New Neighbor Lives Near Barebottle Brewing, Highly Recommends It

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It’s here. The predicted Golden Age for Beer in Bernal Heights is here.

Barebottle Brewing Company at 1525 Cortland has been open now for about a month, and it’s an impressive addition to our local drinkosphere. Neighbor Todd H. is a new Bernal resident who lives very close to Barebottle, and he shared these impressions of the place with us:

A month ago we lived in SOMA — 440 feet away from the Cellermaker brewery. It was hard to leave SOMA. How would we live without our darling neighborhood brewery? Imagine our delight to discover that a new brewery, the Barebottle Brewing Company, was opening a mere 213 feet from our new house right in Bernal, right after we moved in! Only two questions remained: 1) is the beer going to be good, 2) will it be a nice place to hang out and socialize?

The answer to both questions: Yes.

The Beer
Katy had the California Cologne, a Kolsch-Style lager, and it was light, fragrant, and smooth. I had the Scurvy Fighter, a pale ale with strong citrus and lots of hops. A neighbor shared his C’s Bees Honey Brown, which is made with honey from one of the brewers own bees. Barebottle is adding more beers and a number of standards, each with an intriguing twist.

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The Place
The sipping area is large and spacious, clean and bright. It’s dog- and kid-friendly, with games like cornhole and a side room where people were already playing board games. The brewing area is separated from the patrons by a small fence, perfect for who love gazing upon gleaming steel tanks and industrial equipment while sipping beer.

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More
In addition to serving beer, Barebottle will teach you how to brew it. There will be regular lectures and classes on homebrewing. While they don’t serve food themselves, a rotating cast of food trucks will be parked in the driveway right outside, with gorgeous custom picnic-style tables inside. My wife and I are debating the merits of starting a small grill cheese cart to offset the substantial tab we’re going to invariably run up.

The beer is great, the atmosphere friendly and bright, and it’s close enough that we can still see our Wi-Fi signal.

PHOTOS: Courtesy of Todd Huffman

China Films Moody New Music Video in Bernal Heights

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Ah well. So it goes: Another week, another ridiculously sexy music video filmed here in Bernal Heights.

This one comes by way of China (the local Americana-folk band, NOT the famous Asian nation of 1.4 billion people). China recorded their newest video on the undiscovered streets around The Lost Tribe of College Hill, and the Bay Bridged explains the rest:

China went up to Bernal Heights to record a video for “Everyone Thinks I’m a Loser.” Royal Oakie founder David Glassebrook produced and directed the visuals, with his partner Yasamine June chipping in as co-director, art director, and cinematographer. Shot entirely on Super 8, it’s a dark, lovely, grainy ride, with a touch of humor to make sure you aren’t totally wallowing in self-pity. It all feels just right:

Bonus: The Bay Bridged adds that China is doing a release show at the beloved Make Out Room on Sunday, June 17, so if you like what you hear today, you can go see China on Sunday.

Raccoon Family Conducts Home Invasion Training Exercise at Bernal Home

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The noise outside the open window sounded like a strange communication of peeps and growls, as if a small group of feral R2-D2s were huddling to plot their next move. And indeed, they were.

When your Bernalwood editor turned on the back yard floodlights to look outside a few days ago, we interrupted a mama raccoon just as she was instructing her four cubs on the proper technique used to invade my home and plunder our pantry.

Although our stylish coyote gets all the headlines, Bernal Heights is also a thriving habitat for raccoons, and raccoons are shitty neighbors. They’re smart, they’re fearless, they work in teams, and they have digits that approximate opposable thumbs. They’re also rather cute, which is why some wags prefer to call them “trash pandas.”

Anyway, when Bernalwood turned the lights on, Mama Raccoon gave a pissed-off look that said “Ugh. Can’t you see we we’re working here???”

PHOTO: Telstar Logistics

This Guy Remembers Growing Up on Mission Street During the 1940s

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Robert Tiedeman Jr., photographed on June 25, 2016

A few weeks ago, your Bernalwood editor wandered into the fabulous Secession Art and Design store on Mission Street near Valencia to say hello to Neighbor Eden Stein, Secession’s equally fabulous proprietor. As fate would have it, Bernalwood dropped in just as Mr. Robert Tiedeman Jr. was visiting as well.

