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SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces: AI, AK-47s & X-DoD

Gar Smith
Wednesday November 15, 2023 - 01:35:00 PM

Remember the Metaverse? T'was More Like a Meh-taverse
Back in 2021, Mark Zuckerberg heralded the Metaverse—his online, always on, avatar-inhabited, virtual reality, artificial hangout—as a techno-creation that would revolutionize work and play for millions of users who were eager to escape to a fake reality that was more entertaining than the real, work-a-day world. 

The Metaverse, we were told, would be funded by a global flood of cryptocurrency investments. City Group predicted the Meta-rush would captivate at least $13 trillion in new business revenues! 

It Didn't happen. 

As The Guardian recently revealed, Decentraland (heralded as one of the leading Metaverse platforms) was averaging just 38 site-visitors a day. Meanwhile, Horizon Worlds (another Meta-hyped "virtual reality product"), only managed to rack up $470 in sales. And that was (wait for it…) global sales! 

As Kate Wagner put it in The Nation: "To say that the Metaverse is dead is an understatement. It was never alive." 

The Founding Fathers Never Owned an AK-47
According to the anti-gun group Everytown (Note: you know you've got a problem when you have a group named "Everytown"), if the federal ban on assault rifles that was in effect from 1994-2004 had still been in effect from 2005-2019, it could have prevented 30 mass shootings and saved 1,478 people from being killed or wounded. 

What US Kids Dream Of
The Make-a-Wish foundation provides a genuine service by fulfilling "life-changing wishes for children with critical [medical] issues." A recent solicitation for donations contained photos of several kids along with their dearest wishes. Charlotte, 5, suffers from a blood disorder and wishes "to meet a unicorn" (sure enough, there's a photo of a smiling child hugging a white pony wearing a garland of flowers and a prosthetic "head horn"). The other fulfilled wishes are not so winsome, however. Chris, 7, who is dealing with leukemia, wanted "to be a police officer" while Haoran, 7, wanted "to be a marine." 

Yes, these were all American kids. 

Fashion Plates
WR KEYES: (Where Are My Keys?) 

CAMONBA: (Come On, NBA?) 

007GABE: (Secret Agent Gabe?) 

MLDNHRS: (Melon Diners? Mild in Hours?) 

LEOPOL: (Leopold or a political activist born under the sign of Leo?) 

CRKCATS: (Hope this means Creek Cats and not Crack Cats) 

CUBFMLY: (This family either loves young bears or Chicago baseball) 

SOUIDGE: (A tip from phil allen suggests "Sqwuigilum," referencing a scene in the W.C. Fields movie, "Never give a Sucker an Even Break." Works for me.) 

BumperSnickers
"Without Music Life Would Bb" (Bb aka "b-flat.") 

"The Good Old Days: I Wasn't Old and I Wasn't Good" 

"Without Farmers You Would Be Hungry, Naked, and Sober" 

"The Truth Will Set You Free. But First It Will Piss You Off!—Gloria Steinem" 

Friends of the Earth Turns Feisty
As a former long-term employee of Friends of the Earth, a global environmental group founded by Berkeley resident David Brower I was pleased to receive one of the organization's fund-raising mailers. But I was shocked to discover myself reading a funding pitch front-loaded with such a barrage of bellicose language. 

The words "fight" and fighting" were invoked seven times in the short, two-sided solicitation—alongside a slew of militaristic lingo that promised to "battle," "combat," "tackle," and "push-for and win," while invoking "bold, strategic work" and "force" while engaging with "front-line groups" to "hold our leaders accountable." 

In a way, the pugnacious language was fitting for a bold and pioneering eco-org that chose to give up its non-profit status in order to engage in critical political campaigns. As I used to say: "If you aren't a Friend of the Earth, you're going to have to deal with a persistent FOE." 

The Battle of the Street Demos: Paid to Parade
The horrific, on-going civilian death toll resulting from Israel's retaliation for a Hamas terrorist act on October 7 has spurred scores of public demonstrations and marches worldwide. In the US, 300,000 marched in the streets of New York while 50,000 marched in San Francisco. 

In response to the global marches in support of the Gaza's suffering civilians, a pro-Netanyahu "March for Israel Rally" was set for November 14 in Washington, DC. The sponsors—the Jewish Federations of North America and the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations—predicted the event would be "one of the largest pro-Israel rallies in history." 

In order to boost attendance by college students, the Israel on Campus Coalition sent out emails announcing the availability of $250 "microgrants" for student to attend the capitol event. The organizers also offered free bus-rides for out-of-state participants. According to the Microgrant Application, the organizers "successfully allocated funding to help thousands of students attend the event." That would mean that—at a minimum of 2,000 grants—the pay-to-parade subsidy cost at least $500,000. 

US Congress Urges Israel to Attack Iran
The headline could have read: "Congress Gives Israel a Green-light to Attack Iran for a Weapon it Dose Not Possess." 

The House of Representatives has quietly passed a resolution that encourages Israel to attack Iran. The key part of HouseRes559 reads: 

Resolved, That the House of Representatives declares it is the policy of the United States — (1) that a nuclear Islamic Republic of Iran is not acceptable;
(2) that Iran must not be able to obtain a nuclear weapon under any circumstances or conditions; (3) to use all means necessary to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon; and (4) to recognize and support the freedom of action of partners and allies, including Israel, to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. 

A Reminder from Barbara Lee
Congresswoman (and Senatorial candidate) Lee writes: "The federal minimum wage is just $7.25 per hour—and it has been that way since 2009. Even 14 years ago, $7.25 was not enough to sustain a family. But now, after record-high inflation and significant loss in purchasing power, the federal minimum wage is worth 30% less today than it was in 2009. Even if a single parent were to work 40 hours a week every week, $7.25 would come out to just $15,080 a year.
"On average, American households spend $24,000 on housing a year—meaning that the federal minimum wage doesn’t even come close to covering housing. When we add in the costs of groceries (approx. $9,000 a year), gas (approx. $5,000 a year), and childcare (approx. $10,000 for one child a year), it becomes abundantly clear that no parent could ever make ends meet on $7.25 an hour without picking up a second, third or even fourth job.…
"[I]n California, according to the MIT Living Wage calculator, a real living wage would be more than $50 an hour for a single parent with two children….
"As someone who was once on public assistance to support myself and my boys, I understand the struggle—and I know that hardworking Americans deserve infinitely more." 

A Note to President Biden
The White House insists that it wants to hear from the American people, so I was surprised when I attempted to leave a message for the president only to hear a recorded voice announcing my urgent note would have to wait since it was "after business hours" on the East Coast. So, deprived of voice-mail as a venting option, I laid down my concerns with this email message. 

Dear President Biden, 

Please stop your support for seemingly endless and growing foreign wars. We need ceasefires in Ukraine and Israel/Palestine. 

Have you heard that some people have given you a new nickname? It's "Genocide Joe." 

We certainly don't need to expand the Gaza tragedy to spread gunfire into Lebanon, Syria, and Iran. 

Meanwhile, Israel is committing genocide and you have committed our country to supporting Netanyahu's war crimes. Has any other world-leader ever shut down access to food, shelter, and water for millions of helpless civilians? 

And consider: If your neighbors have raccoons in their basement (i.e., the Hamas underground) and you can't stand raccoons, you don't respond by bombing the neighbors' homes to rubble. That makes it look like the problem isn't the raccoons; it suggests you just don't like your neighbors. 

Meanwhile, the planet's weather is out of whack and we need all of the Earth's nations to cooperate for the sake of our common survival. 

So please stop trying to provoke new wars with China and Iran. Withdraw US troops that have invaded Syria and built more than a dozen military bases while seizing control of Syrian oil fields. Withdraw the US occupying troops from a half-dozen US bases our tax dollars have built inside Iraq. And bring the troops home from more than 860 foreign military bases the US is paying $100-250 billion to support in 85 other countries and territories. 

With each passing day, American bombs are killing children in wars around the world. Thousands of children have been killed by more than 26,000 tons of bombs dropped on Gaza's homes and hospitals. We've all seen videos of the carnage and endless photos of dead children and dying newborns. This makes me ashamed to be an American. 

Please rethink the deadly path you've chosen, Joe. Stop misspending our tax dollars on death. Concentrate on your mission as a defender of working Americans. Invest in life, not death. Take your lead from the following list of conscientious political leaders. Stop this endless profiteering on death. Invest in peace and make us proud again. 

Ceasefire Now Resolution Co-Sponsors
Reps. Cori Bush (MO), Rashida Tlaib (MI), André Carson (IN), Summer Lee (PA), and Delia C. Ramirez (IL) as original sponsors, alongside Reps. Alma Adams (NC), Jamaal Bowman (NY), Greg Casar (TX), Bonnie Watson Coleman (NJ), Maxwell Frost (FL), Jesús “Chuy” García (IL), Jonathan Jackson (IL), Pramila Jayapal (WA), Barbara Lee (CA), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY), Ilhan Omar (MN), Ayanna Pressley (MA), and Nydia Velázquez (NY). 

Kucinich for President?
Tired of all the bombastic warmongers in Washington promising "total victory, no matter the cost?" Here's former presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich with a very moving and human-centered reflection on the horrors of war and the crime of collective punishment. 


New housing laws shift private developer risk onto the public

Zelda Bronstein
Monday November 13, 2023 - 04:37:00 PM

EDITOR"S NOTE: Here’s a dirty little secret: A plethora of recent state legislation is touted as the remedy for homelessness, scarecity of affordable housing and the trailing edge of racist redlining. These bills are backed by San Franciso's state senator Scott Wiener, the East Bay’s own state representative, Buffy Wicks, and Berkeley’s state senator, Nancy Skinner. These bills deprive local governments of most of their authority to regulate land use. Skinner is termed out, but Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguin is eagerly campaigning to follow in her footsteps. What most local voters don’t realize is that these new bills, along with determined attempts to weaken the California Environmental Quality Act and the Coastal Commission, do little to increase the availability of affordable housing for those who need it. Instead, they’re cleverly engineered to end financial risk for the development industry.

Here are the gory details, in Zelda Bronstein’s analysis, which first appeared on 48hils.org.
 




Why should cities and counties guarantee profits for builders and push the costs of growth onto local taxpayers?

Yimbyism famously blames the housing affordability crisis on onerous local land use regulations—above all, zoning for single-family homes.

To be clear, I'm using “Yimbyism” as shorthand for the supply-side dogma embraced by card-carrying Yimbys as well as the Biden administration, California and numerous other states, market-friendly think tanks, most academics, the planning profession, and virtually the entire media.

Citing the “laws” of supply and demand, Yimby doctrine holds that permitting taller and denser residential buildings, aka upzoning, will result in lower prices. Hence the slogan “End Apartment Bans.” The assumption is that, absent zoning restrictions, developers will build, build, build, and housing prices will fall.  



California is the epicenter of Yimbyism in the U.S. In recent years, it’s passed more than 200 housing laws—the most of any state. Yet when the Legislature’s housing staff surveyed 65 major housing laws enacted between 2016 and 2022, they counted only 26 that mandated upzoning. Seven other statutes reduced barriers to housing access. Even more notably, 39 of the new laws:

· “Streamlined” public planning processes—that is, eliminated local discretion over land use decisions, thereby exempting housing from the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA);

· Bulked up the state’s existing Housing Element and Regional Housing Needs Assessment laws;

· Increased state oversight of local land use decisions by tightening the Housing Accountability Act;

· And/or (some of the laws did more than one thing) made surplus public land available for housing.

Upzoning’s secondary status was even more pronounced in the “housing package” of 56 bills that Governor Newsom signed on October 11, where it was mandated by just seven of the newest laws. That’s not counting Wicks’ I-love-noise-and-UC bill, AB 1307, signed into law by the governor on September 7.



Moreover, the numbers are misleading, because some laws have far greater impact than others. The upzoning fetishists can point to the expanded Density Bonus Law and the Builders’ Remedy provision of the Housing Accountability Act.

But those legal bulldozers are outnumbered by other kinds of major housing statutes. A few of many examples: AB 101, Newsom’s 2019-2020 budget bill, authorized multiple “state oversight and increased [local] accountability” mandates. AB 72, authored by Santiago in 2017, significantly empowered the Department of Housing and Community Development and the state Attorney General vis-à-vis local jurisdictions. AB 2584, authored by Daly in 2016, authorized “housing organizations” such as Yimby Law to sue under the Housing Accountability Act. A 2023 bill, AB 1485, authored by Haney and Wiener and co-sponsored by the AG and the Housing Action Coalition, gave the AG the right to intervene without court permission in any suit brought to enforce specified housing laws. Wiener’s SB 35, also passed in 2017, and just expanded into the coastal zone by SB 423, drastically curbed local governments’ land use discretion. Ting’s SB 1633, another bill just signed into law by Newsom, effectively makes CEQA action the preserve of the rich.

What developers really want

The subordination of upzoning in recent California housing laws reflects a truth that the supply side crowd seldom acknowledges: Private developers’ top priority isn’t building as many taller, denser homes as possible. It’s getting an anticipated return on their investments.

