New York Daily News

‘Man’ down at Berkeley

Liberal California city cuts 40 gender-specific words

- BY OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ AND SAMANTHA MALDONADO

BERKELEY, Calif. — There will be no manholes in Berkeley, Calif.

City workers will drop into “maintenanc­e holes” instead.

Nothing will be man-made in the liberal city, but “humanmade.” And students at the University of California at Berkeley, will join “collegiate Greek system residences” rather than fraterniti­es and sororities.

Berkeley leaders voted unanimousl­y last week to replace about 40 gender-specific words in the city code with gender-neutral terms — an effort to be more inclusive that’s drawing both praise and scorn.

That means “manpower” will become “human effort” or “workforce,” while masculine and feminine pronouns like “she,” “her,” “he” and “him” will be replaced by “they” and “them,” according to the measure approved by the City Council.

The San Francisco Bay Area city is known for its long history of progressiv­e politics and “first of” ordinances. Berkeley was among the first cities to adopt curbside recycling in the 1970s and became the first in the U.S. to tax sugary drinks and ban natural gas in new homes.

Berkeley also was the birthplace of the nation’s freespeech movement in the 1960s and where protests from both left- and right-wing extremist groups devolved into violence during a flash point in the country’s political divisions after President Trump’s election.

Rigel Robinson, who graduated from UC Berkeley last year and at 23 is the youngest member of the City Council, said it was time to change a code that makes it sound like “men are the only ones that exist in entire industries or that men are the only ones on city government.”

“As society and our cultures become more aware about issues of gender identity and gender expression, it’s important that our laws reflect that,” said Robinson, who coauthored the measure. “Women and nonbinary people are just as deserving of accurate representa­tion.”

When the changes take effect, all city forms will be updated, and lists with the old words and their replacemen­ts will be posted at public libraries and the council chambers. The changes will cost taxpayers $600, Robinson said.

Removing gendered terms has been slowly happening for decades in the United States as colleges, companies and organizati­ons implement gender-neutral alternativ­es.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s wife, Jennifer Siebel Newsom, changed a Sacramento political tradition by adopting the unofficial title “first partner” instead of “first lady,” saying it’s more inclusive.

But formalizin­g the shift in the sweeping way that Berkeley is doing is “remarkable and sends a message,” Rutgers University linguistic­s Prof. Kristen Syrett said.

“Anytime you’re talking about something where gender is not the issue but you use a gendered term, that immediatel­y sends a message of exclusion, even if it’s a dialogue that has nothing to do with gender,” she said.

For Hel Baker, a Berkeley home caregiver, the shift is a small step in the right direction.

“Anything that dismantles inherent bias is a good thing, socially, in the grand scheme of things,” the 27-year-old said.

Lauren Singh, 18, who grew up in Berkeley, approved of the move, saying, “Everyone deserves to be represente­d and feel included in the community.”

Not everyone agreed with the new ordinance. Laramie Crocker, a 54-year-old Berkeley carpenter, said the changes just made him laugh.

“If you try to change the laws every time someone has a new opinion about something, it doesn’t make sense,” Crocker said, adding that he would like city officials to focus on more pressing issues.

“Let’s figure out how to get homeless people housed and fed,” he said. “He, she, they, it — they’re wasting my time.”

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AP

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