Calendar

9896
Nov
17
Tue
Stop Berkeley’s Anti-Homeless Laws: Berkeley City Council @ Old City Hall
Nov 17 @ 6:00 pm – 10:00 pm

A rally on the steps at 6:00 PM.
Council meeting begins at 7:00 PM.

Agenda item #28 (anti-homeless ordinances) Improve Conditions on Our Community Sidewalks; Amending Berkeley Municipal Code Chapters 13.36 and 14.4 may not be heard until after 9:00 PM.

Also there will be agenda item #24 City Manager Referral: Implementation of Tier One Recommendations from the Homeless Task Force

Also, check out the press conference the day before.

#28

From: Councilmembers Maio, Capitelli, Droste, and Mayor Bates

Recommendation: Discuss and refer the following services and ordinances to the City Manager for implementation, and adopt first reading of three Ordinances:
1. Adding Section 13.36.085 to the Berkeley Municipal Code prohibiting urination and defecation in public places.
2. Amending Sections 14.48.020 and 14.48.170 of the Berkeley Municipal Code regulating use of sidewalks.
3. Adding Section 13.36.040 to the Berkeley Municipal Code prohibiting obstruction of City-owned planters and trees.
Additional Services:
1. Create a secure storage facility for personal belongings; bins must be of adequate size, of reasonable number (estimate of 50 – 100 at the outset) and ensure reasonable access, with posted hours.
2. Provide additional bathrooms in the Downtown and Telegraph areas.
3. Provide mobile showers and bathrooms for public use.

Ordinances Would Disallow:
1. Urination and defecation in public spaces.
2. The placement of personal belongings on sidewalks and plazas covering more than 2 square feet during the day, from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. (storage to be provided).
3. The placement of a wheeled mobile unit, no more than 6 square feet in size (i.e. a standard shopping cart) during the day, from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. for no more than one hour in one location after which time the unit must be moved to a different block face (storage to be provided).
Note: Purpose of #2 and #3: Amend Berkeley Municipal Code Chapter 14.48 so the Traffic Engineer may adopt regulations and ensure that public streets, and especially sidewalks, are fully accessible and usable for the purposes for which they were constructed and intended, specifically the movement of goods and traffic, pedestrians and wheelchairs.
4. Lying inside of planter beds or on planter walls.
5. Personal items affixed to or placed on public fixtures including poles, bike racks (except bikes), planters, trees, tree guards, newspaper racks, parking meters and pay stations. Pet leashes exempt only as not prohibited in BMC 10.12.110.
6. Placement of personal objects in planters, tree wells, or within 2 feet of a tree well to enable tree care and to protect tree trunks.

In Addition:
A. Provide public notice before enforcement, including direct interaction with persons to explain the ordinances, location of storage facilities, and location of services.
B. Prior to issuing a citation regarding personal belongings persons shall receive an initial warning with information regarding available storage.
C. Refer to the budget process extending transition-aged youth shelter hours beyond winter months. D. Make public restrooms available and well publicized. Involve BART in exploring possible locations.
E. Ordinances concerning the placement of personal belongings and wheeled mobile units on sidewalks will not be enforced until storage services are in place.

#24

From: Councilmember Arreguin
Recommendation: Refer to the City Manager to develop a plan to implement the Tier One Recommendations of the Homeless Task Force, which involve expanding the City’s Homeless Outreach Team and Mobile Crisis Team, increasing funding for the Crisis Intervention Training (CIT), increasing the number of public restrooms, and providing additional storage spaces and warming centers for the homeless population.

59954
Nov
19
Thu
Black Lives Matter! BART Board: Drop the Charges!
Nov 19 @ 8:00 am – 11:30 am

Nine months ago we flooded the BART Board meetings twice in a row, overwhelmed them with hours and hours of public comments, surprise banners, chanting, and general people power, and forced BART to drop the restitution against the Black Friday 14!

Now, as we approach the one-year anniversary of the Black Friday action that was a call to action nationwide for people of conscience to step UP to end the state-sanctioned War on Black lives, it is time for us all to return to BART and demand that they urge D.A. Nancy O’Malley to#DROPTHECHARGES NOW!