Cyrus Sanandaji, a partner in Presidio Bay Ventures, told San Francisco Chronicle reporter J.K. Dineen that the banks and union pension funds that finance housing “typically won’t invest unless they think they can get a 20% return.”

Getting that return is fraught with risk. Most private developers work with borrowed money. Anything that delays the completion of a project or adds costs—Sanandaji cited San Francisco’s 6% transfer tax—increases their debt and decreases the ROI.

< What developers seek, then, is certainty that the development process from application to certification of occupancy will move forward with minimum expense and delay. Most of California’s new housing legislation aims to maximize that certainty by derisking private developers’ investments. 

To be sure, the state can’t guarantee that derisking will generate new housing. There are barriers to development beyond the control of any state or local government. Thanks to soaring interest rates and construction costs, 47,000 approved housing units are going unbuilt in San Francisco. 

In San Jose, developers are using Builder’s Remedy to shrink their projects

The derisking state only seeks to “escort” financial capital—I borrow the phrase from British economist Daniela Gabor—as far as possible. That means minimizing local land use discretion as much as possible. At bottom, Yimbyism is a political project that seeks to restrict local action and centralize state power in behalf of financial and property capital. 

HCD touts derisking to San Francisco 

Derisking’s crucial role was underscored by the California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) in a letter the agency sent to the San Francisco Planning Commission on June 16. The letter urged the commission to support the “Constraints Reduction Ordinance” (CRO) that Mayor London Breed had released to the public the day before. HCD argued that provisions in the mayor’s proposal “would fully or partially satisfy some of the commitments…set forth as Actions” in the city’s HCD-approved Housing Element. 

Only one of those “commitments,” Action 7.2.6, targets upzoning, and even that target is paired with a streamlining mandate: “Permit group housing broadly throughout the City and streamlining approvals for group housing projects.” Nine of the other Actions roll back public planning processes: 

· “Reduce discretionary processes and neighborhood notification requirements for certain code-compliant housing project (Action 8.4.17), including requests for Reasonable Accommodation (Action 6.3.10).” 

· “Remove Conditional Use Authorization (CU) requirements” for specified conditions in housing projects,” including “demolition of residential units meeting certain criteria” (Actions 8.4.8, 8.4.9, and 8.4.10). 

· “Remove Planning Commission hearings for program-compliant State Density Bonus projects (Action 8.5.2).” 

· “Modify the requirements for the HOME-SF program and entitlement process (Action 7.2.9), including [e]liminating environmental criteria such as historic resource, shadow, and wind” and “[a]llowing the demolition of up to one unit for HOME-SF projects.” 

The remaining Action cuts development impact fees: 

· Increase financial feasibility for affordable housing projects (Actions 1.3.9 and 8.6.1), including [e]xpanding the Impact Fee exemption to a housing project with units affordable up to 120 percent of the Area Median Income” and “[a]llowing 100 percent affordable housing projects utilizing State Density Bonus Law to be eligible for Impact Fee waivers.” 

“By implementing the above programs,” wrote HCD, “as well as other Planning Code changes put forward in the Ordinance, the City can increase certainty of approval for a wider range of housing projects, thus reducing the risk associated with building housing in San Francisco.” The agency added: “The City’s adopted housing element acknowledges that this risk translates to higher housing costs.” So it does, stating that “the cumulative effect of complex entitlement and post-entitlement permitting is making the process uncertain and even more expensive” (Program 8, p. 133). 

What neither HCD nor San Francisco’s housing element say is that when the state derisks private investment, it shifts the risk and expense of housing development onto the local public. That maneuver takes ingenious forms, as illustrated by Breed’s Constraints Reduction Ordinance and Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguín’s Hard Hats Ordinance. 

 

The affordable housing/tenant protection hustle: Breed’s Constraints Reduction Ordinance 

 

Tim Redmond has followed the pushback against Breed’s proposed law (in chronological order: here, here, here, here, and here). My account draws largely on his coverage. 

 

San Francisco’s mayor would have us believe that reducing, if not simply eliminating community, staff, and planning commission input into planning decisions and giving developers the right to demolish existing homes will generate more affordable housing and greater protection for tenants. 

 

Those assurances have sparked massive protest. Every tenants group in the city plus the dozens of community organizations who formed the Race and Equity in All Planning Coalition have argued that by giving developers a free hand, Breed’s proposed law would place tenants in greater danger of eviction. And by encouraging more market-rate construction, the CRO would worsen the city’s affordable housing crisis. 

 

The Tenants Union pointed out that the measure would allow the demolition of “sound, rent-controlled units,” with “no requirements that the new units actually become rental units.” Indeed, the ordinance has no affordability requirements for new housing of any sort. 

 

And, Redmond observes, there are “no provisions in the law that would require the city to make sure that evictions are legal, not fake, and that tenants actually get the right to return.” Even if there were such provisions, they would be impossible to implement, given that San Francisco has no database of rent-controlled housing units. 

 

The CRO lacks an enforcement mechanism that could prevent a scenario laid out by Supe. Dean Preston: a speculator buys rental property, uses the Ellis Act or the threat of the Ellis Act to evict the tenants, and uses Breed’s proposed law “to demolish the building and replace it with high-end housing or a monster home.” 

 

The CRO takes its cues from San Francisco’s 2022 Housing Element and that document’s reiteration of the city’s latest Regional Housing Needs Allocation. According to its Executive Summary, the Housing Element is “San Francisco’s first housing plan that is centered on racial and social equity….The 2022 Update articulates [the city’s] commitment to…increasing housing affordability for low-income households and communities of color.” The Housing Element commits San Francisco to planning for 82,000 new homes by January 31, 2031, of which 46,000 are to be “affordable.” 

 

The likelihood of all those units getting built is low. As Breed’s representative, Lisa Gluckstein, told the Legislature’s housing committees in February, the city’s “RHNA requires an average of 10,000 units per year, or roughly three times historical production.” 

 

In another absurdity, like the Housing Element, the CRO defines affordable housing to include homes affordable to households earning up to 120 percent of the Area Median Income as defined by HUD. In San Francisco, 120 percent AMI for a four-person household is $172,900. 

 

Both the CRO and the Housing Element propose the elimination of development impact fees for “affordable” housing. Development impact fees pay for transit, open space, child care, infrastructure and other services required for the residents of new housing. Either the public will have to make up the shortfall, or these services will not be funded. 

 

In short, “Constraints Reductions Ordinance” is a misnomer. The proposal only reduces local constraints on private capital; it increases restrictions on local efforts to discipline capital. 

 

Consistent with the CRO’s proposed rollback of government accountability to the public, at the September 18 nobody from the mayor’s office showed up. Redmond reported that the two supervisors who co-sponsored the measure, Matt Dorsey and Joel Engardio, were not there for the start of the hearing, sent no staff to the meeting, and “then left for another appointment.” Nor did Breed brief the BoS beforehand on her proposal, thereby breaching the city’s customary protocol for the introduction of legislation that has broad community opposition. 

 

Chafing against Breed’s highhandedness and alert to the CRO’s dodginess, the Board of Supes opted for a process that allowed its members to ask hard questions about the sweeping measure and to run changes to the San Francisco’s housing laws by the City Attorney in a timely manner. As of early November, four and a half months after its release, Breed’s ordinance had yet to be passed in any form. 

 

The construction labor standards ploy: Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguín’s Hard Hats Ordinance 

 

Breed’s CRO takes an in-your-face approach to derisking. By contrast, Arreguín’s Hard Hats Ordinance (HHO), adopted by the Berkeley council on May 2, 2023, charts a devious route. 

 

Formally known as the Helping Achieve Responsible Development with Healthcare and Apprentice Training Standard Ordinance, the HHO requires developers of construction projects (not just housing) measuring 50,000 sf or more to provide their construction workers with health care coverage and to contribute to the state-run California Apprenticeship Council—effectively a path to union membership. 

 

In introducing the item at the council meeting, Arreguín said: 

even in Berkeley,….a proud union town,…workers are being exploited. We need to make sure that as we are building up our city and building up our region, that we are lifting up people as well, and that we’re not doing it on the backs of the people who are building our community. 

His sentiments were echoed by every councilmember at the meeting (Wengraf was absent). 

 

Arreguín emphasized that the HHO’s intended beneficiaries aren’t workers per se, but “qualified local construction workers.” The idea is to “mak[e] sure that people in our community have entry-level workforce opportunities in the construction trades.” 

 

Accordingly, many of the twenty-odd tradespeople, some of them apprentices or former apprentices, others members of union locals, who applauded the measure at public comment noted that they were Berkeley or Bay Area residents or natives, and told how their training and union membership had changed their lives for the better. 

 

The derisking provisions briefly appear in the recommendations that headed up the memo from the mayor that conveyed the HHO to the council: 

2. Refer the City Manager and Planning Commission to:
a) Include an analysis of these new healthcare and apprenticeship requirements on private development as part of the Housing Feasibility Study currently underway and direct the City Manager expedite completion of this analysis;
b) Based on the findings of the feasibility study, recommend adjustments to impact fees if needed to offset the cost of these new requirements to maintain economic feasibility of projects;
c) Bring back to the City Council proposed changes to enabling legislation to enable fee reductions if needed;
d) Explore zoning modifications to allow for additional density as a way to offset the cost of these new labor standards if needed. 

The passage is an exercise in obfuscation. Start with the mystifying reference to “the Housing Feasibility Study currently underway.” Exactly what does it mean for a housing project to be feasible? The memo provides no link to the study. 

Some strenuous Googling revealed that the Housing Feasibility Study is an ongoing inquiry that’s been conducted for Berkeley since 2020 by the Street Level Advisors consultancy. The most recent component I could find online is an attachment to Item 21, “Citywide Affordable Housing Requirements,” on the council’s January 17, 2023 agenda. The staff report says that the city retained Street Level Advisors, “a firm that assists cities across the nation to develop programs and policies to facilitate equitable development,….to evaluate existing regulations and potential changes in order to comprehensively update the City’s affordable housing requirements. Dated February 2022, the firm’s report came in response to council referrals and new state laws. The HHO applies to all construction, not just affordable housing. But the analysis provides a good idea of the consultancy’s approach. 

As shown by the following passage from the 2022 report, Street Level Advisors toes an orthodox supply side line. And as in San Francisco, an absurd Regional Housing Needs Allocation is a driving force in the derisking strategy: 

The Bay Area and the Berkeley community need more housing. Rapidly rising housing costs and growing displacement pressure are the result of a systemic shortage of housing. While building more housing alone would not be sufficient to address the current inequities, we overcome our housing challenges without building significantly more housing. The Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA) requires Berkeley to permit nearly 9,000 new homes at all income levels during the period from 2023 to 2031. (p. 9) 

In fact, the RHNA requires Berkeley to plan for, not permit, nearly 9,000 new homes at all income levels from 2023 to 2031. As journalist Michael Barnes has pointed out, that number is unattainable. 

Street Level Advisors continues: 

To meet this historic challenge, Berkeley’s affordable housing policies must balance two critical but competing goals: 

1) We must set affordable housing requirements high enough to produce meaningful levels of affordable housing, and 

2) We must ensure that they are not too high for developers to accommodate. 

“Accommodate” is code for facilitating the profit margins that developers claim they need to obtain financing for their projects. In “Appendix A: Financial Feasibility Analysis,” Street Level Advisors does a “static pro forma analysis to estimate the return on investment that can be generated by typical residential developments in Berkeley.” 

A 2016 report from the Terner Center, “The Effect of Local Government Policies on Housing Supply,” states that when contemplating zoning changes, most planning departments in the Bay Area “put together a static pro forma,” which “models the costs and returns to a single development on a plot of land in a single point of time. The pro forma provides the expected profit the developer might receive and the amount she can afford to pay for the land.” (p. 11) 

Street Level Advisors goes on to explain its method of estimating a project’s financial feasibility as follows: 

For the rental prototype, we used a common measure of return known as yield on cost (YOC) or a project’s net operating income divided by the total development cost. Based on a review of current market conditions in Berkeley and the East Bay, we occluded that projects earning a yield of at least 5.0% would be “feasible,” meaning that they would likely be able to secure investment…. 

For ownership projects, the Yield on Cost cannot be calculated, so we used a different measure of profitability: Profit as a percent of development cost, also called Return on Cost. Because of the lack of recent condo projects in Berkeley, we were unable to objectively determine the minimum necessary profit as a percent of cost for local ownership projects. As a point of reference, a common rule of thumb used in other studies considers project “feasible” when profit exceeds 10-15% of development cost. (p. 34 of the report) 

The main body of the report considers how changes to Berkeley’s affordable housing requirements such as on-site unit income targets, condo conversion rules, and maximum unit size would satisfy the “critical but competing goals” of producing affordable housing and “accommodating” developer finances. 

