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  From Richmond Confidential - Richmond 2013: A Year For The History Books
January 1, 2014
 
 


Richmond 2013: A year for the history books
By Joaquin PalominoPosted December 28, 2013 5:23 pm
With a new year approaching, it’s time to reflect on the past year and prepare for the next one. For Richmond, 2013 was one for the history books.
The city sparked a national debate around using eminent domain as a tool to stem the home foreclosure crisis, city leaders pushed progressive policies, and crime continued to drop. In short, 2013 was a year of tumult in government and relative calm in the streets. Below are some of the highlights.
Foreclosure Prevention Programs puts the City in the National Spotlight 
Richmond Mayor Gayle McLaughlin speaks to the supporters of the city's housing recovery plan. 'Every foreclosure is someone's work going down the drain,' she said. 'Let's keep fighting the good fight together.' (Photo by: Kevin N. Hume)
Richmond Mayor Gayle McLaughlin speaks to the supporters of the city’s housing recovery plan. “Every foreclosure is someone’s work going down the drain,” she said. “Let’s keep fighting the good fight together.” (Photo by: Kevin N. Hume)

If the Richmond CARES program moves forward, 2013 may be remembered as the year Richmond took on Wall Street, saving thousands from losing their homes.
Or it could be remembered as the year civic leaders hatched a risky plan that bankrupted the city.
The program proposes buying hundreds of underwater mortgages to prevent foreclosures. If the banks or investors refuse to sell, the city would use eminent domain to seize the mortgages, a novel application of the legal tool.
While the city is divided on the issue, one thing is certain: Richmond has sparked a national debate.
“Honestly, I think Richmond is re-writing the history books with this,” said Jose Vega, a Pittsburg, California resident who supports the plan.
Critics claim the program has already cost Richmond millions in lost bonds revenues, and resulted in at least two lawsuits.  More litigation is almost certain if the city presses forward.
While the plan’s fate remains uncertain, it was one of the most important news stories in 2013.
Crime Drops, Police Department Modernizes
Chief

Just five years ago it would have been hard to imagine how safe Richmond is today.  The city’s homicide rate is at a 33-year low, and auto-thefts, residential burglaries, and other crimes are down, according to police records.
“People don’t seem to be afraid like they used to be,” said Bennie Singleton, a long-time community activist. “There was a time when I wouldn’t walk down Macdonald Avenue, but now I’m not afraid to walk anywhere in this city.”
Many attribute the drop in crime to innovative crime-fighting programs and improved police-community relations. Since Chief Chris Magnus took the helm in 2006, the department has invested heavily in community policing.
In 2013, the department also acquired an arsenal of crime-fighting gadgets.
Over the past year RPD purchased: Predictive policing software, which forecasts when and where certain crimes are most likely to occur; Automated License Plate Readers, which can photograph thousands of license plates a day, helping police recover stolen cars; and officer body cameras, which help police collect evidence.
Richmond Police Officer Anthony Diaz, left, looks at fellow officer Phillip Sanchez's body camera. Sanchez, right, is one of four officers selected to test body cameras for the department before they issue them to all patrol officers. (Photo by: Kevin N. Hume)
Richmond Police Officer Anthony Diaz, left, looks at fellow officer Phillip Sanchez’s body camera. Sanchez, right, is one of four officers selected to test body cameras for the department before they issue them to all patrol officers. (Photo by: Kevin N. Hume)

Police officials say the investment will help them make Richmond safer.
“Nothing is ever going to replace an officer’s ability to listen to people and talk to people and connect to people,” RPD Capt. Mark Gagan said. “But technology really does help us know where and when to be somewhere.”
A Hard Year for Chevron
The Richmond Chevron refinery (File photo by: Sara Bernard)
The Richmond Chevron refinery (File photo by: Sara Bernard)

