Piedmont – East Bay Times https://www.eastbaytimes.com Tue, 17 Jan 2023 15:58:14 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/32x32-ebt.png?w=32 Piedmont – East Bay Times https://www.eastbaytimes.com 32 32 116372269 Prep basketball: No. 1 Piedmont survives challenge from No. 3 Salesian at O’Dowd MLK Classic https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/16/prep-basketball-no-1-piedmont-survives-challenge-from-no-3-salesian-at-odowd-mlk-classic/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/16/prep-basketball-no-1-piedmont-survives-challenge-from-no-3-salesian-at-odowd-mlk-classic/#respond Tue, 17 Jan 2023 02:21:37 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8717777&preview=true&preview_id=8717777 OAKLAND — Piedmont had two of its starters foul out, gave up 11 three-pointers, and was consistently harassed into turnovers and rushed shots by a frenetic Salesian team that boasts victories over fantastic teams like Sacred Heart Cathedral and Oakland Tech.

The Highlanders, ranked No. 1 by the Bay Area News Group, justified their top spot by pushing past those difficulties in a 69-63 win at Bishop O’Dowd’s Martin Luther King Jr. Classic on Monday afternoon.

In the process, Piedmont looked every bit like a team that can compete in the Open Division, the highest level of the state playoffs.

“They should be in there,” Salesian coach Stephen Pezzola said. “They beat Mitty, and they beat us, so there’s no reason they shouldn’t be in the Open Division.”

Unless something changes at the last minute, Piedmont won’t be in the North Coast Section Open Division. Only teams from Divisions I through III are eligible for the NCS’s top bracket. Piedmont is a Division IV team.

But that won’t affect where Piedmont lands in the regionals.

The Highlanders clearly are good enough for both.

Salesian’s senior shooting guard Makiah Asidanya nailed five three-pointers as part of a game-high 25-point night.  A 21-point second quarter by the Pride (15-3) ended with a 33-30 lead at halftime.

OAKLAND - Piedmont forward Eva Levingston makes a reverse layup. Piedmont and Salesian played in the high school basketball game at Bishop O'Dowd high school for the Martin Luther King Jr. day Showcase in Oakland, Calif. on Friday, Jan. 16, 2023 (Joseph Dycus/Bay Area News Group)
OAKLAND – Piedmont forward Eva Levingston makes a reverse layup. Piedmont and Salesian played in the high school basketball game at Bishop O’Dowd high school for the Martin Luther King Jr. day Showcase in Oakland, Calif. on Friday, Jan. 16, 2023 (Joseph Dycus/Bay Area News Group) 

After its opponent built its advantage using long-range marksmanship, Piedmont came back by utilizing a much different strategy.

Eva Levingston powered in 10 of her team-high 21 points in the third quarter before joining starting point guard Perseas Gioukaris on the Piedmont bench with five fouls midway through the fourth.

Those baskets, mostly scored on flip shots and layups, turned a three-point Salesian halftime lead into a 53-43 Piedmont advantage heading into the final quarter. The Highlanders defense also made a crucial adjustment.

“We had to start locking in on their shooters too, because they were getting a lot of threes they shouldn’t have,” Piedmont forward and San Diego State commit Trinity Zamora said.

Zamora also took on more ballhandling duties while scoring 18, Natalia Martinez notched 13 points and guard Madison Hill spaced the floor by hitting three 3-pointers. Two of Piedmont’s second-string players also impressed when pressed into action.

“Kat Melian started last year for us, so I knew she’d be ready,” Piedmont coach Bryan Gardere said. “Shakila Zuberi came in and did the same thing. It was awesome to see.”

OAKLAND - Kat Melian shoots a jumpshot. Piedmont and Salesian played in the high school basketball game at Bishop O'Dowd high school for the Martin Luther King Jr. day Showcase in Oakland, Calif. on Friday, Jan. 16, 2023 (Joseph Dycus/Bay Area News Group)
OAKLAND – Kat Melian shoots a jumpshot. Piedmont and Salesian played in the high school basketball game at Bishop O’Dowd high school for the Martin Luther King Jr. day Showcase in Oakland, Calif. on Friday, Jan. 16, 2023 (Joseph Dycus/Bay Area News Group) 

Salesian kept the game close throughout the fourth, but the Highlanders hit their free throws and sealed the victory.

Now owning wins over No. 2 Mitty and No. 3 Salesian, Piedmont (15-0) continues to build an impeccable resume. Gardere believes those tough wins should serve Piedmont well come playoff time in March.

“We didn’t play particularly great today, but I’m glad we figured it out,” Gardere said. “We need to play games like this to figure out what we need to prepare for.”

]]>
https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/16/prep-basketball-no-1-piedmont-survives-challenge-from-no-3-salesian-at-odowd-mlk-classic/feed/ 0 8717777 2023-01-16T18:21:37+00:00 2023-01-17T07:58:14+00:00
Storms send sewage pouring into streets, creeks, San Francisco Bay and Pacific Ocean https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/15/storms-send-sewage-pouring-into-streets-creeks-san-francisco-bay-and-pacific-ocean/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/15/storms-send-sewage-pouring-into-streets-creeks-san-francisco-bay-and-pacific-ocean/#respond Sun, 15 Jan 2023 14:15:01 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8716905&preview=true&preview_id=8716905 January’s storms are offering an unsettling glimpse into one of the Bay Area’s dirtiest environmental secrets: Heavy rain overwhelms our region’s vast plumbing system and flushes  wastewater into places where it doesn’t belong.

Downpours triggered the release of millions of gallons of raw sewage mixed with rainwater across the region in just two weeks, spilling contaminated water into dozens of rivers, creeks and ultimately into the ocean and San Francisco Bay, according to a Bay Area News Group analysis of 88 reports to the state’s Office of Emergency Services.

“Flooded waters contain pathogens,” warned Eileen White, executive officer for the San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Control Board. “If you touch flood waters, you want to wash your hands thoroughly with soap and water to make sure that you don’t get yourself exposed.”

When sewage flows into homes and businesses, expensive remediation and decontamination is needed to make them safe again. Overflows also may have dangerous consequences for the environment, because human waste, pharmaceuticals, shampoos and other harmful products are flushed down drains and toilets.

In one incident, the Martinez Refinery Company reported releasing more than six million gallons of storm and wastewater into the Carquinez Strait estuary, which drains into the San Francisco Bay, on Jan. 4, according to state records. The discharge of partially treated “process water” and storm water was necessary to avoid damage to the refinery, the company reported.

Dozens of other smaller incidents were caused by open manhole covers, broken pipes and overwhelmed treatment facilities, from Corte Madera to Woodside and Half Moon Bay to Pleasanton.

State records show that between Dec. 31 and Jan. 3, a total of more than 14 million gallons of sewage were discharged in the San Francisco Bay region, enough to fill 21 Olympic-sized swimming pools, according to White. The Jan. 4 storm triggered the release of another 8 million gallons, or 12 Olympic-sized swimming pools.

More recent releases are still being tallied. Experts say the total volume is likely to be much larger than current estimates because the chaotic circumstances surrounding these emergency flooding situations mean it’s nearly impossible to accurately evaluate the true scale and impact of sewage contamination.

Like bridges or skyscrapers designed to bear certain weights, stormwater management systems are designed within the limits of weather — and can’t handle the intensity of storms that might happen only every decade or two.