The feasibility analysis for the Hard Hats Ordinance is likely to take the same approach as the one in the Street Level Advisors’ 2022 report. The latter document was prepared with the assistance of another consultancy, Strategic Economics, with which Street Level frequently works. In July the city signed a contract with Strategic Economics to do the next component of Berkeley’s Affordable Housing Economic Feasibility Analysis, which will address among other things the HHO recommendations. The proposal that Strategic Economics submitted to the city said that it would be assisted by Street Level Advisors. 

The contract with Strategic Advisors has a deadline of July 12, 2024. The only future date specified in Arreguín’s Recommendations is the effective date of the HHO ordinance: January 1, 2024. The mayor left the “new requirements to maintain economic feasibility of projects” to be determined at an unspecified point in the future. In other words, as Planning Director Jordan Klein confirmed to me, the HHO could go into effect before the council has considered, much less approved, lower impact fees and greater densification, i.e., upzoning. 

Arreguín’s rush job has to be viewed in the context of his current bid for office: he’s running to succeed termed-out Nancy Skinner in the District 9 State Senate seat. Shortly after the council approved the Hard Hats Ordinance, endorsements from the building trades unions began pouring into his campaign. 

That his half-baked scheme was approved attests to the inanity of the Berkeley council, most fully voiced by District 8 (Elmwood and Claremont) Councilmember Mark Humbert. “In an ideal world,” said Humbert, 

I would really like that this ordinance doesn’t go into effect until we’ve had adequate time to assess its costs and their feasibility on new construction….If the feasibility study shows there are other fees and requirements that have to give a bit, that we have to reduce, so we can continue building housing while also making sure that construction workers are justly compensated, then I’m a hundred percent in favor of that.” 

But “without any actual data here, let alone example pro formas, I think we’re flying blind.” And then, without hesitation: “I will vote yes for this, and will vote yes for this enthusiastically.” 

Councilmember Kesarwani demurs 

As did all his colleagues but District 1 (northwest Berkeley) Councilmember Rashi Kesarwani. She peppered Arreguín and staff about the details of the HHO—a “line of questioning” that the San Francisco-based Housing Action Coalition, one of the most aggressive Yimby groups in the state, would attribute to issues raised by itself and its “friends” at the San Francisco consultancy Progress Public Affairs

“I just got this ordinance on Friday at 5:10 pm,” Kesarwani said. Arreguín told her that it had been unanimously approved in September. 

That’s untrue. What the council approved in September was the referral of a September 20, 2022 proposal from Arreguín and Councilmembers Bartlett, Hahn, and Taplin that directed the city manager and city attorney to draft a Hard Hats Ordinance. What the council and the public received on the afternoon of Friday, April 28, did include the drafted ordinance, as well as what turned out to be a first draft of the derisking Recommendations. 

However, the Recommendations in the item that was before the council on May 2 had been amended by Arreguín under Berkeley’s Orwellian “good of the city” rule. Berkeley Municipal Charter Section 2.06.070 states that the council may consider a last-minute “supplemental/revision” to an already submitted agenda item, if, as the mayor wrote, “[t]he analysis [in the supplemental/revision]…demonstrate[s] how accepting [it] is for the ‘good of the City’ and outweighs the lack of time for citizen review or evaluation by the Council.” 

The Recommendations in the April 28 version of the HMO read: “Refer [to] the City Manager and Planning Commission if necessary…” Arreguín’s “good of the City” version deletes “if necessary.” 

The May 28 version also specified the Downtown Mixed-Use District as the area where an increasing the number of taller buildings “at or above 180 feet in height” would be considered. The “good of the City” version eliminates that specification and qualified the upzoning prospect with the phrase “if needed.” In other words, the upzoning could apply anywhere in town. 

At the May 2 meeting District 4 (Central Berkeley) Councilmember Kate Harrison said Arreguin had made the change at her behest. Pointing out that in 2010 Berkeley voters had approved upzoning in Downtown (Measure R), Harrison said “supports more density throughout the entire city,” especially in North Berkeley and on College and San Pablo Avenues. 

At the May 2 meeting, the first order of business was for the council to accept the mayor’s just-revised material under the “good of the City” rule. It did so unanimously, without the slightest discussion of how the analysis in the revised material had made the requisite demonstration. 

Kesarwani also asked how the 50k sf threshold had been arrived at. Arreguín said that “projects at this scale would be more likely to absorb the [prospective new] requirements” because there would be enough units onsite to amortize the costs. The intent, he added, was to capture not just the tallest buildings but 25- and 30-unit projects as wells. “Missing middle” projects would not be affected. 

The councilmember’s most insistent questions concerned the lack of a financial analysis of the HHO’s effects. Had the city issued an RFP? What was the timeline? Would a contractor be “in the role by January 1, the effective date [of the ordinance] that we’re contemplating?” 

To this last query, Assistant City Manager LaTanya Bellow replied: “We do not know.” 

“When,” Kesarwani asked, “is the soonest date that the housing feasibility study could be completed and presented to the council?” 

Housing, Health and Community Services Director Dr. Lisa Warhaus said that the city had received and was evaluating “two qualified proposals,” and that it hoped to bring the selected “vendor to the council before the recess.” As for the delivery of the analysis itself: Spring 2024 “would be pushing it.” 

Kesarwani then said that, to her surprise, HCD had emailed the city about the Hard Hats Ordinance in December 2022 and February 2023, “even before it was before this council,” and that Planning Director Jordan Klein had responded to the agency’s queries in December. “It’s very hard to predict selectively what HCD will ignore or not ignore,” she said. Does staff have “any sense of how HCD is going to be looking at our implementation of our Housing Element and related programs in terms of determining our substantial progress toward meeting out [RHNA] unit count?” 

In reply, Deputy Director of the Planning Department Alene Pearson said that HCD “wanted to make sure that we hadn’t adopted the [HHO] before the Housing Element had been certified” by the agency. If it had, the HE would have to have included an analysis of the new ordinance. In December Klein told HCD that the ordinance hadn’t been adopted. HCD certified the city’s Housing Element on February 28, 2023. 

Yimby cadres attack the HHO 

I was curious to see the email exchange between HCD and Klein. A Public Records Act request to Berkeley’s excellent City Clerk’s office yielded the documents. 

It turns out that HCD did more than inquire about the status of the Hard Hats Ordinance. In the initial, December email, HCD Housing Policy Specialist Jose Ayala said he was writing to the Berkeley council in response to “public comment regarding the attached ordinance and its potential effects on costs of housing development.” 

HCD encourages individuals and groups to inform the agency about potential violations of state housing law. A PRA request to HCD asking to see Ayala’s email and the referenced public comment revealed that the source of the comment was Paul Campos, Senior Vice President of Governmental Affairs and General Council for the Building Industry Association of the Bay Area. 

On November 11, 2022, Campos sent HCD Housing Policy Manager Paul McDougall an email with a link to the council’s September 22 referral asking staff to draft the HHO and the following comments: 

Estimated cost increased [sic] for real world housing project in pipeline right now is an increase of 18-20% (would be higher, but some work was already going to be done by union labor); for this project that works out to an increased cost of approximately $19 million which would render the project infeasible. 

Clearly would be a major constraint since would apply to every housing project of over 50,000 sq feet. It is NOT limited to public works projects; every housing project. 

Campos wasn't the only supply-sider who contacted HCD’s Paul McDougall about problems with the Hard Hats Ordinance. On February 16 Housing Action Coalition Executive Director Corey Smith cc’d McDougall on an email to the Berkeley council, a three-and-a-half page attack on the HHO. On February 17 McDougall emailed Planning Director Klein asking: “Any updates on the ordinance since December or is it still in its early formation?” 

In 2021 HAC honored the entire Berkeley Council in the group’s annual Housing Action Heroes program “for paving the way to end exclusionary zoning and allow for multi-family homes to be built across the city.” Nancy Skinner presented the award. 

HAC’s February email said nothing about Berkeley’s recent housing heroics. Instead, it warned that “[w]hile the aims of the HARD HATS Ordinance are laudable, housing production is suffering death by a thousand cuts. Each new mandate adds to costs, reduces feasibility, and results in lower production.” 

To be precise, HAC was not commenting on the ordinance proper, which had yet to be released, but on the September 22 referral asking staff to draft the law. There, outlining “the City’s interests in taking action to redress the inadequate status quo condition of construction workforce development,” Arreguín, Bartlett, Hahn, and Taplin noted among other things the need to “[a]ddress inequality as residential developer profit margins continue to increase, while labor wages and benefits have remained stagnant.” 

According to the State of California’s 2014 Affordable Housing Cost Study and Economic Census data specific to California’s construction industry, construction labor wages and benefits account for only 15% of total project costs. Meanwhile, since 1992 the industry’s basis for profitability has increased 50% more than either construction labor or materials. Despite this increase in profitability, there is still a disconnect between construction workers and apprenticeship and health insurance plans, resulting in a shrinking supply of labor. This has constrained the construction industry’s ability to expand in response to the rising construction needs of California and its many cities. 

The September 2022 referral further stated: 

California residential contractors offer fringe benefits at low rates to building trades workers. Only one third of construction workers are policyholders for employment-based health insurance, compared to over half of all other employed male civilian workers, according to data from the Annual Social and Economic Supplement of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Current Population Survey (CPS). California construction workers’ rate of coverage under any employer- or union-provided insurance ranks 35th among the states, proximate in rank to Alabama, Colorado, Louisiana, Nevada, and Virginia. 

HAC’s Smith did not address the Berkeley electeds’ foregoing claims. Instead, he questioned the effects of the apprenticeship fee and health care coverage for construction workers on the financial feasibility of new housing: 

A proposal that solely increases costs will stifle housing and is inconsistent with the goals and objectives of [Berkeley’s] Housing Element. It also means that the benefits of the HARD HATS ordinance would not be achieved if it contributes to the financial infeasibility of new housing. If any ordinance is to pass that would increase the cost of construction without sufficient offsets, then we must acknowledge that we’re planning for rents to increase. Ultimately, this is simple math where revenues need to exceed expenses. 

Citing Berkeley’s then-still-to-be-certified-by-HCD Housing Element, Smith wrote: 

It [says] that construction costs for apartment buildings in the Bay Area are the highest in the state, that they have increased more dramatically than costs statewide, and that construction costs for affordable housing are higher than costs for mixed affordability and market rate projects “likely due to prevailing wage, local hire, and other requirements.” The HARD HATS Ordinance would add similar constraints on mixed affordability and market rate projects without providing any offsets or incentives. 

Smith suggested ways that additional costs could be offset: 

· The City could lower overall fees on new construction. If we understand the associated increase in cost for the HARD HATS Ordinance, we could easily offset those costs in other areas. 

· Increased development capacity would mean more homes that could help offset the additional costs of the proposed HARD HATS Ordinance. 

These are exactly the “offsets” that Arreguín included in the April 28 derisking Recommendations. In its May 5 newsletter, HAC claimed that its “joint advocacy” with Progress Public Affairs “in the 24 hours leading up to the bill’s adoption” had led to these “important concessions,” for which it thanked Arreguín. (HAC also took a dig at Arreguín: “We believe the mayor’s campaign for State Senate was the elephant in the room that prevented [the council from completing the financial feasibility the study before implementing the HHO], and [that] electoral politics can most certainly make for sloppy policy.”) 

HAC further claimed that its lobbying had resulted in a third concession: 

· Giving City staff the latitude to push back implementation, which we believe will be necessary given the complexity, and meaningful because it will help move the timeline of implementation of this ordinance into alignment with the completion of the feasibility study. 

In response to my query, Planning Director Klein said that he was not aware of any decision by the council that gave staff the latitude to push back the HHO’s implementation date. 

It’s also notable that the derisking Recommendations that the council did approve are not what HAC’s newsletter termed “the right path forward for Berkeley.” The “blueprint” for that route, wrote Smith, was laid out in state law: 

Assembly Bill 2011 (2022, Asm. Wicks) has established the blueprint for pro-labor and pro-housing legislation. AB 2011 allows by-right approval [no public hearing] for projects over a certain size if they 1) pay prevailing wages, 2) provide healthcare and 3) provide apprenticeship opportunities. 

Smith continued: 

This same language is also in two pieces of pro-housing legislation recently introduced by Senator Wiener, Senate Bill 4 and Senate Bill 423. Allowing by-right approvals for projects that provide certain benefits to workers should be the status quo across the entire state. The Housing Action Coalition strongly believes that a similar ordinance is the right path forward for Berkeley and would welcome the opportunity to help pass a local ordinance. 

To date, the Berkeley council has not afforded HAC such an opportunity. 

During public comment at the May 2 meeting, Smith, like every other speaker, said he favored expanding health care for construction workers and investing in apprenticeship programs. But he also warned that from the developer standpoint, the HHO was now “all stick and no carrot.” 

Another supply side critic of the HHO was Louis Mirante, the former California Yimby staffer who’s now V.P. for Public Policy at the Bay Area Council, the lobby shop for the region’s biggest employers. The HHO’s provisions for workers are “really important for improving people’s lives,” Mirante told the council, “but projects that are not feasible at the end of the day are not helping anyone but developers in the Central Valley, where people are going to be driving from their new homes….Almost every developer that I’ve talked to says that post-ordinance, they’re planning to not do business in Berkeley, where previously they had been.” 

