AltWeeklies Wire

The EPA Aims to Get the Lead Outnew

The agency's new lead certification program for contractors means well, but will it work?
East Bay Express  |  Nate Seltenrich  |  08-04-2010  |  Environment

Will Oakland's Giant Pot Farms Be Green?new

The massive indoor medical cannabis grows will consume huge amounts of electricity. But will the city make sure they don't add to greenhouse-gas emissions?
East Bay Express  |  Robert Gammon  |  07-29-2010  |  Environment

Educating Tomorrow's Employeesnew

Bay Area community colleges use federal funding to team up with local businesses on job-training initiatives.
East Bay Express  |  Michele Ellson  |  07-28-2010  |  Business & Labor

Rebuilding an East Bay Manufacturing Basenew

With the collapse of the housing bubble, momentum shifts toward preservation of land suitable for light industry.
East Bay Express  |  Michele Ellson  |  07-06-2010  |  Business & Labor

The Sustainable Economies Law Center Wants to Help You Sharenew

Janelle Orsi's Sustainable Economies Law Center seeks to promote a more humane economy.
East Bay Express  |  Bernice Yeung  |  06-30-2010  |  Business & Labor

Do Americans Understand Arizona's New Law?new

Americans have a long history of scapegoating immigrants during tough economic times, but it’s also not clear whether most whites understand the true ramifications of Arizona’s new law.
East Bay Express  |  Robert Gammon  |  05-13-2010  |  Immigration

Hungry By the Numbersnew

How the government defines hunger — and what it looks like up close.
East Bay Express  |  David Bacon and Betsy Edwards  |  05-05-2010  |  Economy

Who Will Vote to Tax Cannabis in California?new

Now that the entire universe has focused on California's push to legalize herb, the question remains: How many people will actually vote for it? Oft-cited poll numbers are old, mid-term voters are older. Expect a dead heat.
East Bay Express  |  David Downs  |  04-14-2010  |  Drugs

Recent Court Ruling Could Produce More Suburban Tract Developmentsnew

The ruling by Superior Court Judge Frank Roesch to overturn the housing cap will require Pleasanton to finally allow homes to be built for low-income workers. But Roesch's decision will also force the leafy town to accommodate more market-rate housing.
East Bay Express  |  Robert Gammon  |  03-24-2010  |  Environment

Berkeley Has Abandoned its Once-Touted Home-Solar Financing Programnew

The City of Berkeley's home-solar financing program was going to be revolutionary. The highly publicized plan was supposed to help thousands of city residents install solar panels on their roofs without any up-front money. That was two years ago.
East Bay Express  |  Judith Scherr  |  02-24-2010  |  Environment

A New, Last-Minute Proposal for Former Navy Basenew

This "Plan B" to Measure B, the controversial 288-page mishmash of amendments and entitlements for what SunCal wants to build, contains the same basic plan as the increasingly unpopular ballot measure but strips out some of the city's objections to the initiative and seeks to bypass Alameda's tough density restrictions by different means.
East Bay Express  |  Rin Kelly  |  01-27-2010  |  Business & Labor

Workplace Labor Practices Have Become a Subspecialty for Labor Law Firmsnew

In a previous assignment, working at a wastewater facility in West Oakland, Watson kept a jar near his station so that he could urinate while on duty, rather than walk several blocks to the bathroom.
East Bay Express  |  Michelle Quinn  |  01-27-2010  |  Business & Labor

Learning in Chinese: Mandarin Immersion Takes Root in Bay Area Schoolsnew

Shu Ren, founded in the fall of 2008, is the latest in a growing number of Mandarin bilingual schools that have cropped up in the Bay Area. Most of the programs follow some variation of the "dual language" immersion model.
East Bay Express  |  Luke Tsai  |  01-06-2010  |  Education

From Personal Struggle, a Higher Purpose for Tracey Weavernew

Tracey Weaver has suffered more than her share of setbacks in life. As a teen she struggled with abuse, molestation, major financial problems, and the deaths of loved ones. But she overcame these and other tragedies and began to devote her life to helping others through hardship.
East Bay Express  |  Alison Alter  |  12-16-2009  |  Children & Families

UC Berkeley Study Links Heat and War in Sub-Saharan Africanew

A study by Cal doctoral student Marshall Burke and professor Edward Miguel, published in last week's Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is the first to link global warming to human warfare.
East Bay Express  |  Madeleine Bair  |  12-02-2009  |  Environment

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