Late today, Benicia City Clerk Lisa Wolfe posted two more campaign finance reports previously submitted by the Valero PAC. These reports shed light on the expenditure of $37,000 seemingly missing from earlier reports.
In addition to the $8,698 spent for their misleading campaign mailers (reported here earlier today), these reports also disclose expenditures of $17,500 for each of their chosen candidates for telephone polling.
Benicia residents reported receiving unsolicited telephone polling calls near the end of August. Now we know who was paying the big bucks to find out what Benicians think, and just so to fashion their political messages in a bought election.
The two new campaign finance reports also show $2,000 paid to Trusted Messenger Marketing of Los Alamos for “Consulting.” This is the same firm the PAC paid to produce and mail their misleading mailer.
The new total of known spending by the PAC for Largaespada and Strawbridge as of today is $45,698.61.
The PAC will be soon be required to file a report disclosing both expenditures AND contributions through 10/30/22. This form will be due in the Benicia City Clerk office on 11/2/22.
It will be most interesting to get further information on Valero’s effort to buy two City Council seats again in 2022.
Note that others in Benicia are keeping an eye on Valero’s meddling in our elections – check out Benicians For Clean Elections at https://www.beniciansforcleanelections.org/
See also my page of support for candidate Kari Birdseye here on the BenIndy.
Stay tuned. I’ll let you know if/when we learn more.
Now, Benicia doesn’t get a ton of media attention…
KQED News, by Alan Montecillo and Maria Esquinca, Oct 19, 2022
The politics of fossil fuels in Benicia’s City Council race
Benicia is home to an oil refinery operated by Valero, which employs hundreds of people and contributes tax revenue totaling an estimated 20% of the city’s general budget.
The company has also played a very active role in local elections. Valero’s political action committee spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in 2018 and 2020.
Now, with this year’s city council race underway — and residents frustrated over recent controversies at the refinery — Valero’s role in Benicia looms large once again.
The five candidates seethed over revelations of undisclosed emissions and fretted about the oil giant’s influence in the city’s politics.
The Vallejo Sun, by Scott Morris, October 14, 2022
BENICIA – Like its place in the center of Benicia overlooking its downtown, the Valero Benicia Refinery cast a shadow over a forum for Benicia City Council candidates Wednesday night, where the five candidates seethed over revelations of undisclosed emissions and fretted about the oil giant’s influence in the city’s politics.
The candidates took on other issues as well, in particular disagreeing on a proposed sales tax increase and whether to welcome more cannabis retailers to the city.
The prepared questions from the League of Women Voters of Solano County – which hosted the forum – did not address the refinery’s emissions or influence, but it dominated the questions solicited from the audience. A packed audience at the Benicia Senior Center listened intently to the candidates’ responses for nearly two hours.
Valero’s influence has been felt heavily in the last two election cycles in Benicia. In 2018, a Political Action Committee receiving funding from the company spent heavily on ads attacking planning commissioner Kari Birdseye, who had helped block a Valero proposal to ship crude oil by rail.
Birdseye ultimately lost her first council bid to incumbent Christina Strawbridge and Lionel Largaespada, who are both now running for reelection. Strawbridge then ran for mayor two years later, and once again Valero attacked her opponent, then-Councilmember Steve Young. Young ultimately prevailed in that race, 53%-31%.
This year, Valero has dumped $230,000 into its PAC but had not reported any expenditures for November’s election as of early October, leading to anxiety for some candidates over how and when Valero will spend that money. The candidates’ campaigns have a $34,000 cap on spending, but the PAC does not have that restriction.
Retired executive Terry Scott, who is running for the council a second time after narrowly losing in 2020, credited Young with keeping Valero at bay in this year’s election, saying that if Valero tried to buy Benicia’s elections “that the people in this community are going to rise up, they are no longer going to take this becoming a refinery town.”
But despite the lack of Valero spending so far, Strawbridge said that the current campaign is “as bad as 2020.”
“There has been attack after attack,” Strawbridge said, pointing to posts on social media and saying that she has made two ethics complaints about other candidates to the city. “So I just feel like there’s a lot of desire to say we are running clean campaigns. And I’m afraid we aren’t.”