In dry times, waste from homes and businesses is whisked immediately away to wastewater-treatment plants, never to be seen, smelled or considered again.

But two weeks of near-constant storms have stressed the system, as heavy rainfall and flooding infiltrate sewer pipes.

“We saw 13 times our average wastewater flows,” said Andrea Pook of East Bay Municipal Utilities District.

Most of the releases were caused when storm water backs up into the streets, flowing up through drains or manhole covers forced open by the overwhelming volume of high-pressure torrents, the reports show.

In Redwood City, a manhole overflow sent polluted water into Borel Creek at a rate of 150 gallons per minute. In San Mateo, 100 to 150 gallons per minute flowed into a storm drain that empties into Polhemus Creek. About 50 gallons a minute were dumped into Sonoma Creek. In Oakland, the overflow of three manholes spilled 25,000 gallons into Lake Merritt.

When a sewage lift station in Daly City overflowed because of stormwater, 35,950 gallons of waste were released into the Pacific Ocean. The rupture of a main treatment line in Moss Beach also caused a spill into the ocean. In Pacifica, an overflowing pump station caused 20,000 gallons to be discharged at Linda Mar Beach.  About 34,000 gallons were released in Menlo Park’s Belle Haven neighborhood when a West Bay Sanitary treatment plant couldn’t keep up with the flow.

In Richmond, the West County Wastewater facility pumped sewage directly into the San Francisco Bay, according to a Jan. 11 report.  “It is unknown how long the releasing will be going for,” it said.

Three discharges into Oakland’s San Leandro Creek, Barnhill Marina and an estuary at the foot of Alice Street originated from the East Bay Municipal Utility District’s “overflow structures,” which are designed to discharge water in high-flow conditions.

Farther south, a sewage treatment plant was flooded Friday when the Salinas River rushed over the banks of a levee. Percolation ponds in the city of Templeton also were flooded, sending 300,000 gallons into the river.

Cal Fire Caption Curtis Rhodes, walks past a home flooded by the Salinas River on Chualar Road near Chualar, Calif., on Thursday, Jan. 12, 2023. The Monterey County Sheriff's Office ordered additional evacuations for low-lying areas along the Salinas River in preparation of floods that could potentially close overland routes. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group)
Cal Fire Caption Curtis Rhodes, walks past a home flooded by the Salinas River on Chualar Road near Chualar, Calif., on Thursday, Jan. 12, 2023. Like many overwhelmed treatment facilities, a sewage treatment plant in Monterey County was flooded on Friday when the Salinas River rushed over the banks of a levee. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) 

Mother Nature is wreaking additional chaos. In Oakland, a tree fell on the sewer line, causing 5,100 gallons of sewage to be released into Sausal Creek. In Crockett, a hillside eroded and collapsed — causing a pipe to break and release 2,700 gallons. When debris blocked a sewer conduit, about 10,000 gallons overflowed into a drain that leads to Oakland’s Lake Temescal.

Records show that a single day — Dec. 31, New Year’s Eve — was responsible for the largest number of reports to the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, with 51 discharges in different Bay Area cities.

On that morning alone, there were 15 sewage discharges in 12 cities: Hillsborough, Woodside, San Bruno, Daly City, Pacifica, Burlingame, Half Moon Bay, San Lorenzo, Richmond, Piedmont, Oakland and Daly City.  By midnight, there were an additional 36 discharges in 25 cities: Alameda, Oakland, San Mateo, Richmond, Pacifica, Martinez, El Granada, Montara, Pittsburg, Corte Madera, San Francisco, Antioch, Redwood City, Dublin, San Leandro, Albany, Berkeley, Woodside, Vallejo, Menlo Park, Benicia, Sausalito, Pleasanton, Foster City and Hayward.

The problem isn’t new, said Sejal Choksi-Chugh, executive director of San Francisco Baykeeper, a nonprofit focused on the health of the San Francisco Bay. But the constant rain has exacerbated the issue.

“Over the years, and typically every time it rains, we see sewage spills in the streets and wastewater overflows,” she said. “But the back-to-back-to-back-to-back major storm events is causing a continuous discharge. That’s what is new.”

With continued population growth, the demands on our sewer systems have increased, say experts. Meanwhile, more development leads to more asphalt and cement, so the bulk of the rainfall ends up in our sewage systems.  And our wastewater pipes, often made of clay, are aging, so water infiltrates through cracks and gaps.

The rate at which the urban Bay Area is adapting to these threats is lagging behind the speed at which rain is drowning it, said Choksi-Chugh.  Cities need to invest in replacing pipes and upgrading wastewater treatment systems to increase storage capacity and install more recycling technologies, she said. Cities also could incentivize homeowners to replace old pipes through grants or low-interest loans.

In the absence of major improvements to our sewer infrastructure, these dangerous overflows will increase as climate change leads to more extreme weather, say experts.

“Our old infrastructure is just not going to be up to snuff,” Choksi-Chugh said. “It’s not going to be able to handle these larger storm events, year upon year. So we really need to be thinking about the future.”

]]>
https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/15/storms-send-sewage-pouring-into-streets-creeks-san-francisco-bay-and-pacific-ocean/feed/ 0 8716905 2023-01-15T06:15:01+00:00 2023-01-15T10:40:38+00:00
Shakeup at Alameda DA’s office: Prosecutors placed on leave, inspectors fired as new District Attorney takes the job https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/13/shakeup-at-alameda-das-office-prosecutors-placed-on-leave-inspectors-fired-as-new-district-attorney-takes-the-job/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/13/shakeup-at-alameda-das-office-prosecutors-placed-on-leave-inspectors-fired-as-new-district-attorney-takes-the-job/#respond Sat, 14 Jan 2023 05:21:53 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8716329&preview=true&preview_id=8716329 OAKLAND –  Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price has placed several seasoned prosecutors on administrative leave this week and fired two top inspectors, in what appears to be the start of an office shakeup by the newly-elected outsider.

Multiple sources told the Bay Area News Group that Price and her new leadership team in their first full week in office moved to place at least three deputy district attorneys, including senior prosecutors, on leave.

Deputy District Attorneys John Brouhard, Butch Ford and Colleen McMahon are among the attorneys Price placed on paid administrative leave — a status that opens the door for their termination.

Additionally, Chief of Inspectors Craig Chew and Assistant Chief of Inspectors Andrea Moreland were fired, according to multiple sources. Unlike prosecutors, inspectors are considered at-will employees and can be terminated without arbitration. The attorneys placed on leave could not be fired until after a two-pronged process, which ends with a ruling by either an administrative law judge or an arbitrator.

On Friday, the mood inside the DA’s office ranged from demoralization to panic. Multiple employees were asked to inform their colleagues, and in some cases their friends, that they were to be placed on administrative leave and other attorneys sat in their offices wondering if they would be next, according to the sources.

Matt Finnegan, an attorney with the local union representing Alameda County prosecutors, said his office is representing the attorneys and will continue to do so “as more slips come in.”

“The biggest downside is that they aren’t going to be able to handle any cases while they’re on administrative leave,” Finnegan said.

It is unclear exactly why the prosecutors were shown the door. A spokeswoman for the DA’s office declined to comment.

However, Price had criticized some of the prosecutors, including Ford, during her 2022 campaign.

