Marc Albert, Berkeley Voice, June 18, 1998
Activist lauded for raising awareness
Community activist L A Wood was officially
recognized for his achievements by the Public Works Department at their
quarterly meeting last week, receiving a plaque honoring him for raising
environmental awareness in city government. The honor is a turnaround
for Wood, who claims to be the victim of ill-will from some members
of the Public Works Commission.
"The commission is very, very wary of the community
around the corp yard," he said.
On a tour of Public Works' Corporation Yard at Acton and
Allston streets several years ago, Wood captured a Public Works crew
on video dumping a street sweeping truck's load into a storm sewer.
The incident, and Wood's video footage caused an uproar amongst bureaucrats
and activists,
"A public works director from Marin wrote me and
said he showed my movie to all the guys on the crew and told them, "hey,
you don't want to be a star in a film like this," Wood said.
Wood began watching and documenting Public Works practices
when he moved into his Bancroft Avenue home, and developed some management
ideas of his own.
"I made them more conscious of their environmental
contamination and the need to clean up," he said. Another idea
wood mentioned-alternative fuels-is taking shape. City Manager James
Keene won City Council approval last week to operate a compressed natural
gas fueling station at the Transfer Station, Natural gas burns cleaner
than gasoline.
Berkeley was granted $263,000 by the Bay Area Air Quality
Management District to purchase vehicles powered by natural gas which
will replace gasoline powered ones. The filling station to be run by
Trillium USA will exist mainly for city vehicles. The station will pay no rent, and will charge set rates. Private vehicles
getting natural gas from the station will pay a three-cent a gallon
surcharge to the city.
Wood says he fought for and won a stop sign, preventing
what he described as speeding city vehicles on their way downtown. "They
are still grappling with the same problems when they moved here in 1916
auto use in the city.
Wood pointing out that Berkeley operates a fleet of 500
vehicles."What they fuel and where they fuel it, I asked that question,
where do the trucks go... they thought they were saving money by not
filling up at private stations, but they are wasting time and gas fueling
up at the corp yard."
Some city vehicles are now stored and fueled near the
Transfer Station on 2nd Street. Wood favors studying de-centralizing
the corp yard, because he said having vehicle close to where they are
needed may save gasoline. However, with the soaring costs of real estate,
the idea may not be well received.
Wood recently produced a short video chronicling shifting
challenges the Public Works Department has faced throughout the century.
Wood praised the 1929 placement of a hand operated gas pump with an
electric one. The new pump, though expensive, saved 3 worker-hours a
day, freeing up employees for other tasks. Wood also identified the
redesign of trucks as another example of increasing worker productivity.
Wood encouraged rank and file involvement in decision
making on equipment purchases. Wood said it made sense to solicit input
about reliability and performance from those using the machines.