Tag Archives: Valero Benicia Refinery

No Kidding: It’s Vital to Show Up for the City Council’s Final ISO Vote on April 1

BISHO.org

NO KIDDING! …

 Stephen Golub, A Promised Land – America as a Developing Country

By Stephen Golub, Benicia resident and author, “Benicia and Beyond” column in the Benicia Herald, Mar 23, 2025

On Tuesday, April 1, at 6 pm, the Benicia City Council will meet at City Hall (250 East L Street) to discuss and conduct its presumably final, vital vote on the draft Industrial Safety Ordinance (ISO) that will help protect Benicians against potential fires, explosions and toxic emissions connected to the Valero Refinery and other facilities the ordinance will cover.

Because this is the final up-or-down vote on the ISO, it is important  to attend and show your support – preferably in person, but also by Zoom if necessary. For more background on this issue, plus a link to the City site where you can find the meeting agenda and Zoom link, please go to bisho.org, the site of the Benicia Industrial Safety and Health Ordinance citizens’ group.

The ISO, which simply gets Benicia a seat at the table in monitoring covered facilities’ operations, emissions, incidents and accidents, represents well over a year of very hard work by Council Members Kari Birdseye and Terry Scott, as well as Fire Chief Josh Chadwick and other City personnel. Much of their extensive effort has occurred in the face of little cooperation and at times hostile opposition by Valero or its allies, despite these officials’ attempts to constructively engage the Texas oil giant’s representatives.

Valero may yet again try to get people opposed to the ISO to show up and even pack the room (as it did earlier this month at a previous City Council meeting), so your attendance for this vital vote is extremely important.

At that last meeting, a number of local organizations spoke in appreciation of Valero’s financial support for their activities. While that is certainly their right to do so and I appreciate the good things they do, I must say that in my decades of work with and study of hundreds of nonprofits, I’ve never encountered a situation where such group spoke in favor of their financial benefactors at an unrelated public meeting. I hope they realize that a key reason many corporations provide such financial support is specifically to encourage political support when needed.

To be frank, I don’t know the exact time the discussion of the ISO will start. But if you show up by 5:30 pm, you will have a greater chance of getting seats in the Chambers, but there will be overflow space just in case.

Those inclined to speak in favor of the ISO or otherwise voice their concerns about why it is important should certainly  do so. If this meeting unfolds the same way as previous ones, there will be forms at the back of the Council Chambers for registering to speak. But even if you don’t fill out such a form, you’ll have an opportunity to voice your opinions.

This is our last, best chance to establish an ISO that will get Benicia a seat at the table to protect the health and safety of our kids, our seniors and everyone else in our wonderful city. It will enable us to have the same kind of ISO that every other refinery-hosting community in the Bay Area has.

As always, in criticizing Valero I’m by no means doubting the value of its current and former employees as friends and neighbors. They’re wonderful folks. But they’re not the same as the San Antonio-based corporation that has a lousy environmental track record (to the point of even being sued by the very conservative and oil industry-friendly Texas Attorney General) and that calls the shots on its Benicia refinery’s operations.

In other news, with a big hat tip to the invaluable Benicia Independent (an online news, opinion and advocacy resource well worth checking out and subscribing to), here are some other chances to participate in our democracy this week, as well as to help ensure its survival.

April 3 (and planned for every Thursday), 5-6:30 pm: Benicia Vigil for Democracy, City Park (First and Military). A gathering to show support for democracy.

April 5, 11 am – noon: Tesla Take Down Vallejo (Tesla Showroom, 1001 Admiral Callaghan Lane, Vallejo). A peaceful protest against Tesla’s owner, Elon Musk, for his work defunding and undermining US Government programs and institutions ranging from Social Security to the US Agency for International Development.

April 5. Hands off! National Day of (pro-democracy) Action. Demonstrations in various locations, including Sacramento, Berkeley, Pleasant Hill and Walnut Creek.

April 5, 10 am – 6 pm: Fiestas Primavera, City Park (First and Military). A festival celebrating Spring and Latin American culture.

Finally and on a lighter note, in view of Trump’s interest in the U.S. acquiring the semi-autonomous Danish territory of Greenland, there’s a completely facetious site called denmarkification.com that seeks to raise $1 trillion (again, this is just a joke) for Denmark to buy California. Check out the reasons for that wonderful country to acquire our unique state!

