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UID:Indybay-18770508
SEQUENCE:18891104
CREATED:20150327T023100Z
DESCRIPTION:If you live in Oakland, Berkeley or Emeryville, attend this meeting.  
 Attend the next Planning Commission meeting.  At a minimum, demand all of 
 the issues listed at the end are addressed as well as many others that 
 I’m sure you can think of.  This is not just about the neighbors even 
 though they should be very concerned.  This is a rare project that will 
 affect and should have input from the larger Alameda County area.\n\n\nfrom 
 the CITY:  The Oakland City Planning Commission and Office of the City 
 Administrator will conduct a joint public hearing on the Final EIR on April 
 1, 2015, at 6:00 p.m. in Hearing Room 1, City Hall, 1 Frank H. Ogawa Plaza 
 to consider certification of the Final EIR and project approvals and 
 recommendations to City Council.\n\nfrom the CITY's website, Current 
 Environmental Review Documents 
 webpage:\nhttp://www2.oaklandnet.com/Government/o/PBN/OurServices/Application/DOWD009157 
  Scroll down to the Children's Hospital documents for detailed 
 information.\n\nSome recent PRESS coverage:\n– December 04, 2013  EBX  By 
 Sam 
 Levin\nhttp://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/is-stanford-trying-to-put-childrens-hospital-oakland-out-of-business/Content?oid=3776544\nIs 
 Stanford Trying to Put Children's Hospital Oakland Out of Business?  The 
 new Lucile Packard Children's Hospital in Emeryville could siphon off 
 wealthier patients and thus make it harder for Children's Hospital Oakland 
 to serve low-income residents.    "... Children's Hospital Oakland is 
 moving forward with its own plan to affiliate with UC San Francisco as part 
 of an agreement announced in August [2013]."\n\n– October 14, 2014  EBX 
 Seven Days Blog  By Sam 
 Levin\nhttp://www.eastbayexpress.com/SevenDays/archives/2014/10/14/childrens-hospital-oakland-settles-contract-dispute-with-resident-physicians\nChildren's 
 Hospital Oakland Settles Contract Dispute With Resident Physicians \n\n– 
 March 2, 2015  EBX Seven Days Blog  By Sam 
 Levin\nhttp://www.eastbayexpress.com/SevenDays/archives/2015/03/02/childrens-hospital-oakland-plans-major-campus-renovation\nChildren's 
 Hospital Oakland Plans Major Campus Renovation\n\n\nAn educational and 
 cautionary tale ...\n\nThis project and review have been in the pipeline 
 for a decent time now.  The City Planning Dept’s process is such that if 
 you are a large business or better yet, a large extractive business, you 
 will get your way.  At this point, every meeting is perfunctory UNLESS a 
 large number of people appear.  In addition to the meeting listed above, 
 District 1 Councilmember Dan Kalb had his staff send out an invite for a 
 last minute meeting:\n\n     “Councilmember Kalb and his staff have heard 
 from many residents in your neighborhood through individual communications, 
 community and planning commission meetings about Children’s Hospital 
 proposed expansion plans. We have been working with the City staff, 
 community groups, and the Hospital on addressing the very real concerns 
 that neighbors in the vicinity of the Hospital have.\n     Before this 
 expansion project goes before the Planning Commission, Councilmember Kalb 
 wants to assemble with you and other community members and listen to your 
 thoughts regarding any outstanding concerns and issues pertaining this 
 expansion plan.  Please join us next Monday evening.”\n\nWhat: Meeting 
 regarding Children’s Hospital proposed expansion plan\nWhen: Monday, 
 March 30th, 6:30pm – 8:00pm\nWhere: North Oakland Senior Center, 5714 
 Martin Luther King Jr. Way\nHosts:  Councilmember Dan Kalb in collaboration 
 with the Santa Fe Community Association and Neighbors (Santa Fe 
 CAN).\n\n\nThis is something a city council member should do regularly 
 regarding massive projects like this, all of the recent Specific Area 
 Plans, questions of commercial mix in retail areas, etc.  Of course, this 
 assumes they see themselves as the resident’s representatives to the 
 municipal corporation of Oakland.  In all but a few minor instances, they 
 do not.\n\nKalb is NO populist.  This meeting suggests there has been a lot 
 of push-back from the community around the already massive Children’s 
 Hospital complex.  It’s interesting to see him get involved.  He has been 
 almost whole-heartedly behind all of the extractive-oriented Specific Area 
 Plans.  He was FOR the creation of the regional & national chain store mall 
 at Broadway & Pleasant Valley Avenue.  Was FOR the rezoning of the Broadway 
 Valdez area to include regional & national chain stores.  Both will create 
 minimum wage jobs and will destroy any chance of all the small storefronts 
 between these projects on Broadway ever being filled by local mom & pops 
 that will support families.  The West Oakland Specific Area Plan was 
 similar in relationship to the existing neighborhood.  Kalb is FOR the 
 rotten seismic retrofit ordinance that due to the City’s horrible Rent 
 Adjustment Program could place ALL of the retrofit costs on the current 
 residents of a building which will force many of those renters to 
 leave.\n\nEvery single one of the recent giant “health” or medical 
 corporation’s expansions should never been allowed to happen.  A rule of 
 thumb is that whenever you see a tall building being proposed, you know 
 something bad is about to happen.  Tall buildings are expensive to build.  
