Because the beaver isn't just an animal; it's an ecosystem!

Tag: Redevelopment Agency


Are you familiar with the myth of the Hydra? It was one of the labors of Hercules to fight this poisinous nine-headed water beast. The swamp where it lurked was filled with deadly gasses, but he covered his mouth and nose with a cloth, and carried a trusty scythe to battle. He soon found that every time he chopped off one head it immediately grew back two in its place. Fortunately, only one head was immortal, the others were just really really successful. In the end, the only way to keep it from getting stronger was to cautarize the neck to stop it from regrowing, and use the venom of the severed head to stop it from coming back. Smart work, but he was Hercules, and he had the help of gods, because Athena was really a sucker for a pretty face.  So he killed the monster.

Malibu 83.AE.346, Caeretan hydria, c. 525 B.C.
Main panel: Hercules slaying the Lernean hydra
Collection of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Malibu, California

Martinez, of course, has its own Hyrda. The Redevelopment Agency. At last count it had been effectively killed seven times in the last 50 years. We are actually one of a handful of cities in California without one. (Make that a very small handful.) The RDA is self-governed body that has the power to take loans, declare blight and make decisions without any public input whatsoever. Don’t confuse “redevelopment” with an RDA. A cute new restaurant block or some satellite shops downtown isn’t the same thing. One is influenced by the will of the people, the needs of the community, and the demands of the city. The other is a wholly uncontrolled shadow government that operates without public input. Once any redevelopment area is defined, the RDA can expand its powers to any single part of the city. Although there are highly respected and successful RDAs, like in Danville or Lafayette, they usually occur in cities with strong voter representation, active neighborhood alliances, and government that is forced to be respectful of its citizens—a city council you can trust or at least control.

Tomorrow night our city council will vote on an ordinance to establish a Martinez RDA. The group “Open Martinez” sends this call to action. Learn more by reading their newsletter here:

It is, of course, the last item on the meeting agenda. But it is essential you attend. The city needs to see the reaction they create. Like Hercules I’d advise you wrap your nose and throat to ward off the toxic air.


Defending our beavers has been a constant struggle against threat of one kind or another. We were warned that lives could be lost, that buildings would collapse, that supporters would be sued, and that the website would be come a target for hate-mail the world wide. With each subsequent challenge the threats would increase. Of course when you feel most threatened, you instinctively feel most vulnerable and unable to achieve your goals. However I have learned through painstaking observation that the reverse is usually true.

The closer you get to power the more ominous the response, and the surer your success. Threat comes when you are strong, not weak.

I mention this because this weekend one of our beaver loyals ran into a certain councilman who kindly wondered whether the “beaver people” were planning some kind of anti-Redevelopment campaign. He expressed concern that this could harm the beavers and bring “Stigma”, and he hoped that wasn’t true.

Are we both hearing the same theme song in the background here? “Nice Colony, shame if something were to happen to them”. (I mean other than lowering their dam by three feet, removing all their food and installing sheetpile through their lodge.) It would be a shame for the beavers to be tainted by a controversial issue that has been dramatically argued in this city since 1950. We wouldn’t want to bring controversy to these peaceful uncontroversial and uncritically accepted rodents, right?

For the record, Worth A Dam doesn’t have an “official” position on the Redevelopment issue. We’re beaver people, and we are committed to beavers. We are a heterogeneous group, and voted for Kennedy, Alford, McCain, Obama and Ron Paul. This is the way its supposed to be, where people set aside their differences to work on common goals, support each other’s shared interests and make space for things that they can’t agree on. I don’t expect readers of this website to agree with my opinion on everything, including RDA. You know how to contact me and express your thoughts as well. To be honest, if the city had ever sat me down and said, ‘if you will make sure beaver people don’t have any opposition for our RDA we’ll keep them safe and build the most beautiful habitat for them you’ve ever seen’, I’d have seriously thought twice. But of course the city didn’t do that. They didn’t ever view us as important enough to promise anything, or even vote on the issue. They just want to threaten that if we offer any opposition to an RDA they’ll support the beavers even less than they do already. (Get your nano-tools so we can measure the incremental shift.)

