Month: August 2005

  • Thought the title of this San Mateo Times article was about a dismissed councilmember but it is about one of our candidates:

    BURLINGAME City Council candidate Paul Prendiville is seeking to banish a lab.jpgt bull mix from his block, after it attacked his shih-tzu Bobo.
    He said the lab.jpgt bull mix was visiting a neighbor across the street Thursday morning, when he ran to Bobo, who was leashed to Prendiville's front porch at 909 Azalea Ave. Bobo was bitten on his torso and his leg. His left eye was pulled from its socket, but was sewn back in. "(The dog) hasn't been picked up. I want the assurance that the dog won't come back," Prendiville said Monday. "We have a lot of children around here and a pre-school one block over."

    … "The neighborhood is absolutely outraged about this and they too will be seeking assurances from the owner that the dog doesn't come back," he said. "I'm grateful that my dog is Catholic and he survived."

    For the full text of Christine's article.

    – Written by Fiona

  • From the Daily Journal today:

    The Burlingame Planning Commission met yesterday and discussed the proposed zoning of the Trousdale West area. Within the recommendation was a minimum number of adults who could live in an assisted-living facility. It was recommended that no more than 60 adults be allowed per acre.

    However, Sunrise Senior Living is proposing a 79-unit facility on 1818
    Trousdale Drive to house 95 people. Daniel Zemanek, the senior vice president of development for Sunrise Senior Living, proposed the zoning numbers be taken out and reconsidered. The board has approved the zoning minus the paragraph limiting the number of adults allowed to live per acre in an assisted living facility. The plan for the new facility was introduced last night. While Sunrise has facilities in San Mateo and Belmont, this will be the first in Burlingame. Zemanek guessed it is about two years out before the facility could open.

    The commission also amended the zoning for the Broadway commercial area allowing small real estate businesses with strict restrictions on the size of the office and the workers within.

    – Written by Fiona

  • Thought this was interesting enough to include in full from the San Mateo Times as sometimes the links disappear!

    Teacher stresses skills for learning

    Jim Burke, a teacher at Burlingame High School, is the author of two books, "ACCESSing School" and "School Smarts." He runs the ACCESS program at Burlingame High School, which focuses on students who are reading below grade level and helps them develop skills in and out of the classroom.

    Q: What got you interested in teaching?
    A: The main thing that got me interested in teaching is having not been a very good student; I barely graduated from high school. In fact, one of the great ironies is that I got a D-minus in English my senior year (of high school) and now I'vewritten a book that's used in a lot of universities, including NYU (New York University) to teach people how to be English teachers. I think when I went to UC Santa Barbara, what I became interested in was psychology and learning, I got very interested in learning about the things I hadn't been able to do or hadn't done well, so I ended up getting a degree in how we learn and how we think.

    Q: What do you think was the most important part of your education?
    A: I can answer that in retrospect and say they were the things that weren't part of school. While I was not doing well in school, I was one of the better tennis players in the state. I learned a lot about how to learn and how to get good at something, so I would spend five or six hours a day, sometimes, working on my tennis game, but it would never occur to me that I could do the same thing and learn how to actually do enough to pass my math class. I didn't realize I was learning how to learn. When it came time and I realized that things weren't working out and I needed to go to college and get a little education, I suddenly realized I did know how to learn, I just wasn't applying those lessons to how to learn; how to do school.

    Q: Do you think your difficulties in school led to your desire to strive to help those students who are underachievers or under-performers?
    A: Definitely. I think I see myself in those kids. I understand what they're capable of becoming and I think one of the things that's unfortunate in our society is we tend to discount effort versus ability. We think you can or you can't. You either have the ability to do math or you can't. Whereas when they compare math studies in places like Asia, what they find is some kids have to work harder and longer to get it than others, but they never say "Well you just can't learn it because you don't have the ability." Some people may take a little longer to write than others, but to assume they don't have anything worth writing or that they can't learn how to write is really counterproductive. So I work very carefully with the kids to help them create experiences that help them realize they can do things. So, for instance, I will send slower readers around the corner to Washington Elementary School and have them work with kindergarteners, which places them in the position of authority and responsibility with books they can read very fluently, and then they develop self-esteem because they realize there are things they can do.

