Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Special to Bayview Hill Association: From Captain John Loftus


Bayview District Newsletter


Bayview Police Station
201-Williams St, San Francisco, CA 94124
415-671-2300
Captain John Loftus
November 5, 2008

Upcoming Events:

Free Legal Assistance from the Legal Advice and Referral Clinic

This Saturday, November 8th

You must register between 10:30 am &12:00pm
Hastings College of the Law
198-McAllister St, 1st Floor (at Hyde St)
Louis B. Mayer Lounge


Pre-School Open House

On November 14th, Daniel Webster Preschool
at 20th and Missouri will hold an open house
to celebrate the school’s launch
and thank the community and its generous donors.

Thanksgiving Day - SF Food Bank Fundraiser

On November 27th, at Farley’s, 1315-18th St,
from 8:00 am till 2:00 pm, all tips will be donated to the
Potrero Hill-based San Francisco Food Bank


Get Ready for a SAFE Holiday Shopping Season


The Holidays are approaching, and that means that
most of us will be doing a little (or a lot) of
shopping for things like gifts and holiday
treats. Here are a few safety tips to make
your shopping experience as
enjoyable as possible!

Limit the number of bags you carry at
once in order to keep at leastone arm free.
Riding (and waiting for) public transportation:
be aware of your surroundings, pickpockets or suspicious persons.
Try to park/walk in well-lit areas.
Do not leave any bags or packages visible in your car;
If you need to leave something in your trunk,
place it there before you park or car,
or re-park your car somewhere else.

Stay tuned for SAFE's Annual Holiday Safety Tips, or visit our website
at www.sfsafe.org to print them out.

*********************************************************************
SIGNIFICANT INCIDENTS:

November 5, 2008-Possession of Loaded Firearm-Weapon,
Concealed-2:03pm-25TH/Connecticut-CN#081180964:

Members of Bayviews Plainclothes team were driving
in the area of 25 and Connecticut when they saw a
subject who they believed to be concealing a
weapon. Upon seeing the officers, the subject
turned and walked quickly in the opposite direction.
Officer Scott told the subject to stop at
which point the subject began to run from the area.
Officer Scott chased behind the suspect and saw the
suspect drop a gun onto the ground, which Officer Scott
immediately seized. Officer Kirchner joined the chase,
tackled the subject to the ground and placed him into
custody without further incident.
The suspect suffered minor injuries
and was treated by medics at Bayview Station.

ARRESTS OF INTEREST:

November 4, 2008-Possession of Cocaine For Sale,
Transporting-4:12am-3RD/Oakdale-CN#081179092:

Officer Gummo and Dizon were driving in the
intersection of 3rd/Palou when they observed
a drug transaction between a subject in a car and a
suspect on a bike. Officer Dizon got out
of the patrol car, caught up to the suspect on the
bike and placed him into custody without incident.
Officers also found suspected crack cocaine and
a “pay/owe” sheet on the suspect.
Officers placed the suspect into custody
and transported himto Bayview for booking.



November 3, 2008-Injuring Phone Line, Battery-11:35pm-1200 blk of
Revere-CN#081178903:

Officer McArthur and Training Officer Brown
responded to Revere regarding a fight and to
check on the well-being of two children at that
location. Officers spoke with the victim who
stated that today her husband came home angry and took
her cell phone from her as she was texting a friend.
The suspect also pushed her and slapped her, then
kicked her out of the house. The victim was not
seriously injured during the incident. The children
remained asleep and were unharmed. Officers
placed the suspect into custody without incident
and transported him to Bayview Station.


ROBBERIES-NO ARREST:

October 31, 2008-4:51pm-300 blk of Salinas-CN#081167360:
A victim was robbed, inside her home, by a masked gunman as she and her
family were playing pool in the garage area. Loss was a laptop, a
wallet, money, credit cards, keys, cell phone and id cards.


October 31, 2008-10:30pm-1400 blk of Lane St-CN#081168512:
A victim was robbed by six suspects who punched the victim multiple
times in the face. The suspects robbed the victim as he was walking
down the street, talking on his cell phone. Loss was a cell phone and
money. The victim refused medical treatment.

October 29, 2008-8:40pm-Oakdale/Phelps-CN#081161497:
A victim was robbed by three suspects while walking on Oakdale. The
victim stated that the suspects approached him from behind and that one
had a gun. The victim also stated that the suspects took his bag, cell
phone, ipod, eyeglasses, book and paperwork. The suspects left the
area. The victim was not injured during the incident. Later, another
citizen reported a robbery with a gun at a location with the same
suspect description.

October 29, 2008-8:50am-1100 blk of Fitzgerald-CN#081159721:
A victim was robbed as she was waiting for a bus by an unknown suspect
who grabbed her from behind and placed her into a choke hold. The
suspect then took her bag and keys. The victim still had her cell
phone, which she used to call police. The suspect fled the area on
foot. The victim was not injured.


BURGLARY-NO ARREST:

November 4, 2008-11:30pm-900 blk of Rankin-CN#081182700:
Entry made through a hole in the fence. No loss.

November 4, 2008-1:01pm-1700 blk of 26TH st-CN#081180710:
Entry made through front door. Loss was a laptop and Air card.

November 4. 2008-9:00pm-700 blk of Brussels-CN#081182023:
Entry made through rear garage door. No loss.


