In addition  to the two initiatives that have already qualified for the June 7, 2016,  election (Compensation Levels Initiative and General  Plan 2030 Amendment – Riviera Project), backers of four other  initiatives are circulating petitions, hoping to get enough signatures to  qualify for the November 8, 2016, ballot. The four are: 
            
              - District       Elections
 
              - 2016       Richmond Kids First Initiative
 
              - Charter       Amendment – the Right to Vote on Development Subsidies 
 
              - Richmond       Fair Rent, Just Cause for Eviction and Homeowner Protection Ordinance 
 
             
            Before  you sign a petition, read the text and understand what you are signing. Don’t  act based on what the petition circulator tells you or the excuse that it  doesn’t hurt to put it on the ballot and let the voters decide. All of them on  the surface appear to be attractive, or at least innocuous. But they are all  flawed, some much deeper than others. Most have well-meaning motivations, and  some are merely solutions looking for a problem. All of them will increase cost  and bureaucracy to a City government that is facing serious budget challenges,  and if passed, some will siphon resources from critical needs like crime  prevention, libraries, parks and streets. 
None  of these initiatives directly addresses the priorities of Richmond residents  (see below). It could be argued that some indirectly address the priorities,  for example that additional services to kids reduce crime. However, it is more  realistic to argue that they will have a negative impact on the ability of the  City of Richmond to address the residents’ real priorities. They are each the  product of a small group of people with their own ideas about what Richmond  needs. Each of these lacks support from a majority of the City Council, hence  the effort to implement them by initiative rather than City Council action. 
            Finally,  most of the initiatives are very poorly and hastily drafted, making them  vulnerable to legal attacks that will cost the City even more time and money.  
              