    Q: How do you think your way of teaching is different from a more traditional method?
    A: I think it's a mix. A part of my teaching is very traditional teaching, which is effectively conveying something. But I think what I do differently is creating that external context. I'm teaching the kids how to write and how to write well, and things like that, but they don't always know why they need to be able to write or why they need to be able to read. So in my ACCESS program, which is for the struggling readers, I bring in people who struggled. When you look at people like Officer (Ed) Nakiso, a great guy, who's the sergeant of the Burlingame Police he was a struggling reader when he was growing up. When he decided he wanted to become a police officer and he realized the first thing he had to do was memorize the California penal code and take tests, suddenly he realizes, "Wow, I guess you really need to know how to read." And guys like Chief (Bill) Reilly of the Burlingame Fire Department. So (he comes) into my class and talks about the fact that when he went into the fire department a million years ago, you just needed to be strong enough to hold the hose. Now you need to be just short of a doctor with all your paramedic skills and you've got to have all this fire, chemical, toxic hazard knowledge, and you've got to be just short of a scientist. So the (students) that sit in the class that think "This stuff's crap and I don't need to know how to read and write, I'm just going to be a firefighter" what they don't realize is the demands on your intelligence to be "just a firefighter" are profound. So what I try to do is blend those things and try to integrate the hands-on world into the classroom and sometimes get the kids out of the classroom. So we send the kids on job shadows, so when they come back from the visitation to the car plant, they've seen the guy who was working there who has to write the reports or read the new manuals to fix things the more traditional lesson plan on reading makes more sense then, because they realize they do need those things.

    Q: Can you explain your ACCESS program in more detail?
    A: ACCESS stands for Academic Success, and so the kids come in reading a couple of grade levels below. So a freshman might be reading at a seventh-, sixth- or fifth-grade level. What the ACCESS program tries to do is not just teach them how to be better readers, but it tries to teach them all the different skills you need to have to be able to be a successful student. What I'm trying to do is teach them not just the reading skills, but I'm trying to teach them the organizational skills, the study skills, the thinking skills, the writing skills that they need. The kids that come into a class like ACCESS have generally experienced school as a place that's designed for people who already know how to do it. School has become unapologetically academic the day of taking all shop or vocational (classes) is really, especially in the Bay Area, gone. If you look at the kinds of skills kids need to have, they're ultimately academic skills. In the class, I'm trying to develop those skills that they're going to need. As Tom Vander Ark, who's the head of the Gates education foundation says, "You want kids to be able to be good citizens, good students and great employees."

    – Written by Fiona

  • Since today seems to be a very slow news day, I will ask a question that has been on my mind for the last couple of weeks.

    While our Gravenstein apple tree is producing as many apples as ever, our very mature pear tree has only produced two pears this year. Over the last decade, the apple tree has been very consistent, but I can recall a couple of years when the pear tree was low on fruit. After one of the low years, a local tree service told me that the tree was getting old and was slowing down naturally. Then it had a big year where it produced 50 or more pears.

    It may be a coincidence, but I also notice that my yellowjacket trap is almost empty while in some years it has filled up by this point in the summer.

    Is anyone else experiencing a low fruit year in Burlingame, especially with pears? I know we have some tree experts reading the blog regularly so any insight would be welcome.

    – Written by Joe Baylock

  • Thanks to the Broadway merchants, the Burlingame Lions Club, the Daily Journal, our most hardworking councilmember and volunteers, we are looking forward to Broadways 2nd Pet Parade.

    TIME: 11:30 AM
    WHERE: Broadway
    INFO: http://www.burlingamepetparade.com
    PARADE REGISTRATION: Free
    OTHER TREATS: Face painting, crafts, etc.
    BARBECUE LUNCH: Burlingame Lions Club
    PRIZES: Eight categories

    Booths will be a new addition this year. They are free to children's groups and to those that march in the parade with 10 pets or more. The cost is $25 for other groups.

    Please call Jean Silveira at 344-4945 to reserve a booth.

    – Written by Fiona

  • Reporters' Notebook in the Daily Journal:

    The site of the former Burlingame Drive-in, once slated for a 450,000-square-foot office building, has been rumored to be a possible location for a biotech facility as most of the property has changed hands out of Glenborough's control. Another rumor for the site has a five-star hotel with condominiums. That proposal has some challenges since the council voted against having housing on the Bayfront. Traffic circulation is also an issue since the closest Highway 101 overpass is Peninsula Avenue.

    Condominiums? Housing on the Bayfront?

