REGULAR BERKELEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1999
AGENDA
Preliminary Matters
Roll Call: 7:05 p.m.
Ceremonial Matters: In addition to those items listed on the agenda, the
Mayor may add additional ceremonial matters.
Comments From The City Manager: The City Manager may make announcements or
provide information to the City Council in the form of an oral report. The Council will
not take action on such items, but may request the City Manager place a report on a future
agenda for discussion.
Comments From The Public: A total of thirty (30) minutes is scheduled. Each
speaker is limited to a maximum of three (3) minutes.
Council Action: The City Council may take action related to any subject listed
on the Agenda.
Consent Calendar
The Council will consider removal and addition of items to the Consent Calendar prior
to voting on the Consent Calendar. All items remaining on the Consent Calendar will be
approved in one motion. Items removed from the Consent Calendar will be taken up after the
"Action Calendar" unless the Council reorders the agenda.
1. Needle Exchange Emergency Distribution
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution reviewing and confirming the continued existence of
a local emergency with regard to HIV transmission from use of HIV-infected needles among
injection drug users, and authorizing the Director of Public Health to take steps to
enable the operation of needle exchange emergency distribution.
Contact: Manuela Albuquerque, City Attorney, 644-6380
2. Ordinances for Second Reading
(First Reading 9/14 - Vote: Abstain - Armstrong, Olds, Worthington; Absent -
Breland):
a. Amending Berkeley Municipal Code Section 14.56.050A to add streets in the area
bounded by Dwight Way, University Avenue, McKinley Avenue and Sacramento Street to
be controlled with a five ton gross vehicle weight limit.
(First Reading 9/14 - Vote: Unanimous; Absent - Breland):
b. Amending Berkeley Municipal Code Title 23, Zoning, by amending Sections
23F.04.010, Definitions, and Sections 23E.80.030 and 23E.80.045, regarding material
recovery enterprise.
Contact: Sherry M. Kelly, City Clerk, 644-6480
3. Lawsuit Settlement: John Sparks
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution approving a settlement of Alameda County Superior
Court Action No. 806864-0 in the matter of John Sparks for $26,000.
Contact: Manuela Albuquerque, City Attorney, 644-6380
4. Lawsuit Settlement: Joseph Baker
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution approving a settlement of Alameda County Superior
Court Action No. 810680-5 in the matter of Joseph Baker for $8,500.
Contact: Manuela Albuquerque, City Attorney, 644-6380
5. Annual Assessment: Downtown Berkeley Business Improvement District
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution approving the calendar year 2000 Annual Report for
the Downtown Berkeley Business Improvement District; declaring Council's intention to levy
an annual assessment for the Downtown Berkeley Business Improvement District for calendar
year 2000; and directing the City Clerk to schedule a public hearing on October 19, 1999
to consider levying a renewed assessment for calendar year 2000.
Contact: Bill Lambert, Economic Development, 705-8180
6. Waive Building Permit and Design Review Fees
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution waiving building permit and design review fees in
the amount of $5,000 for the Women's Daytime Drop-In Center due to unexpected construction
delays.
Contact: Stephen Barton, Housing, 644-6001
7. Predevelopment Loan: 2700 San Pablo Avenue
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution authorizing the City Manager to execute a
predevelopment loan from Bayer mitigation funds for Jubilee Restoration, Inc. and
Panoramic Interest in an amount not to exceed $20,000 for a proposed low and moderate
income mixed use project at 2700 San Pablo Avenue.
Contact: Stephen Barton, Housing, 644-6001
8. Contract: Asbestos and Lead Abatement for Civic Center Building Project
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution authorizing the City Manager to amend the contract
with Forensic Analytical Specialties to provide asbestos and lead abatement monitoring
services for the Martin Luther King Jr. Civic Center Building Project by increasing the
amount $37,160 for a total contract amount not to exceed $60,160 and extending the period
through November 1, 2000.
