends to businesses, in contrast to comments from Walk Bike Berkeley that the reconfiguration of Hopkins Street will benefit businesses. 

The City meetings piled up on Monday, with the main event being the City Council special meeting on the Fair Work Week Ordinance at 5 pm. I gave a description of the November 3 Fair Work Week filibuster in my November 6 edition of the Activist’s Diary. https://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com/issue/2022-11-06/article/50047?headline=A-Berkeley-Activist-s-Diary-Week-Ending-November-6-2022--Kelly-Hammargren 

The effort for the Fair Work Week Ordinance started in 2018. Basically, it protects workers earning less than twice the minimum wage (under $33.98 per hour). In the Fair Work Week Ordinance, qualified current employed workers must be offered additional hours before new employees are hired or staffing agencies are called in. They also receive a minimum pay (4 hours of pay or the hours scheduled, whichever is less) when canceled in less than 24 hours. In scheduling changes of greater than 24 hours, the employee receives one hour of pay for the scheduling changes or cancellations. 

For those of us who have been tracking the Fair Work Week Ordinance and attended the November 3, 2022 council meeting, the core resistance was coming from the City of Berkeley Administration with game playing and pick up by Councilmembers Wengraf and Droste to carry administration water. 

Dee Williams-Ridley, City Manager and LaTanya Bellow, Deputy City Manager were not present Monday evening. Instead, in this round the City was represented by Paul Budenhaggen who was in general supportive and came with financial analysis that put objections to rest. Wengraf tried and failed to modify the proposed ordinance by excluding Longlife Medical Berkeley and changing the criteria for businesses exempted from the ordinance. 

Droste was absent the entire evening and Wengraf signed off the meeting according to record at 6:39 pm which I first noticed when the vote was called. The ordinance passed with no changes, with a unanimous vote by those remaining (Kesarwani, Taplin, Bartlett, Harrison, Hahn, Robinson and Arreguin). The meeting adjourned at 6:58 pm. 

In all the council meetings I’ve attended, I don’t ever recall Wengraf taking a stand alone. When she comes up for re-election in 2024 (if she runs) District 6 voters might want to ask why she left without staying just a few minutes longer to cast her vote for or against the Fair Work Week Ordinance. 

By Tuesday morning all that was left of City meetings was the Land Use, Housing and Economic Development special meeting at 9:30 am. The chair, Councilmember Rigel Robinson, announced that neither of the authors (Wengraf and Harrison) could attend for the single item on the agenda, so no action would be taken on the amendment to BMC Chapter 13.110, the COVID emergency eviction moratorium. Mayor Arreguin stepped in as an alternate for the meeting and opened his participation with the statement that he was opposed to the proposed amendment. With no action in the offing, I tuned out. The 1 ½ hour recording is available if you wish to listen, just go to the bottom of the page under Additional Information and click on audio recordings. https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/council-committees/policy-committee-land-use-housing-economic-development 

The Community for a Cultural Civic Center (CCCC) met at noon on Monday to discuss the election results, the Civic Center Vision Plan open house and the status of the Turtle Island Monument Project. 

There was disappointment from some that Measure L didn’t pass, but no one thought there was going to be any significant contribution to the Civic Center. More than the election was the concern that the plan presented at the open house by Susi Mazuola from Siegal & Strain and Gehl Consultants was to move city offices into the Maudelle Shirek Building and relegate the media and the historical society museum to the basement. 

I said from the beginning that Measure L money would be going to vanity projects. The Civic Center plans presented at the open house certainly confirmed for me that my instinct was correct. Looks like if this goes forward, Berkeley can have its own multi-million-dollar expenditure, so the mayor and council can strut around in their new digs while community non-profits sit in any leftover space the basement, out of sight out of mind, sinking the community visions for use of Maudelle Shirek and the Veterans Buildings. 

The update on the Turtle Island Monument Project for the Civic Center Fountain brought more bad news. The architects, PGA Design Landscape Architects https://pgadesign.com/, have completely shut out the indigenous people that the monument is supposed to honor and the group that raised the money for the project. 