Ford, a longtime prosecutor with more than 30 murder trials under his belt, prosecuted an Oakland man, Shawn Martin, who won an appeal of his murder conviction over Ford giving jurors a misleading instruction. Martin was found not guilty on retrial, and later became a volunteer for Price’s campaign.

Martin’s case became a sticking point because just before his second trial, his attorney filed a failed motion to recuse the entire Alameda County DA’s office for alleged rampant misconduct. Just days before Price’s victory in the Nov. 8 election, Martin was identified as a suspect in a nonfatal shooting outside an Oakland bar and remains at large.

The shakeup also comes just days after Price reduced charges against suspected serial killer David Misch, who was being prosecuted by McMahon. Already incarcerated at a state prison hospital for stabbing a woman to death, Misch is facing a new trial in the slayings of two Fremont women and the abduction and killing of 9-year-old Michaela Garecht in Hayward, all cold cases from the 1980s.

Price dropped special circumstances charges against Misch, stirring controversy while making good on a campaign promise to review cases where individuals face life without the possibility of parole. It is the first of many such cases Price is expected to evaluate.

The official reason for sidelining Brouhard along with McMahon would be more of a mystery, if not for a common denominator among the two veteran prosecutors. While running for DA, Price held a press conference calling out McMahon, Brouhard and other prosecutors for using their government email accounts to campaign for Nancy O’Malley in 2018. O’Malley — who defeated Price and won re-election that year — announced her retirement in May 2021, opening up the seat for the first time in decades.

Price at the time said the prosecutors used county resources “to gain an unfair advantage” against her. Price and an attorney representing her campaign filed a complaint with the Fair Political Practices Commission alleging attorneys violated a state government code prohibiting an independent expenditure committee from coordinating with a candidate — in this case O’Malley.

The Fair Political Practices Commission investigation of the complaint filed by Price remains open, according to the FPPC. Like Ford, McMahon and Brouhard have handled numerous felony trials and are among the office’s most seasoned prosecutors.

Other high-ranking prosecutors who worked under O’Malley have left or are rumored to be eyeing the exit.

Veteran prosecutor Terry Wiley, the O’Malley-backed candidate who ran against Price in the November 2022 election, retired from the office after the election.

One early departure, according to sources, is Assistant District Attorney L.D. Louis, a 20-plus-year prosecutor. Louis is said to have joined the County Counsel’s Office, which oversees legal matters for the civilian side of the county. Louis was most recently the head of the DA’s mental health unit, specializing in policy as well as collaborative courts and alternatives to incarceration.

Top-floor prosecutors and inspectors, like Wiley and Chew, are at-will employees, meaning they could be dismissed without a reason. Virtually all prosecutors, except for assistant district attorneys, are represented by the Alameda County Prosecutors Association and cannot be terminated without cause. Prosecutors began organizing in 2018 and were formalized as a union two years later.

Any prosecutor placed on leave is entitled to a so-called Skelly hearing, which provides employees an opportunity to hear and defend themselves against the employer’s allegations.

In announcing her new leadership team last Friday, Price appointed retired Oakland police Capt. Eric Lewis as chief of inspectors and former Marin County Assistant District Attorney Otis Bruce Jr. and Royl L. Roberts, a Peralta Community College administrator who recently became the district’s general counsel after passing the state bar in July, as her two chief assistant district attorneys.

]]>
https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/13/shakeup-at-alameda-das-office-prosecutors-placed-on-leave-inspectors-fired-as-new-district-attorney-takes-the-job/feed/ 0 8716329 2023-01-13T21:21:53+00:00 2023-01-15T10:57:08+00:00
California’s eighth and ninth storms since Christmas to hit this weekend, adding to flood fears https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/11/dark-dreary-bay-area-weather-is-expected-to-last-into-next-week/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/11/dark-dreary-bay-area-weather-is-expected-to-last-into-next-week/#respond Wed, 11 Jan 2023 19:24:41 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8712538&preview=true&preview_id=8712538 Don’t be fooled by Thursday’s lull.

The eighth and ninth storms to target California since Christmas are on the way this holiday weekend, making for volatile and treacherous conditions from the Bay Area to the Sierra.

The storms themselves won’t be as intense as those that devastated communities in the Santa Cruz mountains and along the beaches over the past week, but with rivers running high and soils already saturated, more flooding and mudslides are predicted across California. The Salinas River in southern Monterey County in particular is expected to flood Friday.

“We definitely appreciate the bounty, but we wish it was spread out over a longer period,” Jeff Lorber, meteorologist with the National Weather Service, said Wednesday.

So much snow has fallen already this season that sensors are registering what is considered the “full seasonal snowpack” normally expected by April 1, state climatologist Michael Anderson told reporters during a news briefing Wednesday. It’s still too soon to say whether the snowpack levels will hold until then, but if they do, they could provide ample snowmelt to continue to fill the reservoirs this spring and summer.

Kevin “Coop” Cooper, a longtime Tahoe area ski condition reporter and resort marketing consultant, said the abundant snow is a welcome change after several lean snow years during the state’s drought.

“Right now, I’m looking out of my house and it’s snowing lightly. We’re seeing a nice new amount of snow, temperatures are dropping,” he said Wednesday. “After my 30 years up here, this is one of the best MLK weekends we’ve seen in a long time.”

But that comes with a catch.

Video: California storms drop hail in the Bay Area, cause rockslides, sinkholes and more

With heavy snow and high winds predicted in the Sierra through the weekend, getting to the mountains could be dangerous. Travel in vulnerable areas, especially the Sierra, is not advised from Friday afternoon through Saturday, Lorber said, “when the winds and the rainfall will be at their peak.” The ninth storm is expected to roar in late Sunday through Tuesday.

It’s the kind of warning that weekend warriors amped to hit the Sierra slopes don’t like to heed.

“Fresh snow is like going through butter,” said Andrew Pham, 22, who stopped at Helm of Sun Valley ski shop in San Jose to attach bindings to his new snowboard and is planning to drive up Friday. “When you’re the first one on it, ooh.”

By Wednesday, snowpack levels reached 226% of average for this time of year, beating out 2005 which was 206% of average. All that fresh snow is giving experts reason to feel optimistic that drought conditions that have gripped the Golden State for three years could meaningfully ease by the end of the snowy season.

“The fact that we’re continuing to get this precipitation is just absolutely fantastic,” said Andrew Schwartz, lead scientist at the UC Berkeley Central Sierra Snow Laboratory near Donner Summit. “It’s still unlikely that we’re going to get completely out of this drought in a single year. But if the storm door stays open… we can put a serious dent in it.”

As of Wednesday, major Northern California reservoirs have registered “impressive gains,” Anderson, the state climatologist, said. But there’s still plenty of catching up to do. Lake Don Pedro east of Modesto is at 69% capacity, for instance, and San Luis Reservoir southeast of the Bay Area, which has risen 35 feet since Dec. 1, is 40% full. The Shasta and Oroville reservoirs, the behemoths of California’s water system, are at 42% and 47% respectively. Lake Oroville has risen more than 90 feet since Dec. 1, surpassing its 2021 and 2022 levels.

Almaden Reservoir in San Jose, Calif. spills Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023, after filling to capacity during the latest storms. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)
Almaden Reservoir in San Jose, Calif. spills Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023, after filling to capacity during the latest storms. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group) 

“We’ve had quite a deficit because of the drought,” said Molly White, principal engineer with the state water board. “So we’re seeing steep inclines right now in storage, and hope that continues.”

