Buying Support for Coal

In a series of quiet meetings, the businessmen behind a plan to export millions of tons of coal from the Oakland waterfront have offered local churches and environmental organizations money in exchange for their support, the Express has learned. According to several sources with firsthand knowledge of the meetings, Jerry Bridges and Omar Benjamin, both former Port of Oakland executive directors who now lead Terminal Logistics Solutions (TLS), the private company that wants to export the coal from the redeveloped old Oakland Army Base, met with leaders of West Oakland environmental organizations and several churches to offer them potentially millions of dollars if they would agree to back their plan. Bridges and a paid lobbyist have also been speaking at influential Oakland churches to rally support for coal.

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According to Brian Beveridge of the West Oakland Environmental Indicators Project, Bridges, who is the president and CEO of TLS, and his business partner Omar Benjamin, who is senior vice president of the company, contacted the environmental group about two months ago and asked for a meeting. Beveridge and Margaret Gordon, also of the environmental group, met with Bridges and Benjamin for lunch at Nellie’s Soulfood Restaurant and Bar near the Port of Oakland.

“They said they’d be willing to offer us twelve cents a ton of coal [shipped through Oakland], placed into some kind of community fund that the community could do with as they please,” Beveridge said. “They suggested, ironically, it could support a health clinic, but I think the irony was lost on them. They said they’d be happy if we managed that fund, and they’d give our organization this money to do that.”

In July, Bridges told KQED that he hopes to ship approximately 4.2 million tons of coal a year from Utah through the bulk commodity terminal planned for construction at the Oakland Global site. According to the US Energy Administration, Utah coal currently sells for about $39.75 per ton. Therefore, at current prices, the value of the coal TLS wants to export from Oakland would equal about $166 million a year in value. Twelve cents on every ton, if it were used to pay off environmental groups, would generate roughly $500,000 a year.

Bridges and Benjamin of TLS did not respond to multiple phone calls and emails seeking comment for this report.

Beveridge said that he and Gordon turned down the offer. “Others have used the ‘bribe’ word, but I wouldn’t say it was that,” said Beveridge. “They were saying, in their context, they want to give the community some kind of benefit, and I understand they’re now offering that to other organizations in the community.

“As much as money is important,” Beveridge continued, “we weren’t going to sell our voice for something we knew up front wasn’t good for us.”

According to Oakland City Council President Lynette Gibson McElhaney, who represents West Oakland, where the coal export terminal would operate, Bridges also recently met with the pastors of several churches in an effort to gain their support for coal exports, again with the offer of money tied to each ton of coal shipped through the Oakland Global bulk terminal. “Churches have said to me that he was creating a community fund that they could tap into,” said Gibson McElhaney in an interview. “Seven cents a ton — that’s what ministers reported to me.”

Gibson McElhaney said last week that she has tried to avoid discussing the coal issue with lobbyists from all sides before Monday night’s public hearing on the subject, but the controversial issue keeps popping up. “Everybody wants to see the Army Base producing jobs, and that’s the spirit we’re moving forward in, but we have an obligation to consider public health and safety, and to regulate any risk to public health and safety,” she said.

Supporters of the coal export plan tout the jobs that would be created from building the terminal and shipping millions of tons of fossil fuel to overseas markets. TLS also claims that it will build a state-of-the-art enclosed coal warehouse with covered conveyor belts, all fed by enclosed rail cars, to minimize fugitive coal dust that might be blown into the surrounding community, or which would expose workers to toxic materials. In a July 15 letter to Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf, Bridges called the type of coal his company wants to ship “low-sulfur,” and “among the cleanest burning coals in the world.”

In advance of Monday night’s city council hearing, CCIG, the master developer of the Oakland Global Project, submitted a report prepared by HDR Engineering that claims that “the amounts of coal dust emissions to the City of Oakland resulting from transport of coal … and related terminal operations will be negligible, and that impacts from coal dust emissions and deposition will not harm health or the environment.”

