For the 2016  Richmond City Council Race, I am initially endorsing Jim Rogers and Jael  Myrick. I may make an additional endorsement at a later date. 
                
              Jim  Rogers                                                                                                         Jael  Myrick 
            This year’s  election is critical for Richmond’s future. The prospect of a fourth Richmond  Progressive Alliance (RPA) member being elected, giving the RPA a Council majority,  could dramatically alter the future of Richmond – and not in a good way. The  RPA has been willing to work with me on occasion, particularly on issues  involving sustainability and the environment. We collaborated to pass the  General Plan 2030, ban toxic pesticide use by City maintenance crews and bring  Richmond into MCE Clean Energy. We voted together to renew City Manager Bill  Lindsay’s contract and oppose Kid’s First. We both opposed Measures N and O. We  are at our best when we find common ground and collaborate. 
               
              On the other  hand, the RPA continues to be obsessed with ideology rather than solving many  of the tangible everyday issues we face as a city and as a community.  For  example, they promoted wildly radical conspiracy and paranormal theories like  space weapons, mind control, and targeted individuals. They insisted on the  City Council passing a resolution to indicate their shared belief and support  As a result, the Richmond Police Department continues to be the go-to place for  people worldwide suffering from paranoia and delusional disorders to seek  protection and relief instead of treatment.  
               
              As we  watched Richmond’s credit rating plummet last year, the RPA showed little  concern for fiscal responsibility and continued to pile on expenditures to an  otherwise balanced budget. With crime prevention and public safety our  residents’ highest priority, the RPA has gone after the Richmond Police  Department with a vengeance, not for what they have done, but for the mistakes  other police departments in other cities have made. And while pushing rent  control is a popular but controversial solution for a tight housing market, the  RPA has routinely and inexplicably voted against both new affordable housing  projects that would increase the affordable housing supply as well as market  rate projects that would contribute millions of dollars for affordable housing  through inclusionary zoning.  
               
              The RPA has  almost no interest in economic development and job creation – the backbone to  our community’s future.  To the RPA, business is anathema and all  corporations are evil. The RPA played a key role in the demise of the UC Global  Campus project because they were more obsessed with shaking down the University  than seeing the project succeed. UC Director of Local Government  and Community Relations, Ruben Lizardo confirmed this, “"When you have a lot of negative press about folks who are  saying the project will have a negative impact, it sends a mixed message to  potential investors and gives pause to any university interested in partnering  with us…And he agreed with the mayor that negative comments about the  project, including fears that it would hasten gentrification, had made it more  difficult for the university to pursue this project.” 
               
              While most  people in Richmond were working hard to make the UC Global Campus a reality,  the RPA attacked it with a vengeance. Councilmember Gayle McLaughlin said at a  March 17, 2016, rally at City Hall that Richmond, “will not allow residents to  suffer from the campus’s arrival.” City Council Candidate Melvin Willis said,  “the only way to ensure that Richmond residents benefit from the campus is if  the campus commits to community improvements that the Richmond Bay Community  Working Group has approved.” Last year, the  RPA, ACCE ( for whom Melvin Willis works) and others took their protests about  the UC Global Campus to the UC Chancellor’s residence, pounding on the front  door and vandalizing property. The  fence that was later completed to provide a measure of privacy for the  chancellor when he is home became part of a rallying cry for his dismissal, and  along with it his essential support for the Global Campus. 
               
              The RPA  never compromises or negotiates with parties they don’t agree with, something  you sometimes have to do in effective government. RPA City Council members  refused to engage with Chevron on negotiating the Environmental and Community  Engagement Agreement (ECIA), and they voted against the $90 million contract  that brought the Richmond Promise program and millions of dollars for  sustainability initiatives, garnering Richmond a coveted Beacon Award just this  week. Once the funding was secured, however, RPA City Council members moved to  take control of the money by setting up an ECIA committee run by one of their  own. 
               
              The Richmond  City Council works best when there are checks and balances among a range of  independent political viewpoints that force debate, encourage dissent and  ultimately result in collaboration and compromise resulting in well-considered  and sound public policy initiatives. When any one group holds sway, bad  decisions are typically the result. We saw this in the years up to 2008 when  pro-Chevron forces controlled the City Council. The result was a flawed EIR for  the Chevron modernization project that was stopped in its tracks by a court  decision that delayed the project for years.  
                          City Council  candidates Melvin Willis and Ben Choi are both members of not only the RPA, but  also its inner circle -- its small and elite Steering Committee. If either of  these two is elected, the RPA will totally control Richmond for at least  the next two years, and the City will be run, not from City Hall by the City  Council, but by a group of RPA insiders from their new headquarters  conveniently located across the street from the Richmond Civic Center. The  other three City Council members, including the mayor, would become completely  powerless and irrelevant.  
            My highest  priority is to help elect liberal and progressive candidates who want the best  for Richmond but do not reflect the extremism and ideological purity the RPA  demands. That is why I am endorsing Jim Rogers and Jael Myrick for City  Council. I don’t always agree with either of them, but experience has proven  that I can work with them. 
            My second  biggest fear is the potential return of Corky Booze to the City Council. Booze  was elected in the wave of opposition to the Point Molate casino, which he  opposed along with the RPA City Council members and me. Both RPA Council  members and I endorsed him, which we all now acknowledge as a terrible mistake.  In his previous term, before being voted off the Council, Booze left a legacy  of unprecedented destruction of civility and order. He encouraged homophobic  and xenophobic rants by public speakers at every meeting. Booze engaged in  endless rants himself on every issue and incessantly insulted other city  council members personally as well as City staff. He was personally responsible  for routinely extending meetings past midnight and into the early morning  hours. His tenure was so marked by negativity that he cannot point to anything  productive he accomplished during the four years he served. Booze is now facing  significant penalties for operating illegal junkyards in several Richmond  locations. 
            Both Jim  Rogers and Jael Myrick have strongly supported progressive environmental and  sustainability agendas in the past but have also supported economic development  and jobs policies. Both Rogers and Myrick are very smart individuals,  pragmatists and tough negotiators, and both have a history of holding Chevron  accountable.  
            Jim Rogers  served with me on the negotiating team that successfully secured a $114 million  settlement with Chevron over tax disputes in 2009. Rogers, Myrick and I  successfully negotiated the $90 million ECIA with Chevron in 2014 that we are  implementing right now with the Richmond Promise and many other programs.  
            As past Contra  Costa Times editorials said: "to his credit, Rogers has proven he can  work with his colleagues on the Council...Rogers is a man of his  convictions...independent...he'll get back to the nuts and bolts." 
            Electing Jim  Rogers and Jael Myrick will result in a balanced City Council that is both  pragmatic and progressive while continuing the priorities voters care most  about – crime prevention and public safety, health and the environment,  streets, parks and other infrastructure, jobs and economic development and  fiscal responsibility.  |