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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: March 30th, 2024

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  • Walking and biking are great. I highly recommend trying one out and there are adult classes if you’d like help learning how to ride and operate a bicycle. A good, used bike with a bike rack can do wonders carrying things around. As a bonus they’re cheap to maintain and safe to work on, completely unlike wrenching underneath a heavy car.

    Depending on your situation, you may want to consider a moped. They’re generally easy to get licensed for, often don’t require insurance, and costs about the same as a good e-bike. They require the same skills as riding a bike (knowing the road laws, understanding how to stop effectively, counter-leaning, etc). The bonus is you’ll be able to get up to speed on frontage and other roads that may not be safe to ride a pedal bike on (e.g. roads without any shoulder). Of course you can always do both, like starting with a pedal bike to get a feeling of how to ride a two-wheeled device.
















  • That’s already the case, though a relatively recent change, called Builder’s Remedy. An incorporated city is granted the right to zone but if they do not have a state compliant housing element (an eight year plan for expected growth and housing to meet that) and if they deny building permits for that planned housing, then a builder can bypass the city’s permitting process. A city effectively forfeits their right to city planning if they don’t have an achievable plan for sufficient housing stock.

    Berkeley has a state approved housing element. If this protested building is in the plan, then there’s not a whole lot the shop owner can do about it. They probably missed their council meetings in figuring out where to put housing during the planning of their city’s housing element. Or they’re upset that they lost in their local politics.