Opponents cite the environmental and health impacts of the coal industry, especially dust blown from trains and silos into surrounding communities. They have pointed out that there have never been health and safety studies of shipping coal in the types of train cars and terminal equipment that TLS has said it will use. Indeed, there are no covered rail cars used to transport coal anywhere in the United States today. Critics also say that enclosing coal in cars and silos could pose explosive fire hazards. Opponents also say the plan is economically risky because US and overseas markets for coal are shrinking as regulators here and abroad try to reduce carbon emissions.

And then there’s the problem of greenhouse gas emissions. In a letter submitted to the Oakland City Council and the mayor on Monday morning, the No Coal in Oakland coalition of neighborhood and environmental groups wrote that the scale of fossil fuel exports from the project would be so big it would have measurable climate change effects on a global scale. According to the groups, if one assumes that TLS exports the maximum allowable coal from the terminal for the 66-year term of its lease, it would ship about 660 million tons of coal to overseas power plants. These coal-fired plants would burn it and then release as much as 1.5 billion tons of CO2 into the atmosphere.

“The City Council is now considering the health and safety impacts of facilitating the release of over a billion tons of CO2 into the atmosphere,” stated the groups’ letter. “The incremental amounts of atmospheric carbon that will drive climate change are measured in billions of tons. A billion tons matters.

In his efforts to drum up support for coal exports, Bridges has avoided discussing the issue of climate change and stuck to the message of jobs. The promise of jobs, even dangerous ones associated with shipping coal, resonates with many in Oakland’s flatland communities. West Oakland’s unemployment rate is 16 percent for the total population and 29 percent for Black residents, according to the US Census.

To deliver this message to churches and community groups, Bridges hired lobbyist Darrel Carey, according to several sources. Carey runs a group called the East Bay Small Business Council and is the cousin of Zachary Carey, the pastor of True Vine Ministries church in West Oakland. Darrel Carey has also written op-eds in the Oakland Post, a Black-owned newspaper, supporting the coal export plan, and attended multiple community meetings to speak in favor of coal and jobs. Carey also recently scheduled a “coal transport education” meeting at True Vine Ministries, but the meeting was cancelled, according to several people who planned to attend it.

Bridges has also been speaking before church congregations about the positive economic impact that building and operating the terminal will have on West Oakland, according to church attendees. Oakland resident Dag Sibhat said he was at Acts Full Gospel Church several weeks ago when Bridges took the stage for several minutes to promote coal exports from Oakland. “The pastor said he wanted everyone to sign on and support him,” said Sibhat about the introduction given to Bridges. “They made him seem like he was an African-American businessman who was trying to succeed in the world, but they didn’t state it as, you know, ‘he’s a representative of the coal industry.’”

According to Sibhat, Bridges described himself as a former senior executive of the Port of Oakland and said that coal exports from the new terminal would be environmentally safe because of new technologies and designs. He drove home the message that coal would provide jobs. “He didn’t say anything specific or detailed about the design, just that it was going to be ‘revolutionary,’” said Sibhat. “That’s why I was questioning his claims. I know the low-income areas would get jobs from this, but the whole safety and environmental thing is important, and a lot of people do take advantage of low-income communities.”

Neither Darrel Carey nor representatives of Acts Full Gospel Church returned phone calls and emails seeking comment for this report.

Late last week, the Alameda Labor Council, which represents unions throughout the county, announced its official opposition to coal exports through Oakland. The Alameda Labor Council pointed to health and environmental harms caused by coal and noted that “jobs involving coal are unhealthy and unsafe due to dust emissions,” and that “coal is increasingly an anti-union industry.”

Monday Must Reads: Oakland and Alameda County Cut Ties with Coliseum City Developer; Governor to Sign Equal Pay Law

Stories you shouldn’t miss:

1. Oakland and Alameda County officials have decided to cut ties with Coliseum City developer Floyd Kephart, who was unable to come up with a feasible financing plan for a massive project that was to have included new sports facilities, along with housing, restaurants, and bars, the Bay Area News Group$ reports. The decision means that city and county officials will negotiate directly with the Oakland Raiders and the A’s on plans for new stadiums for both teams. The biggest stumbling block is the Raiders, because the team has a $400 million funding gap for a new stadium. Kephart’s contract with the city and county will expire this week.