In the Bay Area, Mount Umunhum in Santa Cruz County registered the highest rainfall total in the 24 hours leading to 10 a.m. Wednesday — 1.03 inches. Concord recorded 0.97 inches of rain. About six-tenths of an inch fell in Los Gatos; a quarter-inch fell at Ben Lomond, and two-tenths of an inch fell in San Jose and at the San Francisco International Airport.

In Tahoe, business is booming at ski resorts, despite struggles to keep lifts operational as a series of snow storms continues to plow through the Sierras. So much snow has accumulated in the Sierras already that ski resorts are having to keep track of avalanche risk hour-by-hour.

Mark McLaughlin, the so-called “storm king” who keeps track of Sierra conditions, said he listened to the concussive pounding Wednesday morning of cannons pelting the mountain sides of the Palisades Tahoe resort to trigger avalanches to improve safety before skiers arrive.

“I bet you I heard 20 of them this morning, 20 blasts,” McLaughlin said Wednesday.

Chart showing that, according to average measurement from eight weather stations in the northern Sierra Nevada region, this season's precipitation is at 30.9 inches 144% of average for this date.John O’Connell, spokesman for Caltrans in the Lake Tahoe area, recommended that skiers from the Bay Area hit the road Thursday if they can, as the storm may arrive earlier Friday than initially expected. They should be prepared to put chains on their car tires unless they have four-wheel or all-wheel drive vehicles with tires designed for rain and snow. Either way, if there are chain controls due to ice and snow, vehicles should drive no faster than 30 mph, he said. And temporary road closures are possible during the snowstorms.

“We recommend people bring blankets, bottled water and snacks, have their phone charged up and a full tank of gas,” O’Connell said. “If we do have to hold traffic, you might be stuck up there in traffic that’s not moving for a little bit. We just want people to be prepared.”

Pham, who was tuning up his snowboard in San Jose on Wednesday, is still hoping to hit that fresh snow.

“But Dad called and said the storm is coming and I shouldn’t go,” he said. “So I guess I’m 50/50. But it would probably be worth it.”

Staff writer Scooty Nickerson contributed to this story.

]]>
https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/11/dark-dreary-bay-area-weather-is-expected-to-last-into-next-week/feed/ 0 8712538 2023-01-11T11:24:41+00:00 2023-01-12T09:32:39+00:00
In brief: Piedmont’s Lantern Projects taking donations to aid those in need https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/11/in-brief-piedmonts-lantern-projects-taking-donations-to-aid-those-in-need/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/11/in-brief-piedmonts-lantern-projects-taking-donations-to-aid-those-in-need/#respond Wed, 11 Jan 2023 18:25:22 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8707302 PIEDMONT

The Piedmont-based nonprofit Lantern Projects continues to bring hope to people in need around the world. Last year they provided lab equipment, water wells, Ukraine relief and more. The holiday cookie exchange raised $10,000. Donors can support any of the “wishes” from the list below.

Wish #472 will provide solar lanterns in Gaza, due to long frequent power outages. SCM Medical Missions in Seattle will take the lanterns to Gaza. The lanterns include phone chargers and cost $27.50 each.

Wish #463 provides winter hats, gloves and shoes to the Navajo nation in Chinle, Arizona. $24 will buy a beanie and gloves, and $150 will buy work boots for frigid weather.

Wish #464 buys supplies for a refugee camp in Brownsville Texas. $13 to $50 dollars will provide a tent, toiletries and sanitary pads for those not able to get into a shelter.

Wish #465 donations will go toward the purchase a school bus in Namibia, where conditions are hazardous for children to walk to school.

For more information or to donate, visit lanternprojects.org online.

Documentary ‘Through the Night’ to be shown on Jan. 19

The Piedmont Appreciating Diversity Film Series will present a free documentary film at 7 p.m. Jan. 19 titled “Through the Night.”

The 76-minute film discusses the challenges of finding affordable, dependable child care. Led by Kym Johnson, executive director of area child care referral Bananas, a discussion follows film to be shown in the Ellen Driscoll Theater at 325 Highland Ave. in Piedmont. Masks are strongly advised.

MLK commemoration Monday in new Harvey Theater

Piedmont’s annual Martin Luther King Jr. commemoration will take place from 11 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Monday in the new Alan Harvey Theater at 800 Magnolia Ave. in Piedmont. The event is co-sponsored by the city of Piedmont and Piedmont Anti-Racism and Diversity Committee.

In attendance will be Piedmont Mayor Jen Cavenaugh; U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland; Carina Gould, of the Sogorea Te Land Trust; Kate Schatz, the co-author of “Do the Work: An Anti-Racism Activity Book;” and Clayborn Carson, the founder of Stanford University’s MLK Jr. Research and Education Institute. The event also may be viewed on Piedmont’s community access channel, KCOM-TV Channel 27.

Housing Element to be presented Jan. 30 to City Council

The Piedmont Planning Department will bring the sixth cycle of the city’s state-mandated Housing Element to the City Council for adoption at a special meeting Jan. 30. The city will have three years to implement the proposed building programs.

There are several upcoming key dates, for which residents can get more information. See weekly news on the topic at the city’s website, piedmont.ca.gov.

— Linda Davis, correspondent

OAKLAND

Safety ambassadors in Montclair Village through Sunday

The Montclair Village Association (MVA) is grateful to have Kevin Gilmore and Carla Blackmon on the street for us as safety ambassadors in Montclair Village through Sunday. The well being of diners, shoppers and merchants will be the Village Safety Ambassadors’ primary duty. You can call or text them directly for assistance. Contact a safety ambassador to:

  • provide an escort to a parked vehicle;
  • respond to requests for assistance;
  • or help interface with the proper authorities or city staff to assist with incidents or individuals.

Gilmore and Blackmon will report to and be in touch with Oakland police officers regularly and will be on the streets during the day and after dark as an additional safety presence for all of us — in addition to our Bay Alarm security patrols.

— MVA

To submit an item for our “In brief” section, please email it, at least three days before publication, to njackson@bayareanewsgroup.com. Each item should be 90 to 180 words, include the name of the group or individual to whom it is to be credited and should include a brief headline.

]]>
https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/11/in-brief-piedmonts-lantern-projects-taking-donations-to-aid-those-in-need/feed/ 0 8707302 2023-01-11T10:25:22+00:00 2023-01-11T10:23:43+00:00
Eye on the Hills: ACRE now open in Oliveto’s former Rockridge space https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/10/eye-on-the-hills-acre-now-open-in-olivetos-former-rockridge-space/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/10/eye-on-the-hills-acre-now-open-in-olivetos-former-rockridge-space/#respond Wed, 11 Jan 2023 00:30:08 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8707366 The baton has been passed from iconic Rockridge restaurant Oliveto to the new owners of ACRE Kitchen & Bar (in Rockridge Market Hall at 5655 College Ave). ACRE started serving Dec. 19 in the almost sacred space formerly occupied by the now-defunct Oliveto, and despite opening during the holiday hubbub (with stormy weather to boot) managing partner Pete Sittnick says he’s pleased with the response. He’s also very aware of the shoes he and his staff have to fill.

“Oliveto and Bob and Maggie Klein — they’d been here for 35 years. That is monumental for any restaurant, and we knew that they’d endeared themselves to the neighborhood,” says Sittnick.

