All posts by Roger Straw

Editor, owner, publisher of The Benicia Independent

Benicia’s Terry Scott: The argument for supporting Benicia’s Parks, Lighting and Landscaping District

Investing in our Community’s future

From his email with permission, by Terry Scott, Benicia City Councilmember, Aug 17, 2025
[Editor: My apologies for tardiness of posting this important piece.]

Benicia City Councilmember Terry Scott.

Ballots are out or coming soon to your mailbox. Hopefully you’ve read the city’s material defining it. Plus, the social media platforms are certainly a buzz with commentary.
Let me start out by saying we can’t change the past. We can try and fix today, but it is this City Council’s responsibility to make the hard decisions that shape the City’s long-term future.

So let’s not make the mistakes that have gotten us to this moment in time. Let’s be willing to change how we operate as a government and be brave and bold.

That’s why supporting our Parks, Lighting and Landscape District Initiative is an investment our community’s future.

Here’s why:

When families and individuals choose to call Benicia home, they come with clear expectations: excellent schools, high quality of life, well-maintained parks, and safe neighborhoods.

PLLAD initiative represents a crucial step forward in meeting these expectations and preserving what makes Benicia so special.

One of the most compelling aspects of this initiative is its financial structure. Funds raised through this district would be deposited into a dedicated special independently audited account specifically earmarked for parks maintenance and identified improvements.

This means our general fund—which supports critical services like public safety, water services, and fire protection—remains untouched and fully dedicated to these essential operations.

This noted separation of funding sources ensures that improving our parks doesn’t come at the expense of the vital services that keep our community safe and functioning.

Yes, I understand the frustration about a lack of sunset. But realistically, things wear out. Sprinklers break. Landscaping is forever.

Does anyone believe that parks and recreational spaces are luxuries?

I’d argue they’re fundamental components of a thriving community. They provide: Safe, green spaces for families to gather, children to play, and neighbors to connect, fostering the strong community bonds that make Benicia special.

As our community’s ages ( both older and younger families) we need to place more emphasis on Health and wellness opportunities through walking trails, sports facilities, and outdoor recreation areas that encourage active lifestyles for residents of all ages.

Speaking to value received for the assessment , I would argue that property values are enhanced as well-maintained parks and landscaping contribute significantly to neighborhood appeal and home values.

New residents don’t just move to Benicia for our excellent schools—they choose our community because of the complete package we offer. When parks fall into disrepair or lighting becomes inadequate, we risk losing the very qualities that attract quality families and responsible community members to our area.

I submit that this PLLAD represents fiscally responsible governance. Rather than competing with essential services for limited general fund dollars, we’re creating a sustainable funding mechanism specifically designed to address our community’s recreational and aesthetic needs.

As you have read in the ballot package, we currently have 5 of our 28 parks covered by the current lighting and landscape district assessment. For you, this represents a $71 dollar a year increase in your property tax to $208 or $5.92 per month more.

For most property owners not in the lighting districts who use the parks and trails, who benefit from the enhanced property values, who have children in athletics, who feel safe and welcomed by our commitment to maintain the quality of life your property tax assessment will increase to $208 or $17.33 per month.

The Parks, Lighting, and Landscape District initiative offers us a path forward that protects our essential services while enhancing the community amenities that make Benicia a place people are proud to call home. It’s a balanced, responsible approach that deserves your support.

Terry Scott
Benicia City Councilmember

Benician Stephen Golub: Funeral for a Friendship? Trump Spits at Polite, Pleasant, Insulted Canada.

And that’s not all we’re sorry about…

[Editor: Friend and colleague Stephen Golub wrote this awhile back (7/26/25) and I missed it. I’m posting now because it’s still timely, but also becuase I have a personal connection to Canada. My big sister is a longtime Canadian citizen and resides on Prince Edward Island. Our US president’s abysmal treatment of our northern neighbor is so incredibly shameful. – R.S.]

‘Canadians are the among the nicest and most polite people on the planet. Americans are blessed to have them as neighbors.’

 Stephen Golub, A Promised Land – America as a Developing Country
Strolling several years ago in Vancouver, Canada, I inadvertently crossed the street in front of a car after my light turned red but before the vehicle began moving. If you do this in San Francisco, the driver might toot and shout at you. In my native New York, you’d hear a loud honk and an even louder expletive.

The Vancouver motorist instead said, “Excuse me, did you know that you’re crossing against the light?”

Canadians are the among the nicest and most polite people on the planet. Americans are blessed to have them as neighbors.

Yet Donald Trump has been spitting in these wonderful folks’ faces, on everything from fentanyl to immigration to tariffs to statehood. His barbs portend long-term damage to what once seemed our two nations’ unbreakable goodwill. This potential funeral for a friendship says much about America’s shrinking place in the world.

The insults reach back to Trump’s first term, when he called Canada’s then-Prime Minister Justin Trudeau “very dishonest and weak,”  as well as “two-faced.”

