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Richmond Budget Bodes Ill for Future
Richmond City Council deserves at least a grand jury investigation, and should be recalled. In a sequence of events mirrored across the United States, the city of Richmond, California went from having a fat budget surplus before 9/11 to an enormous deficit by the year 2004, as the depredations on the economy of wars and corporate looting hit home. State money is not available, investments are in the toilet, and the resultant stripping of the budget-padding leave financial mismanagement and finagling lying bare and exposed.
Layoffs of large percentages of Richmond city staff and cutting of public services are shocking residents. Richmond’s once-excellent public library has had its hours slashed and is now in danger of closing completely due to layoffs of most of the staff (branch libraries ARE closed as of 4/7/04). Some firestations had been shut down, and police and fire staff have been cut, as well as 400 other unionized city-infrastructure jobs, such as street, equipment and park maintenance, and community center staff. Half the city’s recreational centers are closing. All this bodes ill for a city with a population already in trouble over low income levels. Massive layoffs will inevitably result in more homeless and desperate people on the streets. Recall the Richmond City Council, for not doing the honorable thing, not even meeting with their staff (as did the Council of Berkeley at several face-to-face sit-down meetings) to discuss ideas and options, but instead hiring ultra expensive consultants to act as a barrier between them and the public. On March 23, after allowing some 60 people to speak in public forum, begging, and pleading with them not to cut services that will hurt the children and the future of Richmond, the Council announced that they had already voted in closed session -- thereby violating the Brown Act. Neighbors are outraged and are getting together to discuss their options. For a step toward an alternative, check out http://www.richmondprogressivealliance.net
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Comments (Hide Comments)Part 2
Tuesday Apr 6th, 2004 4:35 PM
Much community input was ignored. The City Council held some "placebo meetings" over a period of ten days in March, but only AFTER their high-priced consultants had already created an "Action Plan" to the City Council's liking -- part of which no doubt was the instruction to cover Council's ass by holding these so-called Town Hall Meetings to "get public input".
People did give input. One thing that citizens mentioned again and again was that Chevron, the elephant in the Richmond living room, should pay more. There is a cap on the utilities tax that Chevron pays, and that cap should be lifted (Chevron claims that they would pay less if the cap were lifted, but will not reveal their actual energy usage, as that "is proprietary information"). Other suggestions were things like a "clean air tax" on Chevron and other polluting industries, and fines when toxic releases occur and no warning sirens are set off. In addition, concerned citizens, some of whom have sons and daughters in the military service, proposed that the City Council and the Board of Education seek federal funding. These and many other good, creative suggestions the City Council and School Board totally ignored. First they made a small show of printing out some suggestions citizens had made, then they proceeded to ignore them completely. They had their Action Plan, and layoffs and union-busting are the grand foundation and bulwark of it. stop passing the buck
Tuesday Apr 6th, 2004 9:09 PM
Blaming Chevron for Richmond's problems won't work anymore. Chevron has been where it is since 1904, so don't even try. Richmond's problems are caused by a low tax base, due to crime from the projects based on drugs and gangs. Fortunately, other groups are moving into Richmond and they will cause an increase in the tax base. Richmond has almost no major businesses, due to the predictable crime problems from the projects and other undesirable elements - hence 2 major grocery stores in a city of 110,000. Crime does not pay, and businesses will not move into a "community" of drug dealers and welfare loosers. Hopefully, in a few years, the demographics of Richmond will have changed. We are seeing an influx of young families who are looking for an entry into middle class life, and they are the ones who will transform Richmond. The welfare dependent moochers will find themselves further isolated and fenced in. It can't happen soon enough. Richmond deserves better than being a reservation of disfunctional, nonproductive parasites.
update
Monday Apr 26th, 2004 11:34 AM
thanks a lot for the great comment, jerk.
We just discovered that the high-priced ($550 per hour) consultants that the pathetic Richmond City Council is paying huge sums to so that they will "help them" with this crisis has a long history of representing Chevron/Texaco. Find it online by googling for "Winston and Strawn" and "conflict of interest". |