A letter that Mirante, writing in behalf of BAC, sent the council on May 1 struck a tone at once more conciliatory and more threatening than the one taken by the Housing Action Coalition. “This,” Mirante stated, “is not a letter of opposition to the HARD HATs [sic]ordinance or its goals. But in a development environment of high and rising costs, any law that adds more costs, as this one will, should come with a commensurate reduction in costs elsewhere.” 

He congratulated “the City of Berkeley and each of you in making truly remarkable progress on housing.” It was “impressive” that Berkeley was “one of the few cities in the Bay Area with an [HCD]-approved housing element.” The council also deserved congratulations for having increased its approvals of housing projects from 342 in 2018 to nearly 1,000 in 2022. 

Then came BAC’s objections. “Requirements like the HARD HATs ordinance should offset their costs by reducing costs elsewhere either through an incentive-based structure or through reduced fees and exactions, through reduced affordable housing requirements, or through other measures.” Contrary to the claim that Arreguín would make the next evening, Mirante wrote that the 50K threshold for covered projects, amounting to about 25-units, included “smaller missing middle projects….Berkeley would likely end the production of these projects altogether by adopting this ordinance.” He urged the council to “consider a “higher threshold for these projects, or at the very least [to] study the impact of the ordinance” on their feasibility. 

Strangely, for a letter that purportedly did not oppose the HHO, Mirante ended with a threat that invoked the RHNA goals and, implicitly, the prospect of HCD discipline: 

This ordinance could represent a major challenge to the success of the [city’s] housing element and to the City’s in compliance with housing element law because it makes changes with major consequences to the housing element outside that process and without reducing costs. For that reason, this ordinance may not be lawful because it presents such potentially high new costs for a large portion of the projects that the City will need to meet its Regional Housing Needs Allocation goals. If the City’s policies fail to create an environment that encourages housing, it may lose access to the ability to deny certain project under its zoning code and several sources of infrastructure funding, and it could be subject to monthly financial penalties, all consequences for [sic] violating housing element law. 

Also speaking at public comment was Amir Massih, the developer who heads 4Terra and is, he said, a 25-year Berkeley resident. “We’re getting other people’s money to build these projects,” Massih told the council, “and if people are going to take their money and put it into something that’s going to give them a higher return, there won’t be any of these projects built to create the jobs you wanted created.” 

Massih was among eleven self-described “developers and property owners in the Bay Area” who sent the council a letter dated May 1 that expressed “urgent concerns” about the HHO. The other signers included Berkeleyans Denise Pinkston (TMG Partners) and Mark Rhoades (Rhoades Development Group). 

Their criticism of the HHO diverged in a notable way from the objections raised by their fellow supply siders: they argued that upzoning would not pay for the added costs that the HHO would impose on their contractors. “Adding density itself drives up construction costs as buildings become more complex and code requirements more rigorous.” 

If Berkeley is willing to eliminate its inclusionary and impact fee requirements to equal the added cost of the Hard Hats ordinance, housing production in Berkeley could continue. If not, the result will be evident and swift as deals in the pipeline go on hold, and new housing production moves out of Berkeley….We urge you to hold any ordinance adoption until you have adopted the cost offset regime to prevent deals in the pipeline being cancelled by funders, and to keep Berkeley as a place where new housing development remain viable. 

The only councilmember who heeded this advice was Kesarawni. Declaring that “I always have to have the data before I can say, I respectfully abstain….I need the feasibility study first.” 

I attribute her colleagues’ disregard of the Yimby warnings to collective smugness. The city is in the midst of a residential building boom. “We are very fortunate in Berkeley right now that we have so many construction cranes in the sky,” said Kesarwani. “We don’t see those cranes right now in San Francisco and Oakland, because of various reasons.” Neither she nor anyone else specified those reasons. 

Let me suggest the biggest reason. Unlike San Francisco, Oakland, and indeed most places, Berkeley has a built-in, ever-expanding source of demand for housing: the local University of California campus. That demand has been encouraged and legally expedited by the Berkeley council for two decades—first by the Bates council’s 2005 “secret sellout” of the public over UC’s Long Range Development Plan, then by the Arreguín council’s 2021 repeat of that betrayal—despite the school’s uncompensated toll on Berkeley’s services, infrastructure, and finances. In February 2022, the council submitted an amicus brief in opposition to capping the campus’s enrollment. In March and again in September of this year the council submitted an amicus brief in support of UC in its fight against the CEQA lawsuit filed by Make UC a Good Neighbor over the population growth envisioned by the latest LRDP and in particular the construction of student housing in People’s Park. The council majority appears to be believe that developers will not pull out in the face of the university-generated, council-enabled demand for housing. 

Why should Berkeley taxpayers underwrite private developers’ profits? 

Arreguín and his colleagues were even more condescending to the Berkeley public. The developers got the promise of derisking “offsets”; the public got the prospect of greater impacts from citywide densification and of mitigating those impacts with higher taxes. 

Unlike in San Francisco, in Berkeley the shift of risk to the public did not spark a massive protest. If the council had specified the forthcoming densification and lowered impact fees, perhaps the neighborhood associations would have turned out in force. In the event, of the thirty-five people who spoke at public comment on May 2, only three—Berkeley Daily Planet editor Becky O’Malley; Kelly Hammargren, whose indispensable Berkeley Activist’s Diary, posted on the Planet, follows the weekly antics in City Hall; and myself—objected to the burdens that the derisking Recommendations would place on the local citizenry, and each spoke as an individual. 

Hammargren offered the most substantial testimony. “I agree that the costs of construction shouldn’t be on the backs of the workers,” she said. 

But you’re talking about reducing the fees for national and international investors. You said just last Thursday at the Budget Committee these new, taller buildings come with an increased cost for services, especially firefighters. So what about the increased cost to the taxpayers? Are we going to be bearing the brunt of the increased services? I believe this should be passed for the workers, but I’m very concerned about the discount for the developers. 

The council ignored her questions. 

10/23: HCD brings the derisking hammer down on San Francisco 

It was shrewd of Arreguín to delay the release and approval of the Hard Hats Ordinance until after HCD had certified Berkeley’s housing element. Decertification can result in the loss of a city’s land use authority, triggering the draconian Builder’s Remedy. 

Given that the ordinance had been in the works for years—on May 2, Arreguín mentioned two years of “extensive dialogue with our labor partners and also with developers”; the September 20, 2022 referral said work had begun in May 2019 and then been stalled by Covid—it’s hard to view the timing as coincidental. What remains to be seen is if HCD will crack down on Berkeley after the HHO takes effect on January 31 without the derisking provisions demanded by the Yimby militants. 

In a sign that HCD has zero tolerance for what it regards as local insubordination on the derisking front, on October 25 the agency released a hard-line review of San Francisco’s “Housing Policy and Practice,” the agency’s first such assessment of any city’s laws. HCD’s June 16 letter had been a warning; the review delivered an ultimatum: Comply with our demands or invite our decertification of your housing element. 

 

To support the review, HCD had commissioned a study from UC Berkeley researchers that asked: 

· Is the city fully implementing key state housing laws, such as the Housing Accountability Act, the Permit Streamlining Act Senate Bill 35 and State Density Bonus Law? 

· Is local implementation allowing these state laws to achieve their intended effect of promoting housing production and affordability? 

· What causes delay in the entitlement process and how do the city’s discretionary review process impact overall project timelines and the housing approvals pipeline? 

 

Led by Moira O’Neill, the research team examined San Francisco’s entitlement data for 284 projects that had resulted in five or more housing units from 2014 to 2021. They cross-referenced written law, recordings from hearings, approval documents, and analyses from their entitlement data. They also drew on confidential interviews with dozens of participants representing affordable and market-rate developers, former and current city personnel and staff that work on housing development; land use attorneys; and housing advocates. 

 

The UCB researchers’ conclusion: the data shows that San Francisco has not fully implemented state housing law intended to promote housing production and affordability. The summary of their findings, with its denunciation of subjectivity and uncertainty and of local discretion, public hearings and “neighborhood-level politics, encapsulates the derisking agenda: 

San Francisco’s local rules embed subjectivity and uncertainty into review processes that state law says should be objective, time constrained, and, in some cases, certain. The city’s authority to apply discr


Opinion

Public Comment

Marching

Larry Bensky
Monday November 13, 2023 - 04:00:00 PM

Marching for a cause was hardly an innovation in this country by the time the now historic August 1963 March on Washington took place.

There had been hundreds of previous processions, some dating to the Revolutionary era.

And there have been countless marches in this country since 1963. Including last Saturday in San Francisco.

I’d been in so many since 1963.
Would I have participated in this one, were I not disabled beyond mobility? Would I have been there as one of those who want Israel destroyed for its cruelly disproportionate response to Hamas? Would I have been there to shout slogans advocating that tens of thousands of Arabs/Muslims/Jews to be killed after October 7th?

I now think back on 1963. I don’t remember that any slogans were shouted, though the violence that inspired the marchers to be there was as pervasive in 1963 as the violence in the Mideast is today. 


So was the near total ignorance on the part of most of us about what was “really going on.” And we had little idea of how the event had been put together. Even less about how the complexities of history would come to see it. (There’s no excuse for not knowing now - see the recently released movie, “Rustin” for starters.)

When you’re young (I was 26 in 1963) you take one step at a time.

Getting from New York to Washington was my first step. Trains had been sold out for weeks, but as a volunteer in the organizing office of the March I had a ticket. i also had enough experience with the unreliability of east coast trains to know I should travel the day before.

So, I took an extra day off. and didn’t get in trouble; I told my boss, and my boss’s boss, what I was going to do. Many of my co-workers at my first full time job since college (manuscript reader, proof reader, copy editor at the then small publishing company, Random House) did the same.

On arrival, I rode the complicated bus system to a friend’s house in classy Northwest Washington. (The once excellent, since deteriorated Metro subway system wasn’t opened until 1976)

My friend and his family weren’t nearly as wealthy as people elsewhere in their postal code, 18NW - Zip Codes , like the Metro, were yet to be invented. For now my friends were “trying out” life in Washington, to see if he wanted to relocate there “temporarily.” They had a big borrowed house, and I was welcome.


The job he was contemplating paid about ten times what his salary had been at the small Midwest college where he was a tenured professor. His new duties would include a few lectures (i.e. readings) a year. No students to grade. No tests to give. No classes to prepare.

He not only took the “job” as Poet Laureate of The United States, but stayed in and around DC for the rest of his life. His name was Reed Whittemore.

Fun Fact: Whittemore was already “wired” into the unspoken DC ethos upon arrival. Not because he had won many literary prizes. Not because he had lots of books in print. Not because he’d gone to Yale.

Why then?

Because one of his prep school and college buddies had been James Jesus Angleton, a CIA official in 1960’s Washington, who was feared by all and sundry in government. Supposedly, he had a dossier of unverified information about everyone. Including Members of Congress. White House staff (both parties). Supreme Court Justices.

No evidence has ever surfaced that Whittemore ever saw or even corresponded with Angleton. But that didn’t stop lines in minds from being drawn.

You have to understand the Washington of 1963 to begin to know the tectonic plates the “March on Washington” began to start shaking. And which the Whittemores would experience for decades. (I caught some of it too, later on, during the years of Iran-Contra, Anita Hill, Clarence Thomas, Henry Hyde, and a confused and confusing Senator, Joe Biden, who seemed to chair all important hearings.)

There was segregation, male supremacy, anti-communism, alcoholism, infidelity. And, like thunder in the distance, enormous wealth disparity poised to loose its unpredictable precipitation.

Most of the 1963 assemblage had never been in Washington before. Most were “negroes” who had travelled long distances in old yellow school buses. Buses without bathrooms, navigating states where gas station rest rooms had big “Whites Only” signs on their door.

Me, on the morning of the March, I took an uncrowded city bus downtown. The almost entirely white citizens of Northwest DC were well aware of the March. But the extensive media coverage was blurred in the public mind as “blahblahblah tens of thousands of NEGROES are expected…” “blahblahblah NEGRO leaders include many who were involved in recent incidents of violence and bloodshed” “officials in many southern cities say they’re glad local NEGROES will be far away this weekend…”

No wonder that white folks were staying away.

As I got closer to the Mall the all-black crowd got denser.

And I began to hear not speeches from a stage, not chanting from my fellow marchers, not singing as we marched, but …music! I don’t remember who performed in what order: Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Pete Seeger were most familiar to me, though as a child I listened (clandestinely) to Gospel on my clunky bedroom radio.

Later I learned that Mahalia Jackson, Josephine Baker and others as familiar to the “negro” crowd as Baez, Dylan and Seeger were to me had tried to sing and lead Marchers, but were stopped by the (all black) March organizers who feared “dilution” of the main message. (All of the behind the scenes struggles are chronicled in the Stanford archives, magnificently led by Dr. Claiborne Carson.)