Bayview Station Resource List


EMERGENCY 911
Non-Emergency 553-0123
Customer Service Center 311, for TTY or outside SF dial 415-701-2323
Cell phone 911 553-8090 or 911
Bayview Station 671-2300
Web www.sfgov.org/police (For Crime Stats,Internet report-|4e c.)
Captain John Loftus 671-2300 Email: john.loftus@sfgov.org
Anonymous Tip-Line 822-8147 Bayview Station’s Voicemail
SFPD Anonymous Tip Line 575-4444 Live person 24-hrs a day
Graffiti Abatement 278-9454
Graffiti Fax 278-9456
Bayview Events 671-2302 Sergeant Ava Garrick
Bayview Permits 671-2313 Officer Gigi George
Code Abatement 671-2302 Sergeant Ava Garrick
Deputy City Attorney 554-3874 Yvonne Mere
Dept. Parking & Traffic 553-1943
DPW 695-2020 Dispatch
Quality of Life Liaison 671-2332
SF SAFE 553-1984 San_Francisco_SAFE_Inc@mail.vresp.com
Abandoned Auto 850-9737 Officer Rodriguez (Mon- Fri 7AM –3 PM)
Homeless Issues 671-2332
Third Street Beat 671-2300 Officer Gillies
Third Street Beat 671-2300 Officer Lucchetti & Officer Singleton
San Bruno Avenue
671-2300 Officer Percy Hernandez
Bayview Narcotics 254-7197 Sgt. Hagan & Sgt. Dempsey
Westbrook Development 509-1678 Officer Kraus & Officer Teper
Westbrook Development 806-8304 Officer Reynoso & Officer Pasqua
Potrero Hill Development 509-1408 Officer Rodatos & Officer Sanders
Potrero Hill Development 987-6389 Officer Fowlie & Officer Ferraez
Hunter’s View Development 987-6569 Officer Brian Petiti & Officer Chantal
Hunter’s View Development 509-1270 Officer Robinson & Officer Dockery
Alice Griffith Development 269-4002 Officer Lamma & Officer Jakson
Alice Griffith Development 254-8703 Officer E. Martinez & Officer Pashby
Community Liaison: 671-2302 Sergeant Garrick

Gun Stop Program Procedures
Citizens are encouraged to call the anonymous tip line at (415) 575-4444
to report persons who possess illegal weapons in San Francisco.

The San Francisco Police Department is currently hiring:
The San Francisco Police Department is continuously hiring qualified
applicants. Applicants must be 21 years old, have a valid driver’s
license, must be a US citizen, must have a high school diploma or
equivalent, and must not have been convicted of a felony or convicted of
a misdemeanor which would prohibit possession of a firearm. For more
information or to apply, contact the Department of Human Resource at 44
Gough Street, San Francisco.

Megan’s Law Website Access:
The general public can find out information on sexual predators on line
by going to the DOJ website: www.meganslaw.ca.gov or at the SFPD link at
www.sfgov.org/police. You may check specific names or zip codes to
locate those listed in the database.

Join The San Francisco Citizen’s Police Academy
For more information, including application process, please call Ms.Lula
Magallon at (415) 401-4720, or Officer Maria Oropeza at (415) 401-4701.
You can also email us at sfpd_citizenspoliceacademy@yahoo.com or visit
our website: http://www.sfgov.org/site/police_index.asp?id=20182.

Graffiti Alert: $250.00 Reward Program
Day Watch Sergeant, Ava Garrick, is Bayview Station’s Graffiti Abatement
coordinator. Each month he collects surveys from the various beat
officers to report graffiti to DPW and our own Graffiti Unit within the
police department. You can contact Sgt. Ava Garrick at ava.garrick
@sfgov.org.

311 Customer Service Center:
What is 311? 311 is a toll free, NON-EMERGENCY phone number that the
public can call to access information about government services. A live
customer service representative will be available 24 hours a day, seven
days a week, and 365 days a year. The service is available to both wired
and wireless customers. Wireless customers should call (415) 701-2311.
311 employees will be able to provide translations services in more than
145 languages and dialects and will employ a diverse staff of customer
service representatives. TTY users and customers outside San Francisco
should dial 415-701-2323. Captain John Loftus, 201 Williams, S.F. CA
94124 (415)671-2300, fax 671-2345.

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Bayview Police District Newsletter-Special to Bayview Hill Association

Bayview District Newsletter
Bayview Police Station 201-Williams St, San Francisco, CA 94124
415-671-2300

Captain John Loftus
October 31, 2008

Happy Halloween

Upcoming Events:

*ALERT* Bayview Monthly Community Meeting

Due to the Presidential Election, our November Meeting will be held on
WEDNESDAY, November 5th, at Bayview Station at 6:00 PM.
*********************************************************************
Noise Complaints - Halloween at Lot A

If you have a complaint relating to the events at Lot A, please call the
Entertainment Commission Noise Complaint Response Line at 415-602-8141.

Haunted House

The Joseph Lee Recreation Center will host a Haunted House on Friday,
October 31st, from 4-7PM.(ages: 13 and under, Plenty of Games and Surprises)

Halloween Safety Tips

1. Costumes should fit correctly so kids won't trip on them. Wear
light-colored costumes so you can be seen easily at night

2. Kids should not try to Trick or Treat by themselves. They should go
with an adult and a group of friends.
3. Map out where you and your friends will be going. Visit only the
well-lighted houses.
4. Trick or Treat while it is still light out; always bring a
flashlight, it may get dark. Wear a reflective costume or stickers.
5. Pick well-lighted streets. Walk on the sidewalks. Do not take
shortcuts or alleys!
6. Only accept candy at a person's front door. Do not go inside of a
house or into someone's car.
7. Have a back-up plan in case you get separated from your group. Carry
a cell phone, a walkie-talkie or money for a pay phone, and the number
of a trusted adult.
8. Don't eat any candy until you get home. Have an adult check to make
sure there are no tricks in your treats! If there is any suspicious
candy, contact your local police station.

