Benicia in national news regarding Kamala Harris’ role in opposing Valero crude by rail

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Opponents of Valero’s oil train proposal gathered in City Hall on the night of Benicia’s historic vote to STOP crude by rail. September 20, 2016. Photo by Emily Jovais, https://safebenicia.org/

[Note from BenIndy contributor Roger Straw: I was contacted by award-winning E&E Politico reporter Sean Reilly on August 12. Sean wanted to know about the two letters sent by then CA Attorney General Kamala Harris during Benicia’s long and controversial consideration of Valero Benicia Refinery’s “Crude by Rail” proposal. Sean’s excellent article appears below. Note that the Benicia Independent was deeply involved and some say instrumental in helping to defeat the refinery’s (and the rail industry’s) dangerous plan to run mile-long trains loaded with heavy and potentially explosive tar-sands crude oil over the mountains and into our small town. Local activists, commission members and electeds were at the heart of the opposition, but we couldn’t have stopped the CBR proposal without a LOT of help from environmental organizations, activists, staff and electeds from other cities near and far, and experts and attorneys in many fields — including the two letters from our then-Attorney General, Kamala Harris. For more, see our Crude By Rail PERMANANT ARCHIVE.  And please show your appreciation for E&E News / Politico by subscribing here.  – Roger Straw (Oh, and P.S. – go Kamala!!]

[sta_anchor id=”below” /]How Harris stood up against an oil giant as Calif.’s top lawyer

Then-California Attorney General Kamala Harris speaks to California Democrats on May 16, 2015, in Anaheim. Damian Dovarganes/AP

E&E News, by POLITICO, By Sean Reilly | 08/16/2024

Her stance on a pivotal crude-by-rail decision, considered a precedent-setting move, is seen as emblematic of her environmental priorities.

Kamala Harris skewered both a refinery’s plan to use trains to move potentially huge amounts of oil to a San Francisco Bay Area refinery and local oversight of the project when she served as California’s attorney general.

Although the episode did not draw the national spotlight accompanying Harris’ work on a landmark emissions cheating settlement with automaker Volkswagen and other higher-profile initiatives, some see it as an equally telling example of her environmental priorities as the state’s top lawyer.

Harris “didn’t have to get involved,” Craig Segall, a lawyer for the California Air Resources Board at the time who is now vice president of Evergreen Action, a climate policy group, said in a phone interview and ensuing text exchange.

That she did, Segall said, meshed with a focus on community health and getting ahead of emerging problems. The oil industry was also advancing “truly radical legal arguments,” he added, that would have made it hard for communities to address crude by rail in the future.

Under the plan unveiled by Valero Energy more than a decade ago, Union Pacific trains would have unloaded up to 70,000 barrels of crude each day at a refinery in Benicia, a waterfront city on the Bay Area’s northern shore.

After an impassioned 3 ½ year battle that played out largely at the local level, the project went down to defeat in 2016.

At the outset, however, that outcome was not preordained in a community where Valero wields considerable economic heft.

Shadowing the fracas was the 2013 crude-by-rail inferno that killed 47 people in Canada. In a scathing critique issued the next year, Harris’ office faulted the city’s draft environmental review for “severely” underestimating the risk of an accident.

Among other purported lapses, the review also relied on “improper standards of significance, unenforceable mitigation measures, and inadequate analyses” and failed to assess the possible air pollution impacts of changes to the refinery’s crude oil mix, a Harris deputy wrote in the 15-page broadside.

“I would say it was very important, if not crucial, largely because of the timing,” Benicia Mayor Steve Young said of the letter in a recent interview. Young, a member of Benicia’s planning commission at the time, evolved into a fierce critic of Valero’s plans. He later won election to the City Council before becoming mayor.

Up to that point, Young said, the controversy had been framed as a regional issue revolving around residents’ health and safety worries. “But when the AG’s office stepped in, it was seen as a disinterested third party that had an expert opinion.”

The city eventually issued a revised version of the environmental review that addressed many of the attorney general’s objections; the planning commission ultimately voted to reject Valero’s permit application.