Hat tips: Benicia Independent, BF 


Benicia resident and author Stephen Golub, A Promised Land

CHECK OUT STEPHEN GOLUB’S BLOG, A PROMISED LAND

…and here’s more Golub on the Benicia Independent

ALERT! Important to attend Benicia City Council this Tues. April 1

BENICIA ISO TO BE VOTED ON APRIL 1

BISHO.org

By the Benicia Industrial Safety and Health Ordinance
citizens group (BISHO)

Benicia, CA (March 28, 2025) – On Tuesday, April 1, Benicia City Council will meet to discuss and conduct its final vote on the draft Industrial Safety Ordinance (ISO) that will help protect Benicians against potential fires, explosions and toxic emissions connected to the Valero Refinery and other facilities. The meeting will be at Benicia City Hall, 230 East L Street, Benicia, beginning at 6 p.m.

“Because this is the final up-or-down vote on the ISO, we are urging supporters to attend to show support, either in person or by Zoom,” said Terry Mollica, a member of Benicia Industrial Safety and Health Ordinance (BISHO), a citizens group formed in 2023 to advocate for the passage of a strong Benicia Industrial Safety and Health Ordinance.  “This is our last, best chance to establish an ISO that will get Benicia a seat at the table to protect the health and safety of our kids, our seniors and everyone else in our wonderful city.” BISHO has more than 250 supporters, with membership and website visits growing as more refinery incidents occur. Benicia is the only Bay Area refinery town without an ISO.

Benicia City Council voted in January 2023 to begin the process of developing a draft ISO to ultimately be presented to City Council for vote. Since that time, a City Council subcommittee, led by Council Members Terry Scott and Kari Birdseye and Fire Chief Josh Chadwick, have conducted multiple meetings with stakeholders, citizens, experts in industrial emissions, environmental groups, other Bay Area refinery cities and many others to gain feedback as to the best ISO for Benicia.

On March 4, City staff, led by Chief Chadwick, presented the draft ISO to Council and the public. After presentations by many community members, Valero and other industrial organizations to be affected by the ISO, Council voted unanimously to move forward with the draft, calling for a second reading and final vote.

“Our citizens group is thrilled that the ISO is close to becoming a reality,” said Mollica.  “Along with local health and environmental advocates, we have spent years calling for tighter regulations to protect citizens from dangerous industrial emissions that impact air quality and the health of Benicians. We are finally near the finish line and are so grateful that City Council has supported this effort.”

Valero fails with last-minute orchestration of opposition to Benicia ISO

FORMER MAYOR BLASTS VALERO, BUSD, AND BENEFICIARIES OF DONATIONS AND GRANTS

BENICIA STRONG

Elizabeth Patterson, Benicia Mayor 2007 - present
Elizabeth Patterson, Benicia Mayor 2007 – 2020

By Elizabeth Patterson, Benicia Mayor 2007-2020, March 9, 2025

The Benicia Unified School District which represents the stewards of science education and protectors of young people is so worried that Texas based Valero may cut them off from the refinery donations that they testified at the City Council last Tuesday.  The BUSD administrators detailed the “generosity of Valero” implying that the proposed Industrial Safety Ordinance was a threat to the noted Valero donations.

So, did Valero tell BUSD that that is what would happen if the ISO was adopted by the City – cut donations and grants to BUSD – or why else would they testify?  A public member in the council chambers asked for a point of order (and was told that was not in order!) because the subject for public comment was the Industrial Safety Ordinance.  Yet, speaker after speaker including the Benicia Chamber of Commerce testified about donations, grants and the business benefits of Valero.  There was no acknowledgment of air pollution, safety concerns and public health protection.

And what does the ordinance do that is such a threat to Valero’s existence that the recipients of Valero’s generosity spoke for nearly two hours?

The introduced ISO ordinance establishes that the City of Benicia is entitled to any and all reports filed to federal, state and county regulatory entities.  In other words, a seat at the table.  No audit. No requests for more information.  Just provide the city the same information as the regulators.

The ordinance provides for a process of installing air monitors throughout the city in anticipation of the Bay Area Air District dedicating about $60 million of the $82 million from the largest fine assessed for air quality violations in California.  Against Valero.  Here in Benicia.

Other Industrial Safety Ordinance’s elements include a citizen’s oversight commission to provide opportunities for the public to learn about public health, air quality, meaning of actions taken by the regulators and direct access to city staff.  This is everything a community deserves – information, facts, transparency of what the regulators are doing or not doing and sharing among qualified commission members.

The commission is an opportunity to have ex officio members (An ex officio commission member typically holds expertise in a particular area that can be helpful to the commission in carrying out its duties).  The ISO explicitly provides for non-voting ex officio members.  This is modeled after the Benicia Community Sustainability Commission which has designated seats for Valero, Good Neighbor Steering Committee and BUSD.