2. Governor Jerry Brown has indicated that he plans to sign equal-pay legislation that will make it easier for women to sue their employers if men are paid higher wages for the same type of work, the AP reports (via the SacBee$). The pending Fair Pay Act “stipulates employers can justify higher wages for men only if the pay is based on seniority, a merit system, quantity or quality of production, or any other ‘bona fide factor other than sex.’”

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3. Education activists have collected enough signatures to qualify a $9 billion school construction bond for the November 2016 ballot, the SacBee$ reports.

4. Members of Richmond’s citizen police commission contend that City Attorney Bruce Goodmiller has stymied attempts to conduct an independent inquiry into the death of Richard “Pedie” Perez, an unarmed man who was shot and killed by Richmond police a year ago, the CoCo Times$ reports.

5. And brain researchers reported that they found evidence of chronic brain disease in 87 of 91 deceased NFL football players, the LA Times$ reports, citing a new Frontline report.

East Bay Labor Unions Say ‘No’ to Coal in Oakland

The official voice of the labor movement in the East Bay has come out against plans to export coal from Oakland. This morning, the Alameda Labor Council’s executive committee passed a resolution opposing the export of coal from the bulk commodity terminal planned for construction at the city’s former Army Base.

The resolution cites health hazards and environmental harms that are likely to result from shipping and storing coal in West Oakland — hazards that will impact both workers and Oakland residents.

“Jobs involving coal are unhealthy and unsafe due to dust emissions; coal is increasingly an anti-union industry,” states the resolution. “West Oakland residents are already twice as likely to visit the emergency room for asthma as the average Alameda County resident, and are also more likely to die of cancer, heart and lung disease… .”

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Terminal Logistics Solutions, the company proposing coal exports from the terminal, has claimed that the facility will be served by covered rail cars to reduce the amount of coal dust that drifts into nearby neighborhoods. TLS recently unveiled sketches on its website depicting dome-covered silos and enclosed conveyor belts that will store and load the coal onto ships for export overseas.

Opponents of the coal plan have said, however, that covered rail cars, silos and chutes are not used anywhere in the United States today, and their efficacy hasn’t been studied.

The Labor Council’s resolution states that despite the unions’ “unified opposition to coal,” they believe that the project can move forward without coal. Their resolutions welcomes commodities such as steel, wood, grains, sand, gravel ,and other “non-hazardous materials.”

A special meeting of the Oakland City Council is scheduled for Monday. The city clerk’s office has already received more than three hundred speaker cards from members of the public.


Friday Must Reads: OPD Hires First-Ever Civilian Director for Internal Affairs; Chances of El Niño Winter Rise to 95 Percent

Stories you shouldn’t miss:

1. Oakland Police Chief Sean Whent hired the department’s first-ever civilian director for internal affairs — Winkle Hobie Hong, a lawyer with years of police oversight experience in Chicago, the Trib$ reports. The hiring of Hong, who has never been a cop, fulfilled a policy initiative launched by Mayor Libby Schaaf, who has pushed for impartial oversight of OPD. In Chicago, Hong also had worked with Anthony Finnell, who is now the executive director of the Oakland Citizens’ Police Review Board.

2. Climatologists increased the likelihood of an El Niño winter in California this year to 95 percent, further raising hopes that a wetter-than-normal rainy season will help relieve the state’s punishing drought, the Chron reports. El Niños, which are created by warm ocean temperatures, have been associated with above-normal precipitation in the past — but this year’s weather event likely will not hit Northern California until after the 2015 fire season.

3. Lake Anza in Tilden Park in Berkeley is now closed because of a toxic algae bloom that’s likely related to the drought and warmer-than-normal temperatures, Berkeleyside reports. The East Bay Regional Park District previously closed Lake Temescal in the Oakland for the same reason.

4. Members of the UC Board of Regents rejected a proposed university intolerance policy because they said it failed to take a stand against alleged anti-Semitism toward Jews on campuses, the Chron reports. Several Jewish students spoke out against the intolerance policy, but the issue of anti-Semitism has become highly charged because some Jewish students want criticism of Israel and opposition to policies toward Palestinians to be labeled anti-Semitic.