Start practicing your speech, cuz it’s time again to flood the BART Board meeting with public comments and show BART that we’re still here, we’re still fighting, we still stand with the #BlackFriday14, we still remember their racist and deadly legacy, and it’s time they took steps to get on the right side of history!

59898
FIGHTING BACK: How Bay Area activists are defending our civil liberties @ St Cyprian's Church
Nov 19 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

San Francisco Progressive Democrats of America

FIGHTING BACK III
How Bay Area activists are defending our civil liberties

Our freedoms are being threatened more than at any time since the McCarthy period of the fifties.  Not just by the antics of politicians, but directly in our living space: Massive surveillance with the latest technology; the militarization of the police; online monitoring of our messages; the unrestrained killing of African-American and other minority people; media self-censorship.

As always, resistance and opposition are coming from activists on the ground. This is especially true in the Bay Area. At this month’s forum, activists will tell us what they are doing to fight back against the incipient police state.

Speakers:

Shahid Buttar, Director of Grassroots Advocacy, Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
Tessa Drcangelew, Leadership Development Manager at the ACLU of Northern California:
Zaki Manian, San Francisco Organizer, Restore the Fourth
Tracy Rosenberg, Executive Director, Media Alliance

A free public forum — Wheelchair accessible  — Snacks and beverages served

59956
Forum on East Bay Hills Deforestation @ The Oakland Center for Spiritual Living
Nov 19 @ 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm

PLEASE SHARE this so we pack the house with 200 new neighbors: A Panel Presentation by Experts is the next big opportunity, before the holidays, to inform and educate our community of the massive 450,000-tree deforestation plan in the Oakland and Berkeley Hills:

Panelists include:
1) Dave Maloney, former Chief of Fire Prevention at Oakland Army Base;
2) Dan Grassetti, founder of The Hills Conservation Network;
3) Peter Gray Scott, 1991 Oakland hills fire survivor who instigated The Grand Jury investigation of that fire
Moderator is Jack Gescheidt, TreeSpirit Project founder

• A full hour of audience Q&A will follow so the community can ask follow-up questions.

TreeSpirit Project Event page: http://TreeSpiritProject.com/PanelTalk111915
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/events/527182347436611

59978
Nov
20
Fri
Fight Back Against Oakland Killer Cops! @ Fruitvale BART
Nov 20 @ 7:00 pm – 11:45 pm

59993
Mass Copwatching Event by Berkeley Copwatch @ Grassroots House
Nov 20 @ 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm

We observe and document all suspicious activities of our local law enforcement agencies.
Come learn the art of copwatching and help out as we go out afterwards on our “neighborhood watch.”

Pizza provided during debrief.

59948
The Spirit of Bandung: Black Liberation & Third World Solidarity @ East Side Cultural Center
Nov 20 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

59964
Nov
21
Sat
NorCal Climate Mobilization: Challenging Climate Catastrophe @ Lake Merritt Amphitheater, then Oscar Grant Plaza
Nov 21 @ 10:30 am – 4:00 pm

NCCM Banner ImageJoin other environmental activists from around the Bay Area in a Northern California mass mobilization in advance of the 2015 UN Conference of Parties in Paris (COP21). The demands are familiar but the urgency to act grows with each passing day:
End all fracking, tar sands mining and pipelines, offshore drilling, arctic drilling. Stop expansion of the extractive economy. Wind, solar, geothermal power now. No coal exports or crude-by-rail bomb trains in Northern California.

10:30 am – Gather at Lake Merritt Amphitheatre (map)
12:00 noon – March
1:00 pm – Rally at Frank Ogawa/Oscar Grant Plaza

Family friendly. Wheelchair accessible march route.

Learn more, get involved at event website.

A dramatic and rapid reduction in Global Warming pollution is necessary to create:

  • A world united to repair the ravages of climate change
  • A world with an economy that works for people and the planet
  • A demilitarized world with peace and social justice for everyone; where Black Lives Matter; where good jobs, clean air and water, and healthy communities belong to all.
59571
Totally Free Thanksgiving Meals @ New Parkway Theater
Nov 21 @ 11:00 am – 12:00 pm

59947
Alternatives to the Police & Prison: An Intro Workshop @ Berkeley South Library
Nov 21 @ 2:30 pm – 4:30 pm

Are you tired of racist, classist, ableist and anti-homeless policing? Want to deal with crisis and conflict in other ways?

