Something Rotten with Sports Field Deal
Last month, the city approved the purchase of the University
of California's Fourth and Harrison streets parcel to
make way for a sports facility at the West Berkeley industrial lot.
The
pending sale has added sparks to an already heated public debate over
the feasibility of constructing a children's playing field complex amidst
the smokestacks of Berkeley's manufacturing district and the auto traffic
emissions of Interstate 80. Among the many points of concern has been
the UC practice of dumping its construction soils and debris on the
Harrison lot and the impact that these activities have had on the site's
soil investigations.
The public challenge to an incomplete Harrison evaluation
has been met by the city's Toxics Management Division's insistence that
the environmental review is adequate and staff's repeated assurances
of future soil sampling.
All of this now appears to be moot by UC's most recent
move to cover up more of the site with soils from its current Albany
Village construction project. It hardly takes a soil scientist to understand the likely
impact on the toxic profile of this acreage by this practice. It may
be difficult to estimate whether all the fill soils from the Albany
Village area were clean, but there's no question that this current dumping
has obfuscated the results of the soil investigations paid for by the
city in 1997.
UC's soil dumping has severely distorted this year's California
Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) review of the site as well. Even the
state's Department of Toxic Substances Control, the "big guns"
called in by the city's Toxics Division to legitimize their soil investigations,
have been left with little choice but to look the other way.
The
city, DTSC, and especially UC know full well that the university's actions
have invalidated the past site soil investigations, and that these cavalier
actions are not likely to receive any challenge.
It is not difficult to see that UC has very conveniently
avoided a meaningful CEQA review, and hence, avoided the public process.
Whether the City's actions are simply unethical or actually
illegal will most likely remain undetermined.
Why have the city, the purchaser of the property and DTSC
being so silent on this matter? City staff's posturing over the quality
of its soil investigations and their overt dismissal of public criticism
is a bit ridiculous when taken in context of UC's latest dumping activities.
In fact, this most recent dumping of soils took place
a few days after the property had been placed in escrow. UC's activities
are highly irregular given the sale and escrow, the ongoing site evaluations,
and that no use permit has been issued for this property.
No less questionable is the city's intent to develop a
recreational complex with a nonprofit group called the Association of
Sports Field Users.
Perhaps to some it would seem impertinent to ask about
the legality of the city developing an ordinance for any group who would
stand to benefit financially. Yet a recent public records request revealed
that in July, 1999, barely six months after ASFU was chartered, the
city manager signed a professional services contract providing for up
to $24,000 to facilitate the participation of ASFU and their consultants
at city meetings, and of course, to design and develop the $2 million
park facilities.
The ASFU contract issued by the city manager may not be
subject to a competitive bid process, but it appears that this July
1999 contract has in effect created the waiver of the city's competitive
bidding requirement for the Harrison Playing Fields Project.
This was five months before this project was legally considered
by the Berkeley City Council and an ASFU ordinance enacted. ASFU's inside
track and back room maneuvering of the city weren't publicly revealed
until the December meeting of the Parks and Recreation Commission where
city staff lobbied for the proposed ordinance with ASFU as the single
candidate, a candidate already working on the project with the city
staff.
It should be noted that under the city's design and building
contract guidelines, all work must clearly constitute schematic and
programmatic design work described for the fields project. Even the
city attorney's office recognizes the difficulty of maintaining this
thin legal line.
It appears that city staff working on this project have
been caught nudging the cart a little ahead of the horse, Moreover,
this special ordinance is being drafted exclusively for ASFU, which
has absolutely no track record.
The ASFU ordinance provides a waiver for competitive bidding,
prevailing wages, and certain bonding requirements. And if ASFU is also
awarded the yearly maintenance and management contract and possession
of the gate keys, this special interest effort should be recorded in
the history books as a politically orchestrated "perfect game."
Finally, those who have been able to sort through
this Harrison saga and are able to hear over the dull roar of the soccer
crowds, may now understand why some Berkeleyians say that more stinks
about the UC Harrison property and playing fields project than its undeniably
poor air quality.
Excerpt from: L A Wood, Berkeley Voice, January 14, 2000
Harrison Park Project ZONING Documents |
- Appeal for Use Permit # 99-10000112, Fifth and Harrison Street Playing Fields
L AWood, February 8, 2000
- Berkeley Zoning Staff Comments to Appeal of the Harrison Playing fields and Skate Park project, February 22, 2000
- Initial Study for the Harrison Playing Fields and Codornices Creek Improvement Project. (Project # SCH99092010) L A Wood, October, 1999
- Re-evaluation of Harrison Street Playing Fields Zoning
L A Wood, November 23, 1999
- California Environmental Quality Act Review for Harrison Soccer and Skate Park Facility
L A Wood July 2, 2001
- Mitigated Negative Declaration-Skate Park Project and Harrison Park in Berkeley
Edward Murphy City of Berkeley July 11, 2001
- Request for a Review of Use Permit #99-10000112 at Fifth and Harrison Streets
From L A Wood, December 19, 2000
- Memorandum on Status Report on the Impact of Chromium VI at Harrison
From Weldon Rucker, Acting City Manager, December 6, 2000
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News Articles and Commentary on Harrison Park |
Field of Bad Dreams: In its rush
to create sports facilities at Harrison Park, Berkeley overlooked nasty environmental realities.