Who in the world says that to a steadfast friend? To a country whose long border with ours has been peaceful for well over a century? To a nation that helps protect ours through its partnership in the North American Aerospace Defense Command? To a people whose armed forces sent over 40,000 troops to fight in our Afghanistan war, with 158 dying and thousands more injured (In contrast, Trump reportedly dodged the Vietnam-era draft due to a dodgy medical deferment facilitated by a doctor who was his father’s tenant.).

Typhoon Trump has proven even more catastrophic to the Canada relationship today, in his second term. Thankfully, he and Canada recently stepped back from the trade war brink, eliminating tariffs on most products – with certain major exceptions.

Nonetheless, could you blame Canadians for still distrusting Trump, given that he justified large tariffs back in January based on (bogus) claims of allegedly huge fentanyl imports and illegal immigration from north of the border:

“They’ve [Canada and Mexico] allowed, both of them, Canada very much so, they’ve allowed millions and millions of people to come into our country that shouldn’t be here. They could’ve stopped them and they didn’t. And they’ve killed 300,000 people last year, my opinion, have been destroyed by drugs, by fentanyl. The fentanyl coming through Canada is massive. The fentanyl coming through Mexico is massive.”

So how many tons of fentanyl and millions of people have actually entered America illegally from Canada?

Seizures and arrests provide some sense of scale: From October 2023 through September 2024, 43 pounds (not tons) of fentanyl were seized at the Canadian border, in contrast with over 10 tons from Mexico. During that same period, fewer than 28,000 people were apprehended entering illegally from Canada, compared with over 1.5 million down south.

Putting aside the complex calculation of America’s relationship with our neighbor and friend Mexico, those figures clearly don’t justify such Trumpian lies, hostility and trade barriers against Canada.

Adding national insult to economic injury, Trump has notoriously declared that this proud country should be our 51st state:

“We’re taking care of their military. We’re taking care of every aspect of their lives… We don’t need anything from Canada. And I say the only way this thing really works is for Canada to become a state.”

During a visit to Canada’s Nova Scotia province this summer, I got a glimpse of the damage he’s quickly done to our two nations’ bonds. The first hint was alcoholic – by which I mean the disappearance of U.S. beer, wine and spirits from many restaurant menus and liquor stores. Another sign was the plethora of Canada’s national maple leaf flags flying everywhere – a rejection of Trump’s 51st state slap and other insults.

As usual, Canadians were unfailingly friendly and polite during my visit, blaming neither my friends nor me for Trump’s affronts. But their perspective on our country has changed – as  have their visits to America, down by 22 to 40 percent since last year, depending on which category of travel we count.

The next president might restore some foreign faith in the United States if it we demonstrate renewed faith in friendship and alliances. But after being repeatedly burned, could we blame Canadians for remaining wary?

And it’s by no means just Canada. On a visit to Australia earlier this year, I heard rage about Trump’s tariffs; worry about American unreliability as China antagonizes our ally Down Under; and sympathy to the point that several Aussies said they feel sorry for us. Trump’s threats to take over Denmark’s territory, Greenland, is sparking similar ire by our loyal European partner (which, by the way, lost 52 soldiers fighting alongside U.S. troops in Afghanistan and Iraq).

With hundreds of thousands slaughtered by Russia’s invasion and bombardments, Ukraine endures Trump’s fickle promises of aid and his outrageous, dishonest Oval Office attack last February on President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Poland, Finland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia and other European nations wonder if they’re next in line for American abandonment and Russian aggression.

True, Trump very recently and surprisingly voiced renewed support for Ukraine. But Trump could quickly do an about-face (as in the past) if Vladimir Putin simply offers him a soothing gesture or if his advisors whisper pro-Putin advice in his ear.

Canada and other countries saw first-term Trump as maybe an anomaly, something America could rebound from. His far more adversarial second term actions suggest that our allies must plan for a future in which they can no longer count on us. All the while, he cozies up to corrupt autocrats like Russia’s Putin and Hungary’s Orban.

If I could make just one wish for Trump supporters who are friends and neighbors, as well as the many millions of other MAGA backers, it would be that they talk to Canadians about why so many are flying their maple leaf flags these days. In their polite way, our northern neighbors might help Americans grasp how Trump’s words and actions hurt both them and us.

Even examining the matter in a cold-hearted manner, the biggest winner in such a dialogue would be the United States. By alienating so many allies, we toss aside the “soft power” flowing from our influence, example and friendship. That power has protected, strengthened and enriched us for decades. We’d accordingly benefit if more Americans could see our nation through the eyes of foreigners.

Finally, just maybe, such chats might persuade some Americans of one more vital fact: What’s at stake in standing by our allies and shared values is not just friendship – it’s freedom, both here and abroad.


Benicia resident and author Stephen Golub, A Promised Land

Stephen Golub writes about democracy and politics, both in America and abroad, at A Promised Land: America as a Developing Country.

…and… here’s more Golub on the Benicia Independent

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NO KINGS DAY Saturday, October 18 – All over the Bay

Mark your calendar,
Sat Oct 18 in Benicia, Vallejo and more…
(Scroll down for locations & times…)

In America, we don’t put up with would-be kings.

