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Alameda Sunwww.alamedasun.com April 23, 2015 11 Virtual Reality Technophiles Meet Tonight Courtesy photo Students like these are looking for an opportunity to stay with families in Alameda. Exchange Program Seeks Host Families Sun Staff Reports A dozen more host families are needed in Alameda to host exchange students from Spain. The students arrive June 27 and depart July 25. In total, 25 students will visit Alameda this summer to participate in the EMY Program. Students range in age from 13 to 17. The students will participate in three excursions each week to places like Great America, Alcatraz and an Oakland A’s game, just to name a few. Admission expenses and ground transportation for the excursions are paid for through the program. Host families are welcome to join any excursion at a discounted rate. The students come with full insurance and their own spending money. Host families are asked to provide the students with their own beds. For information, or to participate in this cultural experience, call Jan Garcia at 749-7061 or 301-0779. Sun Staff Reports Senior-housing advisor and digital tech consultant for seniors, Linda Jacobson is bringing virtual reality (VR) entrepreneurs and demonstrations to Alameda’s Rhythmix Cultural Works to offer chances to experience this evolving medium at the East Bay Virtual Reality Meetup Event set for tonight, Thursday, April 23, form 7 to 9:30 p.m. Visitors may try out the latest VR experiences and see presentations from business founders using VR to enhance health and well-being. “I’m fascinated by how VR can be developed for therapeutic use by people who are mobility-impaired or mildly cognitively impaired,” said Linda Jacobson, the event organizer. “But this consumer technology is so new, it’s not available to try in stores!” Jacobson chose Rhythmix as experiences in VR involve not just technology, but expression, narrative and multi-disciplinary creativity. Rhythmix Cultural Works is located at 2513 Blanding Ave., in Alameda. Tickets cost $20 or $10 for undergrads. Find out more at www. meetup.com/East-Bay-virtual-reality. Coming Home Winners Courtesy photo H enry Boeger, Dylan Wondolleck and Simon Boeger (left to right) represented Encinal Yacht Club and swept the 2014-2015 BAYS Opti Series at the San Francisco Yacht Club in Belvedere on April 12. The five-regatta series comprised 31 races. Henry won the Blue Fleet (ages 11-12) and was third overall. Dylan won the White Fleet (10-under), and Simon won the Red Fleet (12-15) and was first overall. This summer’s Bay Area Youth Sailing (BAYS) series kicks off in May at Redwood City. Letters: To the editor this week from concerned readers on various topics Continued from page 8 homes compared to multiple-occupancy housing. — Phil Tribuzio They’re just kids Editor: I was pleased to read the letter by Ryan Metcalf (“Baseball, Bullies Not a Good Mix,” Apr. 16) about bullying by coaches in youth baseball in Alameda. My family experienced many of the same issues in this particular for-profit program. We are rather perplexed as to why it seems to be so popular right now. We can only guess that it is because of the pressure tactics employed by the staff, which encourages the players to look down on the Babe Ruth volunteer coaching system. We have heard about inappropriate language and jokes about players made by the coaches (such as about a player’s weight), about players being forced to spend most of a practice running laps, or sent home early, as punishment for not paying attention, etc. Discipline is fine up to a point, but these are just kids. Youth baseball should be about having fun and learning good sportsmanship, not focused on making a high-school or college team. I don’t know Metcalf personally, but it must have taken some courage to write his letter, so I applaud him and hope his effort will lead to changes. — Russell Vernon I disagree Editor: In response to (“Not Another Make-Believe Traffic Remedy,” April 16), I’d like to say as an inaugural member of the Transportation Commission (TC) and a frequent observer and commenter at its meetings, I could not disagree more. It reveals an unfortunate lack of familiarity with how the TC and the Alameda’s Public Works Department function. This is not, as claimed, just another study of what the transportation “problem” is. Instead, Councilman Daysog’s goal is to design implementation strategies that can be applied throughout