******************************************************************************
ARRESTS OF INTEREST:

October 30. 2008-Firearm, possession of Loaded, discharging in a
negligent manner, Contributing to the delinquency of a
minor-12:38pm-1100 Jamestown-CN#081162893:

Officers Byrne and Robinson responded to Jamestown Ave regarding gun
shots being fired in the area. Officers met with a witness who stated
that she heard several gun shots that were coming from the backyard of a
nearby residence. Officers responded to that residence and made entry.
Officers located two suspects, bullet casings and a gun. Officers
placed two suspects under arrest and transported them to Bayview.
Officers Parker and Jackson of Gang Task Force responded and took over
the investigation. No one was injured during the shooting.

October 29, 2008-Possession of Gun by Prohibited Person, Probation
Violation, Loaded Firearm-10:45pm-CN#081161102:

Members of Bayview’s plainclothes team were in the area of LaSalle when
they observed a van parked in the middle of the street blocking traffic
and two subjects standing near the van. Officers recognized one of the
subjects from numerous prior contacts and knew that he was on probation,
with a search condition. Officers detained the subject, searched him
and found a loaded firearm in his waistband as well as suspected heroin
in his back pocket. Officers placed the suspect into custody without
incident. The gun was taken to Bayview Station for proper storage and
processing.

ROBBERIES-NO ARREST:

October 31, 2008-1:10am-300 blk of Hale-CN#081165289:

A victim was pulling into his driveway when an unknown suspect made his
way into the victims garage, pointed a gun at the him and demanded
money. The suspect then demanded the victim give him the pin number to
his debit card. The suspect also took the victims car and drove away.
The victim was not injured during the incident.

October 30, 2008-10:15am-Candlestick point-CN#081164946:

A victim was shot by a suspect four times after being robbed of his
wallet and other possessions. The victim was transported to S.F.G.H.
for treatment. The victim told officers that there were several
suspects, but only one had a weapon. Sgt. Ryan of the Robbery detail
responded and took over the investigation.


October 29, 2008-1:14pm-3rd/Gilman-CN#081158450:

A victim was walking near Gilman talking on her cell phone, when two
unknown suspects approached her. One suspect grabbed her around the
neck and took her cell phone. The victim told officers that she had
followed the suspects and could direct police to the area where she last
saw them. Officers were unable to locate the suspects. The victim was
not injured during the incident.

October 29, 2008-8:50pm-1100 blk of Fitzgerald-CN#081159721:

A victim was waiting for a bus when an unknown suspect came up behind
her, put her in a choke hold and took her purse. The victim was not
injured during the incident. The suspect ran from the area. .


THEFT FROM LOCKED VEHICLE: NO ARREST:

October 29, 2008-10:00am-2000 blk of Revere-CN#081161782:


BURGLARY: NO ARREST:

October 30, 2008-11:25am-Bertha Lane-CN#081162520:
Entry made through front door. Loss was a gold wedding band, a diamond
ring, money and cuff links.

October 29, 2008-3:00pm-200 blk of Napoleon-CN#081162451:
Entry made through a skylight. Loss was eleven thousand dollars worth
of tools and equipment.

Bayview Station Resource List:

EMERGENCY: 911
Non-Emergency: 553-0123
Customer Service Center: 311, for TTY or outside SF dial 415-701-2323
Cell phone:911: 553-8090 or 911
Bayview Station: 671-2300
Web: www.sfgov.org/police (For Crime Stats,
Internet report-
|4e c.)
Captain John Loftus: 671-2300 Email: john.loftus@sfgov.org
Anonymous Tip-Line: 822-8147 Bayview Station’s Voicemail
SFPD Anonymous Tip Line: 575-4444 Live person 24-hrs a day
Graffiti Abatement: 278-9454
Graffiti Fax: 278-9456
Bayview Events: 671-2302 Sergeant Ava Garrick
Bayview Permits: 671-2313 Officer Gigi George
Code Abatement: 671-2302 Sergeant Ava Garrick
Deputy City Attorney: 554-3874 Yvonne Mere
Dept. Parking & Traffic: 553-1943
DPW: 695-2020 Dispatch
Quality of Life Liaison: 671-2332
SF SAFE: 553-1984 San_Francisco_SAFE_Inc@mail.vresp.com
Abandoned Auto: 850-9737 Officer Rodriguez (Mon- Fri 7AM –
3 PM)
Homeless Issues: 671-2332
Third Street Beat: 671-2300 Officer Gillies
Third Street Beat: 671-2300 Officer Lucchetti & Officer Singleton
San Bruno Avenue: 671-2300 Officer Percy Hernandez
Bayview Narcotics: 254-7197 Sgt. Hagan & Sgt. Dempsey
Westbrook Development: 509-1678 Officer Kraus & Officer Teper
Westbrook Development: 806-8304 Officer Reynoso & Officer Pasqua
Potrero Hill Development: 509-1408 Officer Rodatos & Officer Sanders
Potrero Hill Development: 987-6389 Officer Fowlie & Officer Ferraez
Hunter’s View Development: 987-6569 Officer Brian Petiti & Officer Chantal
Hunter’s View Development: 509-1270 Officer Robinson & Officer Dockery
Alice Griffith Development: 269-4002 Officer Lamma & Officer Jakson
Alice Griffith Development: 254-8703 Officer E. Martinez & Officer Pashby
Community Liaison: 671-2302 Sergeant Garrick

Gun Stop Program Procedures:

Citizens are encouraged to call the anonymous tip line at (415) 575-4444
to report persons who possess illegal weapons in San Francisco.