            Source: Richmond, CA  2015 Community Survey 
            District  Elections 
            The  District Election initiative is based on the premise that the City Council  lacks “neighborhood representation.” It would require that Richmond be divided  into six districts, each of which would elect its own City Council member. The  City of Richmond population is approximately 107,000, and each district would  have a population of about 18,000. These are not your mother’s neighborhoods.  For comparison, each district would have a population the same as the City of  Pinole, which has five City Council members. Currently, there are nominally 37 neighborhood  councils, each representing a “neighborhood” in Richmond, some large and  some small, some active and some inactive. With 37 neighborhoods and only six  districts, it is clear that each neighborhood is not going to get its own city  council member. In fact, 31 of the 37 identified neighborhoods (as defined by  neighborhood councils) is going to lack “neighborhood representation” when the  votes are counted and six City Council members are elected. See the map. 
            With  each district the size of Pinole, the boundaries of are by necessity going to  have to include multiple neighborhoods, typically combining areas that don’t  feel like coherent neighborhoods. To get to a population of 18,000, for  example, the district including Point Richmond and Brickyard Cove would  probably have to include Santa Fe and the Iron Triangle. Either Nat Bates or  Jael Myrick would have to find somewhere else to live if they want to stay in  politics. Marina Bay would have to include Coronado and Pullman. Some areas,  like Hilltop-Fairmeade have a population that appears to exceed 18,000, so it  would have to divided into two districts, each of which might reach west into  El Sobrante or east into Parchester or even North Richmond.   
            Most  cities that have moved to district elections, some even by court order, have  done so to correct racial or ethnic imbalances on their City Councils. Richmond  does not have that problem. In fact, district elections may exacerbate a lack  of diversity instead of improving it. 
            With  each City Council member representing a single district, the fights over  limited resources will make today’s City Council dysfunctions look like the  good old days. It will pit neighborhood against neighborhood and make the  vision of “One Richmond” a distant dream. 
            2016  Richmond Kids First Initiative 
            How  could anyone not support the children? Any opponent risks being immediately  labeled as mean spirited and selfish. This initiative is based on the premise  that insufficient City resources are being spent on kids. The reality is that  we can never spend enough on kids, but the way it is drafted, this initiative  cannot be implemented without removing resources from some other critical City  service or program, many of which are also critical to youth. The City would  get no credit for existing programs and projects, such as recreation programs,  libraries, parks or even the $35 million dedicated one of the highest funded  Promise Programs in the United States. 
            This  would have to be new money, but the initiative provides no new source for this.  It’s rob Peter to pay Paul. We already know from the December 15, 2015  presentation by the National Resource Network, that Richmond is facing an  $8.7 million long term budget imbalance. If the 2016 Richmond Kids First  Initiative passes, that will add an additional $5 million to the long term  deficit each year after it reaches full funding. Advocates will argue that it  has an escape hatch if revenues decrease. However, volatile revenues are not  the risk; it has no provision for adjustment if expenditures increase and widen  a budget deficit, which is far more likely. And 70% of the money is required to  go to grants to non-profit organizations, meaning the City cannot continue to  spend it on traditional youth-oriented services provided by the City such as  libraries, parks and recreation – or even after-school programs. 
            Without  a designated new revenue source, the money – a lot of it -- has to come from  somewhere. And it will probably come from traditional youth-supporting  programs, such as libraries, parks and recreation. It will also likely come  from cuts in police, making the streets less safe for kids to walk or bicycle  to school. It will come from programs such as the City’s match for grant-funded  projects like the Yellow Brick Road, the Richmond Greenway, and Elm Street  Playlot (Pogo Park) that make neighborhoods safer and encourage healthy  activities for kids. 
            This  is simply a massive transfer of jobs from the government sector to the  non-profit sector, financed by your taxes. I am told that the Richmond  Progressive Alliance (RPA) does not support the 2016 Richmond Kids First  Initiative because it would ultimately function to divert jobs now provided by  unionized public employees to non-unionized employees of non-profit providers.  The Service Employees International Union (SEIU 1021) is an “allied member” of the  RPA and would stand to lose big time if this initiative passes. 
            The  initiative would also discourage donors to continue giving to existing  non-profits providing services to Richmond kids because those providers would  be supported by public funds in the future. 
            This  is an initiative with a winning title that is a really bad idea. 
            Charter  Amendment – the Right to Vote on Development Subsidies 
            The  motivation for this initiative is the strangest of all. The sponsor is AFSCME (American Federation of State, County  & Municipal Employees), which has chosen Richmond as the unlikely venue for  a power struggle showdown with the University of California. Richmond has no history of public subsidies for private  business. No sports team is asking for a stadium in Richmond. The activities of  the now defunct Redevelopment Agency are long gone.  
            This all  started when the City of Richmond explored the concept of a possible  partnership with UC Berkeley to build infrastructure jointly for the Global  Campus and the Richmond Bay Specific Plan Area. Looking for an opening in its  ongoing beef with the University of California,  AFSCME  is unhappy that the University of California system is using private consultants  and developers rather than public employees to build and operate projects  system-wide, as it might in the proposed Global Campus. Expansion of jobs for  AFSCME members is a top priority, and AFSCME wants to make sure this happens at  the Global Campus. 
            Any  partnership between Richmond and the Global Campus that might involve, say  dedication of a street right-of-way, would require a public vote under the  proposed initiative. If AFSCME didn’t like the labor arrangements for the  Global Campus, presumably it would campaign in opposition. Given the right  concessions, AFSCME might support it. 
            AFSCME  characterizes public-private partnerships potentially as subsidies  from local governments as incentives for business. From the AFSCME  legislative/issues web page: 
            State and local governments must find  balanced solutions to budget challenges, recognizing that state employees and  services have already taken big cuts and further reductions will cause the most  harm – both to state residents and to the state’s economic recovery. It’s time  to have smarter government that best meets the needs of our communities. 
            With  respect to the Global Campus, AFSCME wrote: 
            Given Richmond’s problems with city finances  and credit rating, voters should have a say in decisions about public subsidies  and debt, especially when the recipients don’t pay their share of taxes. This  initiative would require the UC to seek voter approval for subsidies to the  Berkeley Global Campus, and this ensure that the university is held accountable  to community concerns about this enormous development that is going [sic] mean  big changes for our community. 
            At  the end of the day, it’s hard to see how this would affect Richmond one way or  another, except that it would add one more layer of complexity to any municipal  endeavor, costing the City of Richmond both time and money, both of which are  in short supply. 
            Richmond Fair  Rent, Just Cause for Eviction and Homeowner Protection Ordinance 
            The  only good thing I can say about this is that because it is going to the voters,  it will not be the subject of endless City Council debates for the remainder of  this year. The campaign will have to be waged elsewhere. These rent control  schemes have never worked and never will. Bay Area cities with some version of  rent control now have the highest rents and the highest rate of rent increases  in the United States, not a good model to emulate. Richmond still has the  lowest rents in the inner Bay Area.  
            Virtually  all credible sources agree that rapidly rising rents are a result of an  imbalance in supply and demand for housing, and the only effective solution is  to build more housing (See From SPUR - Why New  Housing Construction Matters for Low-Income Households, February 21, 2016, Legislative Analyst's  Office encourages construction not rent control to fix housing crisis, February  16, 2016, and Beacon  Economics Report Concludes Rent Control Does Not Help Low-Income Households,  February 19, 2016. 
            Setting up a  new multi-million dollar bureaucracy in a cash strapped city to regulate the  rental housing market, deciding what landlords can spend on repairs and  maintenance, what rents they can charge and what profits are fair is doomed to  failure. Richmond’s already aging housing stock that will be subject to rent  control will accelerate in deterioration, and developers will be discouraged  from investing in Richmond, even though new housing will be exempt from rent  control. It is inherently inequitable, favoring renters in older housing over  renters in new housing and favoring existing renters over new renters. As time  passes, the inequities accelerate and accumulate, yielding unintended results  that are far from the original objectives. 
            In contrast,  the Mayor’s Office is pursuing a multi-faceted effort to develop more  affordable housing, including providing city-owned property to affordable  housing developers as a subsidy, supporting social impact bonds to rehabilitate  foreclosed and vacant homes and meeting regularly with affordable housing  developers to find ways to remove barriers and provide incentives to build in  Richmond. We are even looking into a voluntary mediation program that has been  successful in other areas for the resolution of landlord-tenant disputes.  
            Media Coverage 
            New push for  rent control in Richmond targets November ballot   
              Feb  23, 2016 
               
