Richmond – East Bay Times https://www.eastbaytimes.com Tue, 17 Jan 2023 13:38:19 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/32x32-ebt.png?w=32 Richmond – East Bay Times https://www.eastbaytimes.com 32 32 116372269 East Bay pets of the week for Jan. 20 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/16/east-bay-pets-of-the-week-for-jan-20/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/16/east-bay-pets-of-the-week-for-jan-20/#respond Mon, 16 Jan 2023 13:00:18 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8711552 Hi, I’m Lillian, a feisty and playful girl with an extra spring to my step! I have a big personality, so I’ll need an adopter who”ll help me express myself in a positive way. I’m unsure about new people and will need an experienced adopter who ideally has worked with “stranger danger” before. Once I become friends with someone, I’m a friend for life and will show that person nothing but love and loyalty! I’m super-athletic and would love an active home. Visit the website of the Berkeley-East Bay Humane Society (Berkeley Humane) at berkeleyhumane.org to learn more and schedule a meeting with me.

— Berkeley Humane

Yoda, I am. Like the infamous grand master of Jedi Order, I believe size matters not. Look at me. Judge me by my size, do you?

Though big I may be, I take up only a small part of your heart. Chin scratches and relaxation time, I enjoy. No greater gift there is than a generous heart. To adopt or not? Your path you must decide. Either way, may the force be with you. The East Bay SPCA (EBSPCA) offers walk-in adoptions at its Oakland and Dublin campuses from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. For updated and real-time information on EBSPCA programs and offerings, visit eastbayspca.org/adoptions online.

— EBSPCA

Meet Chopper, a sweet senior looking for a new home. This low-key, laid-back low-rider has one walk speed: leisurely. The only time he breaks into a trot is when he spies a cat, and then he quickly stops to watch from a distance. Chopper ignores other dogs in his vicinity. He just wants to sniff, nap and get your attention and treats! Chopper’s big noggin is made to lie in a lap and be petted. He can be your shop dog, your couch potato, wherever you need a mature lovebug to brighten your day. Chopper weighs 53 pounds, and we estimate his age to be around 8. To meet this pet at Friends of the Alameda Animal Shelter (FAAS), call 510-337-8565 or visit alamedaanimalshelter.org/adopt online.

— FAAS

Tink is the sweetest little girl, born in her foster mom’s living room the day after her mother was rescued from an overcrowded residence. She was the tiniest of the litter and is the last of her family to find a home. Our tortie is initially quite shy, needing a little time to warm up and realize you’re not a predator, but once she does, look out! To meet our purr monster and lap sitter, contact Kay at kericksonttt@yahoo.com. Community Concern for Cats (CC4C) now holds weekend adoption events at Pet Food Express stores in Martinez and Concord plus our regular location at 1250-H Newell Ave. in Walnut Creek. Visit communityconcernforcats.org online for more information.

— CC4C

Finn is an extra-special ginger girl! Most ginger cats are male, and just a special few are female. Female ginger cats are well known to have calm and quiet personalities, and that’s Finn to a T! Finn is a people lover, lap lover, nap lover and playtime lover. Contact the staff at Milo Point Richmond for assistance at 220 S. Garrard Blvd. in Richmond from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. any day but Tuesdays. Our dedicated staff is on duty every day caring for our animals and have saved more than 39,000 lives in 28 years. For more details, visit milofoundation.org/contact-us.

— Milo Foundation

Mama Lana is a 1½-year-old domestic longhair beauty with a great personality and curly, fluffy tail. She loves people and will happily snuggle on your lap, purring away. But wait. Then there’s the Lana that gets the zoomies, flying around the house and playing with toys. She gets along with other cats and would make a great addition to your family. For more information about this or any other adoptable pets with the Contra Costa (CCSPCA), call Pat at 925-323-0667.

— CCSPCA

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Storms send sewage pouring into streets, creeks, San Francisco Bay and Pacific Ocean https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/15/storms-send-sewage-pouring-into-streets-creeks-san-francisco-bay-and-pacific-ocean/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/15/storms-send-sewage-pouring-into-streets-creeks-san-francisco-bay-and-pacific-ocean/#respond Sun, 15 Jan 2023 14:15:01 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8716905&preview=true&preview_id=8716905 January’s storms are offering an unsettling glimpse into one of the Bay Area’s dirtiest environmental secrets: Heavy rain overwhelms our region’s vast plumbing system and flushes  wastewater into places where it doesn’t belong.

Downpours triggered the release of millions of gallons of raw sewage mixed with rainwater across the region in just two weeks, spilling contaminated water into dozens of rivers, creeks and ultimately into the ocean and San Francisco Bay, according to a Bay Area News Group analysis of 88 reports to the state’s Office of Emergency Services.

“Flooded waters contain pathogens,” warned Eileen White, executive officer for the San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Control Board. “If you touch flood waters, you want to wash your hands thoroughly with soap and water to make sure that you don’t get yourself exposed.”