The San Francisco Police Department is currently hiring:
The San Francisco Police Department is continuously hiring qualified
applicants. Applicants must be 21 years old, have a valid driver’s
license, must be a US citizen, must have a high school diploma or
equivalent, and must not have been convicted of a felony or convicted of
a misdemeanor which would prohibit possession of a firearm. For more
information or to apply, contact the Department of Human Resource at 44
Gough Street, San Francisco.

Megan’s Law Website Access:
The general public can find out information on sexual predators on line
by going to the DOJ website: www.meganslaw.ca.gov or at the SFPD link at
www.sfgov.org/police. You may check specific names or zip codes to
locate those listed in the database.

Join The San Francisco Citizen’s Police Academy
For more information, including application process, please call Ms.Lula
Magallon at (415) 401-4720, or Officer Maria Oropeza at (415) 401-4701.
You can also email us at sfpd_citizenspoliceacademy@yahoo.com or visit
our website: http://www.sfgov.org/site/police_index.asp?id=20182.

Graffiti Alert: $250.00 Reward Program
Day Watch Sergeant, Ava Garrick, is Bayview Station’s Graffiti Abatement
coordinator. Each month he collects surveys from the various beat
officers to report graffiti to DPW and our own Graffiti Unit within the
police department. You can contact Sgt. Ava Garrick at ava.garrick
@sfgov.org.

311 Customer Service Center:
What is 311? 311 is a toll free, NON-EMERGENCY phone number that the
public can call to access information about government services. A live
customer service representative will be available 24 hours a day, seven
days a week, and 365 days a year. The service is available to both wired
and wireless customers. Wireless customers should call (415) 701-2311.
311 employees will be able to provide translations services in more than
145 languages and dialects and will employ a diverse staff of customer
service representatives. TTY users and customers outside San Francisco
should dial 415-701-2323. Captain John Loftus, 201 Williams, S.F. CA
94124 (415)671-2300, fax 671-2345.

SFMTA Newsletter-Special to Bayview Hill Association

SFMTA

San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency

Department of Parking and Traffic, Traffic Engineering Division's

Street & Sidewalk Safety Seminar Series

First Tuesday of Each Month

Keep your work site compliant – Avoid unnecessary & costly situations!

WHO: Everyone doing work on and around San Francisco streets and sidewalks, including contractors, utility workers, moving/hauling companies, City agencies and others

DATE: Tuesday, November 4, 2008

TIME: 8:30am to 12:30pm

LOCATION: The Hiram Johnson State Building – Inside the Milton Marks Auditorium

455 Golden Gate Avenue (between Polk and Larkin)

San Francisco, CA 94102

COST: FREE!

On Tuesday, November 4th, the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency, MTA - Department of Parking and Traffic, Traffic Engineering Division's SPOT Program, will be hosting its FREE monthly educational outreach seminar. The focus of this series is how and why work zones must be in compliance with State and local traffic management regulations, and how following these regulations help ensure these temporary traffic control (TTC) areas are safer for workers, motorists, pedestrians and bicyclists.

November Topics: * The "Blue Book" - San Francisco Street Work Regulations

* The Contractors State License Board

8:30am - 10:15am The Blue Book

"Introduction to the MTA-DPT manual, 'Regulations for Working in San Francisco Streets' - the Blue Book". This presentation is aimed at familiarizing you and your employees with the specific rules of this manual, as well as reducing citations for violations of San Francisco Transportation Code 10.2.24 (formerly known as Traffic Code section 194.3) through the use of effective and compliant Temporary Traffic Control devices and practices.

10:30am - 12:30pm The Contractors State License Board

This month's guest speaker will be Mr. Carl Vega, Assistant Chief Investigator, Special Investigation Unit, of the Contractors State License Board. Carl as been an investigator for the last 34 years and has conducted or supervised in excess of 4,000 investigations of all types of criminal, civil and administrative violations. Additionally he has been an instructor for The California Department of Justice, The California District Attorney's Association, and The National Association of Bunco Investigators.

Carl will be speaking to us on: The history of the CSLB; the Statewide Investigative Fraud Team (SWIFT); safety and job site control; unlicensed and traveler contractor scams; elder abuse/scams; dealing with complaints; as well as answering any questions you have regarding the Department and their role in construction and traffic safety.

Each month we invite different guest speakers who are experts in their fields to share their experience and knowledge on how to work safely and efficiently to reduce unnecessary risk and expense. Please watch for upcoming seminar announcements!

Registration is NOT required, but please RSVP by email with the number of anticipated attendees.

Additional details:

Meeting Location

Auditorium, basement level Milton Marks conference center

Please note: This is a secure building and all persons entering will be required to pass through metal detectors. Please be sure to remove all knives and other sharp tools before entering the building.

Alternate Building Entrance

350 McAllister Street (Earl Warren Courthouse)

Proceed through 350 McAllister Lobby to the 455 Golden Gate Lobby

[If you are parking in the public lot across the street or arriving by public transportation, the 350 McAllister entrance is more convenient.]

Disability Access

The auditorium is accessible to persons using wheelchairs and others with disabilities. Informational materials in large print, assitive listening devices, materials in other alternative formats, American Sign Language interpreters and other accomodations will be made available upon request. Please contact Keith Matthews at 415-307-7435 or keith.matthews@sfmta.com. Providing at least 72 hours will help to ensure availability.

In order to assist the City's efforts to accommodate persons with severe allergies, environmental illness, multiple chemical sensitivity or related disabilities, attendees at public meetings are reminded that other attendees may be sensitive to various chemical based scented products. Please help the City to accommodate these individuals.