Harris’ intervention, which was closely covered by local news outlets, is warmly remembered by other Bay Area critics of the project. “Her support for a safe and healthy world was incredibly important,” Benicia blogger Roger Straw wrote in a 2020 post urging a vote for Harris when she was seeking the vice presidency as a running mate to Joe Biden.

Harris served as California attorney general from 2011 to 2017 before joining the U.S. Senate and then becoming part of the Biden administration. She is now the Democratic nominee in this year’s presidential race against former President Donald Trump, a Republican.

The Union Pacific trains that were to have brought oil to the Benicia refinery would have rumbled through downtown Sacramento, the California state capital where the attorney general’s office and other state agencies are headquartered.

To what extent, if at all, that motivated Harris’ involvement is unclear. Her campaign did not reply to emails seeking her rationale for weighing in on the Valero project. The deputy who signed the letter now works for the California Environmental Protection Agency, which declined to allow an interview with him and instead referred questions to the attorney general’s office.

There, a spokesperson said the agency often issues feedback letters in the course of monitoring projects for compliance with the state’s Environmental Quality Act but otherwise had no comment on its role in the Benicia project.

A representative of Texas-based Valero did not respond to phone and email messages. Throughout a prolonged campaign to persuade Benicia city officials to issue the needed approvals, the company consistently maintained that the endeavor was safe, records show.

Its decades-old Benicia plant is one of several refineries in the Bay Area, with a workforce totaling more than 400 employees and the ability to turn 170,000 barrels of crude each day into products like gasoline, jet fuel and asphalt. It is the city’s largest private employer, Young said, and also accounts for a large chunk of the local tax base.

The company went public with its crude-by-rail plans in early 2013, portraying them as crucial to maintaining the refinery’s competitiveness by allowing it to substitute North American oil for foreign crude delivered by ship, according to an article at the time in the San Antonio Express-News.

The project was part of a surge in energy industry zeal for train transport, as oil production took off in areas like North Dakota’s Bakken Shale formation. In part because of its concentration of refineries, California stood to be disproportionately affected.

Public opposition

Just months later, however, came the disaster at Lac-Mégantic, Quebec, when a short-line train carrying Bakken crude derailed and exploded. For foes of the Benicia project, the tragedy was “critical” to mobilizing public opposition, Andrés Soto, an activist at the time, said in an interview.

Initially, however, the city’s response to Valero’s proposal was positive. While the project would at least temporarily lead to more air pollution and other environmental effects, they could all be “mitigated,” a May 2013 staff study found. The project had the backing of labor advocates and some residents, public hearing transcripts show.

But opponents successfully pressed for the broader review released in draft form in mid-2014. It offered a more detailed look at the potential effects but again found that fixes were possible.

While “significant and unavoidable impacts to air quality” loomed, for example, there were ways to address them, the draft found.

The local dispute was unfolding against a much bigger backdrop. From 2012 to 2013, the volume of rail-carried oil shipments into California had soared roughly 500 percent from 1 million barrels to 6.3 million barrels and was set to grow further, a state panel found in a report that argued for across-the-board action by government and business.

Railroads were pushing back. In a lawsuit, Union Pacific and other industry challengers sought to strike down a recently enacted California rail safety law, arguing that federal law preempted “this entire regime.”

The suit was eventually thrown out, but Harris’ office weighed in again after Valero appealed the planning commission’s decision to the Benicia City Council and took the preemption issue to the Surface Transportation Board, or STB, a federal agency that helps regulate freight rail transportation.

While the company contended that federal law barred Benicia from considering “rail-related impacts,” Harris’ office replied in April 2016 that the city nonetheless had permitting authority over Valero’s plans for building tank car unloading racks and other facilities, the letter said.

Valero “is not a ‘rail carrier’ constructing a project subject to SIB’s exclusive jurisdiction,” the response said. ”It is an oil company engaged in a project entirely removed from STB’s regulation.”