Fast forward to this week in San Francisco. As hundreds still gather here and march (or try to) about horrific slaughter in the Middle East, others are trying to gather and march about APEC. What is APEC? Protest groups you almost certainly never heard of say it is an association of governments and multinational corporations who create, fund, deploy, and profit from weapons of death and destruction. And also contribute to global warming, massive air and ground contamination, and starvation.

The good old dullards at what’s left of our “flagship” newspaper, cite in a small article the coming APEC protests. These “could get violent,” clucks the Chronicle. “If protesters push too close to security…they could harm San Francisco’s image on
the world stage.”

No less a personage than our own current Caesar is to be (and I hope he is!) protected by roads-closed, electronics-monitored aircraft-grounded “security.”

Were I still able to be visibly with the anti-APECS I’d be there in body, as well as in sprit, which I surely am.

Larry welcomes your comments: Lbensky@igc.org.




 


ON MENTAL WELLNESS: when psych medication and/or neurodivergence block brain activity: don't give up on mindfulness-

Jack Bragen
Monday November 13, 2023 - 04:04:00 PM

Mindfulness can have many meanings and many methods. It varies uniquely for each person. And it can be impeded by many things; issues with the brain can impede or otherwise affect attempts at mindfulness. Yet, some kinds of mindfulness can supersede an impediment in the brain. It seems to me as though a genuinely attained person is not limited by brain issues, by brain capacity, or by what the brain can or can't do. 

Recent scientific theory guesses that human consciousness could be electromagnetic. This is an element that doctors don't understand. And, really, there is more that brain scientists don't know compared to what they know. We have not closed the book of understanding the origin of consciousness. 

If a doctor says you have brain damage and you're not capable of much, it says more about the doctor than it says about you: the thinking of the doctor is limited. 

If someone is seeking attainment and they have an issue with their brain, the form and appearances of the mindfulness could look different than the classic Zen Buddhism. In Zen, you sit with back straight and usually with legs folded, and this is an aid to reaching an elevated state, sometimes termed; "Samadhi." Yet if you have an issue with your body and/or mind that prevents that kind of practice, other methods can be used. 

The Zen community is usually the most tolerant you can find. Yet there are some Zen practitioners who haven't evolved past the hurdle of attaining a good understanding of people with mental and physical disabilities. The editorial staff members at Lion's Roar, a commercial Buddhist magazine which is prominent and well-known, adhere to the stereotype that neurodivergent people are incapable of Buddhist attainment. I find clear evidence of this badly mistaken thinking in the contributor's guidelines of the magazine. 

Yet, another Buddhist magazine, "Mindfulness Bell," has published two of my articles. And I have sent them a few items that, due to my "inappropriate attention" or lack of information, should have offended them. But they persistently remained open to dealing with me. There is quite a contrast there. Mindfulness Bell was founded by Thich Nhat Hanh, apparently one of the most conscious and dedicated of human beings in human history. 

It seems to me that my mental condition and the medications to treat it, in fact do make it a lot harder to practice mindfulness. In my history I've found some ways to get around the limits to my brain. Yet at other times in my life, I have regressed and have mentally lost ground. It seems to me that some of this back and forth is caused by karma. Even while the periodic backward progress often appears to hbe caused by random external events, it fits a pattern. When I come close to a sustained elevated state, invariably something happens to me that stops my progress and often reverses it. I believe this is because I have to pay back the karma while at the level at which I generated it. This, while it is very daunting, is possible to do. 

I have incessantly strived to have a better and better working mind. I have learned some things that people are not expected to know. I have a toolbox of methods that work for me, some of the time, to make me feel better and gain better clarity. I'm not going to share them in this essay. 

I wrote a book a while back about mindfulness, but I decided to take it off the market because of deficiencies of that book. Additionally, it was barely if at all selling. In the future, if I am around a long time, I will probably try again to write a book entailing what a person can do with their mind. 

I am self-taught at mindfulness. But I have followed existing theory of Buddhism, not the ritual aspects, not lighting incense, chanting, or any of that. I'm talking of the very basic concepts of Gautama Buddha: Suffering is caused by clinging. 

Since all things must ultimately pass, must change, and/or must end, you will create suffering for yourself if you hang onto everything. Yet there is another side to it, wherein this idea is not always the best idea to apply to a situation. 

Sometimes you should get into the ring, you must grab onto something you're after, and you should fight for it, tooth-and-nail, regardless of whether it makes you suffer. That's part of what people must do, and that's an area in which mindfulness might not apply. 

Yet mindfulness can teach you a lot of things. There are two sides to this coin, and we need both. Learning about Zen can be of help, even if you do not want to go to a temple and do Buddhist practices. The reading is good for informational purposes. It can point you in a good direction. Any new mindfulness book by me is a long way off. 


 

Jack Bragen thinks, lives, and writes in the East Bay Area of the SF Bay.


Open Letter to Bay Area Democrats About Recent Israel-Gaza Resolutions

Raymond Barglow, Pam Montanaro
Monday November 13, 2023 - 04:23:00 PM
The banners say “Standing Together" in Arabic and Hebrew.
The banners say “Standing Together" in Arabic and Hebrew.

Summary. In the Middle East, two groups of people – Palestinians and Israelis – struggle for self-determination and have been doing so since the early decades of the 20th century. Failure to recognize the legitimacy of both of these movements will only prolong the suffering and death caused by the conflict. The resolution that was passed by the Wellstone Democratic Renewal Club (WDRC) in late October of this year and the one passed in early November by the Alameda County Democratic Central Committee (ACDCC), wrongly withhold that recognition. 

Yes, Israeli’s war campaign in Gaza (along with amplified settler violence in the West Bank), like the Hamas action that prompted it, is horrendous, as these resolutions affirm. Our objection to the resolutions is that they reach beyond criticism of Israeli policy to call into question the legitimate existence of the state of Israel altogether. 

The predicament facing Democrats – how best to respond to the recent events in Palestine – is fracturing the left in the U.S. and worldwide. We would like our comments in this letter to contribute to an on-going discussion that finds a compassionate and effective political path forward. 

The conflict in Palestine has multiple causes, including most significantly a history of terrible leadership on both sides. There is however, a non-violent peace movement that brings Palestinians and Israelis together in support of peace and justice – a movement that we in the Bay Area can affiliate with and assist. U.S. organizations doing valuable work include: J Street and If Not Now

Causes of the Conflict. Because the resolution passed in early November by the ACDCC is modeled after and makes the same argument as the Wellstone resolution, we’ll focus on the Wellstone version in this letter. The Wellstone Club, centered in Berkeley and Oakland, is now 20 years old and to its credit has contributed substantially to valuable causes, including the victories of progressive Democrats at the local, state and federal levels. The Club sometimes makes mistakes, however. Its recently passed resolution oversimplifies the history of the Palestine-Israel conflict, when it states that: 

“Our elected leaders must … Address the root causes underlying this explosion of violence, including decades of institutionalized oppression and collective punishment of Palestinians through brutal military occupation and a 16-year Gaza blockade.” 

This accounting of “root causes” is one-sided; it leaves unmentioned the contributions made to the conflict by Palestinian organizations, Israel’s Arab neighbors, and Iran. While those contributions do not justify Israeli treatment of Palestinians over the past 75 years, it is worth noting that Israel’s policy is in part a response to hostility – including by Hamas – toward the existence of Israel that has continued since the invasion of the new nation by Arab countries in 1948. Hamas’s founding documents still call for a purely Islamic state to rule much of the Middle East, including all of Palestine and what is currently Israel. 

During the Wellstone Dem Club’s discussion of the resolution, an amendment was proposed that affirmed: 

“Israel’s right to exist as a secure and independent nation … the form Israel’s existence takes should respect and protect the civil and political rights of all citizens, including Palestinians and those belonging to other non-Jewish communities.” 

This quite reasonable amendment was voted down, thereby confirming the resolution’s bias. 

Religion in Palestine.  

The conviction that Israel has no right to exist is based sometimes on the claim that Israel was founded on a religion and is today theocratic. In truth, Zionism was basically a nationalist movement, like other nationalist movements in Europe in the 19th century, and many of its advocates were secular, socialist, and atheist. While the Jewish religion in its many shadings wields too much influence in Israel today, the fact is that Israel accepts far more religious diversity than a good number of other nations. In addition to the many religiously Judaic political parties in Israel, there are also recognized Islamic religious parties. Christianity of many denominations and the Druze religion are practiced in Israel. It is true that such pluralism is under attack in Israel, but it is far more threatened in Middle Eastern theocracies like Iran and Saudi Arabia. Although these nations are extremely repressive, no part of the left calls into question their right to exist, as some critics do when it comes to Israel. 

It’s true that Israeli policies are becoming appallingly similar to the policies of its adversaries, and that must change. There has been in fact a kind of collaboration between Hamas and Israel’s current leadership. Notoriously, Prime Minister Netanyahu has for two decades promoted Hamas in order to undermine the authority of the PLO, thereby preventing agreement on a two-state solution. Consequently Israel is today one of the most dangerous places on earth for Jews. The existing Israeli leadership, which promised safety while offering virtually nothing to Palestinians, has enabled Hamas to carry out the October 7 attack—the worst killing of Jews since the Holocaust. Hamas surely planned for such an outcome, so as to increase impassioned antisemitism throughout the Islamic world and in other countries as well. 

The Peace Movement in Palestine. We know that many Wellstone Club members do support the peaceful aspirations of Palestinians and Israelis alike. That support can draw on a recognition – absent in the Wellstone resolution – that the devastating clash of wills today culminates a long history of uncompromising militarism on the part of Arab/Palestinian as well as Israeli parties to the conflict. 

Aiming instead for conciliation, many peace-making organizations today, such as Alliance for Middle East Peace and Combatants for Peace, build connection and solidarity among Palestinians and Jews. Voicing the conviction of many Palestinians and Israelis, Standing Together says: 

“we know that we — the majority — have far more in common than that which sets us apart…. The future that we want — peace and independence for Israelis and Palestinians, full equality for all citizens, and true social, economic, and environmental justice — is possible.” 

This is a non-violent peace movement that bridges cultural and religious differences and that merits our participation and support.


Exercise for Elders?

Carol Denney
Monday November 13, 2023 - 04:15:00 PM

Dear Berkeley City Council,

Nothing keeps me in better shape as a disabled senior than attempting to safely evade the parade of whizzing skateboards, bicycles, scooters, roller skaters, and unicycles which have taken over the sidewalks in my neighborhood at San Pablo and University Avenues. And I know that the vehicle drivers are much more awake once they've realized whatever the rules were about respecting the traffic lights are long gone.

Of course Rigel Robinson wants to use the sidewalks as bike lanes. What a great savings this will be once we've so thoroughly gentrified the city that the old, disabled, and otherwise in the way are packed off to places they can afford and keep up with. Ours is becoming a fast-paced, tech-driven community with no time for toddlers and dawdlers.

Thank you, Mr. Robinson, and let me know when your anti-ADA rally is going to be. I would love to be there.


Demand End to Gaza Bombing

Jagjit Singh
Monday November 13, 2023 - 04:19:00 PM

I am writing to express my deep concern and sorrow over the harrowing situation unfolding in Gaza, which demands immediate global attention and condemnation. As someone who experienced the hardships of World War II as a child in an industrially targeted area in England, I find it disheartening to witness the extent of suffering endured by the Palestinians in Gaza due to Israel's relentless 24-hour bombing campaign. 

The living conditions in Gaza, characterized by mass displacement, scarcity of essential resources such as water, electricity, and fuel, paint a grim picture of a living hell on earth. Disturbingly, reports from Amnesty International suggest that Israel continues to employ white phosphorus bombs, causing excruciating pain and severe injuries to the victims, a practice that cannot be ignored. 

It is imperative that the international community collectively raises its voice against these atrocities. A self-imposed censorship within the American media, driven by fear of offending corporate interests, must be overcome to disseminate the true horror captured in video clips and photographs depicting the suffering masses in Gaza. As the saying goes, "What profit does the man have when he gains the world but loses his soul?" Israel and the United States risk becoming pariahs unless there is a united and resounding global condemnation of their actions. 

In this tragic human drama, both Israel and the United States, as enablers, appear to have lost their souls. It is our collective responsibility as global citizens to demand an end to the suffering in Gaza and to hold those responsible accountable for their actions.


Arts & Events

Too Much Ado about Nothing, Wagner’s LOHENGRIN

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Thursday November 16, 2023 - 05:39:00 PM

While I acknowledge that Wager’s Lohengrin has quite a lot of beautiful music, though also quite a lot of what may be called filler, in which the composer stretches out indefinitely and inordinately the basic drama he is depicting. And this drama, in case you hadn’t noticed, is Wagner’s contention that a woman in love must never question her lover about his name, where he is from, or anything of his past. Oh, at the opera’s end, Wagner offers the lame excuse for Lohengrin’s insistence on anonymity by having him reveal that he is a knight of the Holy Grail. As such, says Lohengrin, he must always remain anonymous, even when, as in this case, he falls in love with Elsa. By virtue of his ‘higher’ calling, says Lohengrin, he must insist on anonymity. As usual, Wagner over-reaches. Lohengrim stretches out this meagre plot for four hours and 24 minutes. 