Parking

The Civic Center public parking lot is directly across the street from 350 McAllister between Polk and Larkin, underneath the Civic Center Plaza. The next closest garage is US Parking at 550 Turk Street between Polk and Larkin, behind the Federal Building. There is also garage three blocks away under the Opera Plaza apartment complex at 601 Van Ness Avenue.

If you have any questions, please contact:

Pat Tobin (415) 819-2007
Patrick.tobin@sfmta.com

Or

Keith Matthews (415) 307-7435

Keith.matthews@sfmta.com

For more information on the SPOT Program, and for interactive, educational information on how to comply with San Francisco's Temporary Traffic Control Regulations, please visit:

www.SPOTprogram.com

You have received this monthly safety seminar announcement from the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency - Department of Parking & Traffic's SPOT Program. If you wish to be removed from this list, simply reply to this email with the word "REMOVE" in the subject line, or send the same to keith.matthews@sfmta.com.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Nature News from Jake Sigg

Nature News From Jake Sigg

1. SF Transit Effectiveness Project's revised recommendations - Tuesday 21 October
2. Ecuador's voters approve new constitution that includes Rights of Nature
3. Wildland Weed Mapping Field Course Thursday 6 November
4. Sage observation of a Japanese monk
5. Feedback
6. The Big Necessity: The Unmentionable World of Human Waste and Why it Matters
7. The Sun - oh yeh
8. Center for Learning in Retirement
9. When Bambi goes bad. Montana's capital under siege
10. Moment of truth approaches for Water System Improvement Program, of importance to all northern California
11. Water, water, everywhere
12. Running dry
13. You may drive nature out with a pitchfork/Hippie apes not as peace-loving as we thought
14. In Connecticut you can't...

1. On September 16, 2008, the SF Municipal Transportation Agency Board of Directors heard public comment from over 100 people regarding the Transit Effectiveness Project’s revised recommendations for route changes and travel time/reliability improvements. The SFMTA Board created an Ad Hoc committee to review the TEP’s recommendations. The TEP’s revised recommendations will be presented to the full Board of Directors Meeting on:

Tuesday, October 21, 2008, 2:00 pm
Room 400 City Hall
(Check project webpage at www.sftep.com for meeting updates)

The TEP is a joint project of the SFMTA and the City Controller’s Office and represents the first top-to-bottom review of the Muni system in a generation. TEP recommendations are designed to transform Muni so people can get where they want to go, when they want to get there, reliably and safely.

We express our appreciation to all of you who participated and will keep you posted on milestones in this landmark undertaking in our Transit-First city.

***************************
2. Ecuador Approves New Constitution:

Voters Approve Rights of Nature (covered in: Grist, Washington Post, LA Times, NY Times, Wall Street Journal, et al)

LA Times Editorial: Eye on Ecuador's Constitutional Recognition of Nature's Inalienable Rights
Rights of Nature Included in Ecuador's Proposed National Constitution

See www.celdf.org

(And remember, Bhutan's constitution calls for measuring its Gross National Happiness)

*************************

3. Wildland Weed Mapping Field Course Thursday November 6
Cal-IPC (California Invasive Plant Council) is offering its first-ever Northern California Wildland Weed MAPPING Field Course, Thursday, November 6, in Oakland. Participants will rotate through three field stations, learning and practicing data collection using three mapping collection technologies. In the afternoon we focus on data processing and analysis, including retrieving data, and creating basic maps based on the goals of your weed project. The course will include three session devoted to Q&A to ask questions of our instructors in a smaller setting.
Registration and details at www.cal-ipc.org/fieldcourses/index.php.

*****************************
4.

A flower falls,

even though we love it,

and a weed grows,

even though we do not love it.

--Dogen,

Japanese Buddhist monk and philosopher 1200-1253

*******************************
5. Feedback

Kathy Schrenk:

Jake, With regard to Prop 8, I can't imagine it passing. And I love hearing the anti-gay marriage people try to rationalize their position. They just hate gayness and gay people! It's all about hate! That's all it is! And they tie themselves in knots trying to come up with reasons why it's rational and doesn't just come down to hate, pure and simple. Those "Christians" are just big, big haters.

I have a friend, Josh Richman, who is an amazing journalist, and has a blog where, among many other things, he details the big donations to various political campaigns. Lately the anti-Prop 8 people have been getting a million dollars a week! Amazing. Anyway, I think this info needs more light on it, and I commend Josh for shining some. http://www.ibabuzz.com/politics/

Well, Kathy, you'd better imagine it, because it may happen. Opponents, noting that the polls showed a strong possibility of its passage, started getting money together to counter the pro ads. Let's hope the counter-attack is effective, as I think it may be.

I did receive one dissent, from Steve Lawrence. It is too long to post here. The arguments he makes are familiar. He takes me to task for calling opponents of gay marriage 'irrational'.
He later sent me the following:

I Googled to find what others have written as reasons to not re-define marriage. What I found is pretty slim, and some of it, pretty awful. The Catholic Church (now there's an institution I don't often cite) publishes reasons, but I was unimpressed. Gets into procreative vs non-procreative sex, and lost me. And then there is a great void. Or I can't find anything. I'm surprised. (There are some funny tongue-in-cheeks--pro-gay marriage--e.g. "gay parents will raise gay children, as straight parents raise only straight children.")

Steve: I re-read your reasons for opposing same-sex marriages, but none of it makes sense.
2500 years ago it made sense to insist on producing offspring. Certainly in ancient Greece they were killing each other off so fast in their interminable wars that they had to have replacements or disappear. Even then, Spartan men were required to have male lovers until the age of 30, at which time they took a wife and had children. Athens and other Greek poleis (cities) had less structured but similar arrangements. (Homosexuality was the rule, not the exception then, as it has been wherever same sex people are concentrated together: army, navy, logging camps, prisons, monasteries, &c.) for long periods.