On a recent Saturday night when the rain had subsided and neighbors were eager to get out, they came in pairs and parties of four — and even larger — to dine at ACRE. Your first impression may be how warm and inviting the restaurant seems, with soft music playing over the Constellation system by Meyer Sound that offers excellent acoustics for enjoying conversation.

Juicy chickens turn lazily on their spits in a stone oven over a wood-fired hearth that sets the mood as you enter. A minibar stands in the center of the busy dining room to ensure that wine is poured quickly and efficiently for patrons. And as an homage to the rich culinary history of the space, an upstairs wall is covered with photos from the Oliveto days, including framed recipe cards from former Oliveto owner and Montclair resident Bob Klein.

In the kitchen, chef and co-owner Dirk Tolsma is masterfully creating Mediterranean-influenced dishes with ingredients he takes pride in sourcing himself. He rides his bike to the restaurant and the farmers market, celebrating his family roots in Oakland.

“It’s where my mother was raised, so it’s very personal for me to join the storied East Bay restaurant community,” he says.

Tolsma’s resume is impressive, having served as chef de cuisine for the last five years at EPIC Steak in San Francisco, and previously at the prestigious Auberge du Soleil in Napa and Cyrus in Healdsburg.

Meanwhile, Sittnick works the front of the house, greeting guests. He’s no stranger to this kind of hands-on hospitality, having managed some of San Francisco’s most celebrated restaurants, including Kuleto’s and Farallon.

“Oliveto had so many loyal guests, and when we came in … we said, ‘Look, we’re going to do exactly the same thing in terms of the emotional connection that we want to make with the neighborhood,’ ” says Sittnick. “We want the locals to be welcomed here. We want this to be their favorite restaurant, and we’re going to go out and meet them … and thank them, and ask them to come back.”

To that end, the atmosphere is welcoming, with tables just close enough together to invite conversation with the party next to you. A full bar around the corner overlooks the busy streetscape below, and two former closets have been turned into cozy alcoves for couples who want a more private dining experience. Downstairs, there’s a bright, airy café serving classic cocktails and specialty pizzas, among other offerings, in a more casual atmosphere.

Throughout the house there’s a notable cheery disposition among the wait staff, something Sittnick says he prioritizes in the hiring process.

“What we looked for first was personality because we can teach people about food and wine and technical service; but you really can’t teach people to like people. You either have it or you don’t.”

Part of the Acre mission statement, he said, is that everything is everyone’s job.

“There’s no person who’s above doing anything within the restaurant that needs to happen in order to help the dining experience be the best it can be.”

To learn more about this much-anticipated restaurant including hours and menu items, visit acrekitchenandbar.com online.

Ginny Prior can be followed on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and at ginnyprior.com. Email her at ginnyprior@hotmail.com.

]]>
https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/10/eye-on-the-hills-acre-now-open-in-olivetos-former-rockridge-space/feed/ 0 8707366 2023-01-10T16:30:08+00:00 2023-01-11T06:29:41+00:00
‘This place is soaked’: California tallies damage, girds for more rain after deadly atmospheric rivers https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/10/bay-area-storms-scattered-thunderstorms-in-forecast-as-utility-crews-work-to-fix-power-outages/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/10/bay-area-storms-scattered-thunderstorms-in-forecast-as-utility-crews-work-to-fix-power-outages/#respond Tue, 10 Jan 2023 18:06:03 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8711184&preview=true&preview_id=8711184 CAPITOLA — More rain is expected to fall over the Bay Area and Northern California later this week — potentially exacerbating the effects of a two-week siege of atmospheric river storms that have caused major landslides, flooded roadways and has prompted evacuations across the state.

State and local officials on Tuesday began cleaning up from the half-dozen atmospheric rivers that have pummeled California since late December, killing at least 17 people and leaving 96,000 people under evacuation warnings or orders amid the risk of flooding and mudslides. Their work came amid a brief respite from the rain and the wind but with more strong storms expected to arrive later in the week.

Although none of the coming storms are forecast to be as big as the “bomb cyclone” that hit last week, residents have been warned to stay vigilant. While touring the storm and tide-ravaged community of Capitola on Wednesday, Gov. Gavin Newsom cautioned that even a little rain could cause outsized effects due to heavily-saturated soils.

  • This aerial view shows rescue crews assisting stranded residents in...

    This aerial view shows rescue crews assisting stranded residents in a flooded neighborhood in Merced, California on January 10, 2023. A massive storm called a “bomb cyclone” by meteorologists has arrived and is expected to cause widespread flooding throughout the state. (Photo by JOSH EDELSON/AFP via Getty Images)

  • California Gov. Gavin Newsom surveys storm damage inside Paradise Beach...

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom surveys storm damage inside Paradise Beach Grille restaurant in Capitola, Calif., Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. (AP Photo/Nic Coury)

  • This aerial view shows two cars siting in a large...

    This aerial view shows two cars siting in a large sinkhole that opened during a day of relentless rain, January 10, 2023 in the Chatsworth neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. A massive storm has arrived and is expected to cause widespread flooding throughout the state. (Photo by ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images)

  • California Gov. Gavin Newsom, right, surveys storm damage with Capitola...

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom, right, surveys storm damage with Capitola city manager Jamie Goldstein inside Zelda’s restaurant in Capitola, Calif., Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. (AP Photo/Nic Coury)

  • Extensive damage to homes and businesses on Capitol Avenue in...

    Extensive damage to homes and businesses on Capitol Avenue in Sacramento is seen Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023, following a storm Saturday night that downed trees and power lines throughout the region. (Xavier Mascareñas/The Sacramento Bee)

  • People carrying their belongs arrive at an evacuation center in...

    People carrying their belongs arrive at an evacuation center in Santa Barbara, Calif., Monday, Jan. 9, 2023. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu)

  • Debris from eucalyptus trees that fell in overnight storms in...

    Debris from eucalyptus trees that fell in overnight storms in Burlingame, Calif., is cleared along El Camino Real, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

of

Expand

“The magnitude of this is not isolated to smaller communities, it is scaled across the largest state in our union,” Newsom said. “We’re soaked. This place is soaked. And now just more modest amount of precipitation could have as equal or greater impact in terms of the conditions on the ground.”

On Tuesday, nearly every corner of the state had felt the impacts of the recent atmospheric onslaught that caused flooding and myriad downed trees in Northern California, mudslides and a major evacuation in the Southern California community of Montecito and heavy snow across the length of the Sierra Nevada.

California Storms video: Hail in the Bay Area, rockslides, sinkholes and more

On the Central Coast, where some of the storm’s worst effects were felt, a 5-year-old boy died Monday after being swept away in a San Luis Obispo County creek, authorities said. A woman also drowned the same day after driving onto a mile-long section of Central Coast roadway that had been closed due to flooding, according to the California Highway Patrol.