Neighbor Eden introduced us, explaining that Robert is actually a Bernal neighbor emeritus, because he was born and raised on Bernal’s stretch of Mission Street, in an apartment above 3471 Mission .

Robert explained that his parents purchased the entire building for $7500 in 1937 with a $250 downpayment. (That works out to about $125,000 in 2016 dollars, with $4200 down.) His dad ran a store on the ground floor, where Ankor Borei is now located. The store was called Tiedeman Appliance, and here’s a photocopied photo of it:

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And here’s what it looks like today, in Google Street View:

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To capture more of the history lesson, Bernalwood deployed our mobile video recording system and interviewed Robert Tiedeman about his memories of La Lengua during the 1940s:

He also shared this story written down by his mother, describing what it was like for a new merchant setting up shop on Mission Street during the late 1930s:

Welcome and Congratulations — NOT

We had just completed our move to our new building on Mission Street. This consisted of a store building and two six room flats; it cost $7,350, $250 down which we borrowed from my sister and her husband. Times were so tough (it was the end of 1937) that the real estate agent took his commission from the seller on the installment plan. We had two boys; George had turned four in November and Kent would be one in February 1938.

The store had once been a bakery, and the windows in the back of the Window alcove were many-paned and ugly. They would have to go, we decrded. Bob and I were standing in the store, glad we were there, but also pretty scared as to how we were going to fare. We were the San Francisco Regina Agents, so got busmess through that listing in the phone book, but what other business would we get and how would the neighborhood be for customers?

As I stood in front of the store, I saw the accordion music teacher from across the street and his brother in the barbershop next door start across the street in our direction. “Gee, Bob,” I said, “I’ll bet they are coming over to wish us well and make us feel welcome in the neighborhood.”

The Antoninis approached our building and came into the store. They started to talk, first one, then the other. “Well, of course, you should know, this side of Mission Street gets no business; our side is much better for business.” “Yes, we get the morning sun ‘ and people like to walk down our side of the street.” The elder brother shook his head dolefully, “You’ll never make it over here on the wrong side of the street.”

“No, never,” his brother echoed, and back across to the good side of Mission Street they went.

Bob said, “You and your ideas . . . some congratulations.”

Years later, the accordion music teacher moved to our side of Mission. I wanted to remind him that it was the poor side of Mission, but we had become friends, so I just made him feel welcome.

PHOTOS: Robert Tiedeman Jr., photographed by Bernalwood

UPDATED: Driver Runs From Rollover Car Crash on Cortland

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Neighbor Meredith captured the scene after an automobile rollover accident incident on Cortland last night:

There was a crazy car accident on Cortland between Elsie and Winfield last night at about 11:40pm. We heard the crash and ran outside to see if anyone was injured, but the driver had fled already!

I don’t know how that was possible in what was about 15 seconds from hearing the crash to seeing the car. I think someone was gunning down Cortland and flipped the car with the front hood crashing into the street and the car landing on its top. It took over an hour for the police/fire to clear the scene.

Thankfully no one else was on the road at the same time.

UPDATE 10:00 pm. Over on the Facebook, Neighbor Kristine shared more details about the incident, and the driver of the car:

This happened almost literally outside my bedroom window.

I scrambled to the window after hearing 3-4 smaller crash sounds and then the big final one. I saw the fellow emerge from the drivers side door and amble off. I’m sure he was in shock, but there’s no way he was not also drunk with the way he was moving his body. with determination he wandered (“run” is much too generous”) up Windfield, clearly abandoning the scene.

Neighbors were already gathering at the time and a fellow was trying to talk to him and ask him questions. it wasn’t even obvious at first that he was “fleeing” because he was moving so slowly. the neighbor was distracted by the intensity of seeing the car upside down and the driver kept walking/jogging/skipping.

it was about a minute later that the various neighbors helped the passenger get out of the car. I clearly heard him say that he didn’t know the driver, they had just met and he’d simply accepted his offer of a ride. he gestured west, downhill toward Mission St, as where they had met and had been coming from. I’m sure he was also in shock, but he was surely inebriated as well.