But that was then. Now, can anyone say that we need more people? Attitudes (that's all they are) are arbitrary and can be changed at will. There is no eternal law brought down from Mt Sinai that decrees one thing or another. People make practical arrangements for living with each other to get through life. What justification is there to deny people what they want to do as long as they're not hurting anyone? I do find opposition to this irrational. In San Francisco, at least, just about everyone has friends or work associates who are gay/lesbian. I don't find them any different than anyone else. Do you?

Chris Darling:

PG&E is spending more than $5 million just against Prop H. That is a serious attempt to buy an election.

Gasp. Choke. No, I don't believe they'd do such a thing. PG&E? Perish the thought.

I knew you know about PG&E doing something like that. I thought the figures relevant in that they are high even by San Francisco standards. I know that most of labor is working to pass H. We will see.


Mary Gutekanst:

Jake, do you have an opinion on Prop 1a? I don't remember the status of the proposals to run the train through state parks, and there's been a lot of dispute about the routing of the train through the San Joaquin valley, and other areas. Can you or one of your newsletter readers help with information and advice?


I haven't enough information or understanding of this huge proposal, so I'll ask readers to reply directly to you: maryc@gutekanst.com

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6. If it stinks put a lid on it - Japanese saying

Human waste
Lifting the lid

The Big Necessity: The Unmentionable World of Human Waste and Why it Matters, by Rose George

Death, once referred to in euphemisms, if at all, has been reborn as prime-time television drama. Sex and money are now topics for documentaries, even after-dinner conversation. The last taboo, surely, is shit. The byproducts of digestion are so hard to mention--adolescent jokes aside--that symptoms of bowel cancer are often ignored until it is too late.

But as Rose George explains in this fascinating and eloquent book, there is a great deal that needs to be said about excretion that is not remotely funny. Two-fifths of the world's population has nowhere to defecate except open ground. That is 2.6 billion people whose drinking water contains their and their neighbour's faeces; whose food is contaminated by the flies that lay their eggs in human waste; who live in filth and very often die because of it. And yet this particular curse of poverty is all too often overlooked. Politicians and celebrities are enamoured of "clean water"--but less keen on posing next to the latrines that must be built to keep water that way.

A few frank and indignant souls are trying to help. Ms George meets activists who travel around rural India, provoking villagers to see with fresh eyes the vile heaps deposited close to their homes--and who strike, while disgust is hot, to get them to build latrines. She visits Chinese peasants who light their homes and cook their food with biogas generated from their own and their pigs' fermenting excreta. And she learns about the "Gulper", a prototype manual pump, light enough to be carried on a motorbike, that could empty pitt latrines in slums, thus saving residents from the hazard of "flying toilets"--plastic bags filled with faeces and flung away.

In Japan techno-toilets wash and blow-dry users' bottoms, and innovation abounds. Elsewhere in the rich world, though, citizens are strangely indifferent to the parlous state of a vital piece of infrastructure. London's Victorian sewers, built for 3m people, must now cope with 13m; New York's often overflow. Yet here too Ms George finds heroes: the "flushers" who don crotch-high waders and do battle with everything that is dropped down drains or stuffed down manholes, from cotton-buds (the perfect size to block filters) to congealed fat from restaurants; from mobile phones to the occasional dead Mafioso.

Review in The Economist 11 October 2008

(Similar conditions are not that far behind us in this country. Indoor toilets were rare or absent for most people in my rural upbringing. The toilet on our ranch was an outhouse perched on a hillside, and the feces were deposited on the open hillside, exposed to flies and whatever else visited it. There was no refrigeration, and care had to be taken to not leave food exposed to flies. Even in towns, outhouses were the standard in waste disposal. They also provided sources of mischief and merriment on Halloween.)

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7. http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2008/10/the_sun.html (Some recent images of the Sun in more active times. 21 photos)

The Sun is now in the quietest phase of its 11-year activity cycle, the solar minimum - in fact, it has been unusually quiet this year - with over 200 days so far with no observed sunspots. The solar wind has also dropped to its lowest levels in 50 years. Scientists are unsure of the significance of this unusual calm, but are continually monitoring our closest star with an array of telescopes and satellites. Captions of 2 of the 21 pictures are given here:

Solar flares produce seismic waves in the Sun's interior that closely resemble those created by earthquakes on our planet. On May 27, 1998, researchers observed this flare-generated solar quake that contained about 40,000 times the energy released in the great earthquake that devastated San Francisco in 1906, equivalent to an 11.3 magnitude earthquake, scientists calculated. Over the course of an hour, the solar waves traveled for a distance equal to 10 Earth diameters before fading into the fiery background of the Sun's photosphere. Unlike water ripples that travel outward at a constant velocity, the solar waves accelerated from an initial speed of 22,000 miles per hour to a maximum of 250,000 miles per hour before disappearing

NASA's STEREO spacecraft observed this visually stunning prominence eruption on Sept. 29, 2008 in the 304 wavelength of extreme UV light. It rose up and cascaded to the right over several hours, appearing something like a flag unfurling, as it broke apart and headed into space. The material observed is actually ionized Helium at about 60,000 degrees. Prominences are relatively cool clouds of gas suspended above the Sun and controlled by magnetic forces.

(I am awestruck by these images, and even more by the phenomena portrayed. The awe has many dimensions: The mystery of the phenomenon, its power, its longevity (5 billion years counted, 5 billion more to go), its beauty, the human ability to decipher what is happening and develop the technology to be a witness--and on and on.)

