Category Archives: Valero Crude By Rail

BENICIA HERALD: Steve Young running for City Council

Repost from the Benicia Herald
[Editor:  The Benicia Independent endorses Steve Young for City Council. Learn more about Steve’s campaign kickoff party this Friday, April 27, and RSVP here.  – RS]

Planning Commissioner Steve Young will make bid for City Council

Planning Commissioner Steve Young will be running for City Council. Among the biggest issues in his campaign are opposing Valero’s Crude-By-Rail Project, diversifying the city’s economic base, modernizing the water and sewer system, improving the roads and maintaining the parks. (Courtesy photo)
Planning Commissioner Steve Young will be running for City Council. Among the biggest issues in his campaign are opposing Valero’s Crude-By-Rail Project, diversifying the city’s economic base, modernizing the water and sewer system, improving the roads and maintaining the parks. (Courtesy photo)

Steve Young, a current member of Benicia’s Planning Commission, is looking to make the leap to City Council.

Young’s decision to run was partly influenced by the Council’s decision to delay Valero’s Crude-By-Rail Project rather than deny the refinery a permit to have its crude oil delivered by railroad rather than by boat.

The project was announced in 2013 and drew concerns from residents over its environmental impacts. On Feb. 11, the Planning Commission unanimously rejected a permit from Valero, but the company sent a letter of appeal to the city. City Council held hearings in April, and in a 3-2 decision, the hearings were delayed until September as Valero asks the Surface Transportation Board for a decision on the issue of federal pre-emption.

That was the final straw for Young, who had been considering a bid for City Council.

“I had a lot of people approaching me after the Planning Commission meetings, urging me to run,” he said. “I put off making a decision until I knew which way the Council was leaning, and once it became obvious which was the Council was leaning, I felt it was important for me to throw my hat in the ring and give people who were anxious about this project an alternative way to express their opposition.”

Young does not feel the project is necessary and proposes that the refinery just keep its delivery operation as is.

“Tankers, to me, are much safer, much less polluting and doesn’t require massive potential traffic problems that we already see happening down in the Industrial Park,” he said.

Young acknowledges the economic benefits of the project but feels the environmental risks are far greater.

“It increases their profits, but I think the tradeoff is too great to justify,” he said.

Young has a long history with politics, dating back to his tenure as student body president at his high school in Burbank. He received a bachelor’s degree in political science from UC Berkeley in 1973 and a master’s in urban policy and administration from San Francisco State. He served in various government management positions in California and Virginia and was also the community development director for the Sacramento Housing and Redevelopment Agency from 1999 to 2008. After his retirement from that position, he and his wife Marty moved to Costa Rica so that their daughter Cora could attend high school in a different culture. After Cora graduated in 2012, the Youngs moved back to Benicia where Steve was appointed to the Planning Commission that year. He says that being retired gave him a lot more time to research documents for the Crude-By-Rail Project.

“I had the time to dig through all those documents and do three years of research on it,” he said. “When the Planning Commission started on the Final Environmental Impact Report, I was well-prepared and I had three years’ worth of questions to ask.”

Young also proposes examining the Seeno project, which would construct a 528-acre business park development by East Second Street and Lake Herman Road.

“The idea of straight suburban-type development on that property is problematic for a lot of reasons,” he said. “I’d like to give that a close look.”

Young also supports transparency regarding the recent water and sewer rate increases, diversifying the Industrial Park and turning the Majestic Theatre on First Street into a live music venue to generate revenue for the city.

“Overall there is a challenge that the city is a full-service city, but it doesn’t have a lot of different ways to raise revenue,” he said. “They’re trying to serve a lot of functions with a limited source of money, and I think that’s something that’s going to have to be looked at going forward. Either raise your money or limit your cost, because it’s not sustainable the way it’s going.”

More information on Young’s campaign can be found at SteveYoungForCityCouncil.org. There will also be a campaign kickoff event from 5:50 to 9:30 p.m., Saturday, May 27 at Ruszel Woodworks, located at 2980 Bayshore Road. Food, drinks and live music will be provided. If you go, please RSVP to SteveYoungForCityCouncil@gmail.com.

ENDORSEMENT: Steve Young for Benicia City Council

City Council elections – we’ve got a great new candidate!

By Roger Straw, Benicia Independent, May 20, 2016

Benicia Planning Commissioner Steve Young, candidate for Benicia City Council
Benicia Planning Commissioner Steve Young, candidate for Benicia City Council

No, this is not me with a “new look.” This is Planning Commissioner Steve Young. Steve is running for City Council this fall. I’m happy to endorse him, and I wholeheartedly recommend him to you.

Steve was thorough and critical in his study of the massive documents associated with Valero’s crude by rail proposal over the last 3 years. He doggedly questioned City staff and consultants as the Planning Commission made its way to a unanimous decision to turn down Valero’s proposal in February. He continues to monitor Valero’s appeal to the City Council. If the issue has not been settled by November, we need Steve there with a strong no vote.

We are all invited to Steve’s Campaign Kickoff party on Friday, May 27, 5:30-9:30pm at Ruszel Woodworks – 2980 Bayshore Road, Benicia, CA 94510. Come meet the candidate and enjoy the company of others who are supporting Steve. Please RSVP here.
(NOTE CORRECTION: PARTY STARTS AT 5:30PM
, not 4:30pm as previously posted here.)