              A new push to  implement rent control in Richmond seeks to qualify the policy for the November  ballot. 
   
  An  attempt last year to pass a rent control ordinance failed after being  opposed by landlords and three members of a divided City Council. 
   
              On Tuesday, a  group that includes tenants rights advocates, labor unions and the Richmond  Progressive Alliance (RPA) renewed the effort to install rent control by filing  a proposed ballot measure with the city clerk. The proposed ballot measure  seeks to establish a rent board in Richmond that would set annual limits on  rent increases for renters living in units built before 1995, and would allow  tenants to appeal increases. 
               
              The ballot  measure also includes implementing a just cause for eviction policy. 
               
              The coalition,  which calls itself Fair and Affordable Richmond, is now waiting for the city  clerk to write a title and summary for their proposed initiative. The city  clerk has 15 days to do so. Rent control advocates will then have until June to  gather 4,198 to qualify the measure for the November ballot. 
               
  “The renters of  Richmond deserve protection during the current housing crisis, and our  coalition believes voters this November should be able to take a stand on the  subject of just cause evictions and rent control,” Richmond Councilmember Gayle  McLaughlin said in a statement. 
   
              In August,  Richmond City Council, which includes three RPA members, passed  a rent control and just cause eviction ordinance while decrying spiking  rents they said have been pushing low-income residents out of the city. But the  decision was reversed after a petition to repeal the ordinance — backed by the  California Apartment Association, which represents landlords — garnered enough  signatures from residents. 
               
              The ordinance  was opposed by Mayor Tom Butt and Councilmembers Nat Bates and Vinay Pimple,  who have quoted studies by economists showing rent control doesn’t work to keep  rents down. They also warned the policy would discourage landlords from  investing in improvements on their properties, contributing to further blight  in Richmond. 
               