In an order issued five months later, the Surface Transportation Board reached a similar conclusion, writing that the record “does not demonstrate” that Valero is a rail carrier. Soon after, in a meeting preserved on video, the City Council voted 5-0 to deny the permit.

Then-Mayor Elizabeth Patterson called the decision a precedent-setting move for the state. The audience, seemingly packed with Valero critics, cheered.


SEAN REILLY, E&E News by Politico

Sean Reilly
Sean Reilly, Reporter for E&E News by POLITICO, Covers Air Pollution, EPA

Sean writes about air quality policy and regulations. His work has been honored by the National Press Club and Washington Press Club Foundation, among others; he also contributed a chapter to “Turning Carolina Red,” an eBook published by E&E in 2014. He previously reported for the Federal Times and newspapers in Alabama. He has a bachelor’s degree in political science from Carleton College and a master’s degree in the same subject from Duke University.

Meet with the California Air Resources Board to Incorporate Environmental Justice into Future Research Priorities

Clicking this image will redirect you to CARB’s information page about these events.

Desplázate hacia abajo para leer en español / Scroll down to read in Spanish

Stephen Golub: Public Service in Troubled Times

[BenIndy: This post was first published in the Benicia Herald (to subscribe to the Herald, scroll to the end to find instructions). You can find more from Steve not only on the BenIndy but also at A Promised Land: America as a Developing Country, where he blogs about domestic and international politics and policy, including lessons that the United States can learn from other nations. If interested, you may sign up for future posts by subscribing to the blog.]

Benicia resident and author Stephen Golub, A Promised Land

By Stephen Golub, originally published in the Benicia Herald, August 11, 2024

Though the presidential campaign is already reaching full steam, things will get even hotter once we hit Labor Day and the attacks, counterattacks, hard truths, big lies, TV ads, online snipes and everything else really kick in.

Which brings me to praising Benicia’s public servants.

It’s never been easy to be an elected, appointed or contracted city official. I’m no expert, but decades ago I worked in the New York City Council President’s office and then on an anti-poverty program in one of the Big Apple’s sprawling bureaucracies. In both jobs, the work was exciting, challenging, difficult and stressful.

Benicia is about as far from New York City as you can get, in terms of being a far more pleasant place to live and work (though I’ll endlessly praise to high heaven NYC pizza and delis, and still get a tremendous charge out of visiting there). But in terms of American society and government, we live in far more distressing times in 2024 than we did when I started my government work way back when, particularly as the current presidential race inevitably turns ugly. And that comes on top of the everyday hassles and even harshness that government personnel can experience.

So please, let’s bear in mind that especially for Benicia’s elected officials governing can sometimes be a thankless task for which the main compensation is certainly not financial, relative to the tremendous time and effort they put in. That compensation comprises a small monthly stipend, plus health care coverage of which some can’t or won’t avail.

The true compensation instead, I would think, is the  satisfaction of doing some good in some ways. A price they pay involves significant amounts of time away from family and friends, for endless meetings and other commitments.

They also experience frequent requests, demands, carping and even condemnation from folks who may mean well but don’t walk in the Mayor’s or City Councilmembers’ shoes. True, such matters come with the territory. But when they become all too frequent they can be burdensome. (I got a brief taste of this a while ago when I was apparently mistaken for Mayor Steve Young by a fellow I was introduced to at an apolitical social gathering. The guy’s first words to me were along the lines of, “I want to talk to you about lights on the tennis courts.”)

This is by no means an argument against criticism of our elected officials or city staff. The freedom and ability to do so is part of what effective democracy is all about.

Nor am I saying that all officials everywhere should be held in high esteem. We can look to other localities and the national scene to find folks who’ve violated the public trust, and perhaps to Benicia’s earlier years before its modern era.

And I’m certainly not suggesting that our city officials are flawless saints. They’re human, just like you and me.

But one of the many things that keeps Benicia special is that by and large (and I know there have been exceptions to this rule) these officials and the rest of us keep things civil and functional.

This civility is especially important as the national discourse turns nasty. The next three months will be rough. Unfortunately, post-election disputes may be even rougher. I’ll continue to voice my own strong thoughts and feelings about what may well transpire in the presidential campaign.