Alameda — not just in one development area — that will decrease auto traffic and make nonautomobile options safer, easier, and more convenient. (This has never been done on a citywide scale.) The suggestion that “…They (the TC members) are quite capable of suggesting updates to our transportation element without the help of a consultant,” severely overestimates the capabilities and resources of the voluntary and advisory TC, which is still re-establishing itself after the years when former Mayor Beverly Johnson decimated its ranks by withholding appointments when vacancies occurred. (Yes, her actions have had long-term consequences: in 2009-2010, the TC lost its institutional memory, its continuity and KITTEN SEASON IS HERE! FAAS IS IN NEED OF THE FOLLOWING ITEMS: its culture of pushing the staff to “think outside the box.”) It might have been conceivable for the original TC members — a once-in-a-generation group, in my humble opinion — to do what you propose: they served eight years and developed a new Transportation Master Plan, thanks to a unified and assertive approach to transportation planning that I have rarely seen in 40 years of advocacy work. To ask the existing TC to accomplish a similar feat is asking more than their advisory role under the City Charter. The city staff will manage the consultant’s contract and work closely on the new plan(s), and the TC will most certainly be heavily involved — as it should be — in scoping the goals of the contract and plan as well as modifying its draft results. The amount of time and effort need to develop sound strategies and implementation plans for city- wide reductions in single-occupancy car trips is huge: this will take many hours of community meetings, worldwide research into alternatives, and lots of creative thinking to develop options that will work for Alameda. The already stretched city staff cannot manage such a big project on top of what they already do, thanks to years of staff reductions, so hiring an outside consultant to develop a new community based plan is the only way to accomplish this new and laudable goal. — Jon Spangler Crab feed a success Editor: On behalf of Ken and Colleen Arnerich and the 2015 baseball fundraising committee, we extend our warm thanks and appreciation to all who supported and attended Alameda High School’s 13th Annual Crab Feed & Auction fundraiser held recently this year at Eagles Hall. Special notes of appreciation go to all of the businesses and individuals who supported this event and especially to our corporate sponsors: U.S. Bank, Perforce, Rich Sherratt and one anonymous AHS baseball lover, Harbor Bay Realty, Rich Krinks, Summit Bank and Kevin Kearney, C.P.A. To our dedicated staff of baseball coaches and their families, the many baseball players and their families, we send out a heartfelt “couldn’t do it without you.” And to the baseball families who went above and beyond to make this event a success, an extra thanks for stepping up to the plate. For a complete list of this year’s donors, team records, schedules and game summaries, visit www. hornetfootball.org/boosters. — Debbi Nakahara, Vali Ebert Event chairs, Alameda High School Baseball Boosters Sing Along with the Sacred Harp Sun Staff Reports The 11th Annual Golden Gate Sacred Harp Singing hosted by the Bay Area’s Sacred Harp Singing Community will take place 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. this Saturday, April 25 at Trinity Lutheran Church, 1323 Central Ave. Everyone is invited to join the day of fun and fulfilling sacred harp singing and be a part of a uniquely American musical tradition. The event features participatory, non-instrumental, choral music that anyone is invited to sing, regardless of musical experience or ability — there is no rehearsal or performance, and admission is free. Also known as shape note singing, sacred harp is easy to learn. The term shape note refers to a style of musical notation that uses triangles, ovals, squares and diamonds that allow even relatively new singers to sing tunes at a first reading. The sacred harp is considered to be the oldest continuous musical tradition in America today, with tunes originating from prerevolutionary America as well as contemporary additions. Interest in sacred harp singing has surged since the release of the AcademyAward winning film, Cold Mountain, which featured sacred harp singing in its soundtrack. People from many traditions enjoy this music for its power and depth