Our peaceful movement is only getting bigger and stronger. “NO KINGS” is more than just a slogan—it’s the foundation our nation was built upon. Born in the streets, carried by millions in chants and on posters, it echoes from city blocks to rural town squares, uniting people across this country to fight dictatorship together.

The president thinks his rule is absolute. But in America, we don’t have kings, and we won’t back down against chaos, corruption, and cruelty. Grow our movement and join us.

A core principle behind all No Kings events is a commitment to nonviolent action. We expect all participants to seek to de-escalate any potential confrontation with those who disagree with our values and to act lawfully at these events. Weapons of any kind, including those legally permitted, should not be brought to events.

>> IN BENICIA: October 18th NO KINGS DAY! 1-2pm at the Gazebo (map: First and Military Streets). Bring your signs, your neighbors, friends, and family, and your goodwill. We’ll “parade” this block for the hour on the sidewalk.

>> IN VALLEJO: Vallejo-Benicia INDIVISIBLE is sponsoring a NO KINGS rally on Saturday, October 18, 10AM – 12PM, in Unity Plaza / JFK Library, 505 Santa Clara St. The Vallejo event is listed on the Vallejo-Benicia Indivisible Facebook page (including a map).

>> ALL OVER THE BAY AREA: Here’s a LIST of NO KINGS Oct 18 events in the Bay Area, starting with Benicia – scroll down and click on an event for more details. Or… go to the big nokings.org or mobilize.us map and zoom in. Then click on a city for detailed info.


MORE… (nokings.org)

About No Kings

In June, we did what many claimed was impossible: peacefully mobilized millions of people to take to the streets and declare with one voice: America has No Kings. And it mattered. The world saw the power of the people. President Trump’s birthday parade was drowned out by protests in every state and across the globe. His attempt to turn June 14 into a coronation collapsed, and the story became the strength of a movement rising against his authoritarian power grabs.

Now, President Trump has doubled down. His administration is sending masked agents into our streets, terrorizing our communities. They are targeting immigrant families, profiling, arresting and detaining people without warrants. Threatening to overtake elections. Gutting healthcare, environmental protections, and education when families need them most. Rigging maps to silence voters. Ignoring mass shootings at our schools and in our communities. Driving up the cost of living while handing out massive giveaways to billionaire allies, as families struggle.

The president thinks his rule is absolute. But in America, we don’t have kings and we won’t back down against chaos, corruption, and cruelty.

Our peaceful movement is only getting bigger and bigger. “NO KINGS” is more than just a slogan; it is the foundation our nation was built upon. Born in the streets, shouted by millions, carried on posters and chants, it echoes from city blocks to rural town squares, uniting people across this country to fight dictatorship together.

Because this country does not belong to kings, dictators, or tyrants. It belongs to We the People – the people who care, who show up, and the ones who fight for dignity, a life we can afford, and real opportunity. No Thrones. No Crowns. No Kings.


MEMORIES: BENICIA’S JUNE 2025 NO KINGS RALLY:

 

The Last American President — a Broken Man, a Corrupt Party, and a World on the Brink

Now Available: Thom Hartmann’s latest book

My new book hit the stores today; I promise you’ll find it interesting and useful…

Thom Hartmann, Sep 23, 2025

If you care about the future of our country, you need to read this book.

The Last American President is not just another political analysis: it’s a wake-up call. I wrote this book because we’re at the most critical time for democracy in America since the Civil War. Whether our nation survives as a functioning republic depends on what we do next.

Donald Trump is not an accident of history. He was shaped into the perfect vessel for authoritarianism, and the forces that empowered him are still at work today. In this book I lay out how we got here and what we must do to stop America from sliding into permanent strongman rule.

Here’s what you’ll discover inside:

  • Trump’s authoritarian psychology: From his father Fred’s cruelty to Roy Cohn’s ruthless training, Trump learned that kindness is weakness and power means never apologizing. His entire presidency was the predictable expression of that lifelong pattern.
  • The billionaire machine behind him: Trump didn’t hijack the GOP; he delivered on decades of work by billionaires and corporate interests who turned the party into a tool for plutocracy. His 2017 tax cuts were a $1.9 trillion payoff, repeated again this year.
  • America’s empathy deficit: Democracy depends on compassion, but Trump embodies cruelty, mocking the disabled, separating families, and stripping healthcare without remorse. Without empathy, democratic government collapses.
  • A foreign policy of surrender: From siding with Putin over U.S. intelligence to praising dictators like Orbán and Kim Jong Un, Trump weakened our alliances and emboldened autocrats worldwide.
  • A roadmap for survival: Reform broken systems, Resist authoritarianism through unity and nonviolence, and Remember our history so the crimes of the past remain living lessons.

This isn’t just about Trump. It’s about whether We, the People, will be remembered as the generation that let democracy die or as the one that rose up to save it.

So buy this book. Read it. Share it. Because the future of American democracy is on the line, and together we can make sure Donald Trump is not the last American president.


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