When the police fail to “protect and serve,” who can we turn to in moments of need? How can we respond to conflict and crisis without the punishment and violence that comes with policing and prisons? What would take to build and use alternative responses in our own lives and communities?

Come out to talk about these questions and more.

If folks want to share (optional, of course), there will be time to talk about situations from our lives and brainstorm responses that prioritize de-escalation, accountability, healing and preventing harm.

Everyone is welcome to attend, regardless of their stance on the police. However, the focus of this workshop will be on considering options other than the police.

Snacks will be provided.

 

***Please RSVP by 11/14 if possible to email above***

OR RSVP on this Facebook page

59873
Fundraiser for Refugee Services. @ Station 40, across from BART
Nov 21 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Fundraiser for Soli-Kitchen Convoy, a radical group in Europe which travels to various border points providing direct services to refugees.

Food, speakers, and discussion on the political and historical context of the current wave of Syrian refugees seeking asylum in Europe, and Central American refugees in North America, the policing of migration and the possibilities for resisting borders.

Organized by the Bay Area Anti-Repression Committee.

60013
Breaking through Borders – Oppression and Resistance at the Borders of Europe and the U.S. @ Station 40
Nov 21 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

TTflyerdraft2What: Fundraiser, cafe, and discussion on the political and historical context of the current wave of Syrian refugees seeking asylum in Europe and Central American refugees in North America. We will discuss the policing ofmigration and the possibilities for resisting borders. Benefit for solidarity group providing material aid to migrants as they make their journey across Europe.

*please note that Station 40 is up two flights of stairs and is unfortunately wheelchair inaccessible.

 

 

 

59950
Nov
22
Sun
A Year Without Tamir ~ Angelversary and Speakout for All Victims of Police Terrorism
Nov 22 @ 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm

The family of Tamir Rice, the 12 year old boy who was killed on November 22, 2014 in Cleveland, Ohio, has called for a national day of action on the anniversary of this blue-blooded act of terrorism.

We must continue the fight for justice on Tamir’s behalf and on behalf of ALL VICTIMS OF STATE SPONSORED TERRORISM. We must stand together with all the families as one ~ in love, solidarity, and struggle. By fighting against police terrorism in unity, we will bring an end to these vicious crimes against humanity.

Rally at 1:00pm at Powell & Market
March to follow.

Please bring red ribbon to symbolize the trail of bloodshed and honor the lives of all those slain by police terrorism.

#NoMoreStolenLives #NoFamilyLeftBehind

59979
Justice 4 Tamir Rice!
Nov 22 @ 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm

Protests nationwide on the 1-year anniversary of the killing of Tamir.

One year and still NO CHARGES against his murderers.

59941
Teach-In on the housing affordability crisis in Berkeley @ Berkeley Arts Festival Space
Nov 22 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Teach-In on the housing affordability crisis in Berkeley and what can be done about it.
Facilitator:
Paola Laverde,
Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board Commissioner
Speakers:
Stephen Barton, Ph.D., Former Director of the Housing Department
and Deputy Director of the Rent Stabilization Program in Berkeley
Moni Law, Affordable Housing Activist
   Rick Lewis, Executive Director, Bay Area Community Land Trust
and former Housing Advisory Commission Member
  Austin Pritzkat, President, Berkeley Student Cooperative
  Katherine Harr, Berkeley Tenants Union
Panelist will address
* What are the dimensions of this crisis and what can we do about it?
* What could our local elected officials do to address this crisis?
* How do we prevent displacement?
* How could the City generate more revenue for the Housing Trust Fund
to fund affordable housing construction and acquisition?
Peruse or post local announcements:
http://berkeleycitizensaction.org
Join Berkeley Citizens Action on Facebook please: https://www.facebook.com/groups/319627034774973/

59863
Open Circle ~ Families Fighting for Justice @ Omni Commons
Nov 22 @ 3:30 pm – 5:30 pm

59100
Sunday Night @ Long Haul Free Movie: This is What Democracy Looks Like @ Longhaul
Nov 22 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Free Movie: This is What Democracy Looks Like (2000 Documentary Directed by Jill Friedberg and Rick Rowley – 72 minutes.) Filmed during the WTO protest in Seattle, November 30, 1999. Plus WTO shorts and discussion.