There was a truck parked on Cortland that was hit and leaking gas. I didn’t see the crash itself, but it’s amazing that the driver was able to damage a parked car to his right while also still having enough momentum to completely flip his own vehicle upside down.

I am SO grateful that myself nor another cyclist didn’t happen to be riding on Cortland at the time. I hope this incredibly reckless individual is caught and thoroughly prosecuted.

PHOTO: Courtesy of Neighbor Meredith

Save the Date: The 2016 Bernal Heights Hillwide Garage Sale Happens August 13

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An important announcement for people with overstuffed garages or storage spaces AND the craphounds treasure-seekers who love them: The Bernal Heights Hillwide Garage Sale happens on Saturday August 13 this year, and registration is open now.

Neighbor Michael is co-wrangling the Hillwide Garage Sale this year, and he shares these details:

Hillwide.com is now live and ready to accept registrations for the great garage sale of 2016 that will take place on Saturday, 13-August from 9a-2p.

Hillwide has become a San Francisco tradition, and the best way for our Hillbabies to unload their crap, clear their clutter, and otherwise rightsize their lives both for cash and existential bliss.

The Hillwide is arguably the largest and most famous single day garage sale in San Francisco. Last year, we had over 150 garages participating and we raised over $3,000 for the Bernal Heights Neighborhood Center, strictly from map registrations. This year, our goal is to beat that like a vintage rug from grandma’s earthquake cottage.

New this year, we have a contest for the most impressive garage sale presentation judged by Bernal’s very own Emperor Norton! Perhaps you have a band accompanying your sale, or disco themed sale complete with laser show and disco ball. Maybe you and your staff are all dressed up in costumes or selling your goods on the moon. Whatever it is, it should be festive and oh so Bernal. More info at Hillwide.com.

If you’ve been hankering for a cleansing, drink a kale juice smoothie and clean out the deepest corners of your garage, basement, bonus room or creepy storage place.

Register your treasure trove to get on the Hillwide map and make your donation to the BHNC at Hillwide.com.

Then just open your garage door on Saturday, 13-August, put on some funky grooves and pour yourself a mimosa (or two) – cos Hillwide is on!

The Hillwide elves will promote the event across the city and bring the masses to your doorstep. But you have to register for the masses to find you.

Please contact michael@michaelminson.com if you have any questions!

Cheers!
Michael Minson
Head Elf

Your Esmeralda Slide Park Renovation Project Update

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The stairs around the Esmeralda slides were closed for a few weeks recently while works crews laid down new concrete as part of the ongoing Esmeralda Slide Park renovation project. That was a nuisance, but now that work is complete, and the stairs are open again. Hurrah!

So what’s next? Neighbors Joan and Nancy, your volunteer cat-herders and advocates for the Esmeralda Slide Park renovation, wrote to Bernalwood to share this update:

The Esmeralda Stairs between Prospect and Winfield were finally opened up ,just days before 4th of July weekend. This marks the first sign of a restoration of our beloved Stairway after almost 2 difficult months when the only access was to skirt around the chainlink fence at Prospect and Esmeralda, and the caution tape and barricades at Winfield and the Esmeralda Slide Park Plaza.

Some answers to why all this mess is occurring and when will it end:

The Plaza’s concrete was demolished in May to make way for new irrigation pipes installed to provide water for the entire Park and Plaza planter box. This is a big deal, and it took five years for the City to finally take care of this. For those who think this isn’t worth the mess the City has made of the Esmeralda plaza, try lugging a 100′ hose to water each of the plants in the Park. That’s how a couple of us have been watering the Park for the past five years. As for watering the new plants in the Plaza planter box volunteers put in last August, a couple of neighbors have been graciously drawing from their own water and dragging hoses into the box.

It took the City months to get a new water meter from PUC. Turns out, the City can’t get other agencies to move faster than us mere citizens. Meanwhile, WebCor, a private construction company that does lots of work in San Francisco, is doing all the concrete work for free. That’s great, but you know know how free goes: WebCor does the work in between their “real jobs” with the upshot, it takes longer.