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5. The Berkeley City Council this week banned the sale of e-cigs and flavored tobacco in stores that are within 600 feet of a school, Bay City News Service reports (via the CoCo Times$). The new law, which will take effect in January 2017, is expected to impact 26 retailers in the city. The council also moved forward with a plan to raise the smoking age in Berkeley to 21.

6. The death toll from the Valley Fire in Lake County rose to three, as authorities indicated that one of the bodies found was that of Leonard Neft, a former San Jose Mercury News reporter, the Chron reports. The other body recently discovered is believed to be that of Bruce Burns. Officials say that at least two other people are still missing after the fast-moving blaze roared through the bone-dry region just north of Napa County last weekend.

7. The state’s main political watchdog agency banned dark money in California political campaigns, ruling that nonprofits that engage in politics must disclose the identities of their donors, the LA Times$ reports. The decision by the California Fair Political Practices Commission is separate from a proposed measure for next year’s statewide ballot that would enshrine the prohibition against dark money in the California Constitution.

8. The Bay Area’s housing market cooled down a bit in August, as the median home price in the region dipped 12.1 percent compared to July, the Mercury News$ reports. However, home prices remain well above last year.

9. And health officials are urging people to get this year’s flu shot, saying that the 2015 version appears to be a much better match for flu strains than last year’s, the Chron reports. 

Youth Radio Releases California Drought Trivia App

A group of Oakland students is hoping to make a splash with a new trivia application they developed to raise awareness about California’s drought.

The students built the application as part of Youth Radio Interactive, a programming and journalism initiative associated with the Oakland-based media production company Youth Radio, which educates students on interactive storytelling. Called “Bucket Hustle,” the Android app features a game in which users must catch virtual raindrops and answer as many drought-related questions as they can within 45 seconds. 

The group wanted to find an engaging way to spread knowledge about the drought, said Asha Richardson, co-founder of Youth Radio Interactive. “We know we’re in a drought, but what does that actually mean?” she said.

[jump] According to Richardson, it took only two days to make the prototype. Eight students worked on designing graphics, coding, producing music, and creating trivia questions with Youth Radio Interactive students Storm White and Eli Arbreton acting as the design and programing leads, respectively. After creating the prototype, it took several months to flesh out and fine-tune the app — fixing bugs and conducting a pre-launch — before the final version was ready to be downloaded last month. 

Youth Radio Interactive does not require prior programming experience of its participants. The students built the application using the MIT App Inventor — one of the program’s partners — which Richardson said was particularly useful for beginners looking to get their feet wet in programming. “Young people actually get to make real things,” she said. “The critical thinking skills [they learn] are going to transcend any programming language.”

Since its founding in 2010, Youth Radio Interactive has produced a range of web projects and applications. Their projects have included an app designed to facilitate the sharing of free food in the community, and an interactive page detailing stories of police officers mistaking various objects for guns. 

Youth Radio also recently produced reports on the drought for National Public Radio and National Geographic

This Weekend’s Top Five Events

This weekend, the Eat Real Festival is taking over Jack London Square once again and our trusty food editor even made you your very own guide to optimize your enjoyment. But when you’re not stuffing your face by the water, here’ s a handful of other events to keep you busy this weekend. 

CCR Headcleaner
Unlike CCR, CCR Headcleaner formed in the South. That’s important, because beneath the band’s blistering guitar squall lies real riffs, the lumbering, sidelong kind that inevitably evoke the dry barrel bottom of this country. But make no mistake: Southern Rock never sounds this busted. Mind that the group rode the winds of the 2008 financial crisis to San Francisco, where it donned threads discarded by Community Thrift and joined Arinell’s secret slice club. The members of this group ate out of the trash, even when they didn’t have to. Meanwhile, CCR Headcleaner gigged with fury, indiscriminately opening for high-profile garage types at fancy spots such as the Great American Music Hall and headlining basement punk bills. Any setting will do, even Merchant’s Saloon (401 2nd St., Oakland), which the group anointed the “sickest dive in the Bay” on a flier promoting its free tour kick-off show on Friday.— Sam Lefebvre
Fri., Sept. 18, 8 p.m. free. Merchants-Saloon.com