Visiting the Santa Cruz coast, Newsom vowed to provide assistance to Capitola, where huge waves stoked from a “bomb cyclone” last week tore out a section of the historic Capitola Wharf and smashed and flooded a half-dozen beachfront Capitola Village restaurants.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom tours the storm-damaged Capitola Esplanade on Tuesday with, from left, City Manager Jamie Goldstein, Police Chief Andrew Dally, Capitola Mayor Margaux Kaiser and state Natural Resources Secretary Wade Crowfoot. (Shmuel Thaler -- Santa Cruz Sentinel)
California Gov. Gavin Newsom tours the storm-damaged Capitola Esplanade on Tuesday with, from left, City Manager Jamie Goldstein, Police Chief Andrew Dally, Capitola Mayor Margaux Kaiser and state Natural Resources Secretary Wade Crowfoot. (Shmuel Thaler — Santa Cruz Sentinel) 

“We’re not walking away,” Newsom said, standing on the town’s waterfront where generations of Bay Area residents have gone to frolic on the sand, dine and drink on seaside patios. From Dec. 31 through Sunday, heavy rains and a devastating tidal event caused at least $28 million in damages to public property across unincorporated Santa Cruz County, said Jason Hoppin, spokesman for Santa Cruz County. In addition, five buildings were red-tagged, and another 131 were deemed significantly damaged but repairable.

That doesn’t include any damage sustained Monday when the San Lorenzo River flooded its banks and sent water rushing into numerous buildings. Nor does it include a line of gusty storms to tear through the county early Tuesday morning, which prompted dozens of 911 calls from people reporting trees falling onto their houses..

Newsom gave no specifics regarding state aid to businesses Wednesday, nor details about funding for rebuilding the wharf. He also did not reveal whether the Seacliff Wharf — a state facility just down the coast that once led to a now-damaged cement-filled ship — would be repaired after damage from the storm. “All that will be determined,” Newsom said.

Around the Bay Area, the true extent of the recent storms began coming into focus Tuesday, even as thunderstorms dropped pea-sized hail and yet more rain.

In Santa Clara County, at least $24 million in damages to public property had been tallied by city and county officials through midday Tuesday — a figure that was expected to evolve as more assessments were completed, a county official said. Much of that tally included damage to roadways — more than a dozen of which remained closed midday Tuesday.

Utility crews huddle under an overhang studying a fallen power pole knocked down by the storm on Lincoln Avenue in San Jose, Calif., Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)
Utility crews huddle under an overhang studying a fallen power pole knocked down by the storm on Lincoln Avenue in San Jose, Calif., Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group) 

The heavy rains also caused dozens of sewage spills around the Bay Area and other parts of the state as sewage systems became overwhelmed by huge amounts of water pouring into the ground and seeping into pipes. Since New Year’s Eve, for example, at least 22 million gallons of “unauthorized discharges” occurred in the Bay Area, said Eileen White, executive officer for the San Francisco Bay Water Quality Control Board.

About 150 calls a day have streamed into the dispatch center for Bay Area Tree Specialists of late, said Michelle Reulman, the business’ office manager.

“This is a state of emergency,” said John Gill, owner of Majestic Tree Service, just moments after helping to clear a tree that fell on three vehicles and a house Wednesday off Bascom Avenue in San Jose. “You drive every five minutes, and there’s a tree down on a house or the street or the road or it’s flooded.”

In the early morning hours of Tuesday, a falling eucalyptus tree topped a 137-foot tall transmission tower in San Jose’s Willow Glen neighborhood. The weight of the tower brought down three distribution poles as well as power lines and some transformers, Pacific Gas & Electric Co. spokesperson Mayra Tostado said in an update posted to Twitter. As a result, about 2,100 customers lost power.

“We’ve brought in additional resources to be able to restore power as quickly as possible to our customers,” Tostado said. “We understand how disruptive it has been to be without power and we’re doing everything we can to turn the lights back on as quickly as possible.”

Tostado said the region saw winds up to 70 mph and 100 cloud-to-ground lightning strikes.

Many of the trees were felled during an onslaught of thunderstorms Tuesday that knocked out power to tens of thousands of people across the Bay Area, while dropping between .25 and 1.25 inches of rain across most of the South Bay, the East Bay and the Peninsula. Much of the Santa Cruz mountains received between .66 and 1.4 inches of rain overnight, pushing three-day storm totals to between 6 and 8 inches of rain across much of the area.

As of 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, 24-hour precipitation totals around the Bay Area included 1.21 inches in San Francisco, 1.18 inches in Oakland, 1.11 inches in Concord,.41 inches in San Jose and .40 inches in Livermore, according to the weather service.

More than 40,000 PG&E customers were without power as of 5 p.m. Tuesday — the majority of them in the South Bay where more than 27,000 customers remained without electricity, according to the utility provider.

Utility workers assess a transmission tower that collapsed in Willow Glen in San Jose, Calif., Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)
Utility workers assess a transmission tower that collapsed in Willow Glen in San Jose, Calif., Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group) 

To the east across the Sierra Nevada, a remarkable run of snowfall continued to push the state’s snowpack higher — reaching 215% of its average for this date across the state, according to the California Department of Water Resources. The southern Sierra already has received more than it normally gets by April 1, while the northern Sierra is about 75% of the way to that mark.

Another .1 to .25 inches of rain is expected to fall over much of the Bay Area on Wednesday, with higher amounts forecasted to hit the North Bay and the Santa Cruz Mountains, according to the National Weather Service. Some brief showers may hit the region on Thursday or Friday, but the area should remain mostly dry under cloudy skies those days.

Many residents found themselves whiplashed from the see-sawing weather. In Soquel, near Santa Cruz, Roman Bodnarchuk wondered aloud at the next curveball from Mother Nature after a dramatic two weeks of joy and catastrophe.

APTOS, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 10: People walk amid storm debris washed up on the beach on January 10, 2022 in Aptos, California. The San Francisco Bay Area and much of Northern California continues to get drenched by powerful atmospheric river events that have brought high winds and flooding rains. The storms have toppled trees, flooded roads and cut power to tens of thousands. Storms are lined up over the Pacific Ocean and are expected to bring more rain and wind through the end of the week. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)
People walk amid storm debris washed up on the beach on January 10, 2022 in Aptos, California. The San Francisco Bay Area and much of Northern California continues to get drenched by powerful atmospheric river events that have brought high winds and flooding rains. The storms have toppled trees, flooded roads and cut power to tens of thousands. Storms are lined up over the Pacific Ocean and are expected to bring more rain and wind through the end of the week. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images) 

Just after Christmas, he had finally succeeded in getting his war-refugee parents out of Ukraine — where they lived near a power station under frequent Russian bombardment — and to his rented house by Soquel Creek.

Three days later, the newly reunited family had to flee as the New Year’s Eve storm flooded the bottom level of the two-story home nearly three feet deep with muddy water and debris. The home flooded again Monday, leaving it surrounded with several inches of thick mud.

“It’s very stressful,” said Bodnarchuk, 30. “You can imagine how frustrating it was to leave the house when my mom is sick and having to deal with all these situations. Hopefully the house withstands all this damage.”

He couldn’t help but feel a sense of dread at viewing forecasts for additional rain in the coming week

“We’re very worried,” Bodnarchuk said. “It’s been difficult enough already.”

Rick Hurd, Julia Prodis Sulek, Jason Green and the Associated Press contributed to this report. 

]]>
https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/10/bay-area-storms-scattered-thunderstorms-in-forecast-as-utility-crews-work-to-fix-power-outages/feed/ 0 8711184 2023-01-10T10:06:03+00:00 2023-01-11T06:38:42+00:00
Snapp Shots: Brothers raising funds for nephew with Alzheimer’s https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/10/snapp-shots-brothers-raising-funds-for-nephew-with-alzheimers/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/10/snapp-shots-brothers-raising-funds-for-nephew-with-alzheimers/#respond Tue, 10 Jan 2023 13:00:55 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8707359 When my nephew, Ben, was a little boy, his beloved mother died after a long illness. He was 10; his brother, Jon, was 6; and his other brother, Marc, was 12. And there was more bad news to come. They had three stepmothers in rapid succession, the first two of whom remind me of Cruella de Vil.