More info about Steve and his campaign: SteveYoungForCityCouncil.org. Also check out Steve on Facebook.

– Benicia Independent Editor, Roger Straw

#StopOilTrains Week of Action! July 6-12th

Two emails, first from Ethan Buckner and a second from Vanessa Tsimoyianis …

From: California Oil Trains Network
On Behalf Of: Ethan Buckner
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2016 1:03 PM
Subject: Sign on: #StopOilTrains Week of Action!

With recent delays on decisions in SLO and Benicia, now is a more critical time than ever to demonstrate the power of our movement here in California to stop oil trains and keep extreme oil in the ground.

Last year, we had 12 amazing actions that drew over 2,000 people all across the state. Can we make that happen again???

Here’s a challenge: respond now and let everyone else know what you’re planning in your community. The first group to get an action up on the map at stopoiltrains.org gets beer from me!

Excited to make this happen together!

ethan
stand.earth

———–

From: Vanessa Tsimoyianis
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2016 12:57 PM
Subject: Sign on: #StopOilTrains Week of Action!

Despite the threat of explosions and toxic air pollution, oil trains continue to pass through our cities and towns, by schools and stadiums, and over our drinking water sources. People have the right to know where and when these trains are running — and they have the right to say no.

This July 6-12th — for the 3rd year in a row — over 100 communities are taking the fight to #stopoiltrains to the federal and state government, and to the rail and oil industries. 

With only 7 weeks until the #StopOilTrains Week of Action, here’s how to make this year the best year yet!

Host or join an event at stopoiltrains.org.

Recruit event hosts/RSVPs via email & social media

  • Post on Facebook

This July 6-12th, we will stop oil trains. Want to host an event in your community? Sign-up at stopoiltrains.org to your event an on the map! Together, we’ll take action across North America to #StopOilTrains! (graphic attached)

Will you join us to help protect communities and the climate? Together, we’ll take action across the US and Canada to #StopOilTrains! Sign-up at stopoiltrains.org (graphic attached)

  • Tweet!

This July 6-12, we’re taking action to #StopOilTrains. Sign-up to host an event at stopoiltrains.org #StopOilTrains

This July, we’re building people power to #stopoiltrains & move beyond extreme oil. Join us —> stopoiltrains.org

Become a partner, and launch as soon as you can

  • Once signed up, you’ll be added to the Crude Awakening Network list (oilnet@googlegroups.com). You’ll receive general updates and sample content every week.

Build the Buzzzz

  • Let all the coalitions and lists you’re a part of know about the #StopOilTrains week of action.
  • Create and share content — blogs, posts, video, graphics, etc. Let us know if you need support with this!

Let’s #StopOilTrains, together.

Ethan, Alex, Vanessa and the rest of the Stand Team

ENDORSEMENT: Don Saylor for California Assembly (with appreciation for Dan Wolk)

Editor:  The Benicia Independent endorses Don Saylor of Davis for Assembly District 4 this November (Don Saylor.org). Lynne Nittler’s letter speaks for me – see below. Another good candidate, Davis Mayor Dan Wolk, has expressed strong concerns about oil train safety and joined with the Davis City Council in opposing crude by rail, but has not risen to the level of diligence, outreach and follow-through that Mr. Saylor has shown on Valero’s proposal (DanWolk.org).  Many thanks to both for their efforts.  – RS

Yolo County Supervisor Don Saylor for California Assembly, District 4

By Lynne Nittler, in her email of May 15, 2016
Don Saylor for California Assembly District 4
Don Saylor for California Assembly District 4

Yolo County Supervisor Don Saylor stands out as an uprail public official committed from early on to stopping the dangerous transport of crude oil through our natural habitat and populated areas.  He wasted no time in directing his staff to research and compose a letter insisting that uprail concerns had to be addressed in the EIR.  On the draft EIR, Yolo County wrote a second letter detailing the impacts of the unsafe oil trains, and when the response was inadequate, added a third letter response to the revised draft EIR.

Meanwhile, as President of Sacramento Area Council of Governments (SACOG), Don Saylor also led the 22 cities and 6 counties of SACOG to respond to the regional threat of oil trains with a series of hard-hitting letters during the EIR process.

His deep concerns even took him to Washington DC where he conferred with our local Congressman John Garamendi on stabilizing crude at the loading site as perhaps the only acceptable method of making the Bakken crude safe to transport by rail.

Don continues to monitor the volatile issue closely, as 500,000 of the 2.4 million SACOG residents live at risk in the blast zone.   Most recently, he took time to testify before the Benicia City Council in hopes of convincing them of the enormous impacts to uprail communities and to our state.

We are fortunate to have such a diligent public official.  While an independent PAC of outside oil corporations including Valero as well as other PACS have intruded with huge campaign contributions to one candidate for the District 4 Assembly race (including Lake and Napa Counties, most of Yolo County, and part of Colusa, Solano, and Sonoma Counties ), Don Saylor has not been chosen for such outside support.

If elected, we can count on Don to work and vote as he always has for programs that benefit our region.  Don Saylor will continue to keep a watchful eye on oil trains if he is elected to the CA Assembly.