Fruitvale Beer Garden Opening Party
These days, Oakland’s Fruitvale district is practically synonymous with taco trucks and various other manifestations of delicious Mexican cuisine. Jay Porter, the proprietor of The Half Orange (3340 E. 12th St.), loves that part of Fruitvale’s food culture, but he also wanted his restaurant’s newly expanded patio to pay tribute to an earlier period of the neighborhood’s history, in the late-19th and early-20th centuries, when German immigrants opened a slew of lively beer gardens in the area. What Porter has thus dubbed the “Fruitvale Beer Garden at The Half Orange” will have its grand opening this Saturday. Beer lovers will have the opportunity to sample the restaurant’s newly expanded thirteen-tap draft beer selection and to watch sports on a big-screen TV from the forty-seat outdoor patio. To mark the occasion, all beers will be priced at $4.95 all day and night.— Luke Tsai
Sat., Sept. 19, 11 a.m. Free. TheHalfOrange.com

Art/Act: Edward Burtynksy 

Edward Burtynksy’s photographs offer a sense of the sublime — that feeling you get when standing at the top of a mountain that makes you realize how small you are relative to the rest of the world. But his grand photographs are also terrifying, because, upon closer inspection, they reveal barren landscapes, ravaged by the extraction of natural resources. Many of the renowned photographer’s large-format works will be on view at the David Brower Center (2150 Allston Way, Berkeley) for its annual Art/Act exhibition, which honors one artist doing outstanding work in the intersection of art and activism. Burtynsky’s show will primarily highlight his series Water, which features once rich water sources that have dried up into shriveled landscapes with magnificent topographical patterns. In the midst of California’s detrimental drought, the photographs from all over the world both hit home and speak to the dangers that our ecosystem faces worldwide. The show opens on September 18, with a free reception from 7–9 p.m. during which the artist will give a public lecture about his work.— Sarah Burke
Sept. 18-Feb. 4, 2016 Free. BrowerCenter.org

Psychic TV
An enduring countercultural figure, Genesis P-Orridge is credited with forerunning industrial culture as a founding member of Throbbing Gristle, a group of experimentalists bent on probing the margins of sound and provocative physical feats in the tradition of durational performance art. Then, P-Orridge founded Psychic TV. Flitting between psychedelia and outlandish acid house, the group’s packaging and visual components further expanded upon P-Orridge’s influential aesthetic. A serial collaborator, P-Orridge’s boldest move occurred in tandem with the late Lady Jaye. Together, the two embarked upon the so-called Pandrogeny Project, working through surgery to morph into a sole, gender-free individual. Most recently, P-Orridge reinvigorated Psychic TV — which performs on Saturday at the Independent (628 Divisadero St., San Francisco) — as a pulsating, psych-inclined rock unit.— S. L. 
Sat., Sept. 19, 9 p.m. $22. TheIndependentSF.com

Bilongo Esmeralda (Let The Devil Take Style)
In the dystopian future depicted by artist Sofía Córdova, the world is submerged in water and all its residents are displaced, lost and looking for some sense of home to grasp on to. In Córdova’s newest work, an immersive installation at Pro Arts Gallery (150 Frank H. Ogawa Plaza, Oakland) entitled Bilongo Esmeralda (Let the Devil Take Style), the local artist literally makes the viewer feel as if he or she is on a sci-fi boat, using massive sails that double as projector screens for Córdova’s video work. Córdova is Puerto Rican and has been working on an ongoing series of videos that aims to reimagine the Caribbean diaspora and, more broadly, the immigrant experience in general. She also performs as one half of Xuxa Santamaria, making experimental, psychedelic dance music rife with intellectual undertones and very much in line with her fine art practice. Many of the works in Bilongo Esmeralda employ the same campy, colorful aesthetic as the visuals for her music. The entirety of her video series, entitled Echoes of a Tumbling Throne (Odas Al Fin De Los Tiempos), will be screened on September 18 at 6:30 p.m. with a live score by Xuxa Santamaria in Frank Ogawa Plaza.— S. B. 
Through Sept. 18.Free. ProArtsGallery.org

Oakland Councilmember Annie Campbell Washington and Police and Fire Unions Fined for Illegal Robocalls

Oakland city Councilmember Annie Campbell Washington was fined by the state Fair Political Practices Commission $3,500 today for illegal robocalls that her campaign made to Chinese and Spanish-speaking voters last year.