In the current San Francisco Opera production of Lohengrin, the menace of a looming fascism hovers over everything that happens in this opera. In the opening scene, armed men with rifles keep peasants at bay. King Heinrich, though he gradually reveals himself to be a fair-minded individual, is on scene to raise an army against hypothetical possible invaders. Militarism in the face of hypothetical threats to national security is the name of the game here, as it is in so many areas, including our own. Meanwhile, in Brabant Friedrich von Telramund, who has been rejected by Elsa von Brabant in his hopes of marrying her, has now married Ortrud and accuses Elsa of murdering her brother. Elsa, held in abject conditions in an underground prison, is summoned to rrespond to Telramund’s accusations. 

The role of Elsa is performed by Juie Adams, familiar to SF Operagoers for her appearances with the Merola company, as an Adler fellow, and in roles such as Freia in Das Rheingold, Gerhilde in Die Walküre, Mimi in La Bohème, and Kate Pinkerton in Madama Butterfly. Over the years, the voice of Julie Adams has only grown stronger and more rich in coloration. As Elsa in Lohengrin, Julie Adams was excellent. In the role of Friedrich von Telramund, baritone Brian Mulligan portrayed his character as a schoolyard bully who reveals himself as weak in the face of his wife Ortrud. As for Lohengrin, who first appears to Elsa iin a dream, then arrives mysteriously on a swan to defend Elsa, he is sung by New Zealand tenor Simon O’Neill. His ringing tenor quite fills the bill for the nole of Lohengrin. In return for his defence of Elsa, Lohengrin demands that she never ask his name, where he is from, or anything of his past. Elsa accepts. King Heinrch is sung by bass Kristinn Sigmundsson, whose resounding bass has often been heard here in roles such as Baron Ochs in Der Rosenkavalier, Sarastro in Die Zauberflöte, Daland in Der Fliiegende Hollânder, and Vadrik in Rusalka.  

Where pure beauty of singing is concerned, honors in this Lohengrin are shared by soprano Julie Adams as Elsa and Romanian mezzo-soprano Judit Kutasi as Ortrud. As Act I comes to an end, Lohengrin defeats Telramund in single combat, though he spares Telramund’s life. Act II is dominated by Ortrud, who first consoles her husband for his defeat by Lohengrin, saying it was done by sorcery. Then she unveils her scheming plot to plant seeds of doubt in Elsa’s mind about Lohengrin’s demands for complete anonymity. As Ortrud, Judit Kutasi sang splendidly. Her voice rang with burnished coloration, though deep, penetrating and brimming with intensity. In this her SF Opera debut, Judit Kutasi proved herself a magnificent newcomer to local audiences, who no doubt will wish to hear in many more roles. In Lohengrin’s many small roles, only one is noteworthy here. The role of the King’s Herald was splendidly sung by baritone Thomas Lehman. 

The set for this Lohengrin was designed by Paul Steinberg and it featured two-storied buildings set aslant. In the opening scene, the King’s Herald announces with his trumpet the arrival of the King from an upper-story compartment open to the stage area. The distortion caused by the slanted buildings evokes similar distortions in many German Expressionist films of the 1920s and 1930s. David Alden directed this production of Lohengrin. Associate Director was Peter Retton. Costumes for this Lohengrin were by Gideon Davey and they featured more or less contemporary outfits complete with hats for the crowd scenes, though the principals wore more or less period costumes. 

As Act III opens, Lohengrin and Elsa are married and led into the bridal chamber to the famous bridal chorus. The newlyweds speak of their joy’, but when Lohengrin lovingly calls Elsa by name, she begs him to allow her to lovingly call him by name. His secret, Elsa declares, will be safe with her. At this, Lohengrin is distraught. Then, suddenly, Telramund breaks into the bridal chamber, and this invasion is somewhat ludicrously carried out by his cutting through a papier maché wall. Telramund attacks Lohengrin but is himself killed. Lohengrin tells Elsa he will answer her “forbidden questions” tomorrow in front of the King. At that meeting, which takes place under banners evoking those of Nazi fascism, Lohengrin reveals Telramund’s treachery and then declares that he is a knight of the Holy Grail and is thus bound by a demand for anonymity. In answer to Elsa, Lohengrin says his name is Lohengrin but that he must now return to Monsalvat. As he is about to leave on a swan, Ortrud rushes in to assert that the swan is actually Elsa’s dead brother Gottfried, whom she cursed. In response to this Lohengrin brings the dead Gottfried back to life and proposes that Gottfried be the new leader of Brabant. The dreaded Nazi banners fall to the ground, bringing in a new and more tolerant regime. Then off goes Lohengrin, leaving behind a grief-stricken Elsa, who has lost the man she loved all because she dared to ask his name. Oh well, that’s Wagner for you. 

Eun Sun Kim conducted this Lohengrin. Her deep commitment to this music is evident, and her conducting brought out much of the warmth of this music. John Keene was Chorus Director.


The Italian Roots & Legacy of San Francisco Opera Celebrated at Museo Italo Americano

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Thursday November 16, 2023 - 05:50:00 PM

b On Saturday, October14, Museo Italo Americano at Fort Mason presented a one-day symposium on the many ways the history of opera in San Francisco is intertwined with the city’s Italian community, which was largely responsible for making San Francisco a major opera center in the USA and worldwide. Also featured at the Museo Italo Americano was, and still is, a wonderful exhibition entitled BRAVO illustrating the participation of so many illustrious Italian singers, conductors and composers who have thrilled San Francisco audiences with their performances here. Both the one-day symposium and the BRAVO exhibition were the work of a team that included Bianca Friumdi, Curator of Museo Italo Americano; Kip Cranna, Dramaturg Emeritus at San Francisco Opera; and a whole host of others, all of whom were graciously thanked by Bianca Friundi in her welcoming remarks at the start of the symposium.  

On a personal note, Bianca Friundi noted that having grown up in Milan, Italy, she had long considered Milan’s Teatro alla Scala the worldwide center of opera. Then, on coming to San Francisco as Curator at Museo Italo Americano, she was thrilled to learn of the deep Italian roots of opera in San Francisco and of how Italian-Americans here were so influential in making San Francisco a world-class center of opera. This symposium and the BRAVA exhibition, she said, are testaments to the contributions of Italians and Italian-Americans to that history of opera in San Francisco.  

Following her opening remarks, Bianca Friundi introduced Marina Romani, Lecturer at UC Berkeley, who then gave a talk on the life and work of Gaetano Merola (1881-19580. Born and raised in Naples, Merola first came to San Francisco in 1906, where he immediately was impressed by the musical passion and potential of this city. Merola revisited San Francisco in 1909 as conductor of the traveling International Grand Opera Company; and he returned here in 1919 as conductor of the San Carlo Opera Company, a group he also conducted here in 1920 and 1921. Later that year Merola and his wife Rosa moved permanently to San Francisco, which he called “my other Italy.” In her talk, Marina Romani noted that a major step forward was taken when Gaetano Merola attended the “Big Game” at Stanford Stadium in the fall of 1921 and was greatly impressed with that stadium’s wonderful acoustics. This discovery led Merola to present four staged open-air opera performances at Stanford Stadium in 1922, all starring the great Italian tenor Giovanni Martinelli. So successful were these performances that in 1923 Merola founded San Francisco Opera, with funding provided by a dozan Italian-Americans, who are now duly honored with their names on a plaque at San Francisco Opera’s War Memorial Opera House. San Francisco Opera’s first season opened on September 26, 1923 at the Exposition Auditorium (now known as the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium). Ten different operas were offered that first season, all but one were Italian. 

On August 30, 1953, at an outdoor concert of the San Francisco Symphony at Stern Grove, Gaetano Merola, age 72, was felled by a stroke and died while conductiong soprano Brunetta Mazzolini in the aria “Un bel di vedremo” from Puccini’s Madama Butterfly. 

The next speaker was Kip Cranna, Dramaturg Emeritus of San Francisco Opera, who began his talk by noting that the very first operatic music heard in San Francisco came in the first year of the Gold Rush. Verdi’s aria, “Ernani, involami” was performed on November 4, 1850 at the Jenny Lind Theatre. Cranna noted that the heroine’s rousing call to be saved from marrying the aged and reviled suitor must have appealed to the overwhelmingly male population of San Francisco at this time. Cranna then played for us a video recording of Leona Mitchell performing this aria at the Met in 1982. Leona Mitchell’s performance was thrilling, perhaps even a bit over the top in her improvised and heavily embroidered cadenza at the close of Ernani, involami.” In February 1851, two Bellini operas — La Sonnambula and Norma —were performed at the Adelphi Theatre, and in April of that year, the first complete Verdi opera — Ernani — was performed by the Pellegrini Company at the Adelphi Theatre. Since the company lacked a suitable baritone for the role of Don Carlo, Matilde Korsinsky Von Gulpan sang the role transposed to a soprano key. In spite of Ernani’s initial success during Gold Rush times in San Francisco, it is a curious fact that San Francisco Opera did not present Ernani until 1963. By then, it seems, the oompahpah style of Verdi’s fifth opera was clearly out of favour.  

Following Kip Cranna’s talk, we were treated to a musical interlude by soprano Eileen Meredith, accompanied by keyboard artist Ron Valentino. Meredith sang two arias from Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro, Butterfly’s Un bel di vedremo, an aria from Puccini’s La Rondine, and Vissi d’arte from Puccini’s Tosca. Then we took a lunch break to enjoy the boxed lunches provided by Museo Italo Americano.  

When we reassmbled at 1:40 we heard a presentation by Jeffrey McMillan, Public Relations Director at San Francisco Opera. McMillan’s talk was entitled The Importance of Italian Diva Claudia Muzio. McMillan duly noted all the qualities that made Claudia Muzio special. Above all, there was her fierce commitment to each and every role she performed. Muzio debuted at San Francisco Opera in 1924 as Maddalena in Andrea Chenier opposite Italian tenor Beniamino Gigli. Over the next decade Muzio sang often at San Francisco Opera, and in 1932 she inaugurated the new War Memorial Opera House by singing the lead role in Tosca. In her total dedication to each and every role, noted Jeffrey McMillan, Claudia Muzio was like Maria Callas, who came after Muzio and modeled her performing style on that of Muzio. Other singers who were inspired by Muzio included Magda Olivera, Aprile Millo, and Ailyn Pérez. McMillan played recording clips of Muzio singing Mimi’s farewell aria from La Bohème, Violetta’s reading of the letter from Georgio Germont when on her death bed, and the ensuing cabaletta È tarde!  

A panel discussion brought the symposium to a close. Amid many questions from the audience, two artists were invited from the audience to join the panelists. One was graphic designer Alice Amiigassi, who designed all texts and photos for the BRAVO exhibition; and the other was muralist Cindy Salans Rosenheim who talked about all the planning that went into her choice of subject for the main mural — a view of the War Memorial Opera House circa 1932. Her remarks provided a fitting end to a most informative symposium on the history of the Italian community’s involvement in the early days of opera in San Francisco.


The Opera OMAR, Or the Perils of Political Correctness

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Thursday November 16, 2023 - 05:51:00 PM

Judging by the wildly enthusiastic applause I heard at the War Memorial Opera House on Sunday, November 5, at the close of the new opera Omar by Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels, it would seem that political correctness is all you need these days to win the approbation of opera audiences. I wish to express my extreme disapproval of this tendency. While I gladly acknowledge that the opera Omar, which relates the story of a West African Muslim brought to America as a slave at age 37, mounts an effective plea for respect and tolerance to be granted to this slave’s Muslim faith, I seriously question both Omar’s quality as an opera, which I find rather dubious, and its inability to think in more profound terms than mere political correctness. 