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8. Center for Learning in Retirement: http://www.clirsf.org/

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9. When Bambi goes bad

Helena, Montana is under siege. Not by terrorists, locusts, or gangs of surly teenagers, but by 700 urban deer. And they're not just devouring gardens. The more unruly have reportedly attacked dogs (including a bichon frise belonging to U.S. Senator Max Baucus' mom), false-charged kids in playgrounds, and jumped off buildings and through plate glass windows. In 20005, a gang of bucks even chased a paper delivery guy under a car. So this month, Helena officials launched a counterattack. In a pilot deer-control program, police officers will kill 50 of the animals--trapping them with bait and nets, dispatching them slaughterhouse-style with a bolt gun, and giving the meat to a local food bank.

High Country News, 13 October 2008

Those Bambis had better not try to terrorize Juneau. Sarah wouldn't take any nonsense from them, and would likely have a venison dinner.

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10. Water System Improvement Program (WSIP)
(NOTE: This is an important issue for all of northern California, not just San Francisco)

October 30 (Thursday) -- This will be the moment of truth! In the morning the SF Planning Commission will discuss and vote on certification of the final EIR for the WSIP. In the afternoon, probably at 1:30pm, the SFPUC will choose a project. A big public turnout will help ensure the best outcome, so please plan on joining us. If you would like to check out the final EIR, it's available at
http://www.sfgov.org/site/planning_index.asp?id=80530

Canoe Trips -- The Tuolumne River Trust will be hosting a number of canoe trips in the Modesto area this fall (when the salmon are running). For more information and to sign up, please visit http://www.tuolumne.org/content/article.php/20081009085452220

Note from John Rizzo: We (Sierra Club and Tuolumne and others) have been meeting almost daily with Ed Harrington and the PUC, planning commissioners, PUC commisssioners, and supervisors.

This is a very bad EIR that doesn't take into account global warming and the reducing snow pack, states that drastically declining fish stocks are "not significant," offers mitigation that fish experts say has no effect on fish. It downplays the existence of endangered trout.

In 1989, Fish and Wildlife said that we need to INCREASE flows in the Tuolumne River. SF agreed to study it, but never did.

The program affects the upper (in Yosemite), middle and lower stretches of the Tuolumne River, and threatens to eliminate salmon, trout, and
other fish from the river. There are also damaging effects in east bay a Alameda Creek regarding fish stocks.

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11. "Everything is water." Thales of Miletus
“If there is magic on this planet, it is contained in water.” Loren Eiseley

Water

“Twenty percent more water than is now available will be needed to feed the additional three billion people who will be alive by 2025.”
World Commission on Water for the 21st Century

“Because of population growth, California will be chronically short of water by 2010.” (Association of California Water Agencies)

“When the well’s dry, we’ll know the value of water.” Benjamin Franklin

“Nearly half the water consumed in the United States now goes to grow feed for cattle and other livestock. To produce just one pound of grain-fed steak requires hundreds of gallons of water to irrigate feed crops consumed by the steer.” Jeremy Rifkin, Beyond Beef


Data Points from Scientific American, June 2003:

NOT ALL WET

In March, the United Nations reported on the state of the world’s freshwater. Population growth could mean that by the middle of this century, seven billion people in 60 countries could be affected by a lack of clean water. Yet little is being done to confront the impending crisis.

Percent of the world’s accessible freshwater used by humans: 54
Percent estimated to be used by 2025: 70

Percent used by agriculture: 69
For industry (average): 22
For industry, high-income countries: 59
For industry, low-income countries: 8

Annual number of deaths from water-related diseases: 5 million
Annual number sickened by poor water: 2.3 billion

Available water per person, in liters per day:

Countries with the least:

Bahamas: 181
United Arab Emirates: 159
Gaza Strip: 142
Kuwait: 2.7

Country with the most:
Greenland 29.5 million
U.S. (contiguous): 20,300

Source: World Water Assessment Program; see www.wateryear2003.org
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Water, water, everywhere
Take Me to the Source: In Search of Water, by Rupert Wright

The physical properties of water are what make life on earth possible. Water combines two elements--hydrogen and oxygen--each on their own toxic; together creating a "benign life-giving force". So Rupert Wright puts it in this splendid, if frustrating, omnium gatherum of water science, art, and lore.

Brief excerpt from review in Guardian Weekly

"Come gather 'round people wherever you roam
Accept that the waters around you have grown...
And you better start swimming or you'll sink like a stone
'Cause the times they are a-changing."
-- Bob Dylan, 1962

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12. Running dry
Everyone knows industry needs oil. Now people are worrying about water, too

"Water is the oil of the 21st century," declares Andrew Liveris, the chief executive of Dow, a chemical company. Like oil, water is a critical lubricant of the global economy. And as with oil, supplies of water--at least, the clean, easily accessible sort--are coming under enormous strain because of the growing global population and an emerging middle-class in Asia that hankers for the water-intensive life enjoyed by people in the West.

Oil prices have fallen from their recent peaks, but concerns about the availability of freshwater show no sign of abating...Water, unlike oil, has no substitute. Climate change is altering the patterns of freshwater availability in complex ways that can lead to more frequent and severe droughts.

Untrammelled industrialisation, particularly in poor countries, is contaminating rivers and aquifers. America's generous subsidies for biofuel have increased the harvest of water-intensive crops that are now used for energy as well as food. And heavy subsidies for water in most parts of the world mean it is often grossly underpriced--and hence squandered.