California law requires that political candidates and committees disclose to call recipients the fact that they paid for a telephone ad. According to the FPPC, Campbell Washington’s robocalls did not inform voters that the messages were paid for by her committee.

Campbell Washington also failed to disclose payments made for the phone calls in her campaign filings with the Oakland City Clerk.

Political action committees of the Oakland Police Officers’ Association and the International Association of Firefighters Local 55 were also both slapped with substantial fines by the FPPC today for illegal robocalls that both unions paid for to benefit Campbell Washington.

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According to the FPPC, the Oakland police union paid for 10,191 robocalls with the following script:

“This is Oakland Police Officer Wendy Rae calling on behalf of the Oakland Police Officer’s Association and California Attorney General Kamala Harris asking you to join us in supporting Annie Campbell Washington for City Council. Annie Campbell Washington understands that the key to reducing crime is keeping youth in school and out of the courtroom. She is the only candidate endorsed by our police officers, firefighters and Attorney General Kamala Harris. Please join us on November 4th. Thank you.”

The IAFF Local 55 paid for another 10,879 robocalls to Oakland voters. Campell Washington won her seat on the council thanks in part to support from the city’s powerful police and fire unions.

Both union PACs failed to disclose to callers that they paid for the political messages, and both were fined $2,000 for the violations.

Campbell Washington did not immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

Thursday Must Reads: PG&E Line May Have Sparked Massive Sierra Fire; Sea Level Rise Threatens Bay Area Wetlands

Stories you shouldn’t miss:

1. The massive Butte Fire, which has killed two people and ravaged more than two hundred homes in the Sierra foothills, may have been caused by a PG&E electrical line coming in contact with a tree, the Chron reports. The blaze, which has burned 72,000 acres in Amador and Calaveras counties, is one of three major fires still burning in the state. The two people who are confirmed dead as a result of the fire apparently refused orders to evacuate their homes.

2. Sea level rise from climate change in the coming decades will seriously threaten wetlands in San Francisco Bay and the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, the CoCo Times$ reports, citing a new scientific study. The study’s authors say the Bay Area needs to build up the region’s wetlands — which protect the coastline and keep area waters healthy — with sediment, because human-made dams and river diversions have blocked natural sediment from accumulating.

3. Authorities found a body believed to be that of one of the four missing people in the fast-moving Valley Fire in Lake County, just north of Napa County, the Chron reports. The corpse was discovered near the search for Leonard Neft, a former San Jose Mercury News reporter, who went missing in the wildfire last weekend. Officials are still searching for three other missing people. 

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4. The proposed medical pot regulations awaiting the governor’s signature might bar people with drug-related felony convictions from being involved in the state’s cannabis industry, the Chron$ reports. Activists say this aspect of the proposed regulations, which was backed heavily by law enforcement groups, could disproportionately exclude African Americans and Latinos in the state who have been targeted by police for drug offenses.

5. Good government advocates, including Bob Stern, the author of California’s primary campaign finance and ethics laws, are proposing a ballot measure that would require the disclosure of donors in so-called dark money political campaigns, the SacBee$ reports. Currently, dark money groups — nonprofits — don’t have to reveal the names of their contributors.

6. The Berkeley City Council voted to delay making a decision until November on a proposal to raise the city’s minimum wage to $19 an hour by 2020, Berkeleyside reports. Small business owners warned that the proposed wage hike could force them to close.

7. And there appears to have been a consensus among political analysts that Carly Fiorina, the former Hewlett-Packard CEO, won last night’s Republican presidential debate.