and to experience the sheer enjoyment of singing together. For more information, contact Lindy Groening at 593-0019 or [email protected]. Bill: For city hire falls on taxpayers Continued from page 1 Royal Canin - Baby Cat Instinctive Loaf in Sauce Royal Canin Mother & Baby Cat food Friends of the Alameda Animal Shelter (FAAS) 1590 Fortmann Way, Alameda • (510) 337-8565 www.AlamedaAnimalShelter.org HOURS: Wed: 11AM-7PM • Thurs-Sun 11AM-5PM Ad paid for by anonymous donor Serving the City of Alameda Since 1977 ANNUAL MEETING of the ALAMEDA FOOD BANK The public is invited to see the Alameda Food Bank’s new board members approved. May 18, 2015 at 6:30 p.m. at 1900 Thau Way, Alameda. For information, call 510-523-5850. Alameda Food Bank provides nutritious food to low-income Alamedans. To donate food or money or to receive services, call: 523-5850 or visit www.alamedafoodbank.org executives wanted to pay, emails obtained by The Alamedan showed. “The (chief resiliency officer) model proposed by Alameda raises concerns around salary; the longterm sustainability of resilience as a practice; and the placement of the CRO within the fire department with a dotted line to the Mayor,” 100 Resilient Cities’ chief operating officer, Andrew Salkin, wrote to Nguyen on March 10, 2014. Nguyen, whose staff was scrambling to address potential job openings that would be created if Zombeck took the chief resiliency officer position, balked at negotiating further with initiative executives. Then-Fire Chief Mike D’Orazi also had his hands full with a second project: a community paramedicine pilot project, which launched in June 2014. “At this point, we need to know if you will fund the position that we propose. If yes, we’ll be all-in next week,” Nguyen, who told The Alamedan the city didn’t want a policy person to fill the role but were instead seeking a grassroots organizer — wrote in a March 11, 2014, email to Salkin the following day. “If not, 100RC will move on without Alameda.” After losing the grant, city officials vowed to press forward with their efforts to make Alameda more resilient should disaster strike. The fire department had already restarted its disaster preparedness program, and the city planned a luncheon to discuss efforts to make Alameda more resilient in May 2014, a month and a half after announcing the city had lost the grant. In his report to the council, Nguyen wrote that the city hopes to initiate planning efforts this spring and conduct community and staff training over the summer, fall and winter; implementation and updates would be made in April 2016. As part of the process, the city will update a hazard and risk assessment the federal government requires before it will provide aid in the wake of a disaster. The report also says the city will use its to-be-built emergency operations center as a year-round training center for resiliency efforts. The city has been criticized for moving forward with the multimillion-dollar facility, which was slated to be occupied by a single fire department employee and used only for occasional training and in case of emergency. “The new facility will serve two primary functions. One, it will be the emergency operations center, the headquarters, for disaster response. Two, it will serve as the city’s resiliency training center year-round,” wrote Nguyen, who dubbed the new facility an emergency operations center and city resiliency training center. Read more Alameda news at www.thealamedan.org. Read how the city lost the grant here: http:// thealamedan.org/news/specialreport-how-grant-was-lost. THE HUMANE SOCIETY OF ALAMEDA SINCE 1973 HAS BEEN DEDICATED TO ANIMAL PROTECTION AND PET POPULATION CONTROL WE NEED YOUR SUPPORT! to continue our financial assistance to the Alameda Animal Shelter, our spay and neuter fund and our dedicated programs. q $20 Individual Membership q $100 Life Member q $35 Supporting Member q $______ A Donation Amount Send to: H.S.A., P.O. Box 1571, Alameda, CA 94501 www.HSAlameda.org Name ___________________ Address ______________________________ City _________________________________ Zip ______________________ H.S.A. is now offering FREE animal adoption for Alameda Veterans of the Armed Services. We continue to offer FREE animal adoptions for Alameda Senior Citizens living on low incomes. Animal adoptions provided at the Alameda Animal Shelter. Checks payable to the Humane Society are tax-deductible. We are an all-volunteer 501 (c)(3) Non-Profit Organization