Another change in the dynamic with Valero was revelations earlier this year that Valero had been spewing thousands of tons of excess pollution from a hydrogen vent for decades. The Bay Area Air Quality Management District first became aware of the issue in 2019, but did not alert the city government or residents until this year, when it sought an abatement order against Valero to correct the violations. Penalties for Valero have yet to be determined.
Largaespada pointed out that determining punishment for Valero is not in the city’s jurisdiction, though it will provide input. “Valero like any business and every business in the community is expected to follow laws, whether they come at a local level, the county or the state,” he said. “With respect to punishment of sorts, that is the jurisdiction of the air board.”
Strawbridge said that Valero had “betrayed” the city, but also chided regulators for not alerting the city to the toxic release.
“It’s not only Valero but the Air District,” she said. “They did not report what they have found as far as the emissions, we still don’t know what the impact that’s going to have on our health and we need more information on that.”
Birdseye and Scott both stressed the need for more monitoring, both in the community and in people’s homes, and said that they want financial penalties from Valero to go to the city to help pay for the cost of such monitoring.
“The fine that they are going to impose which hopefully will run into the millions of dollars to tens of millions of dollars, should come back to our community that should then be used for funding that can be used by every single person in this room to get air filtration systems and monitoring systems in your house,” Scott said.
Birdseye said that the community air monitoring currently in place was limited in terms of the emissions that Valero was found to have been releasing, so the city needed to find a way to have more robust air monitoring. “Right now, we rely on citizens’ Purple Air monitoring stations at our school sites and throughout our community,” she said. “And they pick up just the particulate matter, not the toxic gases, not the toxic compounds that are in our air.”
William “Billy” Innes, a retired educator who joined the race late, had a brief answer for how he would address Valero’s emissions that drew a rebuke from the forum moderator for addressing the other candidates. “Am I planning on doing anything about this? Oh, heck yes, I am. I’m planning on voting for Kari Birdseye and Terry Scott,” he said.
The candidates disagreed most sharply on Measure R, a proposed three-quarter-cent sales tax increase that will also be on the ballot in November, with their responses varying from enthusiastic endorsement to staunch opposition. The measure’s language says the estimated $5 million in annual proceeds would go to road repair, though the tax is a general tax and could be spent on any purpose.
Largaespada said that there are “5 million reasons to vote against Measure R” and argued that between a statewide gas tax, franchise fees for trash collection and expected revenue growth in the city, it could already allocate $5 million toward roads. “It’s in the budget right now,” he said. “I’m a reasonable person. If staff had said we’re out of money, then yes on R.”
But Largaespada’s current counterpart on the council, Strawbridge, said that Measure R was necessary to maintain Benicia’s streets. “We must pass Measure R,” she said. “Our roads are pathetic and dangerous. It’s going to be less than a penny on the dollar. This is a small investment for maintaining your property values and keeping kids on bikes safe.”
Birdseye agreed with Strawbridge. “If we want better roads, not only for our home values, but for our businesses, for our industrial parks where trucks are banging around and getting broken axles. If we want safe roads, this is the way to do it right now,” she said.
Scott was more measured in his support. “While no one likes new taxes, I support Measure R,” he said. “It is the only way we will be able to finally address the steep cost of road repair maintenance and specific infrastructure.”
Innes bristled at the argument that Measure R would protect homeowners’ property values, pointing out that the tax would have a disproportionate impact on the city’s poorest residents. “The argument I hear on behalf of Measure R is that it will help maintain property values for homeowners,” he said. “I understand that. But is it right to have those who make the least amount of money, minimum wage, have to sustain homeowners’ property rights?”
The candidates also differed on whether to allow new cannabis dispensaries in the city. The only dispensary in the city, STIIIZY, opened a year ago and Young recently said in a Facebook post that it has become the second largest tax producer in the city. But in 2020, a ballot measure found that a majority of Benicia voters did not want more cannabis dispensaries by a vote of 47-53%.
