BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-62203
SEQUENCE:62203
CREATED:20050404T051000Z
DESCRIPTION:    Community press conference 3pm Tuesday, April 5, on City Hall steps  
 Editorial by Willie Ratcliff  Mouths are locked shut at the Redevelopment 
 Agency about seven mysterious items – involving $40 million in new bonds 
 and taxes for the Hunters Point Shipyard – on the agenda for the 
 Redevelopment Commission meeting Tuesday, April 5. Carried over from the 
 March 1 meeting, we know what the items are called, but we don’t know 
 what they mean. And Redevelopment staff say the soonest we’ll find out is 
 Friday, just four days before the meeting.  I suspect it’s another big 
 giveaway for Lennar – $40 million from us taxpayers to pay for streets 
 and sidewalks and utilities – on top of the giveaway of the land itself 
 of Parcel A, where the huge, corrupt homebuilder wants to build 1,600 new 
 homes sandwiched in between the dump on Parcel E, one of most contaminated 
 in the country, and more recently revealed dumps on Parcel B, all on a 
 Superfund site that’s a long, long way from clean. All the dumps are 
 known to contain radioactive as well as other deadly toxins.  Redevelopment 
 staff say the agency’s top dogs are huddling with Lennar – maybe with 
 the mayor too, who has a personal interest in this development: his cousin, 
 Laurence Pelosi, served as treasurer for his mayoral campaign and until 
 last May as senior vice president of Lennar Communities. Until they come 
 out of the huddle on Friday, not even the members of the Redevelopment 
 Commission, two of whom were just appointed by the mayor on Friday – 
 London Breed and Francee Covington, both African American – are likely to 
 know what the $40 million agenda items are all about.  I don’t think the 
 Commission should vote on any of those seven mystery items until we all – 
 especially the residents of Hunters Point – have had plenty of time to 
 study this new giveaway, and that’s what we’ve told Redevelopment. But 
 I don’t know if they heard us.  So I’m asking everyone who reads this 
 to come out Tuesday to the community’s press conference on the steps of 
 City Hall at 3 p.m. Bring your friends and come out to support the people 
 of Hunters Point – and to support your own health, which is threatened by 
 the radioactivity and other deadly toxins leaking out of those Shipyard 
 dumps into San Francisco Bay and polluting the entire Bay Area. After the 
 press conference, we’ll go inside City Hall to Room 416 for the 
 Redevelopment Commission meeting that starts at 4:00.  Here are the seven 
 mystery items as they were listed on the March 15 agenda and then held over 
 ‘til April 5:  “Establishing Community Facilities District No. 7 
 covering portions of Phase 1; Hunters Point Shipyard Redevelopment Project 
 Area (Resolution No. 35-2005)  “Forming Community Facilities District No. 
 7 (Hunters Point Shipyard Phase One Improvements), authorizing the levy of 
 a special tax, and preliminarily establishing an appropriations limit for 
 the community facilities district; Hunters Point Shipyard Redevelopment 
 Project Area (Resolution No. 36-2005)  “Determining necessity to incur 
 bonded indebtedness of Community Facilities District No. 7 (Hunters Point 
 Shipyard Phase One Improvements); Hunters Point Shipyard Redevelopment 
 Project Area (Resolution No. 37-2005)  “Calling a special election in 
 Community Facilities District No. 7 (Hunters Point Shipyard Phase One 
 Improvements); Hunters Point Shipyard Redevelopment Project Area 
 (Resolution No. 38-2005)  “Declaring results of special election in 
 Community Facilities District No. 7 (Hunters Point Shipyard Phase One 
 Improvements) and directing recording of notice of special tax lien; 
 Hunters Point Shipyard Redevelopment Project Area (Resolution No. 39-2005)  
 “Levying special taxes within the Redevelopment Agency of the City and 
 County of San Francisco Community Facilities District No. 7 (Hunters Point 
 Shipyard Phase One Improvements); Hunters Point Shipyard Redevelopment 
 Project Area (Resolution No. 40-2005)  “Authorizing issuance of and sale 
 of special tax bonds for Redevelopment Agency of the City and County of San 
 Francisco Community Facilities District No. 7 (Hunters Point Shipyard Phase 
 One Improvements) in an amount not to exceed $40,000,000, authorizing the 
 execution of an indenture of trust, and approving and authorizing related 
 documents and actions; Hunters Point Shipyard Redevelopment Project Area 
 (Resolution No. 41-2005)”  Back on March 19, we wrote to Redevelopment 
 with the following questions. You guessed it: despite many reminder calls, 
 we’ve received no response. We asked:  l “What is Community Facilities 
 District No. 7? What is its geographic area?  l “Who will vote? Isn’t 
 it true that nobody lives in the Shipyard now? And when will the special 
 election take place?  l “Who will be taxed?  l “What exactly is the 
 purpose of the bond proceeds? Are they to pay for the infrastructure – 
 streets, sidewalks, undergrounding of utilities and the like for Lennar’s 
 residential development? Although that’s standard in project areas that 
 are unattractive to developers, please explain why such an expensive 
 incentive is necessary for residential development at the Shipyard, which 
 is such a desirable opportunity that some of the largest developers in the 
 country competed for it.”  Our letter also asked: “I understand that 
 Mayor Newsom announced a moratorium last week on bonded indebtedness. Will 
 that mean a postponement of the issuance and sale of this $40 million bond 
 package, assuming it is approved by the Commission?”  Since we wrote the 
 letter, we’ve heard from another activist that Lennar may be trying to 
 cut back on the community benefits it promised in the Environmental Impact 
 Report. Remember: Lennar is notorious for building a subdivision of homes 
 on its own toxic dump in Florida. They’re known for corruption, not 
 trustworthiness.  Our letter concluded with what Bay View readers know 
 well, that “our newspaper strongly opposes any development at the 
 Shipyard until it’s completely clean – we support and expect full 
 compliance with Proposition P. And we firmly believe that when the time for 
 development comes, the community – and not an outside developer – 
 should be in charge. Frankly, we are outraged that San Francisco intends to 
 give Florida-based Lennar not only the land but $40 million to proceed with 
 the very profitable private development of 1,600 homes – or more. How can 
 that be justified?”  See you Tuesday! Meanwhile, call Mayor Newsom at 
 (415) 554-6141 and ask him to explain those seven agenda items, the $40 
 million mystery.  Email Bay View publisher Willie Ratcliff at 
 publisher@sfbayview.com.    
 http://www.sfbayview.com/033005/shipyardhomebuilding033005.shtml\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/04/03/62203.php
SUMMARY:Protest $40 million bonds, taxes for Shipyard homebuilding
LOCATION:City Hall steps
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/04/03/62203.php
DTSTART:20050405T220000Z
DTEND:20050405T230000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