After 6 weeks of torn up concrete, the irrigation pipes are now under the newly poured Plaza. Hopefully, in another month, our picnic table and benches will be re-installed. A new retrofitted slide approach platform (with a railing) will be installed, making it possible for people in wheelchairs to pull themselves onto the slide and go down (though they’ll still need assistance exiting the slide).

Speaking of wheelchair access to the Plaza; Once the City starts tearing up old public sidewalks, they need to come into this decade by meeting American Disabilities Act (ADA) Requirements. Even though the Esmeralda Slide Park Plaza is at the apex of a steep hill with narrow sidewalks, two new curb cuts leading into our Plaza will make it possible for a people with wheelchairs or strollers to wheel into the Plaza easily.

The mounds of dirt that seem to grow every day at the base of the slide are there because of the trenches being dug for the irrigation pipes coming down the hillside to deliver the water from our new water meter. The trench on the hillside between the staircase and the slide will get covered with lots of fresh dirt in planting boxes, which we hope many gardener wannabes will volunteer to help plant and weed when the time comes. Meanwhile, in the past we never planted along the hillside because our hose didn’t reach for watering, and we didn’t create terracing to hold soil for plants we couldn’t afford. Now, between the City and WebCor, they’re going to make and install the terraces after the City completes the installation of the water pipes. We’re hoping they’ll complete this work in the next couple of months, although the City hasn’t confirmed their timeline.

Lastly, the wretched slide landing pad will be replaced. Concrete will be poured by WebCor to accommodate a brand-new, softer pad that’s wider and curved for those who live dangerously and travel fast down the slide. Once again, the City hasn’t provided a timeline for this, but we’re hoping in the next couple of months.

Thanks to everyone for their patience, and please enjoy the access we once again have to our stairs. Be safe navigating the trenches in the slide landing area, and we’ll have more progress updates soon!

PHOTOS: Courtesy of Neighbors Joan and Nancy

Tuesday: Rockstar Artist Michael Gillette Talks About Making Art for Rockstars

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Last autumn, Bernalwood told you about Drawn in Stereo, the new book by Bernal neighbor Michael Gillette which showcases his remarkable work as an artist and animator.  This Tuesday, July 12 at 7pm, you can meet Neighbor Michael in person as he talks about his book at the Bernal Heights library.

Neighbor Michael says:

Hello Bernal and beyond!

I am giving a talk on my book, Drawn in Stereo at the Bernal Heights Library on Tuesday 12th of July @ 7pm.

The book is a retrospective focusing on my music-related illustrations, graphics, animations, and paintings from the last 25 years.

I will be discussing projects for the likes of: The Beastie Boys, Beck, My Morning Jacket, MGMT, James Bond, and Paul McCartney, in the context of life as an independent artist, based initially in Britain, but in Bernal for the last twelve years.

All are welcome, and the curious can check out the book here.

IMAGE: Courtesy of Michael Gilette

Early Morning Fire Rips Through Gates Street Home

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A two-alarm fire broke out inside a home at 121 Gates (between Eugenia and Powhattan) during the early morning hours today, severely damaging the structure. The fire started before dawn, at around 5 am, and by 8 am it was under control.

There are no details yet on possible injuries or the cause of the fire, but Bernalwood will update this story as additional information becomes available.

PHOTOS: Top, via @Glyom. Below, via @SFFFLocal798.

Special thanks to @SFFFLocal798 for the early-morning updates.

Let’s Have More Sprinklers and Less Conspiracy Theories

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Last week, D9 Supervisor David Campos embraced an unconventional theory about the cause of the June 18 Cole Hardware Fire on Mission Street in Bernal Heights. Writing in the San Francisco Examiner, Supervisor Campos said:

We are at a point in this crisis where reasonable people now believe that arson is playing a part in the rash of fires that are destroying the homes of Mission and Bernal residents. Reasonable people see that fires in low-income buildings almost always result in large profits for building owners and landlords and are disturbed and afraid the uptick in fires is more then just a coincidence.

As the elected representative of these neighborhoods, there is nothing I want more then to assure my constituents that arson is not a factor in these fires. Unfortunately, at this point, I can not say this with certainty.