Strawbridge and Largaespada were apprehensive about allowing more dispensaries. Strawbridge said that the city needed more time to understand the impacts of the current dispensary. “We’re hearing a lot of numbers being passed out,” she said. “So far the council has not gotten nor received any information about what the retail cannabis is developing as far as financial support. So I have concerns, because we have been told through our finance director that it’s lower than what they expected.”
Scott said that he would also like to see more information, but touted the tax benefits and said that the current dispensary has not caused any law enforcement issues. Birdseye said that industrial cannabis production has been going well in the city and she would support more retail. Innes said that he thought cannabis businesses were safer to have downtown than bars.
…we can make a constructive change this November by replacing both with Terry Scott and Kari Birdseye.
By Craig Snider, October 9, 2022
With the Benicia City Council election in full swing, I’ve read with interest various opinions about the candidates. But two candidates stand out for their anti-public health and antibusiness development stances: Largaespada and Strawbridge. Consider the influence of Valero corporation, with its $250K war chest under the guise of “Working Families for a Better Benicia”. That’s troubling given its chronic air and water pollution problems. In the past, Valero worked to defeat candidates who support better oversight of their polluting operations. Apparently they expect lax treatment by the candidates they support. Otherwise, why would they get involved in our elections?
Remember the whole “Crude by Rail” debacle that plagued our community for years while we fought Valero’s efforts to bring “Bomb Trains” loaded with filthy shale oil into our community; snarling traffic, compounding air pollution and otherwise putting our citizens at risk? Lionel Largaespada was one the few Benicians to support it. So it’s no surprise Valero looks favorably on his candidacy. Largaespada is a Republican whose party works tirelessly to diminish air and water pollution regulations by using industry lobbyists to alter rules in their favor. These lobbyists also work hard to limit the the EPA and other regulators’ ability to do their job of keeping us safe from toxic pollution.
Christina Strawbridge eventually did better on the Crude by Rail project when she did an about face on the issue after a bomb train derailed and caught fire in Oregon in June 2016. Evidently, 12 prior bomb train derailments including the destruction of Lac-Megantic, Quebec and the death of 47 residents were insufficient up to that point. Valero’s Crude by Rail project had reached the breaking point in Benicia and it was clear that any candidates supporting the project would be rejected by voters. Perhaps that’s why she finally came around, but her lack of support before the political winds changed is telling.
Another issue that Lionel and Christina agree on is their opposition to cannabis retail in Benicia. Many of us attended numerous council meetings to achieve a good compromise cannabis ordinance for the city. We were tired of seeing cannabis tax revenue drift off to Vallejo and elsewhere. The original ordinance passed the council and allowed for two cannabis shops at limited locations. In the run up to the 2018 council race I had the opportunity to ask Strawbridge directly, during a public candidate forum, where she stood on the new cannabis ordinance. In front of a packed room at the library, she stated that she supported the ordinance, and if elected, wound not change it. But once elected, she immediately changed her position and opposed the ordinance, voting in May 2019 to ban retail sales altogether. In her words, “Cannabis dispensaries are not a good fit for Benicia”. Christina and Lionel led the anti-cannabis retail effort by proposing so many “no retail cannabis” buffers that it would be nearly impossible to site a cannabis store anywhere in town.
A month later, on June 18, 2019, The council voted 3-2 in favor of allowing one retail cannabis shop, dropping many of the onerous buffers proposed by Strawbridge and Largaespada. In one year, our single cannabis shop has generated more tax revenue for the city than over half the downtown businesses combined! By now you know who the two “no” votes were.
Frankly, I’m tired of the shenanigans. But we can make a constructive change this November by replacing both with Terry Scott and Kari Birdseye. Scott and Birdseye will both put public health and safety above politics while supporting needed business development in Benicia. Both are long-running chairs of Benicia Commissions, skilled in dealing with tough issues and respecting diverse views in our community. Terry’s considerable business background will add a much-needed element to our City Council while Kari’s background in communications and media will improve city communications and public involvement on important issues. They’ll both bring a creative, problem-solving skillset that is often lacking in city government. Please join me in voting for Terry Scott and Kari Birdseye for City Council. You’ll be glad you did!
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