After all, political correctness can shift, often quite dramatically and quickly.. For example, Immediately after Hamas’s surprising and murderous raid on southern Israel on October 7, in which 1,400 Israelis were killed, political correctness then certainly favoured Israel. But now that Israel has mounted a month’s long genocidal attack on Gaza, killing more than 10,000 Gazan civilians, political correctness has shifted in favour of the besieged Palestinians. Perhaps this shift in attitudes toward the current war between Israel and Gaza is in part responsible for the apparent political correctness of the opera Omar’s plea for respect for the slave Omar’s Muslim faith. In any case, let’s examine the notion of political correctness in regard to the opera Omar currently being performed at San Francisco Opera. For starters, the slave Omar Ibn Said is loudly celebrated as the author of the only known account of American slavery written in Arabic. Well enough. However, by reading carefully the book I Cannot Write My Life: Islam, Arabic, and Slavery in Omar Ibn Said’s America, written by Mbaye Lo and Carl W. Ernst, (University of North Carolina Press, 2023), I discover that this much-touted ‘Autobiography’ by Omar Ibn Said is scarcely more than 22 pages long, repeatedly protests that “I cannot write my life,” and limits itself to criticism of one cruel slave master and speaks highly of two brothers who were more charitable slave masters, even as they tried hard, with perhaps some superficial success, to convert this well- educated, devout Muslim to Christianity as the One True Religion. On this latter issue, the opera Omar hedges its bets, having Omar read aloud in English Psalm 23 from a Christian Bible printed in Arabic, yet ending the opera with Omar stating that he loves to read … “the great Qu’ran.” Okay. So under slavery in America Omar learns to respect the Christian religion yet also continues to embrace his Muslim faith. Meanwhile, the whole issue of religious faith iis — or ought to be — at least called into question. There is, in fact, a half-hearted stab at this when a slave girl Katie Ellen,sung here by mezzo-soprano Rehanna Thelwell, sings exultantly of her willingness to die so she may see her Lord Jesus seated at the right hand of God the Father. Okay. We get that when people are under extreme duress and oppression, they may grasp at a religious hope for pie in the sky when they die. But may I suggest that, though Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels certainly don’t go this route, the same reservation about religion applies to Omar Ibn Said and his iclinging tenaciously to his Muslim faith. Enough on the murky realms of political correctness. As opera, Omar, a co-commission by San Francisco Opera with many other institutions, is a musical hybrid, deriving its styles from a wide variety of sources, including West African percussion, bluegrass, spirituals, Protestant hymns, Gershwin (evident in a jazzy hoe-down among the slaves), minimalism, and, according to Michael Abels, “even a touch of Wagner.” (Perhaps fortunately, I did not notice a touch of Wagner.) In case you’re wondering, both Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels are mixed-race individuals who sought to anchor their music in their mixed-racial roots. Once again, however, political correctness does not ensure quality. Often, it curtails it. The music of Omar strikes me as a rather bland mish-mash of American genres more suited to Broadway musicals than to the opera stage. In the role of Omar, tenor James McCorkle sang fervently and forcefully. He was excellent here in the role of Omar he created at this opera’s premiere at the Spoleto Festival in 2022. Mezzo- soprano Taylor Raven was also excellent as Fatima, Omar’s mother. Her appearance to a sleeping Omar in a dream sequence in Scene 5 of Act I was particularly effective when she advises Omar to heed young Julie’s advice he flee Charlotte and go to Fayetteville. Perhaps the vocal highlight of the entire opera was provided in Act II, Scene 2 by soprano Brittany Renee as Julie, the young slave girl who, impressed that Omar took her advice and came to Fayetteville, tells Omar that her father was a Muslim like him. She describes how her father and mother, though from different backgrounds and different religions, loved each other deeply and created a wonderful family for their daughter until her father was sold to another slave master when she was ten years old. In this wonderful aria sung by Brittany Renee, there is more than a hint of a potential love relation developing between Julie and Omar. But, alas, this somehow fails to materialise as the opera concentrates on Omar’s religious faith and ignores all else in his life. This is yet another fault of political correctness, which often fails to recognise that the personal is political, and vice versa. In small roles, baritone Norman Garrett sang effectively as Omar’s younger brother Abdul, who tries in vain to negotiate with the slave-traders in Senegal, only to be deceived when they invade his village and seize slaves.Tenor Edward Graves, bass-baritone Calvin Griffin, and baritone Kenneth Overton had brief roles encountering Omar during their Middle Passage on a slave ship bound for America. Bass-baritone Daniel Okulitch did superb double-duty as both the cruel slave-master Johnson and the charitable slave-master Owen. Tenor Barry Banks also did double-duty as both the slave auctioneer and Owen’s friend Taylor. Mezzo-soprano Laura Krumm was a pert Eliza, the daughter of Jim Owen. Jermaine McGhee was superb as the whirling dervish ancestral figure who repeatedly invokes this story’s African roots with his dances, set to West African percussion music performed on tar, ghaval, talking drum, and djembe, Incidentally, there occurs during the hoe-down by the slaves dancing at the Owen plantation an interesting projection of black-and-white footage showing African Americans dancing in animated fashion. Is this archival footage from slavery times, or is it perhaps footage from Harlem dance halls in mid-20th century? In either case, it’s interesting footage. Throughout the opera there is also interesting footage of Arabic script, presumably quotations cited by Omar from the Qu’ran, which are projected onto screens, curtains or bits of scenery, thereby emphasising the power of the written word for Islam. The conductor was John Kennedy; the Director was Kaneza Schaal; the Designer was Christopher Myers; the Set Designer was Amy Rubin; and Costumes were by April M. Hickman and Micheline Russell-Brown. The production of Omar was generally well done. If only its co-composers Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels had ventured deeper into this story than a superficial level of political correctness, maybe it might have done more to open people’s minds. Omar continues through November 21.


THE BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S CALENDAR, November 12-19

Kelly Hammargren
Monday November 13, 2023 - 11:06:00 AM

Worth Noting:

There are only four (November 14, 28, December 5, 12) more scheduled City Council meetings before Winter Recess - December 13, 2023 – January 15, 2024

Recommended Go To meetings are bolded:

  • Monday:
    • At 10 am United Against Hate Week launches at Civic Center Park.
    • At 10 am the Health, Life, Enrichment, Equity & Community meets in hybrid format on animal welfare at the racetrack.
    • At 12 pm CCCC meets online. At 2:30 pm the Agenda Committee meets in the hybrid format.
    • From 4:30 – 6:30 pm in-person film on Not in Our Town.
    • At 4:30 pm City Council meets in closed session.
    • At 6:30 pm the Youth Commission meets in person.
  • Tuesday:
    • At 4 pm City Council meets in the hybrid format on San Pablo safety enhancement plan.
    • At 6 pm the City Council meets in the hybrid format with the Southside Plan as 13 under Action.
  • Wednesday:
    • At 1 pm there is a webinar online on preparing RFPs.
    • At 1:30 pm the Commission on Aging meets in person on bicycles on sidewalks.
    • At 2 pm the FITES Committee meets in the hybrid format on bicycles on sidewalks.
    • At 7 pm the Commission on the Status of Women meets in person.
    • From 7 – 8:30 pm Councilmember Hahn sponsors an in person meeting on public safety.
    • No agenda is posted for the 7 pm Commission on Labor meeting.
  • Thursday:
    • At 10 am the Budget Committee meets in the hybrid format on financial forecast and mid-year budget adjustment (AAO#1).
    • At 7 pm the Transportation and Infrastructure Commission meets in person.
    • The Design Review Committee is cancelled.
  • Friday: From 9 am – 12 pm CEMTF meets online on Climate and Accessibility
  • Saturday:
    • From 9 – 11 am is the Shoreline Cleanup.
    • From 11 am – 2pm is the Pandemonium Color Run for grades K-5


Check the City website for late announcements and meetings posted on short notice at: https://berkeleyca.gov/

Directions with links to ZOOM support for activating Closed Captioning and Save Transcript are at the bottom of this calendar.



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BERKELEY PUBLIC MEETINGS AND CIVIC EVENTS 

Sunday, November 12, 2023 - November 12 – 18, 2023 United Against Hate Week 

 

Monday, November 13, 2023 

 

UNITED AGAINST HATE WEEK Launch at 10 am 

In-Person: At Civic Center Park 

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/united-against-hate-week-launch-tickets-730675047737 

 

HEALTH, LIFE, ENRICHMENT, EQUITY & COMMUNITY at 10 am 

A Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor – Redwood Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1612187768 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (toll free)  

Meeting ID: 161 218 7768 

AGENDA: Harrison – Ordinance adding BMC 12.75 to Establish Protections Relating to animals Held Owned, Used, Exhibited or Otherwise Kept for Racing or Other Sport, Entertainment or Profit. 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/council-committees/policy-committee-health-life-enrichment-equity-community 

 

CCCC (Community for a Cultural Civic Center) at 12 noon 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87912721146?pwd=SlFxUmc0c3JQUHVueVNvYjFkTGE4Zz09 

AGENDA: Update on Civic Center Project with Susi and Eleanor Hollander, possible update from Jen Lovvorn on Turtle Island Monument, and Clark Suprynowicz on a winter light festival concept from Immersive Arts Alliance https://www.immersiveartsalliance.org/ 

 

NOT in OUR TOWN Film and Panel Discussion from 4:30 – 6 pm 

In-Person: At 2036 University, UC Theatre 

Tickets: https://tinyurl.com/35umdb24 

AGENDA: Short Film Screening with panel discussion hosted by Berkeley’s Mayor Office, and BUSD 

https://www.niot.org/ 

 

AGENDA AND RULES COMMITTEE Meeting at 2:30 pm 

Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor – Redwood Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1603904656 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (Toll Free)  

Meeting ID: 160 390 4656 

AGENDA: Public Comment on non-agenda and items 1 – 7. 1. Minutes, 2. Review and Approve -11/28/2023 draft agenda – use link or read full draft agenda below at the end of the list of city meetings, 3. Berkeley Considers, 4. Adjournment in Memory, 5. Council Workssessions, 6. Referrals for scheduling, 7. Land Use Calendar, Referred Items for Review: 8. Discussion and Possible Action on City Council Rules of Decorum and Remote Public Comments, 9. City Council Legislative Systems Redesign, Unscheduled Items: 10. Modifications or Improvements to City Council Meeting Procedures 11. Strengthening and Supporting City Commission: Guidance on Development of Legislative Proposals, 11. Discussion and Recommendations on use of Berkeley Considers 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/council-committees/policy-committee-agenda-rules 

 

CITY COUNCIL Closed Session at 4:30 pm 

A Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor – Redwood Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1605213034 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (toll free)  

Meeting ID: 160 521 3034 

AGENDA: Conference on Ashby BART 

https://berkeleyca.gov/city-council-closed-meeting-eagenda-november-13-2023 

 

YOUTH COMMISSION at 6:30 pm 

In-Person: At 1730 Oregon 

AGENDA: 9. Berkeley High School (BHS) Restroom Survey to pass out to BHS students. 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/youth-commission 

 

Tuesday, November 14, 2023 

 

CITY COUNCIL Special Meeting at 4 pm 

A Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 1231 Addison St. in the School District Board Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1617610462 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (toll free)  

Meeting ID: 161 761 0462 

AGENDA: Alameda County Transportation Commission San Pablo Ave Multimodal Corridor Program: Safety Enhancement and Parallel Bike Improvements Projects. Go to Revised material (Supp 1) to see diagrams of parallel bike paths and San Pablo plan 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/city-council-agendas 

 

CITY COUNCIL Regular Meeting at 6 pm 

A Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 1231 Addison St. in the School District Board Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1617610462 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (toll free)  

Meeting ID: 161 761 0462 

AGENDA: Use the link and choose the html option or see the agenda listed at the end of the calendar. 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/city-council-agendas 

 

Wednesday, November 15, 2023 

 

FACILITIES, INFRASTRUCTURE, TRANSPORTATION, ENVIRONMENT & SUSTAINABILITY at 2 pm 

A Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor – Redwood Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1604033673 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (toll free)  

Meeting ID: 160 403 3673 

AGENDA: Robinson – Modernizing and updating outdated & unnecessary language in the BMC related to transportation (allowing non-electric BICYCLES on SIDEWALKS), 3. Harrison - Discussion – Calm traffic in west Berkeley to Protect Children, 4. Harrison – Discussion – Progress on the Bike and Pedestrian Plans. 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/council-committees/policy-committee-facilities-infrastructure-transportation-environment-sustainability 

 

COMMISSION on AGING at 1:30 pm 

In-Person: At 1901 Hearst, North Berkeley Senior Center 

AGENDA: Presentations/Updates: 1. Tenant and landlord protections, 2. Staffing for Aging Services, 3. Taxis, Commissioner reports: Commission on Disabilities lawsuit, Discussion/Action Items: 1. Support and management services needed for housing homeless and elder populations, 2. Referral from from City Council (Agenda and Rules Committee) regarding shared bicycle/pedestrian usage of sidewalks, possible Town Hall Meeting in February 2024, 3. Ohlone Greenway safety and modernization project, 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/commission-aging 

 

COMMISSION on the STATUS of WOMEN at 7 pm 

In-Person: At 1901 Hearst, North Berkeley Senior Center 

AGENDA: 4. Presentation on Sex Trafficking, 9. Continued discussion/action on sex trafficking, 10. Safety for older women. 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/commission-status-women 

 

COMMISSION on LABOR at 7 pm 

In-Person: At 2939 Ellis, South Berkeley Senior Center 

AGENDA: not posted as of 10:20 am Saturday, check on Monday 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/commission-labor 

 

COMMUNITY AGENCY REQUEST for PROPOSAL WORKSHOP from 1 – 3 pm 

Videoconference: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/89349518460 

AGENDA: For all agencies that plan to submit proposals for funding 

https://berkeleyca.gov/community-recreation/events/community-agency-request-proposal-workshop 

 

PUBLIC SAFETY TOWN HALL from 7 – 8:30 pm 

In-Person: At 941 The Alameda, Northbrae Community Church 

AGENDA: Public Safety Town Hall with Police Chief Louis and Deputy Fire Chief Keith May 

Organized by Councilmember Sophie Hahn 

 

Thursday, November 16, 2023 

 

BUDGET and FINANCE COMMITTEE at 9:30 am 

A Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor – Redwood Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1617357038 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (toll free)  

Meeting ID: 161 735 7038 

AGENDA: 2. Presentation: City’s Fiscal Forecast, 3. Taplin, Harrison, Bartlett authors, co-sponsor Hahn – City Council Office Expenditures, 4. AAO (Annual Appropriations Ordinance aka budget update), 5. Audit on Police Dept on overtime and outside security contracts, 6. Audit status Berkeley streets. 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/council-committees/policy-committee-budget-finance 

 

DESIGN REVIEW COMMITTEE - cancelled 

 

TRANSPORTATION and INFRASTRUCTURE COMMISSION at 7 pm 

In-Person: At 1901 Hearst, North Berkeley Senior Center 

AGENDA: 1. Informational Briefing on AC Transit Realign project, 2. Informational Briefing on City, Informational Briefing on City of Berkeley Draft Daylighting Policy, 3. Informational Briefing on Community-led Traffic Counts. 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/transportation-and-infrastructure-commission 

 

Friday, November 17, 2023 

 

CLIMATE EMERGENCY MOBILIZATION TASK FORCE (CEMTF) from 9 am – 12 noon 

Register: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/climate-ableism-accessibility-registration-656200883507?  