But they somehow got through it by sticking together and looking out for each other. And they all grew up to have interesting lives. Marc is an indie radio promoter who gets artists played on radio stations all over the world. Jon is the general manager of an international entertainment company with offices in Los Angeles, Hong Kong and Japan.

But Ben has had the most interesting career of all. His entry-level job was at CNN as the “designated John 3:16 tackler.” Let me explain: Back in the 1970s and ’80s, there was a guy called the Rainbow Man who used to insert himself into the picture at televised sports events wearing a multicolored wig and holding a sign reading, “John 3:16” (the Bible passage that reads, “For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life.”). Ben’s job was to tackle him to get him out of the shot.

His next job was as private secretary for Zsa Zsa Gabor. His third job came when he heard that Vin Scully, the great Dodgers announcer, was having trouble setting up his computer. So Ben, a big baseball fan as well as a techno geek, offered to set it up for him.

That led to a friendship and working relationship that had Ben doing a lot of research and writing for Scully and eventually the whole Dodgers organization, for which he set up the first major league team website. And that led in turn to a career as an ace reporter and West Coast producer for Major League Baseball’s website, MLB.com.

He was a welcome visitor at every ballpark in the country. Let me put it this way: He’s on a first-name basis with Sandy Koufax! It doesn’t get any better than that.

But his home base was always Dodger Stadium, and that’s where Ben found a way to indulge his mischievous streak. In the late innings it’s common for fans in the nosebleed seats to move down to the more expensive seats near the field if they see they’re not being used. But it’s technically against the rules.

So Ben would wander through the stadium, and when he spotted a family doing it — usually a father and his kids — he’d tap the guy on the shoulder and say, “Sir, you and your family will have to come with me.”

By the time they got to the elevator, the guy would be sweating bullets. Ben would push the button, and the elevator would descend to the ground floor. When the door opened, they’d find that they were inside the Dodgers dugout — while the game was still going on! Then Ben would hand each kid a brand-new baseball and a sharpie and say, “OK, kids, go get those autographs!” And all the players would sign.

But it all came to a sudden halt five years ago when he and everyone else his age at MLB were laid off and replaced by people 25 years younger. It was more than the loss of a job; it was the loss of a career. And the lost income created strains on his marriage that led to divorce.

And now comes more bad news: Ben has been diagnosed with middle-stage Alzheimer’s disease. Naturally, his brothers are rallying around him (with considerable help from their significant others). They’re trying to provide not only for his medical treatment, but also his living expenses for the rest of his life.

“In the meantime, we’ve created a project for Ben to work on to keep him focused and energized,” says Jon. “He not only loves baseball; his other big passion is sports movies. We’re creating a sports movie website and database with Ben’s old boss for him to watch films, research and provide information that will be part of this website’s database. We shipped him about 40 sports movies last month, and there will be a lot more to come.”

The website is scheduled to go online in April. They’ve also set up a GoFundMe campaign (gofund.me/e5ff381f) to help pay his bills. I know their mom would be proud of all three of them. I sure am.

Martin Snapp can be reached at catman442@comcast.net.

]]>
https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/10/snapp-shots-brothers-raising-funds-for-nephew-with-alzheimers/feed/ 0 8707359 2023-01-10T05:00:55+00:00 2023-01-10T14:04:43+00:00
Bay Area storms: Another round of ‘dangerous’ wind, rain expected to hit region https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/08/bay-area-storms-another-round-of-dangerous-wind-rain-expected-to-hit-bay-area/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/08/bay-area-storms-another-round-of-dangerous-wind-rain-expected-to-hit-bay-area/#respond Sun, 08 Jan 2023 17:37:13 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8709301&preview=true&preview_id=8709301 Another windy deluge could send some streams over their banks and cause widespread power outages across the Bay Area over the next couple days, marking the latest salvo from an ongoing parade of winter storms that shows no sign of relenting any time soon.

The latest atmospheric river-fed storm is expected to pack damaging winds and drop several more inches of rain over much of the Bay Area — a double-whammy that forecasters say should peak Monday morning and linger through Tuesday. Even more storms are forecast to make landfall beginning later this week — threatening to further saturate soils during one of the Bay Area’s most waterlogged stretches in recent years.

On Sunday afternoon, Gov. Gavin Newsom implored Californians to avoid driving through flooded roadways and to prepare for even more water in the near future — noting that 12 people had died over the last week and a half due to storms across the state.

“Use your common sense,” Newsom said at a press conference. “Don’t test fate… just a foot of water and your car’s floating. So it’s really important that people are mindful, and again, just use their common sense.”

The National Weather Service issued a flood warning for areas along the Guadalupe River above the Almaden Expressway in San Jose. The river is expected to reach its flood state of 9.5 feet by 9 a.m. Monday before cresting at 11.5 feet at about 4 p.m. that day.

Juan Alexander takes a picture of Belen Cortez, as they stop at the Penitencia Creek. The creek has a strong flow during a break in the rain in San Jose, Calif., on Sunday, Jan. 8, 2023. (Josie Lepe for Bay Area News Group)
Juan Alexander takes a picture of Belen Cortez, as they stop at the Penitencia Creek. The creek has a strong flow during a break in the rain in San Jose, Calif., on Sunday, Jan. 8, 2023. (Josie Lepe for Bay Area News Group) 

A flood watch also exists through Tuesday for almost the entire Bay Area. Alameda Creek near Niles Canyon and Sunol could reach its flood stage of 9 feet on Monday morning before cresting that afternoon, just shy of its 14-foot, 9-inch record. Also at risk of topping their banks were Arroyo de la Laguna at Verona in Alameda County and the San Lorenzo River in Santa Cruz County.

On Sunday afternoon, Santa Clara County officials issued evacuation warnings — essentially, advisements to be prepared to leave a moment’s notice — to people living in the watershed areas of the Uvas Reservoir and Pacheco Pass River Basin, due to flooding concerns. The warnings are impacting roughly 1,600 people, according to the county.

“This is going to be dangerous,” said Brayden Murdock, a National Weather Service meteorologist.

Standing under a break in the clouds on Sunday in San Francisco’s Potrero Hill neighborhood, Becky Luong expressed fatigue at the unrelenting pace of storms. Her home’s garage in the Portola neighborhood was flooded with about an inch of water during Wednesday’s storm — ruining several pairs of shoes stored down there and leaving damaged a few bags of concrete.

“I’ve never experienced such a big storm like this,” said Luong, who has lived in the city for close to three decades. “It is the wind that makes it worse. This is different. I got scared.”

“I’m tired,” she added, about the recent wet weather. “I’m so grateful to see the sun today.”

Nearby, Nick Bulley waited in line for workers to fill his car with sandbags to protect his house in the hilly Twin Peaks neighborhood. The backyard and first floor of his newly renovated home were flooded during the New Year’s Eve storm with an inch of water, likely causing thousands of dollars in damage. On Sunday, he ran a dehumidifier to suck up all the moisture and limit the cost of repairs.

“This was just an unusual event,” Bulley said. “We weren’t prepared. We didn’t have sandbags. Now we’re making sure we have something to at least toss in front of the doors.”