Contact: Rene Cardinaux, Capital Projects, 644-6580
9. Certify Zoning Adjustments Board Decision Regarding 1608 Fourth Street (to
be delivered)
From: City Manager
Recommendation: 1) Certify the decision of the Zoning Adjustments Board
(ZAB) action
of September 23, 1999, relevant to Use Permit 99-10000052, the former Courtald's
industrial site located at 1608 Fourth Street; 2) schedule the matter for a public hearing
on October 19, 1999 for consideration of the proposed project and ZAB's action; and 3)
Waive Council Rules to take action on the project the same night as the public hearing.
Contact: Elizabeth Epstein, Planning and Development, 705-8105
10. Contract: Marina Dock Storm Damage Repair
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution approving plans and specifications for Marina Dock
Storm Damage Repair; accepting the bid of M.B. Construction, Inc.; and authorizing the
City Manager to execute a contract and any amendments in an amount not to exceed $442,684
for the period September 29, 1999 through April 1, 2000.
Contact: Andreas Campos-Kreutzer, Public Works, 644-6506
11. Contract: Emergency Sidewalk Repair Project
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution approving plans and specifications for the Fiscal
Year 2000 Emergency Sidewalk Repair Project; accepting the bid of AJW Construction; and
authorizing the City Manager to execute a contract and any amendments in an amount not to
exceed $680,229 for the period September 20, 1999 to June 30, 2000.
Contact: Andreas Campos-Kreutzer, Public Works, 644-6506
a. City Manager Supplemental Report (to be delivered)
Contact: Andreas Campos-Kreutzer, Public Works, 644-6506
12. Contract: Spiral Sidewalk Repair Project
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution approving plans and specifications for the Fiscal
Year 2000 Spiral Sidewalk Repair Project; accepting the bid of AJW Construction; and
authorizing the City Manager to execute a contact and any amendments in an amount not to
exceed $338,551 for the period September 30, 1999 to June 30, 2000.
Contact: Andreas Campos-Kreutzer, Public Works, 644-6506
13. Contract: 2455 Prospect Street Construction (to be delivered)
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution authorizing the City Manager to negotiate and
execute a contract and any amendments in an amount not to exceed $75,000 for project
management of planning, architectural and construction management services at 2455
Prospect Street pursuant to court order in the event owner does not complete mandated work
by specific date.
Contact: Elizabeth Epstein, Planning and Development, 705-8105
14. Berkeley Campus Policy Regarding Replacement of Parking Facilities by Capital
Projects
From: Councilmembers Worthington and Spring
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution calling on the University of California Chancellor
to: 1) review and revise the "Berkeley Campus Policy Regarding Replacement of Parking
Facilities by Capital Projects", 2) hear pros and cons about the policy, and 3)
consult with the City Council, Transportation Commission, neighborhood representatives,
ASUC Senate, and others affected but not included in this decision.
Contact: Kriss Worthington, Councilmember District 7, 644-6398; Dona Spring, Councilmember
District 4, 644-6266
15. Discontinue Criminal Charges Against UC Berkeley Students
From: Councilmember Worthington and Vice Mayor Shirek
Recommendation: Requests University Chancellor Robert Berdahl to: 1) Immediately
discontinue all Office of Student Conduct proceedings against Maria Brenes, Eva
Camarena,
Francisco Casique, Joanna Eveland, Sara Kaplan, Charles McNally, Shaheed Mustafa, and
Christopher Zamani, and that no punitive measures be taken against them as a result of
their participation in the actions taken in support of the Department of Ethnic Studies;
2) Take all actions within the Chancellor's power and purview to facilitate the dismissal
of all criminal charges against Victor Alarcon, Francisco Casique, Joanna
Eveland, Charles
McNally, Shaheed Mustafa, and Christopher Zamani, including but not limited to written
communication to the Alameda County District Attorney expressing this request; 3) Rescind
and erase from students' records all "Letters of Admonishment" issued to student
protestors; and 4) Reinstate Sara Kaplan to her job at the Recreational Sports Facility.