              Supporters of  rent control have a different perspective. 
               
  ‘The Bay Area  housing crisis has already begun to hurt Richmond, and it’s effects will only  get worse,” renter Edith Pastrano said. 
   
  Richmond  coalition proposing ballot initiative to dedicate city funds for youth services   
              Feb  22, 2016 
               
              A coalition of  local organizations and community leaders is proposing a November ballot  initiative that would mandate that a certain percentage of the City of  Richmond’s unrestricted general fund be dedicated to youth services. 
               
              The group,  called “Invest in Youth Coalition,” says the ballot initiative would amend the  city charter to gradually increase the amount of city funding dedicated to  youth services, topping out at 3-percent of the general fund budget by 2020.  That amount could be scaled back, however, in the event of fiscal emergencies. 
               
              The ballot  initiative is being introduced at a time when City Council is considering  drastic budget cuts to remedy a projected $22.7  million deficit by 2021. Mayor Tom Butt aims to shave more than $8 million  from the budget this year, after an independent audit recommended the city  reduce its expenses and increase its revenues. 
               
              The coalition  hopes to mandate that funding for youth services be maintained and perhaps even  increased. Supported by Contra Costa County Supervisor John Gioia, the East Bay  Center for the Performing Arts and the RYSE Center, among others, the ballot  initiative has already been submitted to the city. Representatives of Invest in  Youth Coalition are now working to gather enough signatures to qualify the  measure for the November 2016 ballot. 
               
  “This ballot  measure is about our collective commitment to building a youth, children and  family-friendly city,” said Kimberly Aceves, Executive Director of the RYSE  Center. 
   
              The funds that  would result from the ballot measure would go toward supporting youth services  including mental health and wellness, violence prevention and response,  education, job training and also constructive activities such as sports, media,  arts, culture, technology and after school/summer programs. 
               
              If the measure  passes, a 15-member oversight board made up of youth and adults will develop a  Strategic Investment Plan to guide funding decisions and make recommendations  to council. 
               
              Modeled after  similar initiatives accomplished in San Francisco and Oakland, extra funds are  needed as Richmond youth “bear the burden of multiple health and social  inequities,” which ultimately results in violence, school truancy, early  pregnancy and poverty, the coalition said. 
               
  “Investing in  our youth not only greatly improves their chances of leading successful lives,  it’s a wise use of public resources and reduces downstream costs,” Gioia said. 
   
              Diana Ramirez,  16, said the fund will help Richmond thrive again. 
               
  “Teenagers, like  myself, need support in this very difficult part of our lives, that will shape  our future and the future of our city,” she said. 
   
              Acclaimed local  artist Donte Clark added: “Our investment in the community is the only way to  break down the barriers that have challenged any real change. This initiative  is another collective step forward.” 
               
              Jordan Simmons,  artistic director for the East Bay Center for the Performing Arts, paraphrased  Frederick Douglass by saying, “it is better to build children than repair men  and women.” 
               
  Richmond group  pushes to bring rent control measure to voters
              By Sarah Tan 
  stan@bayareanewsgroup.com 
              Posted:    02/23/2016 03:18:40 PM PST | Updated:   21 min. ago 
               
              RICHMOND -- A  citizens group plans to ask voters to pass a rent control law here in November,  after an earlier effort by elected leaders was rescinded in the face of a  backlash by landlords. 
               