It is unknown what PGA Design Landscape Architects will present at the Landscape Preservation Commission on December 1 at 7 pm and at the Civic Center Commission on December 7. CCCC voted to send a letter to city council regarding the handling of the Turtle Island Monument Project. 

On October 11, 2022 Berkeley City Council voted to adopt the Land Acknowledgement Statement recognizing Berkeley as the ancestral, unceded home of the Ohlone people. The Land Acknowledgement is now included in writing (not recited) under preliminary matters in council regular meeting agendas (not special meetings or closed meeting agendas). 

Councilmember Hahn, who authored the acknowledgement, spoke about how much she learned in the process. There is much to learn, and one piece that barely hit the radar until notice of a hearing was published in New York Times, that the U.S. has yet to fulfill the promise of Article 7 in the Treaty of New Echota of 1835 / TREATY WITH THE CHEROKEE, 1835. Kim Teehee is the Cherokee Nation Delegate requesting to be seated as a nonvoting delegate in the House of Representatives. Teehee has been waiting three years, the Cherokees nearly 200 years for the vote of admission as a delegate to the House of Representatives. 

 

“ARTICLE 7. The Cherokee nation having already made great progress in civilization and deeming it important that every proper and laudable inducement should be offered to their people to improve their condition as well as to guard and secure in the most effectual manner the rights guaranteed to them in this treaty, and with a view to illustrate the liberal and enlarged policy of the Government of the United States towards the Indians in their removal beyond the territorial limits of the States, it is stipulated that they shall be entitled to a delegate in the House of Representatives of the United states whenever Congress shall make provision for the same.” 

https://americanindian.si.edu/static/nationtonation/pdf/Treaty-of-New-Echota-1835.pdf 

 

The community meeting on the Ohlone Park restroom and lighting is Wednesday evening at 6:30 pm. It has been ingrained for decades through scary movies and suspense scenes that crime lurks in the darkness and if we just have enough bright light we will be safe and secure. In the webinar “Light at Night: A Glowing Hazard” one of the speakers related how her partner’s catalytic converter was stolen from a vehicle parked in bright light right under a street light. 

Light at night disrupts our own circadian rhythm and wild life. The question is can we overcome our fear of the dark and put artificial light at night (ALAN) in the proper frame as light pollution and treat it like every other pollution? Reducing night light pollution means shielding light so it is directed to only where and when it is needed, placing fixtures close to the ground, using the least amount of light needed with the appropriate color temperature with red/orange/yellow wave lengths and utilizing timers and motion detectors. 

Dahlia Lithwick who as senior legal correspondent for Slate writes about law, the Supreme Court and hosts the podcast Amicus https://slate.com/podcasts/amicus is also the author of the book Lady Justice: Women, the Law, and the Battle to Save America. The early chapters are energizing reviews of women in law who took courageous stands, started programs, took on white supremacists, defended reproductive rights, like Sally Yates, serving as Acting Attorney General in the transition from President Obama to Trump, who refused to defend the Muslim ban, Becca Hellar who started the International Refugee Assistance Program and was instrumental organizing the lawyers that showed up at airports providing legal support during the Trump travel ban, and Roberta Kaplan and Karen Dunn who litigated Charlottesville. Bridgitte Ameri was the attorney assisting the teenager seeking an abortion in an ICE detention facility who overcame through appeal the 2 to 1 decision with Kavanaugh in the majority delaying access to abortion. 

The chapter titled MeToo speaks to the sexual harrassment of Judge Alex Kozinski, how Kozinski’s sexual misconduct was an “open secret” until Heidi Bond, a former clerk, finally blew the whistle in the Washington Post. Lithwick writes “Everybody knew something awful absolved all of us of the burden of doing anything. All of us hoping the story would break someday and we would be off the hook.” The powerful Judge Kozinski was in the position to make or break legal careers. For Brett Kavanaugh, clerking for Judge Kosinski was the step to clerking for Justice Kennedy and making his way to the Supreme Court. 

Lithwick lays out how those subjected to the harassment and the bystanders who stayed silent makes everyone complicit. It is the ethical question of when and where do we draw the line.