The heaviest downpours should begin to subside by midday Monday, Murdock said, though chances for additional precipitation should linger through Tuesday. Most of the Bay Area — including San Francisco and Oakland — could see 2 to 3 inches of rain by Tuesday, the weather service said. San Jose is expected to see a little more than 2 inches from this storm.

A PG&E employee works on damaged utility lines along Sandy Road on Sunday, Jan. 8, 2023, in Castro Valley, Calif. A large eucalyptus tree fell Saturday afternoon severely damaging a home, trapping a person inside and knocking down utility lines. (Aric Crabb/Bay Area News Group)
A PG&E employee works on damaged utility lines along Sandy Road on Sunday, Jan. 8, 2023, in Castro Valley, Calif. A large eucalyptus tree fell Saturday afternoon severely damaging a home, trapping a person inside and knocking down utility lines. (Aric Crabb/Bay Area News Group) 

The heaviest rainfall should fall over the waterlogged Santa Cruz Mountains, where 5 to 7 inches of rain is expected, with a few places seeing as much as 8 inches. To the south, the Santa Lucia Mountains along the Big Sur coast could see 8 to 12 inches of rain in some spots.

In addition, howling winds could once again raise the risk of power outages from trees falling onto power lines.

Winds of 25 to 35 mph are expected across much of the Bay Area’s lower-lying regions, with gusts potentially hitting 60 mph, the National Weather Service said while issuing a high wind warning. Along the coast and the Bay Area’s peaks, forecasters are expecting winds of 35 to 50 mph and gusts of up to 80 mph.

“This is also going to be a wind event,” said Murdock, adding that “when you do have strong winds after seeing plenty of moisture in the soil, you can see trees fall.”

The storm marks the latest atmospheric river to drench Northern California over the last couple of weeks, whipsawing the region from one of its driest three-year runs in recorded history to a state of perpetual flood risk. Oakland, for example, has received 15.84 inches of rain since Dec. 1 — almost all of it in the last two weeks. That’s more than two-thirds of the 22.89 inches of rain it normally gets in a calendar year.

Still, even though the recent wet weather has begun to alleviate drought conditions across Northern California, experts say even more moisture is needed to put an end the region’s historic drought. Water levels at some of the state’s largest reservoirs — including Lake Shasta, Lake Oroville and Trinity Lake — remain below historical averages for this time of year, even though some have started to tick upward in recent weeks.

Later this week, more storm systems are expected to begin hitting Northern California, each fed by atmospheric rivers streaming across the Pacific Ocean. While none of them are expected to be as powerful as the storm hitting late Sunday night and Monday, they could still cause flood damage in parts of the Bay Area, said Michael Anderson, California state climatologist.

He said that federal resources have been mobilized to help the National Weather Service’s forecasts. Five Air Force C-130s and a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration aircraft are flying over the Pacific Ocean – reaching as far as Hawaii – to gather data on the coming storms.

“These next storms are really going to start seeing some flood stages be reached,” said Anderson, during a call with reporters Saturday. “There’s a lot to keep an eye on and a lot to track.”

For more on the latest emergency warnings, go to aware.zonehaven.com.

 

]]>
https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/08/bay-area-storms-another-round-of-dangerous-wind-rain-expected-to-hit-bay-area/feed/ 0 8709301 2023-01-08T09:37:13+00:00 2023-01-09T05:27:49+00:00
In brief: Piedmont’s MLK Day event Jan. 16 at Harvey Theater https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/04/in-brief-piedmonts-mlk-day-event-jan-16-at-harvey-theater/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/04/in-brief-piedmonts-mlk-day-event-jan-16-at-harvey-theater/#respond Wed, 04 Jan 2023 18:50:24 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8701307 PIEDMONT

Piedmont’s annual Martin Luther King Jr. commemoration will take place from 11 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Jan. 16 in the new Alan Harvey Theater at 800 Magnolia Ave. in Piedmont. The event is co-sponsored by the city of Piedmont and Piedmont Anti-Racism and Diversity Committee.

In attendance will be Piedmont Mayor Jen Cavenaugh; U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland; Carina Gould, of the Sogorea Te Land Trust; Kate Schatz, the co-author of “Do the Work: An Anti-Racism Activity Book;” and Clayborn Carson, the founder of Stanford University’s MLK Jr. Research and Education Institute. The event also may be viewed on Piedmont’s community access channel, KCOM-TV Channel 27.

Submit entries for art and writing showcase by Tuesday

Piedmont’s Anti-Racism and Diversity Committee (PADC) is calling for students to contribute to their art and writing showcase.

Submissions will be featured in the upcoming Martin Luther King Jr. celebration mentioned above. The submission deadline is Tuesday, and all submissions will be entered in a raffle for prizes, including $25 gift cards.

The theme for this year is King’s statement that “This call for a worldwide fellowship that lifts neighborly concerns beyond one’s tribe, race, class and nation is in reality a call for an all-embracing and unconditional love for all men.”

The PADC’s Ellen Lee said last year, the K-12 students produced a powerful collection of illustrated collages, poetry and essays that were included in the commemoration. A compiled slideshow of the 2022 event is available online at padc.info, as are details on obtaining a submission form.

Beatles tribute concert to be held Sunday at arts center

The In the Tradition Piano Trio will perform a tribute to the Beatles at 5:30 p.m. Sunday, reprising their hits with other songs from the era.

The benefit concert will take place in the Piedmont Center for the Arts at 801 Magnolia Ave. in Piedmont. Tickets are $20 at the door or online at bpt.me/5316993. A photo identification and proof of vaccinations required, as will be face masks and social distancing.

Housing Element to be presented Jan. 30 to City Council

The Piedmont Planning Department will bring the sixth cycle of the city’s state-mandated Housing Element to the City Council for adoption at a special meeting Jan. 30. The city will have three years to implement the proposed building programs.

There are several upcoming key dates, for which residents can get more information. See weekly news on the topic at the city’s website, piedmont.ca.gov.

Christmas trees for disposal will be picked up till Friday

The waste-collection company Republic Services will pick up live, cut-up Christmas trees to be disposed of in Piedmont through Friday. Put undecorated, unflocked trees in green waste carts for pickup at no charge.

— Linda Davis, correspondent

OAKLAND

Safety ambassadors in Montclair Village through Jan. 15

The Montclair Village Association (MVA) is grateful to have Kevin Gilmore and Carla Blackmon on the street for us as safety ambassadors in Montclair Village through Jan. 15. The well being of diners, shoppers and merchants will be the Village Safety Ambassadors’ primary duty. You can call or text them directly for assistance. Contact a safety ambassador to:

  • provide an escort to a parked vehicle;
  • respond to requests for assistance;
  • or help interface with the proper authorities or city staff to assist with incidents or individuals.

Gilmore and Blackmon will report to and be in touch with Oakland police officers regularly and will be on the streets during the day and after dark as an additional safety presence for all of us — in addition to our Bay Alarm security patrols.

— MVA

To submit an item for our “In brief” section, please email it, at least three days before publication, to njackson@bayareanewsgroup.com. Each item should be 90 to 180 words, include the name of the group or individual to whom it is to be credited and should include a brief headline.

]]>
https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/04/in-brief-piedmonts-mlk-day-event-jan-16-at-harvey-theater/feed/ 0 8701307 2023-01-04T10:50:24+00:00 2023-01-04T10:49:17+00:00