              The  Fair and Affordable Richmond Coalition -- consisting of elected officials,  renters, homeowners and activists -- on Tuesday gathered to officially file the  petition with the city clerk. The group will have until June to gather 4,198  valid signatures to place the measure on the November ballot.  
            A  rent control ordinance was narrowly passed by the City Council in August, but  it was repealed in November after a landlord association circulated a petition.  Since then, affordable-housing activists have promised to bring the measure to  the November ballot.  
            Had  the ordinance approved in August been implemented, Richmond would have been the  first California city in more than 30 years to pass rent control, joining San  Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley, Santa Monica and East Palo Alto.  
            "I'm  a homeowner, and for me, this is a way to stabilize the neighborhood,"  Claudia Jimenez said. "It'd be hard for me to see neighbors leave because  of rent."  
            The  new measure would cap rent increases at 1 percent to 3 percent a year, and also  would include some additions to the original proposal, such as relocation  compensation for tenants who have been unjustly evicted, and an exemption for  homeowners renting out portions of their primary dwelling, such as an in-law  suite. Councilwoman Gayle McLaughlin said she knows establishing rent control is  only part of the solution to the housing crisis but that it is a step in the  right direction.  
            "We  have a large low-income community that's really being impacted, and we want to  keep our mixed-income community," she said.  
               
              Mayor  Tom Butt has come out in opposition of the measure. He said he doesn't believe  implementing rent control measures will solve the affordable-housing problem in  Richmond. More housing would be the way to keep Richmond affordable, not rent  control, he said.  
               
  "The bottom  line is that if you look at a city where it's been in effect now for decades,  it just hasn't worked," Butt said. "They're the same cities that have  the highest rent in the U.S.: San Francisco, Berkeley. All the experts will  tell you that the best way and really the only effective way to deal with  rapidly rising rent is to build your way out of it."  
   
              Placing the  measure on the ballot could cost around $50,000 for local taxpayers.  
               
              Sarah Tan covers  Richmond. Contact her at 510-262-2789. Follow her at Twitter.com/sarahjtan.  
               
            Debate On Rent Control  Possibly Heading To Richmond Ballots
               The  proposal would set annual limits on rent increases and provide am appeal  process for tenants. 
                Albany, CA  
                 
                By Susan C. Schena (Patch Staff) - February  24, 2016 12:17 pm ET  
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                RICHMOND, CA -  The debate on whether Richmond should adopt a rent control ordinance will  potentially be brought to voters in November after supporters made early steps  toward introducing a ballot measure Tuesday.  
                 
                Fair and  Affordable Richmond, a group of elected officials, renters and homeowners,  gathered today to file documents with the city clerk for a ballot measure to  create limits on rent increases and protections from certain evictions.  
                 
                A rent control  ordinance was passed by Richmond’s City Council in August, but a petition  blocked the ordinance in September, a day before it would have taken effect.  
                 
                Supporters of  the ordinance saw the petition as delaying a policy that supporters were  confident would pass as a ballot measure. Fair and Affordable Richmond  apparently commissioned a recent poll that indicated that nearly two thirds of  voters would vote today to enact rent control and just cause eviction  protections.  
              “The renters of  Richmond deserve protection during the current housing crisis, and our  coalition believes voters this November should be able to take a stand on  (this),” Councilwoman Gayle McLaughlin said in a statement. The proposed ballot  measure would establish a board that would set annual limits on rent increases  for Richmond and provide a process for tenants to appeal increases.  
                 
              Under the  policy, renters living in units built before 1995 would be have a cap placed on  rent increases and would have protection from evictions for reasons that are  “without just cause.” Claudia Jimenez, a Richmond landlord and a proponent of  the measure, said this initiative is one step voters can take to support the  community, particularly the city’s low-income residents.  
              “Richmond is a  city requires a measure that prevents people from being displaced,” Jimenez  said.  
                 
                She later added,  “More than 30 percent of (the city’s renters’) income is used for rent.” The  California Apartment Association - as well as realtors, homeowners and property  management companies - spearheaded the petition that shut down the previous  effort to establish rent control in Richmond.  
                 
                he association’s  CEO Tom Bannon at the time called rent control a “failed policy.” Richmond  Mayor Tom Butt has voiced similar sentiments. 
                 
                In an email  newsletter from last month Butt said, “Richmond continues to offer some of the  lowest rents in the Bay Area, and the lowest rents of any city located along the  BART line.” “Strategies like rent control have not worked in neighboring  cities,” he added. 
                 
                --Bay City News              |