Contact: Kriss Worthington, Councilmember District 7, 644-6398; Maudelle
Shirek,
Councilmember District 3, 644-6243
16. Parking Enforcement Policy
From: Councilmember Armstrong
Recommendation: Ask the City Manager to establish, effective October 1, 1999, an
enforcement policy for traffic tickets that stipulates parking enforcement officers will
negate a parking ticket if the driver being ticketed appears while the ticket is being
written.
Contact: Polly Armstrong, Councilmember District 8, 644-6401
17. West Berkeley Air Quality
From: Councilmember Spring
Recommendation: Request the City Manager send a letter to Bay Area Air Quality
Management District (BAAQMD): 1) expressing Council's concerns regarding the cumulative
impact of BAAQMD discharge permits to West Berkeley air quality and public health; 2)
request that BAAQMD conduct an area-wide emissions exposure study for Pacific Steel
Castings and other BAAQMD permit holders within one quarter mile of Gilman and Second
Streets; 3) study to include a review and evaluation of emission inventories, ambient air
monitoring, dust/soil testing and a modeling/risk assessment component to estimate
exposure to air toxics in the immediate area.
Contact: Dona Spring, Councilmember District 4, 644-6266
18. Landmarks Preservation Commission Designation of 725 Gilman Street
From: Mayor Dean and Councilmember Olds
Recommendation: Certify to Council the designation by the Landmarks Preservation
Commission of 725 Gilman "Hot Dip Galvinizing", as a Structure of Merit.
Contact: Jennifer Drapeau, Mayor's Office, 644-6484; Betty Olds, Councilmember District 6,
644-6399
19. Sidewalk and Median Strip Signs
From: Mayor Dean and Councilmember Maio
Recommendation: Refer to the City Manager an amendment to Berkeley Municipal Code
Section 20.16.190 which would allow ground signs on all Saturdays and Sundays of the year,
retaining all conditions in the current ordinance and adding a new condition that all
signs must be removed Sunday evening; scheduling the amended ordinance for first reading
on October 12 and the second reading for October 19 if, in the opinion of the City
Attorney, the proposed amendment can be fast-tracked.
Contact: Jennifer Drapeau, Mayor's Office, 644-6484; Linda Maio, Councilmember District 1,
644-6359
20. Appointment to the Berkeley Housing Authority
From: Mayor Dean
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution appointing Helen Rippier Wheeler to the Berkeley
Housing Authority for a two-year term.
Contact: Jennifer Drapeau, Mayor's Office, 644-6484
21. Spay-Neuter Ordinance Presentation
From: Councilmember Spring
Recommendation: Set aside 10 minutes at the beginning of the public hearing on
November 16th regarding the Spay-Neuter Ordinance, to view an excerpt of a documentary
film on companion animal over-population.
Contact: Dona Spring, Councilmember District 4, 644-6266
22. Establish a Telecommunications Task Force
From: Councilmembers Worthington and Maio
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution establishing a Telecommunications Task Force by the
Fair Representation Ordinance, that will sunset after one year, to examine
telecommunication issues and address the following: 1) Promoting universal access to cable
and the Internet to every Berkeley resident; 2) Exploring methods to insure low-income
residents can participate fully in receiving Cable TV as well as the full range of
telecommunication services; 3) Exploring invitations of bids from an overbuilder of cable
systems to offer competitive video, internet, and telephony services to Berkeley
residents; 4) Insuring all people in Berkeley including low-income residents have
affordable access to the Internet; 5) Studying the feasibility of making converter boxes
available for purchase as well as rent; 6) Insuring full funding for Berkeley Community
Media; 7) Studying how to fully implement four Public Access Channels; 8) Requesting and
reviewing quarterly status reports on the number and classification of complaints, as well
as the resolution of those complaints; 9) Looking at the TCI annual survey of residents,
businesses, and educational institutions, and suggest improvements to survey
questionnaires; 10) Participate in a seven-year review and update session in order to
ascertain the level and quality of service; 11) Develop a process for the City for keeping
the community informed of new options in telecommunications; 12) Refining and expanding
these tasks if deemed necessary; and 13) Exploring open access in the use of lines by
other Internet Service Providers.
