Richmond  considers litter tax on city businesses
              Richmond Standard 
               
                 
Jun  22, 2016 
 
Richmond City  Council may ask voters in November to decide on a proposal to impose a litter  tax on city businesses. 
 
On Tuesday, the  council voted 6-1 to have city staff prepare a measure for the November ballot  on the proposed tax. City staff must bring the measure back to council for  further review. 
 
Under the  proposal, the city’s fast food businesses, liquor stores, convenience markets,  gas station mini-marts and large retailers serving carryout food would pay  annual taxes. The proposal was fashioned after a similar first-of-its-kind tax  in Oakland that passed in 2006. 
 
The annual tax  may range from $233 to $3,800 depending on the amount of a business’ gross  receipts, according to city staff. The city could take in as much as $675,000  annually if all businesses complied with the tax requirement, according to its  preliminary figures. 
 
The proposal was  born from a list of revenue-generating ideas proposed by Mayor Tom  Butt earlier this year in response to the city’s budget  deficit projections. 
 
Councilman Nat  Bates, the only vote against considering the ballot measure, took issue with a  proposal he believes would make the city less friendly to businesses for the sole  purpose of fixing the city’s budget problems. 
 
-   End  of Richmond Standard Article – 
 
The photos  below were taken in about a 30-foot section of the Cutting Boulevard median  between 27th and 28th Streets. This shows only about 25%  of the trash, which consists predominately of packaging from fast food outlets,  liquor stores, tobacco outlets, coffee shops and food outlets. The weeds are  also a blight. The City of Richmond appears to be unable to keep up with median  maintenance any more.
            The trash is  not only a blight, but it carries a significant cost to the City as it is  ultimately washed into the storm drain system and into the Bay. The City is  responsible for keeping trash out of  the Bay and is subject to significant penalties under the Clean Water Act. 
              
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