John Geluardi, East Bay Express, September 4, 2002
- Air quality still an issue at
soccer fields
John Geluardi, Berkeley Daily Planet, July 24, 2002
- The Choice of Harrison VIEWPOINT
L A Wood, Berkeley Daily Planet, February 6 2002
- Poor air quality notices wanted
at west Berkeley soccer fields
John Geluardi, Berkeley Daily Planet, November 3-4, 2001
- Test shows poor air quality at
Harrison Park
John Geluardi, Berkeley Daily Planet, August
4-5, 2001
- To: Bay Area Air Quality Management District
Re: Chromium in Air at Fourth & Harrison Street March 26, 2001
- Air Study Expands to Include
Samples of Chromium
John Geluardi, Berkeley Daily Planet, April 11,
2001
- Playing fields' price goes up
Judith Scherr, Berkeley Daily Planet, February 19, 2000
- Something Rotten with Sports
Field Deal
L A Wood, Berkeley Voice, January 14, 2000
- Harrison Is Wrong Site for City's
Play Fields
L A Wood, Berkeley Daily Planet, December 14, 1999
- Soccer, Skateboard Park Score
Final Goal
Marc Albert, Berkeley Voice, December 10, 1999
- Strong Support for Park Project;
Activist: More Study Needs to Be Done
Judith Scherr, Berkeley Daily Planet, September
18-19, 1999
- News print Opinion pieces on Harrison Skate Park and Chromium VI contamination (2000)
- Toxins Found at Skate Park: City
Halts Construction, Says There Is No Public Health Threat
Bonnie Chance, Daily Californian, November 28, 2000
- Haven for Skateboard Aficionados
Coming to Berkeley Skateboard Park Land to Cost $2-8 million
Cecily
Burt, Oakland Tribune December 9, 1999
- New Skate Park for Youths to Open:
Council Approves Rules Ordinance Despite Residents' Concerns
Meredith Mandell, Daily Californian, November 20, 2000
- Construction Imminent on City's
First Skate Park: West Berkeley Site of Toxic-material Cleanup Will
Be Used to House the Skating Facility and Two Soccer Fields
Clare Curley, Berkeley Voice, October 19, 2000
- Chemical
Stalls Skate Facility: 'Erin Brockovich' Pollutant in Berkeley
Tyche Hendrick, San Francisco Chronicle, December
5, 2000
- Backside Noseslide on the Chromium
6: City to Blame for Toxic Skate Park Fiasco
L A Wood, Daily Californian, November 28, 2000
- Skate and
die? Toxic puddle forces Berkeley officials to close new skate park
Corbett Miller, San Francisco Guardian, February 23, 2003
- City to Blame
for Skate Park Fiasco
L A Wood, Berkeley Voice, January 10, 2003
- Harrison
Field and Skate Park
L A Wood, Berkeley Daily Planet, November
29, 2000
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Additional information on Chromium 6 and permits |
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West Berkeley Air Monitoring Studies & Risk Assessments |
- NEW West Berkeley Community Monitoring Project
Global Community Monitor
- NEW: Chart of West Berkeley Air Pollution Sources
California Air Resources Board 2005 data for industrial facilities in zip code 94710
- A Screening Assessment of Ambient Air: Pacific Steel Casting Company
ENSR Health Sciences, March 1989
- Toxicological Analysis of Chemicals Used at Pacific Steel Casting Company
Selina Bendix, 9 November 1990
- Ambient Air Pollution and Health Risks at Harrison Street
Acurex Environmental Corporation, December 10, 1997
- West Berkeley Air Monitoring Part 1, West Berkeley Air Monitoring Part 2
Applied Measurement Science, September 6, 2000
- PM10 Monitoring at the Berkeley Recycling Center Materials Recovery Facility
July, 2002 to January, 2003 Applied Measurement Science
- Berkeley Solid Waste Management Transfer Station Air Quality Evaluation and Recommended Mitigation Measures, ESA Environmental Science Associates, April 29, 2003
- Update on Air Quality at the proposed site of the Ursula Sherman Village
Prepared for: Building Opportunities for Self-Sufficiency, September 30, 2002
- Harrison Soccer Fields Air Study Part 1, and Harrison Soccer Fields Air Study Part 2
Applied Measurement Science, June 2003
- Qualitative Human Health Risk Assessment For Airborne Particulate Matter at Harrison Street Park
Charles E. Lambert Ph.D. DABT McDaniel Lambent, Inc. April 25, 2003
- Assessment and Recommendations re: Air Quality at Harrison Play Fields project
Date: October 25, 1999 Poki Namkung, M.D., M.P.H., City of Berkeley Health Officer
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