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Alameda Post - City Hall with a circle and slash of a bunny and a syringe, indicating no animal testing. IN the bottom right hand corner is an asterix with the words "some exceptions apply"

Council Approves Narrow Animal Testing Ban

City Council narrowly approved a ban on animal testing or experimentation on property owned or controlled by the City of Alameda, with some notable exceptions. Karin K. Jensen details the steps that led to this decision and reports that critics say the ban mostly maintains the status quo.

Latest Alameda Articles

Alameda News

›› Karin K. Jensen,
April 19, 2024
City Council narrowly approved a ban on animal testing or experimentation on property owned or controlled by the City of Alameda, with some notable exceptions. Karin K. Jensen details the steps that led to this decision and reports that critics say the ban mostly maintains the status quo.
›› Post Staff Reporting,
April 18, 2024
Juanita Gex, a legend among Alameda’s Lincoln Middle School community, passed away peacefully on March 7, 2024, after nearly 94 years of a life devoted to education, the environment, animal welfare, and her family. 
›› Ken Der,
April 18, 2024
Traveling down Webster Street will feel a little different starting this week. As part of the next phase of the Commercial Streets Program, the City of Alameda has restriped Webster Street from Lincoln Avenue to Central Avenue with exciting improvements. Ken Der details the project.
›› Post Staff Reporting,
April 16, 2024
One segment of the Shoreline Park waterfront trail—from the Bay Farm Ferry Terminal leading up to Creedon Circle—will be closed from April 29 through May 10 while the City widens and repaves the trail.
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Alameda Features

›› Post Staff Reporting,
April 19, 2024
AMP is providing free technical assistance for planning and designing EV charging solutions at multifamily properties in Alameda. Attend the free webinar on May 14 to get more information and learn how to get rebates up to $48,000.
›› Jeff Smith,
April 19, 2024
Jeff Smith's math puzzle for this week is a version of Cavendish's Gravity Experiment. Work out the correct answer to earn free Tucker's ice cream.
›› Post Staff Reporting,
April 18, 2024
The Oakland Roots had to take advantage of an extra 30 minutes of play to do it, but they prevailed in the third round of the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup in a thrilling 2-1 victory against NPSL club El Farolito Tuesday night, April 16.
›› Arthur Lenhardt,
April 17, 2024
Arthur Lenhardt pens two poems considering a fresh spring rain and the passage of time as children grow older.

Alameda Opinions

›› Anna Crane,
April 19, 2024
President of the League of Women Voters of Alameda Anna Crane praises City Council's decision to reduce candidate ballot statement fees, "We applaud this decision as a means of broadening participation in Alameda elections."
›› Susan Davis,
April 19, 2024
AUSD Senior Manager of Community Affairs Susan Davis looks ahead to graduations and announces summer programs, construction projects, and notable dates.
›› Brice,
April 18, 2024
Seagull and Goose discuss pet ownership in this installment of our weekly cartoon drawn by Alameda native, Brice.
›› Hunter Cobb,
April 17, 2024
"This was a performance Shakespeare would have been happy with," raves Hunter Cobb about the Foodbank Players' production of 'Macbeth.'

Alameda History

›› Dennis Evanosky,
April 19, 2024
After acquiring Alameda marshlands and tidelands in 1954, the Utah Construction company set out on an ambitious project to create over 1300 acres of land. Dennis Evanosky covers the controversial undertaking that split Alamedans into two camps.
›› Steve Gorman,
April 18, 2024
"Our beautiful San Francisco, our pride and joy; and now, what remains?" pined Alamedan Emilie Gibbons Cohen after the great 1906 earthquake. Steve Gorman examines the letters Emilie wrote in the aftermath of the quake, gaining a rare view into the daily life in Alameda following the disaster.
›› Steve Gorman,
April 11, 2024
As the 118th anniversary of the great San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906 approaches, Steve Gorman examines a remarkable firsthand account from Alamedan Emilie Gibbons Cohen. She writes, "The constant boom boom of the dynamite sounded and echoed in our ears; a black pall hung over the city."
›› Dennis Evanosky,
April 10, 2024
A number of early, individual visionaries had grand ideas for what Alameda and Bay Farm Island could become, but land changed hands many times, each dream fizzling out with it. Dennis Evanosky introduces the out-of-state giant, Utah Construction, that ultimately shaped Alameda.
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