It’s true: A disconcerting number people believe that arson was the cause of the Cole Hardware fire. It’s also true that many seemingly reasonable people believe Lee Harvey Oswald didn’t act alone, that fluoridated water is part of a communist plot to overthrow the free-enterprise system, and that space aliens sometimes capture humans for use in strange medical experiments involving deep-penetrating probes. Belief in an unsubstantiated theory is not the same as engaging with reality on the basis of evidence and facts, and Supervisor Campos brings no new facts to our understanding of what caused the Cole Hardware Fire.

Both in public and privately, investigators from the San Francisco Fire Department say there is currently no evidence to suggest that the Cole Hardware Fire was caused by arson or foul play. While the precise cause of the fire remains unknown, investigators have concluded the blaze started somewhere in the Cole Hardware Building, at around 2:15 pm on Saturday, June 18. That’s a busy time for shoppers at Cole Hardware, and an exceptionally risky time to commit arson — assuming you don’t also seek to simultaneously commit homicide.

Another fact: Fire investigators say the building next to Cole Hardware on the north side — the one on the corner of 29th that’s home to the Graywood Hotel SRO and the beloved 3300 Club — had no outstanding fire code violations or complaints. It was also equipped with functioning alarm and sprinkler systems, both of which activated during the fire.  The result is that the City says the building remains structurally sound, even now.

Shukry Lama, a co-owner of the 3300 Club, credits the sprinklers with saving the building and his business. “I got to see the third floor, and the sprinklers and firewall really saved us,” Shukry says. “The top of the southwest wall was badly scorched, but the fire damage stopped at the sprinklers. We were on the far side of the building, so our damage was just water, but everyone said the building is completely salvageable.”

Thanks to the sprinkler system, the tenants who lived in the Graywood Hotel may eventually be able to return home. That’s a fact. It’s also a fact that Supervisor Campos has thus far declined to support the mandatory installation of sprinkler systems in older, multi-unit residential buildings.

In April 2016  Supervisor Campos held an event on the corner of Mission and 22nd Street — the site of a previous multi-unit residential fire — to announce his plan to introduce legislation aimed at reducing fire-related displacement in San Francisco. In his Examiner essay last week, he reminded us of this:

My office will soon have reached the limits of the powers given to us by the charter of the City of San Francisco to address these fires. Over a year ago we legislated the creation of an Interagency Fire Taskforce and drafted legislation to increase the audibility of fire alarms, update fire alarm technology, improve smoke alarm access and ensure that landlords provide tenants with critical information after a fire.

What’s missing from the list?  KQED highlights what Campos left out:

In April 2015, a Board of Supervisors committee held a hearing to look at ways to install sprinklers in more of the city’s older apartment buildings. During that hearing, fire officials released data showing that five out of every six buildings damaged by fire between 2010 and 2015 had no sprinkler systems.

Supervisor Jane Kim looked into crafting a sprinkler ordinance.

“The data shows that sprinklers absolutely save lives,” Kim said at the time.

The S.F. Apartment Association has opposed any attempt to require retrofitting the city’s older buildings with sprinklers, citing the expense and a long list of logistical issues. Instead, the association proposed improved education for tenants on the use of fire extinguishers and fire escapes.

In December, when a six-member group made up of members of four city agencies released its recommendations, it did not include suggestions on sprinklers. Neither does Campos’ proposal.

KQED also reported “The San Francisco Apartment Association, a group that represents many landlords in the city, worked with Campos on the legislation.”

Campos’s decision to work with The San Francisco Apartment Association and omit sprinkler retrofits from his fire-prevention legislation is complicated by the fact that the San Francisco Ethics Commission website tells us he’s accepted $2500  from The San Francisco Apartment Association over the years:

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To be sure, installing retrofit sprinklers is expensive. Very expensive. The 2016 Fire Safety Task Force Final Report outlines the magnitude of these costs in detail, and shares the perspective that “property owners are concerned with the expense of retroactively installing sprinkler systems to existing buildings and the cost to relocate tenants during such installation.”