    – Written by Fiona

  • Here is a compilation of questions from Ian, Patrick, political blunder, Admin et al. taken from earlier threads and subsequently re-grouped:

    1. Planning and Development
      1. What is your idea of an ideal city and why?
      2. What is your vision for downtown Burlingame and what steps will you take to achieve that during your next/first term?
      3. Depending on the makeup of the new council, it is possible that Safeway could come back with a proposal basically identical to the one that was turned down previously. If they do, will you vote For it or Against it?
      4. What changes, if any, would be necessary for you to accept Safeway’s plan?
      5. Would you support a reduction or an increase in the FAR, if so, by how much?
      6. Would you support establishing a “significant historic property” list for residential and commercial properties?
      7. If the Donnelly Plaza proposal came to a vote exactly as proposed in Mr. Ionescu's 5 July presentation and assuming acceptable financial terms were reached, would you vote For or Against?
      8. Would you support a proposal to establish housing on the Bayfront?
    2. Downtown and Business
      1. Do you support the current funding structure of the DBID (i.e. assessments on all downtown businesses, payable each year by all unless rejected by the weighted majority of members)? If not, what is your alternative funding proposal? Please specify whether it would be based on voluntary membership in DBID, or on a restructured universal assessment.
      2. Would you support the erection of a parking structure in downtown Burlingame? If not, why? If yes, where would you propose to build it, and how would you propose to pay for it?
      3. What proposals do you have to encourage smaller, independent retailers in downtown?
      4. There is no difference in the $100 business license fee between businesses with no or one employee(s), and those with many. Are you For or Against an increase?
    3. Our Streets
      1. Would you vote For or Against having the city fully fund the school crossing guards each year you serve on council?
      2. What steps will you take to encourage people from the Bayfront and hotel guests to come to the West side of the freeway for their dining and shopping needs?
      3. Will you continue to make homeowners responsible for maintaining sidewalks in the city setbacks?
      4. Do you support a change in our current parking meter fee scale? If so, what would that be?
      5. Would you support free meters for certain events like Free Shopping Days as San Mateo and other cities have done.
      6. What do you propose to do, if anything, to encourage people to ride and walk into town, rather than making car trips?
    4. Trees
      1. Will you support strengthening the Heritage tree ordinance by increasing the fines for non-compliance?
      2. When the budget allows, will you pledge to insure that each sidewalk area in the downtown core, (including on and between California/El Camino/Howard/Chapin) be planted with appropriately scaled trees or greenery?
    5. City Government
      1. What is your position on voluntary spending campaign spending limits?
      2. Do you feel the city has done enough to facilitate feedback from ordinary citizens? (eg. 3 minute public comment period) If not, what do you personally propose to do?
      3. Will you support televising Planning Commission meetings?
      4. What role do you believe the city council plays with regards to school and hospital issues?
      5. Will you benefit from the financial or political support of the Peninsula Coalition and, if so, do you subscribe to the organization's philosophical perspective regarding development?
      6. Should Burlingame have term limits like other Peninsula cities?
      7. Would you support a city amendment/ordinance that would hold elected officials accountable for campaign promises? Accountability could be anything up to and including removal from office .
      8. Regarding lifetime medical benefits for elected city officials, would you be in favor of reducing the coverage and/or increasing the years of coverage to 8 years?
    6. Our Community
      1. Will you impose strict residency requirements for all representatives?
      2. What steps will you take to protect those who are often underrepresented: our youth, our seniors, those in our communities with disabilities?
      3. For incumbents, what steps have you taken to improve the lives of the youth of Burlingame? For new candidates, what steps will you take?
      4. What are your thoughts about a teen center? Would you support the one previously studied, across from Washington Park? If not, why?
      5. Would you support and encourage public art/live music i.e. concerts in our downtowns? If so how?
      6. Would you support city sponsored forums on various topics of interest, like those currently presented in Redwood City, and from CBB?
      7. Which of the following statements fairly sums up your opinion about Burlingame?
        1. Burlingame is fine as is. I feel that things are generally running smoothly and do not feel an urgent need to change any policies or plans.
        2. Burlingame is doing alright. I feel that things are generally running smoothly, but that there are certain areas where we can make some improvement..
        3. Burlingame has seen better days. I don't feel that the city is being run as well as it could be, and see many areas for improvement .

    – Written by Fiona

  • A special treat for us tomorrow (Friday) on Burlingame Avenue around 1:00 when Cathy and her talented students will show us their miming skills.

    Should be fun!

    – Written by Fiona

  • The Burlingame Voice has obtained today's random alphabet drawing results from the CA Secretary of State's office. This drawing determines the order of names on the ballot for all state elections. Using those results, the ballot orders in Burlingame will be:
    Four year seats (choose 3)

    1. Keighran
    2. Condon
    3. Prendiville
    4. Root
    5. Baylock
    6. Andersen
    7. O'Mahony

    Two year seat (choose 1)

    1. Cohen
    2. Lembi

    – Written by admin

  • According to the San Mateo Times today, no candidates filed after the extended deadline yesterday.

    The candidates for the Burlingame Elementary School District are:
    Mark J. Friedman, Mark G. Intrieri, Jim Rowe, Gregory Land, Liz Grindraux, Dennis Zell

    – Written by Fiona

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