Industrial Safety Ordinance supporters highlighted “incidents” over two decades to stress the need for involvement in understanding causes and corrective actions. They detailed air monitoring that is currently inadequately detecting toxic air pollution affecting Benicia businesses and residents.

Clearly the most egregious failure of Valero operations is the hydrogen vent at the refinery leaking 2.7 tons of toxics into the air for 15 years and never reported until the Bay Air District discovered the leaks.  That is the reason for the largest fine assessed for air pollution and refinery standards.

During the City Council meeting for the introduction of the final version of the ISO, a spokesperson effectively represented the ISO supporters, thereby saving the City Council from additional hours of testimony.  Because the supporters participated actively at the subcommittee stakeholder table throughout the sixteen months, they had made their interests and concern known throughout that period.

The opponents were given every opportunity to refine and improve the ISO.  The last-minute effort apparently orchestrated by Valero to torpedo the introduced ISO failed.  The City’s process shows that stakeholders should participate and discuss the necessity of ISO based on facts, not fear.

Time will tell if Valero punishes BUSD, youth sports, charitable organizations, the arts and the host of beneficiaries of donations and grants because the City Council unanimously agreed the city has a need for and deserves a seat at the table.  Bravo to the City Council: public health and safety firstBenicia strong.

Elizabeth Patterson, Mayor 2007-2020

KQED NEWS: Benicia Moves Toward Tougher Oversight of Valero Refinery

BISHO Working Group report on the March 4th City Council Meeting

By Julie Small, KQED News, Mar 6, 2025

The Benicia City Council plans to vote on a controversial industrial safety ordinance next month despite fierce opposition from oil giant Valero and other industrial businesses that operate in the city.

Oil executives, employees and residents packed a City Council meeting Tuesday to weigh in on the proposal, which would create a citizens’ oversight commission, boost community air quality monitoring and empower city officials to issue fines for safety and air quality violations.

The new law would replace an existing agreement with Benicia. Valero has threatened to sue the city if it moves ahead with the ordinance.

“It’s a governmental overreach, significant governmental overreach — even in California!” Lauren Bird, general manager and vice president of the Benicia refinery, told the council. He touted the facility’s track record of responding to and containing plant malfunctions.

“ We work hard every day to maintain a safe operation,” Bird said. “Are we perfect? Absolutely not. But we work round the clock, 24/7, 365 days, multiple times a shift, multiple people, dedicated people who work hard, who are well trained, who are capable.”

Dozens of refinery employees and company supporters praised Valero for financial contributions to the community and warned against alienating the town’s largest taxpayer.

“ If you keep poking that golden goose, one day it’s going to fly away,” said Mark Hughes, a former council member. “And that’s not a threat, that’s not any inside information I have about Valero. It’s just the likely outcome of a company that constantly feels that it’s being pushed away.”

But Anthony Burnasconi said residents like him are paying too high a price for Valero’s community investments.

“Valero can build baseball fields and donate to the schools, and that is good,” Burnasconi said. “But Valero is also a multibillion-dollar corporation that can spill poison into our air.”

Last year, the regional air district fined the company $82 million for failing to report excess toxic emissions at the Benicia refinery. Those releases occurred between 2003 and 2019 and were not disclosed to the public until 2022.

“More important than the amount of money involved was the number of years that the problems had been ignored,” said ordinance proponent Terry Mollica, speaking after Tuesday’s vote. “Sixteen years of just sweeping the problem under the rug. That’s what people want the ISO to address.”

“Benicia showed up tonight,” said Councilmember Kari Birdseye, who, along with Councilmember Terry Scott and Benicia Fire Chief Josh Chadwick, refined the industrial safety ordinance over 14 months and held dozens of meetings with stakeholders.

“Whether they were for or against it, all of the testimony was very impactful and meaningful to our final decision, and I am over the moon with the 5–0 vote,” Birdseye said. “It showed that our council takes the health and safety of Benicia very seriously.” 

Supporters of the ordinance held sunflowers while the dozens who came to speak against the ordinance sported Valero’s dark blue uniforms and T-shirts. Parents on both sides brought their children.

Resident Julian Christi put it simply, saying, “I just want to keep my family safe.”

His daughter Charlotte also addressed the council.

“I am 10 years old, and I’ve lived in Benicia all my life — it’s all I know,” she said. “I go to Joe Henderson Elementary, and I would like to say that I am also in favor of the ISO.”