CocoRosie, Ibeyi, tUnE-yArDs to Perform at Symbiosis


Spotlighting genres from techno to deep house, the Symbiosis Gathering returns to the Woodward Reservoir Regional Park (26 Mile Rd, Oakdale) this week for its ten year anniversary. From September 17 to 20 the festival will provide educational workshops on topics including indigenous seed stewardship, astrology, and permaculture gardening, in addition to an extensive lineup of electronic musicians. Several Oakland-based artists and organizers will be involved, and the festival will also feature art installations, art boats, yoga workshops, and live painting. Headliners include avant-garde pop sister duo CocoRosie, who just dropped their long anticipated album, Heartache City. Local variety show Tourettes Without Regrets will provide entertainment on day three of Symbiosis, and the Oakland-based Merrill Garbus and her band tUnE-yArDs will perform on the final evening. French-Cuban twins Ibeyi — notably one of the few acts featuring people of color — will bring Yoruba and English spirituals to the show.

Check out CocoRosie’s new album below. 

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Mid-Week Menu: Tomatoes at Oliveto, a $19 Minimum Wage Proposal for Berkeley, and Two New Urban Farms in the East Bay

Welcome to the Mid-Week Menu, our roundup of East Bay food news.

1) Every year there’s such a narrow window of time for the Bay Area’s farmers’ market faithful to enjoy peak-season tomatoes before we have to face the prospect of mealy, flavorless specimens for the other ten or eleven months of the year. Well, that window is rapidly closing, and there’s no better place to enjoy one last hurrah than the annual Tomato Dinners at Oliveto (5655 College Ave., Oakland), which kick off tonight and run through Saturday, September 19.

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An entire menu’s worth of tomato-centric dishes — more than 25 in all — include millefoglie (a layered stack, I presume) of Early Girl tomato and salt-roasted beets, burrata ravioli with chunky tomato sugo, charcoal-grilled pigeon with pancetta-wrapped tomatoes, and a Hawaiian pineapple tomato cheesecake. See the full menu here.

2) It’s the rare week when we don’t have too much action on the new restaurant front, but the Bay Area News Group does bring word that Angela’s (1640 Park St.) is open in Alameda after a fire — a suspected arson case — ravaged the restaurant just three days before it was set to open last year. The Mediterranean spot serves beer and wine and will focus on using local ingredients. (Hat tip to Tablehopper.)

3) The Berkeley City Council is considering a Labor Commission proposal to raise the city’s minimum wage to $19 by 2020 — though the vote on the proposal has been pushed back to November 10, Berkeleyside reports. Recent minimum wage increases have been the subject of some concern for East Bay restaurant owners during the past year. The cover story I wrote in February looked at some of the different approaches that restaurants have begun taking to deal with the change. (Mostly, they’ve increased prices.)

4) As the Express reported last week, Urban Adamah, a Berkeley-based Jewish educational farm and community center, is set to break ground on a larger permanent location at 1151 Sixth Street. The two-acre site will include an urban farm, a cafe, a children’s garden, and several classrooms.

5) Bay Area Bites has a nice profile of a new West Oakland farm whose main focus is on offering employment to the formerly incarcerated.

6) About a year ago, I reported on a photo/cookbook project being put together by local teen chef Elazar Sontag, now 17, and photographer Anya Ku, a third-year student at UC Berkeley. The book, Flavors of Oakland, includes stories and recipes from twenty Oakland residents from all different cultural backgrounds. Now, Ku and Sontag are raising funds to pay for printing expenses — and to cover the cost of providing free copies to interested Oakland public schools and libraries.

7) The kickoff event for next week’s Matutu Festival of Stories — an art, film, and music showcase (which the Express previewed here) — will take place on Tuesday, September 22, 7–10 p.m., at Miss Ollie’s (901 Washington St., Oakland). The menu for the $75 prix-fixe dinner includes cornmeal fritters, twice-fried plantains, and chef Sarah Kirnon’s signature skillet-fried chicken. (Hat tip Tablehopper.)

8) The Fruitvale Beer Garden at The Half Orange (3340 E. 12th St., Oakland) will have its grand opening celebration on Saturday, September 19 — head over to check out the expanded patio and to enjoy $4.95 beers all day long. More details here.

9) ICYMI, Eat Real Festival and Town Eats are taking over Jack London Square this weekend.

Got tips or suggestions? Email me at Luke (dot) Tsai (at) EastBayExpress (dot) com. Otherwise, keep in touch by following me on Twitter @theluketsai, or simply by posting a comment. I’ll read ‘em all.