There’s always been a love-hate relationship between the city and Chevron, but longtime County Supervisor John Gioia said, “public support is at an all-time low.”
In an effort to improve relations with the community, Chevron has donated millions to local non-profits and schools.
Still, 2013 will be remembered as the year that more than 2,000 activists rallied against the refinery, Chevron faced unprecedented lawsuits and grappled with an emerging regulatory regime.
In response to the 2012 fire, which sent thousands to the hospital, the city filed a historic lawsuit against Chevron last summer. It was the first time the city sued its largest employer, even though the refinery has seen at least 14 dangerous incidents since 1989.
The suit alleges that the company placed profits over public safety. “We don’t want to see another toxic plume traveling across Richmond and the Bay Area,” Mayor Gayle McLaughlin said at a news conference when she announced the lawsuit.
Chevron had already agreed to pay $2 million in fines and restitution, and is the target of a class-action lawsuit that has thousands of plaintiffs.
The century-old refinery is also facing an uncertain regulatory future, even as it pushes forward its billion-dollar modernization project.
The Bay Area Air Quality Management District passed a resolution this year to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to pre-1990 levels in the Bay Area.  To meet this goal, some say refineries will have to be shut down.
“Basically what this would do is it would prohibit refining fossil fuels in the Bay Area,” said Jessica Dervin-Ackerman, a spokesperson for the Sierra Club, an environmental group that worked closely with the agency on the resolution.
Representatives from the petroleum industry disregard the doomsayers, but there’s no denying that if the resolution is enforced, Chevron will need to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions.
And lastly, the U.S.  Chemical Safety Board has recommended sweeping reforms to California’s petroleum industry after investigating the 2012 fire at Richmond’s refinery.
The board recommended beefing up safety precautions and increasing inspections.  “The report advocates a fresh regulatory system, a quantum leap toward making refineries and chemical plants safer,” said board Chairman Rafael Moure-Eraso.
In short, it was a tough year for Chevron.  In the beginning of 2014, the refineries modernization project will be reviewed. In turn, 2014 should also be another big and controversial year for the oil company.
Action on the Shoreline
Betty Reid Soskin, park ranger at Richmond's Rosie the Riveter, became famous during the government shutdown.  (Photo by Nancy DeVille)
Betty Reid Soskin, park ranger at Richmond’s Rosie the Riveter, became famous during the government shutdown. (Photo by Nancy DeVille)

Richmond’s shoreline saw a flurry of activity this year.
Starting at Richmond’s southern edge, development at the Richmond-Bay campus slowed down due to federal budget cuts.
The campus—which is a partnership between UC Berkeley, the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and the city of Richmond—would consolidate Berkeley researchers at a single site. Currently they’re strewn amongst a number of labs in the East Bay.
Once complete, the campus could generate 10,000 jobs, and make the city an epicenter for bioscience, health and energy research.
City Manager Bill Lindsay said UC Berkeley is still committed to the campus, although the federal sequester has halted any new projects for the Lawrence Labs.
“Funding is always going to be an issue when you have an organization that relies on government support,” Lindsay said. “But this is a 40-year build out we’re talking about, so you have to keep it in perspective.”
A bit further north on Richmond’s coast, a hometown hero was transformed into an international celebrity.
Betty Reid Soskin, a 92-year-old park ranger at the Rosie the Riveter National Historic Park, became the face for thousands of furloughed workers during the federal government shutdown.
“Any day I could wake up and no longer be a functioning adult,” Soskin told the Chronicle in October. “I fear that this interruption in my work will cut it off. And I still have so much I want to give.”
Soskin drew crowds from all across the world who came to see possibly the oldest National Parks Service ranger in the United States.
“It’s so fascinating to get first-hand history and from an African American woman’s perspective,” said Jeanne Kortz, who has heard Soskin give her talk many times, and now brings friends to hear her. “I’m always learning something new as she always talks about something different.”
Richmond resident Julie Lienert carries her dog down to the beach. Saturday was Leinert's first time coming to Point Molate Beach Park since it opened. (Photo by: Mark Andrew Boyer)
Richmond resident Julie Lienert carries her dog down to the beach. Saturday was Leinert’s first time coming to Point Molate Beach Park since it opened. (Photo by: Mark Andrew Boyer)

Just around the horn of Richmond’s shoreline, the Point Molate Beach Park re-opened after being closed for more than a decade.
The park is the only stretch of beach run by the city, and resident’s say it’s one of Richmond’s many hidden gems. The park overlooks the Richmond San Rafael bridge, and has wonderful views of Mount Tamapais.
“We grew up here and being back just feels like home,” said Francisco Avila, who was barbecuing at the park opening day. “Being here gets you in tune with nature, and the view is just gorgeous.”
Richmond Prepare for an Uncertain Future
While 2013 was a big year, 2014 should be equally exciting. The city will elect a new mayor and council.
The fate of the Richmond CARES program, Chevron’s modernization project, and the Richmond Bay campus will all become clearer in the coming year as well. 
Obviously some of 2013’s major events weren’t included in this roundup.  Please use the comments section to tell us what you think were the most important events of 2013.
From everyone at Richmond Confidential, Happy New Year! It has been a pleasure covering this exciting city in 2013.
RichCon

Sally Schilling, Nancy Deville, Kevin Hume, and Leo Zhou contributed to this report.

 

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