But this column, today, fundamentally focuses on Benicia. I’m thankful that the city is led by Steve Young, one of the most even-keeled individuals I’ve ever met. We may well need his calm leadership here during the troubled times ahead nationally.

I’m also thankful for our current Council as a whole for its service, as praised by retiring Councilmember Tom Campbell.

And for folks such as former Mayor Elizabeth Patterson and former Councilmember Lionel Largaespada, spanning much of Benicia’s political spectrum, with whom I may disagree on some matters but for whom I have considerable respect for their own service.

And for community leader Christina Gilpin-Hayes, who recently tossed her hat into the City Council electoral ring for November, as well as for others for similarly seeking office here this year.

And for the city staff who keep Benicia running and thriving.

In some ways, we’re in the calm before the national electoral storm right now. Let’s be grateful for what we have as our local campaigns unfold, and for the chance to make Benicia even better.


[The Benicia Herald  does not have an online edition. Supporting local journalism is crucial for ensuring communities are informed and facilitates transparency and accountability during important local events and initiatives. You can subscribe to the Herald by email at beniciacirculation@gmail.com or by phone at 707-745-6838.

California Forever going dark? …after spending $7 million in April-June

Latest campaign finance report includes details on massive income & spending…

Big bucks aren’t enough to win the day…

By Roger Straw, The Benicia Independent, August 13, 2024

Solano County recently posted California Forever’s 2nd Quarter campaign finance report, Form 460.  It’s 68 pages long, and provides a detailed look inside the billionaire funding and the massive effort to sell the public on the billionaires’ failed ballot initiative.

Contributions

The report details 11 self-funding contributions April-June totaling $5,935,000. In addition, they made non-monetary contributions (staff time, office space & expenses, legal fees and event sponsorships) totaling $1,473,302. Total contributions for the three months – all self-funded – were $7,408,302. This was on top of the $1,850,109 California Forever gave itself in the 1st Quarter. Yes, that’s a total self-funding of $9,258,411 through the first half of 2024!

Expenditures

California Forever spent most of that money. Expenditures April-June totaled $7,078,688 (plus another $319,455 in as yet unpaid bills). This on top of its 1st Quarter expenses of $2,008,873, a total outlay for the first 6 months of this year: $9,087,561.

The details revealed on the 60 pages of individual expenditures are mind-blowing. For instance, just take a look at the first page of expenditures, p. 8:

  • Acosta Consulting, Sacramento, for literature: $112,500.20
  • Angie Wei Consulting, Sacramento, for campaign consulting, 2 payments, both for $20,000
  • Grindstone Field Solutions, Sacramento, for campaign workers’ salaries, $140,135.42

That is only the first of 60 pages, with additional payments for each of the above categories.

Another example: see pp. 56-64 for massive amounts spent on “radio airtime and production costs”:

  • KCBS-AM San Francisco: payments of  $9,452, $13,636 and $17,106, total around $40K. (and similar payments to many other AM and FM stations in the Bay Area, Sacramento and one in Burbank)
  • Pandora Radio: 2 payments of $13,440. Spotify: 2 payments of $13,440 and another of $16,800. Sirius XM: $16,800.
  • And 2 whopping payments, $438,537 and $389,662.36 paid to DMA Nielsen of Queensbury NY for “t.v. or cable airtime and production costs.”
Transparency going forward?

QUESTION: Now that the initiative is no longer on the ballot, will California Forever be required by State and/or County law to file another 460 at the next deadline (probably in September sometime)?

QUESTION: California Forever now says they will “apply for a General Plan and Zoning Amendment and proceed with the normal County process for the negotiation and execution of a development agreement.” [County news release 22 Jul 2024]  >>What County department will be overseeing this kind of process? I assume that project documents will be posted on the County website, but it’s not clear to me where. Interested parties will want to be monitoring this process closely.

I’ll be sure to update with answers on the BenIndy if/when I get answers.

Roger Straw, Benicia Independent contributor


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