That’s totally legit. Sprinklers retrofits are expensive, and it would be onerous to impose the full burden of retrofit mandate costs upon property owners. A forward-looking retrofit proposal should include mechanisms to make public funds available to property owners seeking to comply with a sprinkler mandate. Crafting such a proposal would take vision, leadership, a talent for negotiation, and intense attention to detail.  David Campos tells Bernalwood he has a plan for sprinkler retrofits, and it looks like this:

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If that sounds rather noncommittal and less-than-encouraging to you, that’s because it is. Yes, it’s hard work to develop real solutions to help prevent long-term displacement caused by fires in old, multi-unit buildings. So our Supervisor finds it easier to pass the buck and speculate about things that may be “more then [sic] just a coincidence.”

Supervisor Campos seems to be in no hurry to develop a sprinkler retrofit program, and because of term limits, his time on the Board of Supervisors is quickly coming to a close. That means the challenge of reducing fire-related tenant displacement in our district will soon fall upon his successor. To learn where they stand on the sprinkler retrofit issue, Bernalwood reached out to the two leading D9 Supervisor candidates, Hillary Ronen and Joshua Arce,  for comment.

D9 candidate Hillary Ronen currently works as a legislative aide in Supervisor Campos’s office. She tells Bernalwood:

I’m definitely for sprinkler retrofits, but the kinds of concerns I have are to make sure costs aren’t transferred to tenants in a way that will result in people being displaced. The costs are quite significant. That’s what we need to figure out — who pays? Is it building owners, or funds the city provides? But what we don’t want is for the costs to be passed along to tenants who can’t afford them. Sprinklers are an important part of addressing these horrendous fires.

D9 candidate Joshua Arce also addressed the sprinkler retrofit question. Arce is a civil rights attorney and he emailed Bernalwood:

Now is the time for all of us to work together to develop a sprinkler ordinance that I will introduce on the same day that I am sworn in as District 9 Supervisor, one that requires fire sprinkler systems on buildings most vulnerable to this type of catastrophe. We will start with wood frame apartment buildings in and around the Mission, safeguarding the tenancies of low-income renters while addressing the economic impact on property owners with programs that are already available in other cities but have not been considered here.

I’ve already had the chance to sit down with tenant, housing, property owner, public safety, and labor representatives to draw lessons from the efforts to pass the successful 2001 SRO Sprinkler Ordinance that proved to be effective at 29th and Mission.

There is clearly a path forward. We’ve done it before with respect to SRO’s and let’s do it again before the status quo results in yet another tragic fire that destroys lives and threatens residents and family businesses with long-term displacement.

So there you have it: Real facts about what we can do to help protect the future of San Franciscans who live in older wooden buildings. Oh, and while it may just be nothing more than just a coincidence, there was an article in the San Francisco Examiner this week about a fire that broke out Tuesday afternoon at an SRO-style building in the Tenderloin:

Fire officials said the fire took place in a fifth-floor unit at 519 Ellis St. The Senator Hotel, a supportive housing development, is located at that address.

According to police, the fire began when a tenant lit several items in his room on fire, causing the room and building to catch fire.

Fire department spokesman Jonathan Baxter said the fire was put out by sprinklers before firefighters arrived on scene and it did not spread beyond the room where it started.

The fire caused moderate damage and was reported under control at 4:48 p.m., according to Baxter. No injuries were reported.

PHOTO: Aerial view of the fire scene, showing the structurally intact Graywood Hotel building, which was protected by a sprinkler system. Image via video screenshot, courtesy of Alan Musselman

Bernal Neighbor Eddie Ramirez Honored as Veteran of the Year

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Last week, Assemblymember David Chiu invited Bernal neighbor Eduardo Ramirez to come to Sacramento.

Neighbor Eduardo is a resident of Cortlandia, and David Chiu was honoring him as Veteran of the Year for Assembly District 17, in recognition of both Neighbor Eduardo’s long service career and his post-retirement efforts to assist other veterans. Here’s the announcement from Assemblymember Chiu’s office:

Assemblymember David Chiu (D-San Francisco) this week honored United States Air Force veteran and Bernal Heights resident Eduardo “Eddie” Ramirez as the 2016 Veteran of the Year for the 17th Assembly District.

Eddie served in the United States Air Force for over 20 years and is a veteran of Operation Watch, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and the Cold War. His distinguished military career has earned him numerous awards and decorations throughout his tenure in the Air Force.

