California’s
$3 billion stem cell research effort made one of its rare appearances in the
New York Times this weekend in a long article on the front page of the
newspaper’s Sunday business section.
The piece,
however, carried not a word about the agency’s accomplishments. Instead the story
by Matt Richtel talked about a proposal to build an 18,000-seat arena for the
Golden State Warriors basketball team.
The
arena would be located a short walk from the current headquarters of the stem cell
agency as well as the UC San Francisco Mission Bay complex and the biotech
enterprises that surround it. The proposal has triggered a major flap in the
city involving the biotech industry, among other issues. A former vice chancellor of UCSF, Bruce Spaulding, is leading a move to
block the project.
The stem
cell agency, known formally as the California Institute for Regenerative
Medicine(CIRM), popped up in the article as a result of its decision to transfer
its headquarters to Oakland. The California Stem Cell Report wrote about the move on Aug. 17, triggering a spate of articles in the Bay Area media. (See here and here.)
Richtel
wrote,
“’San Francisco has always been that other city with a different set of values,’” said Jeff Sheehy, a governing board member of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, the largest stem cell funding agency in the world. The institute is moving to Oakland after the expiration of a free-rent deal on its space near the proposed complex; it discovered that office rents in San Francisco were prohibitively high. He sees the arena, which he opposes (he would like affordable housing on the land), as suggestive that San Francisco secretly wanted mainstream credibility all along.
Jeff Sheehy -- Sheehy photo
“'We should have an arena because New York has Madison Square Garden. We should compete for the Olympics and the Super Bowl,' he says, mocking the pro-arena attitude. He describes the new San Francisco as 'just another capitalist, consumerist, profit-driven, money-motivated Disneyland.'”
Sam Hawgood -- UCSF photo |
Richtel
wrote that Hawgood “has
offered qualified support for the Warriors, as long as the owners and the city
address his big concerns about traffic, including creating dedicated lanes for
health emergencies and increasing public transportation options and the number
of parking lots.”
Joe Lacob -- Kleiner photo |