 They are not “sustainable”.  LEED is a program developed by big 
 business to create a “green-washing” cover for their activities.  When 
 the power goes out, anything above the 4th floor is essentially useless 
 space.\n\nMost don’t understand that for the last 100 years, the 
 ever-increasing, so-called “health” system is not about health.  It is 
 about creating repeat business.  The concentration of commercial power in 
 massive mid-height complexes (Alameda Co’s Highland, Children’s) and 
 towers (Alta Bates Pill Hill or most Kaiser locations) is the absolute 
 opposite of what should be happening if a city were to have a healthy 
 economy.  The only reason one should ever need to visit a doctor is on the 
 incredibly rare occasion of breaking a bone or having a severe cut 
 requiring more stitches than a friend or family member feels comfortable 
 addressing.  If we had a healthy economy, we would have many independent 
 doctors spread evenly throughout the City in neighborhood commercial areas 
 with a few evenly placed hospitals intended only for rare surgeries.  
 Instead, there is a concentration of a handful of massive medical complexes 
 controlled by huge, wealthy Non-Profit Organizations.\n\nIf you see a 
 tower, you know wealth extraction and wealth inequality is at 
 hand.\n\n\nSome ISSUES that should be addressed:\n\nNOTIFICATION:  This 
 singular massive complex affects all of the City yet only those immediately 
 adjacent would have been notified.  And, that is purely for construction 
 purposes.\n\nLOCATION & NUMBER of facilities:  Who has been involved with 
 decisions about consolidation versus dispersion of such 
 facilities?\n\nSIZE:  This is a massive addition to the existing complex.  
 It sits adjacent to detached single family homes and a limited access 
 freeway.  The existing complex is already too tall & bulky and that’s 
 without it’s clunky, post-modern, over-scaled design.\n\nTRAFFIC:  The 
 hospital admits the additions will increase the number of patients it can 
 service and the number of staff positions that might be created.  This will 
 add a lot of automobile traffic in what is essentially a residential 
 neighborhood.  Elevated BART tracks are adjacent to the site but there is 
 NO station within easy travel to this hospital.  The increase auto traffic 
 and noise/pollution from the adjacent freeway and BART tracks will require 
 that the hospital be sealed.  Doctors/medical facilities are already the 
 3rd most common form of death.  This is due to ineptness and infection – 
 everything most common in centralized, massive 
 facilities.\n\nTAX-EXEMPTION:  While it may be true that this facility is 
 known for servicing the poorer populace common to Oakland, the community 
 should know if the hospital meets it’s minimums for service.  Many do 
 not.  See a recent expose in the EBX for many other hospitals in the area.  
 Many tax-exempt organizations do not pay certain taxes and can therefore be 
 a burden on the community.  Just because these are non-profits does not 
 mean they don’t make a lot of money for their owners, investors, and the 
 upper management who feign to run it.\n\nTREATMENT:  Not of patients (see 
 note above about 3rd most common form of death) but of those who exchange 
 labor for wages in these facilities.  Recent articles provide some insight 
 into the bad faith of the management.  What of fatigue for nurses who are 
 too long on their feet due to staffing levels.  Of medical-residents who 
 should never be subjected to their bootcamp-like early years.  What of 
 guarantees to use local Oakland labor and UNIONized labor at that?  Is the 
 General Contractor and the tradesmens to be hired local?  Are the design 
 professionals:  the architects, engineers and landscape architects local?  
 This is a big expensive project but will only mean anything to the local 
 economy if it is 100% local so money will circulate in the City.  
 Otherwise, it will be yet another extractive project that has been all too 
 common over the past couple of decades.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/03/26/18770508.php
SUMMARY:Oakland’s Children’s Hospital Expansion - community meeting
LOCATION:5714 Martin Luther King Jr. Way\nNorth Oakland Senior Center
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/03/26/18770508.php
DTSTART:20150331T013000Z
DTEND:20150331T030000Z
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