Contact: Kriss Worthington, Councilmember District 7, 644-6398; Linda Maio, Councilmember
District 1, 644-6359
23. HAAS Pavilion M.O.U. 30-Month Status Report
From: Councilmember Worthington
Recommendation: Request the City Manager appoint a staff person to review the status
of implementation of the Haas Pavilion Memorandum of Understanding and report back with
the status: 1) The preliminary report should primarily focus on the concerns of small
business owners, neighborhood residents, and the community concerns represented in Section
C - Fiscal and Economic Measures 1 through 7 (as outlined in this report); 2) A later
report should more thoroughly address the complete complicated MOU, but the time sensitive
nature of Section C requires a prompt report on this section; and 3) Include the continued
availability of Edwards Field to community runners in the preliminary report.
Contact: Kriss Worthington, Councilmember District 7, 644-6398
24. University Shuttle in South Campus Neighborhoods
From: Vice Mayor Shirek and Councilmember Worthington
Recommendation: Direct the City Manager to inform the University of California
Chancellor's Office that until the University complies with all applicable City, County
and State laws and submit its plans for expanded University shuttle in the South Campus
neighborhoods to the appropriate City boards and commissions, that this shuttle activity
be suspended; and that the City Manager have the Berkeley Police Department enforce all
existing City Traffic Ordinances, including noise, tonnage restrictions, etc. regarding
the University's Southside shuttle service.
Contact: Maudelle Shirek, Councilmember District 3, 644-6243; Kriss Worthington,
Councilmember District 7, 644-6398
Presentations
25. Fire Free 88: Fire Resistant Paint
Contact: Linda Maio, Councilmember District 1, 644-6359
26. Update on San Pablo Avenue Transit Corridor
Contact: Margaret Breland, Councilmember District 2, 644-6400
27. Gang Violence Prevention Initiative
From: Councilmembers Spring, Breland, Worthington, and Vice Mayor Shirek
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution supporting the efforts by the Berkeley High School
youth group "Berkeley High School Youth Together" and offering Berkeley's youth
positive solutions by opposing AB 1735 and a State-wide initiative based on AB 1735 known
as the "Gang Violence Prevention Initiative"; and requesting the City Manager
inform our elected State representatives and ask them to join us in opposing this
draconian legislation.
Contact: Dona Spring, Councilmember District 4, 644-6266; Margaret Breland, Councilmember
District 2, 644-6400; Kriss Worthington, Councilmember District 7, 644-6398; Maudelle
Shirek, Councilmember District 3, 644-6243
Action Calendar
Appeals:
28. Zoning Appeal of Use Permit 99-20000082 - 1328 Walnut Street
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution affirming the decision of the Zoning Adjustments
Board approving a Use Permit to Judith Buist to construct a 1,393 square foot residential
addition to the rear of the structure, including a bedroom, dining room, bathroom and
decking at 1328 Walnut Street and dismissing the appeal.
Contact: Liz Epstein, Planning and Development, 705-8105
a. Communications from:
1. Marilyn Siegel
2. Judith Buist, applicant
Contact: Sherry M. Kelly, City Clerk, 644-6480
NOTICE CONCERNING YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS: If you object to a decision
by the City Council to approve or deny a use permit or variance for a project the
following requirements and restrictions apply: 1) No lawsuit challenging a City decision
to deny (Code Civ.Proc. ?1094.6(b)) or approve (Gov.Code ?65009(c)(5)) a use permit or
variance may be filed more than 90 days after the date the Notice of Decision of the
action of the City Council is mailed. Any lawsuit not filed within that 90-day period will
be barred. It is your obligation to inquire with the City Clerk (644-6480) to determine
when a Notice of Decision is mailed. 2) In any lawsuit that may be filed against a
City Council decision to approve or deny a use permit or variance, the issues and evidence
will be limited to those raised by you or someone else, orally or in writing, at a public
hearing or prior to the close of the last public hearing on the project.
Old Business:
29. Voting Delegates, Annual Congress of Cities (held over from September 14
meeting)
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Designate a voting delegate and alternate to act on behalf of the City
at the policy-making meeting of the Annual Congress of Cities and direct the City Clerk to
transmit the names of the delegates to the National League of Cities no later than October
11, 1999.