...Water is an essential ingredient in many of the products that line supermarket shelves...Although agriculture uses most water, many other products and services also depend on it. It takes around 13 cubic metres of freshwater to produce a single 200-mm semiconductor wafer, for example. Chipmaking is thought to account for 25% of water consumption in Silicon Valley. Energy production is also water-intensive: each year around 40% of the freshwater withdrawn from lakes and aquifers in America is used to cool power plants...Moreover, the water used within a factory's walls is often only a tiny fraction of a firm's true dependence on water. Jose Lopez, the chief operating officer of Nestle, notes that it take four litres of water to make one litre of product in Nestle's factories, but 3,000 litres of water to grow the agricultural produce that goes into it. These 3,000 litres may be outside his control, but they are very much a part of his business.

Excerpts from The Economist 23 August 2008

(I read this article just as I received in the mail a story from the Glen Canyon Institute, dedicated to draining Lake Powell on the Colorado River in Utah. For years they have been predicting severe drawdowns from Lake Powell, and climate warming is expected to accelerate that drawdown. Now, the shocker is that the Scripps Institute of Oceanography says that even Lake Mead, downstream from Lake Powell and the Grand Canyon, may be empty by 2021. Aside from the uncertainty whether this will actually happen by that date, it's obvious that the insane growth binge in Las Vegas and Phoenix will more than come to a halt; it would have to reverse. No more gushing fountains, emerald green lawns, golf courses, swimming pools? How could the gods do this to us?)

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13. Nature notes

Naturam expellas furca tamen usque recurret. "You may drive nature out with a pitchfork, but she will keep coming back."

I was reminded of this when a friend inquired about whether she should plant currants (in the genus Ribes), which are known to be a host for the damaging white pine blister rust. My response:

Not a problem; keep all of them. White pine blister rust has been a problem disease for a very long time. I worked summers on fire trail crews in Glacier National Park in the 1940s. We had the choice of keeping fire trails cleared or being on the blister rust crew, clearing all Ribes (currants and gooseberries) from the national park! It was exhausting, but Mother Nature made it clear that she was not to be told how to manage her forests. The National Park Service finally gave up this headstrong, ecologically illiterate approach and have not pulled Ribes in recent decades.

Native currants and gooseberries are widespread in California. In the mountains we have white pines (sugar pine, Western white, limber, whitebark) that are vulnerable to blister rust; however, it doesn't seem to be a serious disease in California. Also, we do not have white pines except in the mountains; Monterey and most other pines planted in lower elevations are all in another pine group which is not susceptible.
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"Hippie" Apes Not As Peace-loving as We Thought

Bonobos, endangered primates found in the lowland forest south of the Congo River, have earned a reputation as the free-loving hippies of the great-ape world, thanks to their liberal use of sexual activities for everything from greetings to conflict resolution. Before this week, scientists thought bonobos only ate small animals like squirrels and rodents. But this Monday, a German report revealed that the apes actually hunt and eat other great apes, citing at least 10 instances in which bonobos set out on hunting trips specifically in search of chimpanzees, which they sneakily ambushed in the trees from below.

This week's findings don't show a correspondence between warrior-like tendencies and male dominance, since bonobo societies are actually ruled by females, who participate in the hunts. The findings do, however, have important implications for models on early human evolution: Along with chimps, bonobos are thought to be humans' closest living relatives.
From the Center for Biological Diversity

(So much for matriarchy)

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14. What you can't do in Connecticut

It's illegal to:

Pirouette while crossing a street

Play scrabble while waiting for a politician to speak

Sell pickles that don't bounce. To be officially a pickle, it must bounce when dropped.

(Heard on Says You, Sunday 4 pm, KQED FM. There were other gems, but I couldn't write them down fast enough.)

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

HABITAT HELPS IN THE BAYVIEW

Become a Homeowner in San Francisco

Habitat for Humanity Greater San Francisco will break ground on seven
4-bedroom homes in the San Francisco Bayview-Hunters Point District this fall 2008

All interested families are invited to attend an orientation
meeting to hear about the Habitat program and pick up an application.

Program Requirements

• Family members must have lived together for at least one year.
• Must complete 500 hours of “sweat equity” on the construction of their
home.
• Must not have owned a home for the past three years.
• All household members (over 18 years old who are not full time
students) whose income will contribute to the household gross income must be a U.S. citizen or a legal permanent resident of the U.S. (green card)
• Household income between 40-60% of the median gross annual income forSan Francisco households of comparable size based on U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) guidelines:

4 Person 5 Person 6 Person 7 Person 8 Person 9 Person
40% $37,700 $40,750 $43,750 $46,800 $49,800 $51,300
50% $47,150 $50,950 $54,700 $58,500 $62,250 $64,150
60% $56,600 $61,100 $65,650 $70,150 $74,700 $76,950

How to Apply

To obtain an application you must attend one of the following
orientation meetings. All meetings will be held at the:
South East Community Facility, Alex Pitcher Community Room
1800 Oakdale Avenue, Suite B
San Francisco, CA 94124
(at the corner of Phelps Street)
Orientation Dates
Tues Sept. 9 6 - 9 pm
Fri Sept. 19 4 - 7 pm
Mon Sept. 29 6 - 9 pm
Thurs Oct. 2 6 - 9 pm
Sat Oct. 4 10 am - 2 pm
Applications are only available at orientations and there will be no
make-up opportunities.

All orientations are conducted in English and a translator should
accompany all non-English speaking applicants. As space is limited we
ask that only one applicant per family attend the meeting. Dates and
locations for turn-in workshops will be distributed at all orientations.
Only street parking is available.

For more information and a list of program requirements,
please visit our website at www.habitatgsf.org.