Chop Park Street, Fall Specials, Plenty of Tree Parking

Park Street getting back to its roots:

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Twenty-six trees were removed to make way for new street lights and parking meter pay stations/kiosks.

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In Memoriam: Tree Grande, October 2011

At the corner of Park Street and Central Avenue in Alameda

Two of Grande’s neighbors that were the last mature trees standing:

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Alameda Occupies Wall Street – City Hall

Messages from Alameda’s Occupy Wall Street demonstration in front of city hall, October 18, 2011:

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Demand the Supply

You’d think if there was a demand for a product, someone would produce it.  Not so when it comes to pickup trucks.

Without fail, every auto mechanic who works on my 1993 half-ton Toyota pickup offers to buy it.  When I’m out and about, guys come up to me and express the same interest.  They all say the same thing:  trucks like mine are easy to maintain and are workhorses for hundreds of thousands of miles.   It’s true.  That little truck of mine is a gem, and it continues to haul its fair share of all kinds of materials. Continue reading

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Greenspace Becomes Us

Right when you think every viable idea for developing Alameda Point has been put on the table … Surprise! … A new parkland/open space proposal is delivered by Golden Gate University’s Center on Urban Environmental Law.

What makes the proposal unique?  It advocates securing and designating green space as the first land-use priority before any building construction is decided upon.  The proposal calls for one contiguous open-space corridor along the entire waterfront at Alameda Point, with certain areas designated for wetlands and natural habitat.  Considered the defining centerpiece for Alameda Point, around which all other development will revolve, the directors of the project see the value of a comprehensive, versus piecemeal, open-space design.   Continue reading

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Code Blue at Alameda Hospital

It’s been about nine and a half years since voters established a Health Care District (the District) to levy a $298 annual parcel tax to save Alameda Hospital from closure. Recent developments unfortunately indicate the District is scrambling to pay for the hospital’s daily operations.

Alameda Hospital has been operating at a $328,000 per month shortfall ever since it lost Kaiser’s business in April 2010.  In addition to the shortfall, inpatient volumes and other revenues have declined enormously.  As of July 2011, no additional sources of cash reserves are left. Continue reading

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Silence Has Implications

City Council

The editorial in the Alameda Sun (Council Needs a PIO, Aug. 18, 2011) supporting the recent appointment of a city public information officer (PIO) went one step too far.  It advocated for the city council to institute its own public information officer too.  While having a PIO might help the media obtain information for news stories, I say let our elected officials speak (or not speak) for themselves.

“The primary responsibility of a PIO is to provide information to the media and public as required by law and according to the standards of their profession,” states Wikipedia.  Unlike a public entity, no individual is “required” to provide information.  However, part of the job of being an elected official is to be responsive to one’s constituency.  While the city itself, at the behest of the city manager, can speak in one voice, members of the city council often part ways on issues. Continue reading

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Charting Coursework for Jobs

Back-to-school time is approaching.  Experts from all corners of society have been trying to define what skills are necessary to prepare young adults for the workforce.  The trend has been to push for higher academic, classroom-based education for all students.

This single-minded “college for all” approach, however, has been challenged in a recent Harvard University Graduate School of Education Study, which provides valuable observations. Continue reading

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Beltline Brainstorm

At the city’s two recent “Urban Greening” workshops, every Alameda park was beautifully displayed on big posters.  We were presented with the results of the city’s recent park master-plan survey.  We learned that almost all Alamedans visit our shoreline, natural areas and parks, and they rate our park system as above expectations.  Of the less than 10 percent who identified desired improvements, the highest ranking improvement was creating more natural open space with hiking opportunities and a trail system.

Everyone attending the workshop was then given the opportunity to list needed improvements, but, like the survey, the consensus was that we are mostly content with Alameda’s established parks. Continue reading

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Landing Zone Veterans’ Clinic

We haven’t heard much lately about the proposed veterans facility at Alameda Point, but it’s been moving full steam ahead.

The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is conducting its environmental review and seeking architecture/engineering firms to plan and design an outpatient clinic, which will also include a columbarium, administrative space, and associated parking.  This $210 million project will provide primary and specialty care, including ancillary services, mental health, substance abuse, ambulatory surgery, and vocational rehab for over 7,000 veterans from Northern Alameda County.

The land for this 110-acre project sits on the former runways and is part of the 549 acres formerly slated to become the “Alameda National Wildlife Refuge.”  All 549 acres will be acquired through a no-cost federal-to-federal land transfer from the Department of Defense (the Navy) to the VA.  This transfer has been in the works since 2006, when the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service declined to take the land.  Fish & Wildlife did not want to be perpetually responsible for monitoring toxic issues at the old disposal site in the western wetlands area.  While the VA needs only 110 acres for its project, the Navy said the VA had to take all the land or none of it.

Under the 1996 base reuse plan, the property owner and the city council, with public input, are responsible for developing a management plan and philosophy for the wildlife refuge.  So far the VA plans to continue contracting with Fish & Wildlife to look out for the endangered birds, but the East Bay Regional Park District could also handle that job.  There is no indication that either the VA or the city is working to create a bona fide wildlife refuge with more wetlands and marshes that provide foraging areas for waterfowl, or a public access system.  For example, the VA’s recent detailed solicitation for firms makes no mention of the nature center the VA included in its September 2010 proposal to the city council.  The nature center was to house the wildlife refuge’s management office.

As the project moves forward, our city council has both a challenge and an opportunity.  The challenge:  to become the advocate for a full-fledged urban wildlife refuge, fulfilling the responsibilities described in the base reuse plan.  The opportunity:  to partner with the VA in the construction of the roadway and infrastructure out to the site.  The adjacent 200-plus acres (the Northwest Territories) are under the city’s trusteeship of Public Trust Lands.  A regional park and Bay Trail have been planned there for 15 years, and wetlands and habitat restoration are being considered, but we need a road to get there.  Partnering with the VA could help build the roadway and infrastructure to the western shoreline and fulfill the promise of maximum public shoreline access.  The VA’s utility installation and site improvements are scheduled to begin in August 2012.

Stay tuned.  The environmental assessment statement will be issued soon, with public meetings to follow.  Let’s assist our veterans, our wildlife, our environment, and our city!

Originally published in Alameda Sun

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