Contact: Sherry M. Kelly, City Clerk, 644-6480
30. Council Operating Budgets (D-13) (held over from September 14 meeting)
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Adopt two Resolutions to 1) Establish general policy guidelines for
Council Operating Budgets (staff salaries, fringe benefits and operating expenditures) and
establish an allocation of $48,480 per Councilmember for FY 2000 with cost of living
adjustments for Council Aide salaries and fringe benefits beginning in FY 2001 and 2)
authorize an additional $15,000 in Councilmember Spring's operating budget for FY 2000 and
$15,000 for FY 2001.
Contact: Phil Kamlarz, Deputy City Manager, 644-6580
a. Reports from Councilmember Spring (dated September 28, 1999)
1. Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution, that in the interest of the public's right to
know how elected officials are reimbursed for discretionary expenditures, that
Councilmembers not voting for the policy to increase the Council's discretionary allowance
must file an information item on a Council Agenda if they want to apply for the increase
at a later time.
2. Recommendation: Take action on the 1999-2000 Mayor's budget recommendation as
follows: 1) Approve yearly cost-of-living increases for her aides' salaries budgeted at an
annual minimum of $129,697 not including benefits. These cost-of-living increases be
consistent with the cost-of-living increases provided to the unrepresented class of City
employees; 2) $19,635 for non-personnel expenses; 3) $18,000 in discretionary funding for
a total of $167,332; 4) Provide for carry-over of unexpended FY1999 appropriations to
FY2000 for non-personnel expenditures only; and 5) Commencing in FY2000, provide for
annual carry-over of unexpended discretionary appropriations (excluding fringe benefit
allocations) to subsequent fiscal years for non-personnel expenditures only, in an amount
not to exceed $5,000.
Contact: Dona Spring, Councilmember District 4, 644-6266
31. University Avenue Median Landscaping (CR 98-77) (held over from September
21 meeting by Councilmember Olds)
From: City Manager
Contact: Lisa Caronna, Parks and Waterfront, 644-6943
32. Decision on Public Hearing Regarding Creating 4-Way Stop at Intersection of
Euclid/Virginia (see September 21 packet for material)
From: City Manager
Recommendation: Adopt a Resolution amending Section 20 of Resolution No. 56,502-N.S.
by modifying Subsection 20e-24 to designate the intersection of Euclid/Virginia as a 4-way
stop.
Contact: Andreas Campos-Kreutzer, Public Works, 644-6506
33. State Infrastructure Bank (held over from July 20 and September 14
meetings)
From: Mayor Dean
Recommendation: Request the City Manager do an analysis of funding up to $47.5 million
of unfunded street repairs through a loan from the newly established State Infrastructure
Bank; that the City Manager is to consider the source of funds to be used for payback of
this loan as the General Funds which have been designated for street repair (approximately
$1 million); that given the interest rate which will be imposed and the amount of
available funds for payback that the City Manager advise the Council what size loan would
be appropriate and what steps should be taken at our next meeting September 14, 1999.
Contact: Shirley Dean, Mayor, 644-6484
34. Process to Amend West Berkeley Plan and Zoning Ordinance (held over form
July 20 and September 14 meetings)
From: Mayor Dean and Councilmember Olds
Recommendation: Request the City Manager initiate a process to amend the West Berkeley
Plan and Zoning Ordinance (as necessary) to allow retail in the Mixed Use-Light Industrial
District on Eastshore Highway between Hearst and Virginia (approximately a one-block
area), that if in the course of this process, staff and involved commissions determine the
area should be different from what is described above, they should feel free to make that
recommendation to the Council.
Contact: Shirley Dean, Mayor, 644-6484; Betty Olds, Councilmember District 6, 644-6399
a. City Manager Report (dated September 14, 1999)
Recommendation: That no action be taken to initiate an amendment to the West Berkeley
Plan and Zoning Ordinance to allow retail in the Mixed Use-Light Industrial
(MULI)
District and that zoning enforcement action be delayed until March 2000.
