| 
           | RPA Statement on the Kids First Ballot  Initiative: 
             
The Richmond Progressive Alliance  strongly supports increasing funding and expanding programs for youth, children  and families in Richmond. We have also been long-time supporters and allies of  the organizations in the coalition that is promoting the Kids First initiative  that will be on the ballot in November or a following election.. RPA was not  consulted on the wording of the initiative as it was being formulated, but  sometime after the signature gathering process was underway, we did have  multiple meetings with Kids First coalition members, including inviting them to  make a presentation at the RPA Steering Committee. 
 
Because many RPA Steering Committee  members had concerns--not with the general spirit of the initiative, which was  widely supported--but with the actual language, certain specific aspects and  potential unintended consequences, we were unable to reach consensus and hence  decided not to take a position as an organization on this initiative. 
We received the letter below from one of our members, Mike Parker, who  expressed his views as an individual. We welcome additional comments from our  members. 
Marcos Bañales and Marilyn Langlois  
 
RPA co-coordinators  
7/26/16 
 
To the RPA Steering Committee 
 
I understand that the RPA has taken no  position on the Kids First ballot measure. 
 
I acknowledge that groups that the RPA  normally actively works with and supports like RYSE, East Bay Center are  actively supporting this initiative and that at this time, the RPA is not  supporting it nor is it opposing it. 
 
But I would like to express my views  on what is actually a big political issue in this country. 
 
The fundamental motivation behind Kids  First is great. There is no question but that priorities in this society are  misplaced. We need to be spending more on kids and giving them a future and  less on jails, police , and other means to deal with the results of an unjust  society. It is far better to spend money to prevent a problem than to try to  clean up afterwards. 
There are two problems I see with the fine print of Kids First. 
 
1. It does not deal with the  priorities squarely. Instead it will end up pitting the needs of kids against  the needs of seniors, poor families, recreation and education for adults,  improving neighborhoods, roads, street lighting etc. Kids First will require an  additional 3% of the general fund to be allocated for its designated  activities. In Richmond 70-75% of the General Fund goes to Public Safety.  Perhaps another 10% goes to expenditures that cannot be avoided -- insurance,  settlements, electricity etc. or is just pass through (like building license  processing). There is a general unwillingness to touch the amount budgeted to  public safety. Unless this changes that means that 3% of the General Fund is  actually more than 20% of the remaining that goes for senior services,  recreation, parks, libraries. That the "Kids First" initiative avoids  challenging the untouchability of Police and Fire appropriations therefore pits  it against other badly needed services in the city. The initiative might still  be of value because, if passed, it would force the city to look hard at  priorities especially the "untouchable" ones, but the second problem  is a deal-breaker for me. 
 
2. Richmond Kids First essentially  copies an ordinance from Oakland. But in Richmond's version someone added this  paragraph: "Entities eligible to receive funding shall be non-profit  community-based organizations, including organizations with a non-profit fiscal  agent; and public agencies, in partnership with non-profit organizations, that  serve children, youth and disconnected transitional-aged young adults. In any  fiscal year, public agencies shall not receive, in total, more than 20% of the  funding awarded to applicants." In other words, 70% plus the 10% for  administration of this large portion of the budget will be taken from direct  public use. Seventy percent of more than four million dollars of current city  work will be outsourced. The services will be moved from public control to some  form of private control, from union workers to nonunion workers. Services  provided by the WCCUSD and Richmond Libraries are explicitly excluded from this  money unless they are part of "collaborations" with non-profit  organizations. This paragraph effectively privatizes a big proportion of the  city budget. In turning over public money and control to non-public  organizations, it is analogous to turning education over to charter schools.  Unfortunately that may well be exactly what some of the Kids First backers  want, --there is a national campaign to privatize and destroy public services.  I emphasize "some" --I think most of the backers of Kids First can  understand that it is important to strengthen and expand public services not  undermine them. 
 
So what is the answer. First, we can  work to make sure that where we have options that kids prioritized. For example  a big portion of the discretionary funds from the Chevron Community benefits  Agreement went to kid oriented projects. Second we can focus on raising more  funds for the city so we can expand kid oriented services like libraries,  recreation etc. by joining campaigns to close Prop 13 loopholes and taxing the  wealthy at the state level and taxing sugary drinks to benefit recreation  programs at the local level. 
 
Mike Parker 7/26/16 
 
http://richmondprogressivealliance.net 
 
Juan  Reardon This situation represents a serious failure by RYSE, Gioia  and the paid consultants who put this together and were unaware or ignored the  steps that are required to place a measure on the ballot. The organizers of  this failed effort have a serious responsibility to the young folks who were  involved thinking that their leaders knew what they were doing. Eduardo  Martinez spoke well at public forum after the young speakers when he said that  although this ballot measure did not fulfill the required steps and it had too  many problems in it to ask for political support for an exemption to the rules  of the democratic process, the speakers and the mobilization for the ballot  measure highlights the need of analyzing priorities. 
 
The many problems in the language of  the measure also are the responsibility of RYSE, Gioia and the paid consultants  who ignoring the reality of Richmond's financial difficulties decided to take  away from libraries, parks, street improvement, parks and recreation  department, community centers and many programs serving the youth in Richmond  to allocate the take to private entities like the NGOs who lead the campaign.  YES, the youth of Richmond needs a lot more than what they are getting and  their frustration is valid. Intelligent and wise organizers would lead efforts,  including electoral efforts and ballot measures that bring into the city and  the community NEW funding. When some of us in the RPA lead an initiative to tax  the sugary drinks in 2012 (Measure N), which would have reduced consumption and  child obesity at the same time bring in several million dollars to be allocated  to youth needs (Measure O) there was no real support from RYSE. They stood by  the side to see it fail.  
 
Other cities improved more recently on  Richmond's leadership ballot measure to tax sugary drinks. Cities like Berkeley  have succeeded San Francisco is trying it also. Why didn‘t RYSE improve on the  2012 effort by the RPA and placed a citizens ' initiative in the ballot to tax  soda drinks and in this way bring in NEW funding for youth programs with fair  allocations to NGOs? We understand that it takes a lot to stand to the soda  drinks, but that would have been real leadership for our kids. Trying to force  the city to lay off public servants from community centers, park and recreation  programs, libraries etc. and pass the savings along to local NGO is no solution  and it shows no leadership, just trying to satisfy valid needs by creating more  problems. It is not a good lesson to teach the young either. Sooner or later  the soda tax will be back on the Richmond ballot and this measure will bring  ADDITIONAL funds into the needs of the youth. It could be written so that the  NEW income is distributed evenly between the Public Services offered by the  City and grants for the NGOs working with Richmond youth. This will require a  bit of humility and a willingness to work together for the benefit of the youth  without hurting the City. NEW FUNDING, that is the key. Taking the initiative  to stand to corporate America to get the funds that are needed takes guts, but  there is no better lesson for the youth of Richmond.  | 
            |