60020
World in Danger: From Fukushima to California @ Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists’ Hall
Nov 22 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

The Fukushima nuclear plant disaster remains very dangerous. What might we still be able to do about it? Who’s monitoring radiation levels? What about California’s last nuclear plant, Diablo Canyon, surrounded by a dozen earthquake faults, and San Onofre, closed in 2013 but containing tons of nuclear waste? Nuclear engineer Arnie Gundersen and Fairewinds Director Maggie Gundersen; with Joanna Macy, environmental activist, author, scholar of Buddhism, deep ecology, whose work addresses psychological and spiritual issues of the nuclear age; Gar Smith, author “Nuclear Roulette”; Mary Beth Brangan, EON-Ecological Options Network; songs by singer-songwriter Vic Sadot.

Sponsored by the BFUU SJC, EON, Codepink Women for Peace
Wheelchair accessible.

For occasional email notices of peace/eco/social justice alerts and related events at BFUU, send any email to:
bfuusjev-subscribe [at] lists.riseup.net

For weekly notices of BFUU services etc. go to:
http://www.bfuu.org/signup.html

60021
Nov
23
Mon
Protest the War on Black People: Drop the Charges on Black Friday 14 @ Snow Park
Nov 23 @ 3:45 pm – 5:00 pm

Stand against the war on black people on Monday Nov. 23rd! Protest global displacement, policing and repression! Protest state Violence!

One of the many weapons of State sanctioned violence is displacement. The gentrification we see in the Bay Area is an extension of land theft, exploitation, colonial expansion, and forced migration seen all across the world. Communities impacted by displacement will be coming together to raise their voices in support of the Black Friday14! While the State attempts to criminalize Black activists for demonstrating their power, we will demonstrate our commitment collective liberation and to ending anti-Black violence here and everywhere.

Let’s honor cultures and the resilience of our communities here in Oakland. Let’s show the City of Oakland what the people of Oakland stand for!

**Bring a paint brush OR a toothbrush!!**

#3rdWorld4BlackPower #BlackLivesMatter #BlackPowerMatters#BlackResistanceMatters #BlackFriday14

60016
Occupy Forum: The Foundations of Racism in America @ Global Exchange, 2nd Floor
Nov 23 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm


Information, discussion & community! Monday Night Forum!!
OccupyForum is an opportunity for open and respectful dialogue
on all sides of these critically important issues!

Occupyforum presents

The foundations of racism in America:
“Race” is not a noun, it is a verb (“to racialize”)
with Steve Martinot
“White supremacy is not just racism, or an ideology; it is the core of a culture. “Race” is produced by cultural structures and not just by psychological aberrations, or by attributing characteristics to human beings. These structures emerged in the Virginia colony during the 17th century as part of the way the English colonized the land, demonized the indigenous, and enslaved Africans.

To recognize the operations of the structures of racialization in the US today, and the role of white racialized identity in maintaining those structures, we must know their history. Thus we can see the structural components, and identify them in contemporary events and political processes. This capability has become all the more urgent because, though the civil rights movements seriously undermined the hegemony of whiteness, it did not contest the underlying structures of racialization. It is the resurfacing of those structures that is now making a violent political comeback, and reconstituting the elements of white racialized identity.

The strength of this comeback leaves the old language of anti-racism weak and ineffective. The new resistance that this resurgence has engendered needs to see much more clearly what we are up against than the old civil rights movements did. To see and hit at the core of this resurgence, which includes the prison industry and the police-prison nexus, we need to see how its structural components work together and resurrect each other.”

Steve Martinot has been a human rights activist most of his life as a union organizer, community organizer, anti-war activist and historian on the structures of racialization in the US. He is a former political prisoner, and active in prisoner solidarity work today. His 8 books include “The Rule of Racialization” and “The Machinery of Whiteness,” (Temple University Press). His latest publication is

“The Need to Abolish the Prison System.”

Time will be allotted for Q&A, discussion and announcements.

Wheelchair accessible, ride shares announced.

59995