Contact: Elizabeth Epstein, Planning and Development, 705-8105
35. Public Comment Rules (removed from Consent by Councilmember Spring and
held over from September 14 meeting)
From: Mayor Dean
Recommendation: Refer to the Council Committee on Rules a proposal to eliminate the
practice of allowing speakers during the public comment period to defer their time to
another speaker.
Contact: Jennifer Drapeau, Mayor's Office, 644-6484
36. Berkeley Millennium Celebration (removed from Consent by
Councilmember Maio and held over from September 14 meeting as revised)
From: Mayor Dean and Councilmember Breland
Recommendation: Support the following as Berkeley's Millennium Celebration: 1) Add to
the National theme of "Honor the Past, Imagine the Future" a City of
Berkeley theme of "A Call for Peace"; 2) In accordance with the recommendation
of the Police Chief, the City will neither encourage nor sponsor any large gathering of
people on Friday evening, New Year's Eve, December 31, 1999; 3) Sponsor an historic
exhibit in the Veteran's Memorial Building, "Berkeley Then and Now" and the
publication of a Berkeley Time Line written by members of the Berkeley Historical Society
and allocate $800 to the Historical Society for this purpose; 4) Endorse the sale
of Berkeley Millennium Peace Bells as a memento of January 1, 2000, advancing a loan for
the purchase of the bells to be repaid from their sale; request that the Berkeley Unified
School District have school children make peace bells as a classroom project; and urge all
residents through public service announcements, flyers sent home with school children,
letters to watch groups, etc. that instead of firing guns into the air or setting off
fireworks or other noise makers, that residents ring a peace bell from their home at the
stroke of midnight January 1, 2000; 5) Purchase a stainless steel time capsule into which
individuals, families, households, groups, institutions, churches, schools, businesses
will be invited to submit written messages to the future on special acid-free paper and
black and white photos of themselves or Berkeley scenes. The capsule to be designed and
placed as a work-of-art in a public building such as the Main Library, the Civic Center
Building or the Public Safety Building. The capsule to be opened in about 220 years. It
is proposed that the opening date of the capsule be set for February 22, 2222. Costs of
the capsule are to be self-financed through fees, with provision made for scholarships for
those who cannot afford the fee; 6) Endorse the commissioning of the
composition of an official Berkeley song, and a Berkeley poem which also could be engraved
upon the surface of the time capsule; 7) Endorse the raising of private funds for: a) the
purchase of an electronic carillon to strike the hour and half-hour and play Westminster
chimes at an appropriate hour in the Downtown Area. Approval by a majority of the
people within the area affected by the sound of the carillon will be sought, and an option
for the purchase and installation of a silent clock in the belfry of Old City Hall is also
to be considered; and b) the commissioning of a composition by Kent Nagano and
performance of a Berkeley Symphony, or other type of composition, e.g. piano sonata,
quartet, etc., by the Berkeley Symphony Orchestra; 8) Explore with the Civic Arts
Commission, the possibility of commissioning through competition or other process the
creation of a major public art sculpture made from melted-down guns; 9) At a date to be
announced in the Year 2000, hold a public, "I survived Y2K" ceremony, at which
time the poem would be read, the song played, the symphonic composition played, and
the time capsule closed and its future location announced; and 10) Request the
University of California Berkeley Campus toll the midnight hour, December 31, 1999 from
The Campanile.
Contact: Shirley Dean, Mayor, 644-6484
37. Development of Oxford Street Lot (held over from September 14 meeting by
Councilmember Spring with a revised recommendation)
From: Councilmember Spring
Recommendation: That the City-owned Oxford Parking Lot be designated, in the event
that it gets developed as an Opportunity Site for very-low-income residential units at
least half of which have to be affordable to people at 50% and below the median income. In
particular, we encourage the creation of co-op and co-housing units and plans designed to
create a mixture of families, students, and seniors that reflects the diversity of
Berkeley's population. This recommendation should not conflict or interfere with the need
to replace the existing amount of public parking as well as additional parking appropriate
for new development at the site. Due to the importance of this parking being available to
short term parkers in the downtown area, the City would retain control of the parking.