Buying Support for Coal

Terminal Logistics Solutions president and CEO Jerry Bridges. Credits: US Army Corps of Engineers In a series of quiet meetings, the businessmen behind a plan to export millions of tons of coal from the Oakland waterfront have offered local churches and environmental organizations money in exchange for their support, the Express has learned. According to several sources with firsthand knowledge of...

Monday Must Reads: Oakland and Alameda County Cut Ties with Coliseum City Developer; Governor to Sign Equal Pay Law

Stories you shouldn’t miss: 1. Oakland and Alameda County officials have decided to cut ties with Coliseum City developer Floyd Kephart, who was unable to come up with a feasible financing plan for a massive project that was to have included new sports facilities, along with housing, restaurants, and bars, the Bay Area News Group$ reports. The decision means that city...

East Bay Labor Unions Say ‘No’ to Coal in Oakland

A Union Pacific train laden with coal passing through the Sierra Nevada foothills toward the Bay Area in August 2015. Credits: Tom Anderson The official voice of the labor movement in the East Bay has come out against plans to export coal from Oakland. This morning, the Alameda Labor Council’s executive committee passed a resolution opposing the export of coal from...

Friday Must Reads: OPD Hires First-Ever Civilian Director for Internal Affairs; Chances of El Niño Winter Rise to 95 Percent

Stories you shouldn’t miss: 1. Oakland Police Chief Sean Whent hired the department’s first-ever civilian director for internal affairs — Winkle Hobie Hong, a lawyer with years of police oversight experience in Chicago, the Trib$ reports. The hiring of Hong, who has never been a cop, fulfilled a policy initiative launched by Mayor Libby Schaaf, who has pushed for impartial oversight...

Youth Radio Releases California Drought Trivia App

A screenshot of Bucket Hustle, the recently released app from Youth Interactive Radio. Credits: Asha Richardson A group of Oakland students is hoping to make a splash with a new trivia application they developed to raise awareness about California’s drought. The students built the application as part of Youth Radio...

This Weekend’s Top Five Events

This weekend, the Eat Real Festival is taking over Jack London Square once again and our trusty food editor even made you your very own guide to optimize your enjoyment. But when you're not stuffing your face by the water, here' s a handful of other events to keep you busy this weekend.  CCR Headcleaner Unlike CCR, CCR Headcleaner formed...

Oakland Councilmember Annie Campbell Washington and Police and Fire Unions Fined for Illegal Robocalls

Oakland city Councilmember Annie Campbell Washington was fined by the state Fair Political Practices Commission $3,500 today for illegal robocalls that her campaign made to Chinese and Spanish-speaking voters last year. California law requires that political candidates and committees disclose to call recipients the fact that they paid for a telephone ad. According to the FPPC, Campbell Washington’s robocalls...

Thursday Must Reads: PG&E Line May Have Sparked Massive Sierra Fire; Sea Level Rise Threatens Bay Area Wetlands

Stories you shouldn’t miss: 1. The massive Butte Fire, which has killed two people and ravaged more than two hundred homes in the Sierra foothills, may have been caused by a PG&E electrical line coming in contact with a tree, the Chron reports. The blaze, which has burned 72,000 acres in Amador and Calaveras counties, is one of three major fires...

CocoRosie, Ibeyi, tUnE-yArDs to Perform at Symbiosis

Spotlighting genres from techno to deep house, the Symbiosis Gathering returns to the Woodward Reservoir Regional Park (26 Mile Rd, Oakdale) this week for its ten year anniversary. From September 17 to 20 the festival will provide educational workshops on topics including indigenous seed stewardship, astrology, and permaculture gardening, in addition to an extensive lineup of electronic musicians. Several...

Mid-Week Menu: Tomatoes at Oliveto, a $19 Minimum Wage Proposal for Berkeley, and Two New Urban Farms in the East Bay

Welcome to the Mid-Week Menu, our roundup of East Bay food news. 1) Every year there’s such a narrow window of time for the Bay Area’s farmers’ market faithful to enjoy peak-season tomatoes before we have to face the prospect of mealy, flavorless specimens for the other ten or eleven months of the year. Well, that window is rapidly closing,...
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