Eddie has remained committed to serving his fellow veterans in San Francisco, acting as the founder and CEO of OneVet OneVoice, an organization that refers veterans to health care services. Additionally, he created the San Francisco Veterans Town Hall Collaborative and the San Francisco Veterans Film Festival. Eddie is the co-owner of the Excelsior’s Mama Art Cafe, a neighborhood cafe providing artistic space and entrepreneurship opportunities to veterans.

Eddie is a passionate, dedicated, and committed leader whose work has truly benefited our San Francisco’s veterans and is most deserving of his selection as Assembly District 17’s Veteran of the Year.

Bravo, Neighbor Eduardo, and congratulations!

PHOTO: via @DavidChiu

3300 Club Badly Damaged, But Owners Vow “We’ll Be Back”

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Shukry Lama is a co-owner of the much-loved 3300 Club on the corner of Mission and 29th. The bar was heavily damaged during the June 18 Cole Hardware Fire, even though it managed to avoid the flames.  Inside, the water damage was extensive, but the good news is that the building — which also contains the Graywood Hotel SRO — has been deemed structurally sound, so it won’t require a teardown.

Shukry shared some thoughts with Bernalwood after visiting the 33 to assess the damage:

Going into the bar and seeing how much stuff was damaged, was very depressing

There was a lot of water bubbling all over the ceiling and walls. Cracks in anything plaster, and the drywall is still soaked. ABC says all of our booze is gone; we can’t resell it or return it. We have a lot of pictures from the 30s and 40s that were damaged, mostly of my grandfather who grew up in the neighborhood. We were able to save some of the old paintings we have from an old bartender who passed away a few years ago, but some were damaged. All the original art that we had on the walls from him is damaged and will have to be replaced

My jukebox guy came in, he thinks his jukebox is shot. Hopefully our insurance covers his stuff. Anything electronic is dead.

The building owner has been awesome, he and our building supervisor have been there every day and keep checking up on us. First thing he said, when the fire was still going. was, “tell your grandma not to worry, we can fix it.” He’s been sharing resources, giving advice, and generally helping talk us through the process.

It’s going to take a lot of work to come back, but we’re willing to do it and everyone has been offering their help. It will take a while, but we’ll be back.

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PHOTO: Top, 3300 Club interior, photographed by Evan Sernoffsky on June 19. Below, Shukry Lama (right) with his Aunt Chris outside the 3300 Club, shortly after the fire.

 

Reminder: Kindly Refrain From Setting Bernal Hill on Fire During July Fourth

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Bernal Hill on fire, July 4, 2013

It’s the Fourth of July weekend! Hooray! This is an exciting time of year for patriotism, barbecues, and Karl the Fog. Yet seeing as how we’re all feeling a bit pyro-phobic lately, we have a humble request for all Citizens of Bernalwood during this July Fourth holiday: Please do not turn Bernal Hill into a blazing inferno.

Bernal Hill is a popular place to watch the official fireworks pink fog show put on by the City, but it’s a dangerous place for civilians to launch their own fireworks. For example, the photo above shows Bernal Hill on July 4, 2013, after an amateur fireworks show set the hill on fire.

That was bad. Let’s not do that again. Here are some time-tested Fourth of July fire prevention tips for Bernal Hill from Neighbor Sarah:

It’s that time of year again – time for most of us to celebrate freedom, the Declaration of Independence, and the birth of our nation. It’s also time when some damage property and endanger people by setting off illegal fireworks and leaving lots of garbage behind. As we prepare for July 4, here are a few things to keep in mind.

1. Do not set off fireworks. Definitely don’t set them off on Bernal Hill, which is covered in dry grasses and brush. You may recall that [in 2013], some moron set the Hill on fire. Luckily, no one was hurt, but imagine if this had happened in an area crowded with people watching the downtown fireworks display. If you remember nothing else, remember this: No. Fireworks. On. Bernal. Hill.

2. If you see someone setting off illegal fireworks on Bernal Hill, call the police. Dial 553-0123 if nothing is on fire yet. Dial 911 or 553-8090 if there is an active blaze. Again, call 553-0123 if you see fireworks in progress, and call 911 if it actually sets off a fire.

PHOTO: Fire on Bernal Hill, July 4, 2013, by Neighbor Bernard