Stop developers from buying bypasses & defend General Plan 
              RPA opposes "Richmond Riviera" ballot measure
                                  The  following statement was drafted and approved by the RPA Steering Committee and  presented to and endorsed by the membership at the December meeting:
 
            The  Richmond Progressive Alliance strongly opposes the "Richmond Riviera"  ballot measure scheduled to come before the voters next June.  We oppose  this measure because it undermines the ability of our community to determine  and realize our vision for our city. Over several years Richmond has developed  a General Plan to expand housing here, to meet the needs of the community and  at the same time improve the quality of our lives by paying attention to the  air we breathe, transit and traffic, the shoreline and parks, and our tax  base.  The General Plan should not be pushed aside simply to meet the  desires of a developer of a particular area. 
            The  "Richmond Riviera" item came to the City Council in November 2015  because developer Richard Poe had paid signature-gatherers to get a qualifying  number of signatures on a petition for a revision of the General Plan.   The revision would allow his development company to build a specific project on  Ford Point (next to the Craneway and forthcoming Ferry Terminal). There are  many objections to the content of the proposal, including density, design, and  setbacks. 
            Even  more importantly, we have a process for approving specific projects that  involves formal Design Review, the Planning Commission, and the City Council,  as well as processes for making changes in our General Plan.  Just as we  reject the idea of giving in to developers who buy lobbyists or special favors,  we reject the idea that these community processes should be bypassed by  developers who have the money to pay for signature gatherers and can thereby  force the City to either agree to a project as they propose it or face the  expense of putting it on the ballot. If the Richmond Riviera project were to  succeed in the June primary, it would open the door for every developer who  wanted to bypass Richmond's development approval process. 
            The  initiative procedure is not appropriate for these kinds of complicated  decisions.  Voters will be asked simply to vote yes/no on 12 pages of  legal documents with modifications to the General Plan, zoning changes, and a  development agreement with the City that would not be subject to any future  modification or negotiation.  (See Item L2 of City Council agenda for  11/17/15, including the initiative and the staff's response to it at http://sireweb.ci.richmond.ca.us/sirepub/agdocs.aspx?doctype=agenda&itemid=51486.) 
            We ask Richmond voters to decisively turn down this initiative and  to close one door that allows big money to control our politics. 
               
              We note that some of the support for Poe's project exists because some Richmond  residents have lost confidence in the Richmond Planning Department. The  planning function of the City is vital to our future and full democratic  control must be restored.  But it will not be helped by turning over  control of planning decisions to those who have enough money for signature-gathering  and then running expensive PR campaigns.  
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