This plan also wants to encourage the construction of space for public cultural elements
(e.g. theater companies or art galleries), since any project at the site should contain
substantial pedestrian-friendly commercial space covering as much as physically feasible
of the Oxford, Allston, and Kittredge frontage, or second-story space where more
practicable. Any development of the site will undergo a thorough planning process
involving all the stakeholders. This issue will be referred to the Council Sub-committee
on Central Berkeley.
Contact: Dona Spring, Councilmember District 4, 644-6266
38. Stepped-up Enforcement of Seismic Retrofitting Requirements (held over
from September 14 meeting)
From: Mayor Dean and Councilmember Olds
Recommendation: 1) Establish a priority in all City Department Work Plans for
1999-2000 for stepped-up enforcement of seismic retrofit requirements for the highest risk
category, particularly theaters, which are on the City's list of Unreinforced Masonry
Buildings (URMs); 2) all theaters will be looked at for seismic safety whether on the URM
list or not; 3) assign a risk category to soft-story apartment buildings and include these
buildings as a priority if the risk category is of the same magnitude of the highest risk
category used for the URM list; 4) that given information gained from the Northridge
Earthquake about welded steel frames that staff consider including other buildings on the
priority list for stepped-up seismic retrofitting if they meet the highest risk category;
5) that staff report back as soon as possible but no later than 45 days for a work plan
with a timeline on proceeding with these evaluations and stepped-up enforcement actions;
and 6) that this report be reviewed by the Seismic Technical Group before it is brought to
the Council.
Contact: Shirley Dean, Mayor, 644-6484
Information Reports
39. Animal Care and Control (CR 99-84)
From: City Manager
Contact: Dash Butler, Police, 644-6568
40. Skateboard Features in City Parks (CR 97-131)
From: City Manager
Contact: Lisa Caronna, Parks and Waterfront, 644-6943
41. Camp Fees for Non-Residents (CR99-89)
From: City Manager
Contact: Fred Medrano, Health and Human Services, 644-6459
42. National Endowment for the Arts Grant Application
From: City Manager
Contact: Bill Lambert, Economic Development, 705-8180
Communications
Council rules limit action on Communications to referral to the City Manager and/or
Boards and Commissions for investigation and/or recommendations.
Page No.
1. Rosemary Vimont, regarding East Campus Playing Fields.
2. Jennifer Logan, Physicians for Human Rights, regarding U.S. Campaign to Ban Landmines.
3. Norine Smith, regarding 1999 General Plan.
4. Joel Myerson, regarding parking meters.
5. Karen Sarlo,
regarding Berkeley Unified School District upcoming events.
6. Carol Denney, regarding accessibility at publicly funded
events.
7. Patrick Kennedy, Panoramic Interests, transmitting articles
regarding traffic and housing.
8. Rachel Rupert, Chamber of Commerce, regarding Southern
Pacific and Santa Fe Railways land dispute.
9. Neighbors for Responsible Development Committee, regarding Environmental Impact
Report for development of 2700 San Pablo site.
10. Brenda Klutz, Deputy Director, State Department of Health Services, thanking Council for their opposition to the closure of Oakland Kaiser
Permanente Hospital.
11. George Killingsworth, regarding Black Repertory Group.
12. L.A. Wood, transmitting article regarding P.S.C. Air Emissions.
13. Cindi Goldberg, regarding mandatory Spay/Neuter Ordinance.
14. Jesse Townley, transmitting petition and letters regarding 924
Gilman Street Project.
15. Michael Albert, Z Magazine/Znet,
regarding East Timor.
16. Clifford Fred, regarding proposed City-Campus Planning Advisory Group.
17. Herb and Saundrah Clark Grevious, regarding Black Repertory Theater.
18. Susan Cerny, regarding landmarking of the Tuttle Manufacturing
Company at 725 Gilman Street.
19. John Vance, First Amendment Center, regarding KPFA/Pacifica/Mumia/Chiapas/East
Timor.
Adjournment