Honestly, their sheetpile-palooza was for me the single best indicator about whose interests they are likely to protect in this city, with or without an RDA. Warning a beaver loyalist that talking about RDA could harm the beavers is italian old school. Here’s the kindest version of what I think about that particular councilman’s concern for the possible stigma my having an opinion will bring the beavers…

[youtube:http://youtube.com/watch?v=0LnJskwydvM&feature]


Hundreds came to the shoulder-to-shoulder town hall meeting with George Miller Saturday, but only tens showed up for the council retreat later that afternoon. Beavers were mentioned at neither, sadly. There were massive cameras and reporters at the first, and only the Gazette at the non-recorded second. Can you guess which spent a greater percentage of time on questions, incorporated greater audience feedback and created a friendlier atmosphere?

Lets be clear: my interest in local politics was generated by exactly two furry creatures in Alhambra Creek about two years ago. There are big historic fights in Martinez that I know nothing about. Still, advocating for these animals has required me to be at fairly close quarters with our city council, to hear their thought processes, listen to their promises, and see how they weighed decisions. If any single issue has forced you to do that at one time or another, you know the result of this discomforting intimacy. Here we are, almost at anniversary of the subcommittee report being delivered, still without a vote on whether the beavers can stay. When I proposed planting to replace the alarming vegetation loss caused by the flood plain scraping, I was told to let “nature take its course”. Staring at the faces who made the decision to install a sheetpile wall in front of what they knew was another sheetpile wall I saw that they were simply relieved that their real commitment had been honored. Each was completely unburdened by wondering how vastly flood conditions would have improved for the entire town if they had voted to invest that half a million dollars somewhere else, say the creek banks by the adult school.

I say this to preface on my remarks. The no-retreat retreat started with city manager Phil Vince outlining the plans for using measure H money by rebuilding the Rankin Park Pool. This was responded to by Lara Delaney who wondered if it might not make more sense to use that money to rebuild the pool somewhere more centrally located in Martinez. Mark Ross reminded her that the bond measure specifically talked about rebuilding the existing pool, and she said again that it didn’t make much sense to go all the way across town for a pool. The city manager even added that the weather was warmer south of highway 4. Mayor Schroder cautioned them away from these speculations saying that the voters might feel this was a “bait and switch” technique to get money approved for one project and use it for another.

All in all, it took 20 minutes for our elected representatives to remind each other that they had an obligation to implement the will of the voters. Whew. Time well spent.

Janet Kennedy raised the issue of a city wide disaster plan, and talked about our failure to provide one. Then it was off to the blue-light special of the day:

A Redevelopment Agency for Downtown Martinez.

Phil Vince began this talk by saying that Martinez had enormous jewels to offer, the open space, the Marina, the train station, but that no city’s general fund should be forced to carry the burden of managing these things on its own. It was time for Martinez to form an RDA. He had worked most recently in Moraga which wasn’t “right” for an RDA because it was just “open space on either side and a few shopping centers in the middle” and did not “have enough blight”. (Never mind that Martinez is equally landlocked by open space, a refinery, and the marina. Apparently we have enough of the blight that Moraga lacked. Interestingly, Moraga didn’t have enough, but apparently Lafayette did.) He said that this time around the city would invest funds and effort to educate  residents about the benefits of an RDA.

40,000 of our tax dollars set aside to teach us what we should think.

The fact that this had been a divisive issue in the past for Martinez was raised, stressing the need for unity. The city manager reassured that this education money would outline the pros and cons of a Redevelopment agency and then simply let the voters decide. Janet Kennedy said that she had never seen an RDA that didn’t improve the city she was in, including San Pablo where they used it to fund a casino. Mark Ross said that if you didn’t have your own RDA on board your funds were siphoned into other projects in the county. Given the fact that 40,000 dollars was going to be spent to teach us pros and cons, someone from the audience asked the council to list any “cons” they could think of.

They could not name one. .

After I raised my concerns about it (which are in yesterday’s gazette and hopefully wednesday’s record) Lara Delaney argued heatedly that an RDA is just a tool, and that it can be used for whatever the city needs, and if there is a powerful tool that can help the city, she was going to use it.

Here’s my thought about the “tool” argument. An RDA is powerful tool, yes. So is a chain saw. It is not the kind of tool you hand to just anybody and promise they can use for the next 40 years. We are in an economic crisis which means that any RDA is going to be poised to siphon a greater portion of any recovered city wealth until 2050. Think of it this way, with the economy down each of our homes have lost value, maybe 30% of their value. That wealth will come back when the dust settles, but forming an RDA now means that any taxes on that recovery will belong to the RDA, not the schools, not the fire department, not the general fund. Yes cities can be responsible and create “pass-throughs” to protect that money, but how good has our city been at saying “no” to big money interests and protecting the needs of residents?