AGENDA: Climate, Ableism & Accessibility 

https://www.cemtf.org/ 

 

Saturday, November 18, 2023 

 

3rd SATURDAY SHORELINE CLEANUP from 9 – 11 am 

Meet at 160 University. Shorebird Nature Center  

Go to webpage for more information and link to register  

https://berkeleyca.gov/community-recreation/events/3rd-saturday-shoreline-cleanup-1 

 

PANDEMONIUM COLOR RUN from 11 am – 2 pm 

At 1301 Shattuck, Live Oak Park  

Youth Grades K-5 

Go to webpage for more information and link to register  

https://berkeleyca.gov/community-recreation/events/pandemonium-color-run 

 

Sunday, November 19, 2023 – no city meetings or events found 

 

+++++++++++++++++++ 

 

AGENDA AND RULES COMMITTEE Meeting at 2:30 pm 

DRAFT AGENDA City Council November 28, 2023 Regular Meeting  

Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor – Redwood Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1603904656 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (Toll Free)  

Meeting ID: 160 390 4656 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/council-committees/policy-committee-agenda-rules 

 

AGENDA on CONSENT: 

  1. 2023 Conflict of Interest Code Update
  2. 2023 Annual Commission Attendance and Meeting Report
  3. Environment and Climate Commission – Appointment of New Youth Members
  4. Radu, City Manager – Amend Contract R9704 with City of Albany, Albany will pay Berkeley $291,019 total $945,512 for Animal Services FY 2024 – FY2026
  5. Radu – Contract $60,750 with Echo Cartagena DVM to provide on-site veterinary services January 2024 – June 2024
  6. Radu – Contract $51,569 with Edgeworth LLC to purchase and install security camera system at Berkeley Animal Care Services 10/5/2023 – 10/5/2024
  7. Oyekanmi, Finance – Formal Bid Solicitations $6,880,000
  8. Warhuus, HHCS – Revenue Grant Agreement $673,179 to provide public health nursing services 7/1/2023 – 6/30/2026
  9. Warhuus, HHCS – Lease of 830 University to Berkeley Free Clinic
  10. Louis, Police – Amend Contract 32300062 add $50,000 total $200,000 with Moreland Investigations for background checks, 11/3/2022 – 11/2/2027
  11. Louis, Police - Amend Contract 32200152 add $150,000 total $200,000 with Cindy K. Hull & Associates Forensic Consulting Services, LLC
Council Consent Items: 

  1. Arreguin – Appoint Tracy Matthews to the Berkeley Housing Authority for 2-year term
  2. Bartlett – Expenditure of Funds - Healthy Black Families 10th Anniversary
  3. Harrison – Refer to City Manager to Enhance the City’s Deconstruction and Construction Materials Management Enforcement and Regulations and Refer to AAO#1 Budget Process $250,000 for Social Cost of Carbon Nexus Fee Study for Berkeley Origin Construction and Demolition Debris
AGENDA: on ACTION: 

  1. Garland, Public Works – Street Rehabilitation Five Year Plan for 2024 – 2028
Policy Committee Track 

  1. Arreguin – Civic Arts Referral for Memorial Wall to Councilmember Dona Spring and budget referral $162,000
  2. Arreguin – Accept grant funding $75,000 from San Francisco Foundation and amend Contract 32200161 with Creative Development Partners to extend consulting work associated with Equitable Black Berkeley Initiative total contract $200,000
  3. Kesarwani – RFP to Support Berkeley Based Non-Profit Food Assistance Providers Serving Food Insecure Households - $200,000 FY2024-2025 – FY 2025-2026
  4. Taplin – Designating Open Space Adjacent to the Ninth Street Greenway between Heinz and Berkeley-Emeryville border as a Linear City Park pursuant to BMC 6.42
  5. Bartlett – Purchase Old Finnish Hall
  6. Bartlett – Homeless Shelter Crisis in Berkeley, declare a shelter crisis
  7. Bartlett – Healthy Checkout
  8. Harrison – Amend BMC 3.78 to Expand Eligibility Requirements for Representatives of The Poor to Serve on The Human Welfare and Community Action Commission
  9. Harrison – Adopt BMC 13.89 Community/Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act
INFORMATION REPORTS: 

  1. Warhuus, HHCS – Healthy Checkout Ordinance Update
 

++++++++++++++++++ 

 

AGENDA for November 14, 2023 CITY COUNCIL Regular Meeting at 6 pm 

A Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 1231 Addison St. in the School District Board Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1617610462 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (toll free)  

Meeting ID: 161 761 0462 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/city-council-agendas 

 

CEREMONIAL MATTERS: 

  1. Presentation: AC Transit Realign Process
 

AGENDA on CONSENT: 

  1. Amend Contract No. 090741-1 add $370,000 total $750,000 thru 12/31/2025 with Foster and Foster Actuaries and Consultants (formerly Bartel Associates, LLC) for Actuarial Consulting Services
  2. Hollander, Economic Development – Expansion of the Elmwood BID (Business Improvement District) for calendar year 2025
  3. Oyekanmi, Finance – Formal bid solicitations $2,453,813 includes $200,000 for Children’s Story Time Renovation, $816,813 for Parker-Addison Mobility and safety Improvements Project, $400,000 for Berkeley Emergency Communication Center Dispatch Modernization, $325,000 for Food for Summer Lunch Program, $80,000 for Hardscape Repair and Preplacement (Marina), $632,000 for Land Use Planning Consultant
  4. Warhuus, HHCS – Amend Contract No. 31900284 add $290,000 total $6,549,173 with Dorothy Day House to fund inclement Weather Shelter Program
  5. Garland, Public Works - Contract $125,000 with Mercury Associates, Inc for Fleet Replacement/Maintenance Study and Consulting Services 12/1/2023 – 12/30/2026
  6. Garland, Public Works – Purchase Order $335,000 Western Truck Parts and Equipment for One Roll Off Truck
  7. Garland, Public Works – Amend multi-year Purchase Order add $400,000 total $11,894,000 with Diesel Direct West, Inc for Fuel for City Vehicles and Equipment for City vehicles and emergency equipment (including generators) increasing the combined amount thru 2/28/2024
Council Consent Items: 

  1. Taplin, co-sponsors Hahn, Harrison – Budget referral $7,000Berkeley Junior Jackets Facilities Expenses
  2. Wengraf, co-sponsor Arreguin – Resolution authorizing City of Berkeley to enter into MOU with Alameda and Contra Costa Counties to form a Wildfire Prevention Coordinating Group (WPCG) to improve regionwide collaboration to reduce wildfire risk
AGENDA on ACTION: 

  1. Hollander, Economic Development – Renewal Elmwood BID for calendar year 2024
  2. Hollander, Economic Development – Renewal Solano BID for calendar year 2024
  3. Fair Campaign Practices Commission – Amend BMC Chapter 2.12 Berkeley Election Reform Act (BERA) to ensure cost of living adjustments and committee reporting thresholds
  4. Klein, Planning and Development – Amendments to BMC Title 23, the Zoning Map, General Plan Land Use Diagram, and the General Plan relating to the Southside Zoning Implementation Program of the 2023-2031 Housing element Update to increase residential development in the Southside Plan area
INFORMATION REPORTS: 

  1. Warhuus, HHCS - Measure O Bond Impacts on Affordable Housing Development in Berkeley
  2. Klein - LPO NOD: 60 Panoramic Way #LMIN2023-001
  3. Klein - LPO NOD: 803 Delaware, LMSAP2023-0002
  4. Klein - LPO NOD: 1960 San Antonio/645 Arlington LMSAP2022-0005
  5. Klein - LPO NOD: 2113-2115 Kittredge LMSAP2022-0011
  6. Planning Commission Fiscal Year 2023-24 Work Plan
 

+++++++++++++++++++++++ 

 

LAND USE CALENDAR PUBLIC HEARINGS: 

  • 2924 Russell 2/27/2024
  • 3000 Shattuck Avenue (Construct 10-story mixed-use building) – TBD
WORK SESSIONS & SPECIAL MEETINGS: 

  • December 5, 2023 – Re-Imagining Public Safety Update and Ceasefire– (to be the only action item of the evening, Wengraf and Arreguin will be absent on December 5)
  • Draft Waterfront Specific Plan (proposed for January 23, 2024 – rescheduled from November 2, 2023)
  • February 6, 2024 – Office of Economic Development (OED) Dashboards Presentation
UNSCHEDULED WORK SESSIONS & SPECIAL MEETINGS 

  • Fire Department Standards of Coverage & Community Risk Assessment (December 5 at regular council meeting)
  • Dispatch Needs Assessment Presentation
  • Presentation on Homelessness/Re-Housing/Thousand-Person Plan
PAST MEETINGS with reports worth reading: 

* * * * * 

 

Kelly Hammargren’s summary on what happened the preceding week is posted on the What Happened page at: https://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/what-happened.html and in the Berkeley Daily Planet https://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com/ 

 

The Activist’s Calendar of meetings is posted on the What’s Ahead page at: https://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/whats-ahead.html 

 

If you would like to receive the Activist’s Calendar as soon as it is completed send an email to: kellyhammargren@gmail.com.If you want to receive the Activist’s Diary send an email to kellyhammargren@gmail.com. If you wish to stop receiving the weekly calendar of city meetings please forward the email you received to- kellyhammargren@gmail.com -with the request to be removed from the email list. 

______________ 

For Online Public Meetings 

CLOSED CAPTIONING, SAVE TRANSCRIPT OVERVIEW, DIRECTIONS and ZOOM SUPPORT LINKS:
.

ZOOM has as part of the program -(for no extra cost)- Closed Captioning (CC). It turns computer voice recognition into a text transcript. Closed Captioning and show full transcript and the save option are only available when the person setting up the ZOOM meeting has activated these options. If you don’t see CC ask for it. If it can’t be activated for the current meeting ask for it for future meetings. 

 

The accuracy of the Closed Captioning is affected by background noise and other factors, The CC and transcript will not be perfect, but most of the time reading through it the few odd words, can be deciphered--for example "Shattuck" was transcribed as Shadow in one recent transcript. 

 

For the online attendee, the full transcript is only available from the time the attendee activates Show Full Transcript. But if you sit through a meeting and then remember 10 minutes before it is over to click on Show Full Transcript you will only get the last 10 minutes, not the full transcript – So click often on both Save Transcript and on Save to Folder during the meeting for best results. 

 

When you click on Show Full Transcript it will allow you to scroll up and down, so if want to go back and see what was said earlier you can do that during the meeting while the transcript is running. 

 

At the bottom of the transcript when we as attendees are allowed to save there will be a button for, "Save Transcript," you can click on the button repeatedly throughout the meeting and it will just overwrite and update the full transcript. Clicking on the Save Transcript repeatedly as the meeting is coming to an end is important because once the host ends the meeting, the transcript is gone if you didn't save it. 

 

Near the end of the meeting, after you click on "Save Transcript," click on "Save to Folder." The meeting transcript will show up (as a download to your desktop) in a separate box as a text file. (These text files are not large.) After you have done your last Save Transcript and Save to Folder (after the meeting is over) you can rename the new transcript folder on your computer, and save it (re-read or send or share it). 

 

Remember, allowing us attendees to save the meeting transcript does not require the public meeting host to save the transcript (for public record.) 

 

Here is the link to ZOOM Support for how to set up Closed Captioning for a meeting or webinar:
https://support.zoom.us/hc/en-us/articles/8158738379917#h_01GHWATNVPW5FR304S2SVGXN2X 

 

Here is the link to ZOOM Support for attendees in how to save Closed Captions: 

https://support.zoom.us/hc/en-us/articles/360060958752-Using-save-captions#h_01F5XW3BGWJAKJFWCHPPZGBD70 

 

How to convert a YouTube video into a transcript 

 

Copy the YouTube url into the box with “enter a youtube url” and click on go https://youtubetranscript.com/ 

The transcript (not perfect, but very close) will appear instantaneously