(Consider the Albatross).

It’s time to ask ourselves three important questions:

  • Is this the right tool?
  • Is this the right time?
  • And is this the right council ?

Not sure what to do after that last cup of coffee? You might want to join your fellow Martinez-ites for a town hall meeting with Congressman Miller. He’ll be at city hall from 9:30 to 10:30. He’s coming to talk about the economy and stabilization measures. I have said before that his last town hall meeting was the most uplifting political event I ever attended until November 7, 2007, so its probably worth the trek.

I posted this back in May of last year when I met an aide of his at the farmer’s market.

Now for my day’s best news. In the midst of talking and explaining about the beavers we met a nice mom with a magical little daughter who explained that she was an aide for Congressman Miller. Not only was she a huge beaver fan, so were her co-workers, and they had watched the videos in the office. I can’t tell you how delighted that makes this particular beaver advocate. I respect the congressman enormously, am consistently impressed with his position on the issues, and up until November 7, 2007 his town hall meeting at Martinez City Hall was the most uplifting political event I’d ever attended. Now he’s got stiff competition. Always in the back of my mind, I wondered whether he might be interested in the beavers who’d settled into the creek in his home town.

It turns out our beavers have friends in some very high places.

9:30 is not so very much later than the beavers go to bed, and I thought maybe the congressman might enjoy seeing something up a creek that wasn’t the economy, so I dropped his aide a note and suggested a guided tour. She actually thought he might be interested and asked him!  Breath was held, would the entire economy benefit from the “beaver bump?  Sadly it turns out government work is fairly taxing right now and his schedule couldn’t accommodate a beaver visit. Next time, congressman!

(I told her the beavers were big fans and would miss him.)

Anyway, there will be a hot bed of activity tomorrow. First Miller to talk about our economic woes, and at the same time a city council “retreat” where they will make plans for the next two years and say admiring things to each other. Rumor is a redevelopment agency will be top on their list. Apparently the mayor wants the concept to be “shovel ready” for whenever the economy improves.

If the council is “shovel-ready” with an RDA, I dare say there’s a host of Martinez residents who are “Pitchfork-ready” in response. A no-retreat, retreat I guess.


Beaver friend and former city council contender Tim Platt had this letter in the Martinez News Gazette last week. I thought it was worth reprinting here with his permission:

February 11, 2009

Dear Editor,

 

The Gazette’s recent State of the City article highlighted fiscal achievements that have contributed to the relative soundness of our current financial situation.  However, one of our most significant achievements was not mentioned—avoiding the potentially dire financial consequences that could have come from establishing a Martinez Redevelopment Agency.

 

The ability of a Redevelopment Agency to repay its bonds and loans is based directly on increasing property values.  The increase in property tax income in the Redevelopment Agency area is the primary source of income to the Redevelopment Agency.  Yet prices for housing, commercial buildings and land plummeted over the last two years and are predicted to continue to do so into the foreseeable future.  That significantly reduces the amount of property tax income going to Redevelopment Agencies.  Their ability to pay off the bonds they have issued becomes more difficult.  The same is true of the loans many Redevelopment Agencies have taken from their host city governments.

 

In addition, the State has belatedly realized that the property tax moneys diverted by Redevelopment Agencies would be better spent on the local agencies and districts they were diverted from (schools and community colleges,  East Bay Regional Parks, BART, fire departments, cities with Redevelopment Agencies in them, county government, public hospitals, etc.).  Our State government recently enacted legislation taking $350 million of those diverted dollars back from the Redevelopment Agencies to support local schools (and more may be taken back in the future).

 

Added together, the financial pressure on Redevelopment Agencies to be able to repay their bonds and loans is increasing.  We are lucky to have dodged that bullet in Martinez .

 

I applaud the sound thinking of our Council, the City and numerous local citizens who kept us out of this potential morass.

 

Working together I believe we can continue to make wise decisions to solve our City’s problems without jeopardizing our future.

 

Sincerely,

Tim Platt


Thanks Tim. If our beaver fans would like to know more about why this particular bullet is worth dodging, here are some places to start looking…

 

Redevelopment: the unknown government

Redevelopment Abuses

California Alliance to Protect Property Rights

 

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