When sewage flows into homes and businesses, expensive remediation and decontamination is needed to make them safe again. Overflows also may have dangerous consequences for the environment, because human waste, pharmaceuticals, shampoos and other harmful products are flushed down drains and toilets.

In one incident, the Martinez Refinery Company reported releasing more than six million gallons of storm and wastewater into the Carquinez Strait estuary, which drains into the San Francisco Bay, on Jan. 4, according to state records. The discharge of partially treated “process water” and storm water was necessary to avoid damage to the refinery, the company reported.

Dozens of other smaller incidents were caused by open manhole covers, broken pipes and overwhelmed treatment facilities, from Corte Madera to Woodside and Half Moon Bay to Pleasanton.

State records show that between Dec. 31 and Jan. 3, a total of more than 14 million gallons of sewage were discharged in the San Francisco Bay region, enough to fill 21 Olympic-sized swimming pools, according to White. The Jan. 4 storm triggered the release of another 8 million gallons, or 12 Olympic-sized swimming pools.

More recent releases are still being tallied. Experts say the total volume is likely to be much larger than current estimates because the chaotic circumstances surrounding these emergency flooding situations mean it’s nearly impossible to accurately evaluate the true scale and impact of sewage contamination.

Like bridges or skyscrapers designed to bear certain weights, stormwater management systems are designed within the limits of weather — and can’t handle the intensity of storms that might happen only every decade or two.

In dry times, waste from homes and businesses is whisked immediately away to wastewater-treatment plants, never to be seen, smelled or considered again.

But two weeks of near-constant storms have stressed the system, as heavy rainfall and flooding infiltrate sewer pipes.

“We saw 13 times our average wastewater flows,” said Andrea Pook of East Bay Municipal Utilities District.

Most of the releases were caused when storm water backs up into the streets, flowing up through drains or manhole covers forced open by the overwhelming volume of high-pressure torrents, the reports show.

In Redwood City, a manhole overflow sent polluted water into Borel Creek at a rate of 150 gallons per minute. In San Mateo, 100 to 150 gallons per minute flowed into a storm drain that empties into Polhemus Creek. About 50 gallons a minute were dumped into Sonoma Creek. In Oakland, the overflow of three manholes spilled 25,000 gallons into Lake Merritt.

When a sewage lift station in Daly City overflowed because of stormwater, 35,950 gallons of waste were released into the Pacific Ocean. The rupture of a main treatment line in Moss Beach also caused a spill into the ocean. In Pacifica, an overflowing pump station caused 20,000 gallons to be discharged at Linda Mar Beach.  About 34,000 gallons were released in Menlo Park’s Belle Haven neighborhood when a West Bay Sanitary treatment plant couldn’t keep up with the flow.

In Richmond, the West County Wastewater facility pumped sewage directly into the San Francisco Bay, according to a Jan. 11 report.  “It is unknown how long the releasing will be going for,” it said.

Three discharges into Oakland’s San Leandro Creek, Barnhill Marina and an estuary at the foot of Alice Street originated from the East Bay Municipal Utility District’s “overflow structures,” which are designed to discharge water in high-flow conditions.

Farther south, a sewage treatment plant was flooded Friday when the Salinas River rushed over the banks of a levee. Percolation ponds in the city of Templeton also were flooded, sending 300,000 gallons into the river.

Cal Fire Caption Curtis Rhodes, walks past a home flooded by the Salinas River on Chualar Road near Chualar, Calif., on Thursday, Jan. 12, 2023. The Monterey County Sheriff's Office ordered additional evacuations for low-lying areas along the Salinas River in preparation of floods that could potentially close overland routes. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group)
Cal Fire Caption Curtis Rhodes, walks past a home flooded by the Salinas River on Chualar Road near Chualar, Calif., on Thursday, Jan. 12, 2023. Like many overwhelmed treatment facilities, a sewage treatment plant in Monterey County was flooded on Friday when the Salinas River rushed over the banks of a levee. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) 

Mother Nature is wreaking additional chaos. In Oakland, a tree fell on the sewer line, causing 5,100 gallons of sewage to be released into Sausal Creek. In Crockett, a hillside eroded and collapsed — causing a pipe to break and release 2,700 gallons. When debris blocked a sewer conduit, about 10,000 gallons overflowed into a drain that leads to Oakland’s Lake Temescal.

Records show that a single day — Dec. 31, New Year’s Eve — was responsible for the largest number of reports to the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, with 51 discharges in different Bay Area cities.

On that morning alone, there were 15 sewage discharges in 12 cities: Hillsborough, Woodside, San Bruno, Daly City, Pacifica, Burlingame, Half Moon Bay, San Lorenzo, Richmond, Piedmont, Oakland and Daly City.  By midnight, there were an additional 36 discharges in 25 cities: Alameda, Oakland, San Mateo, Richmond, Pacifica, Martinez, El Granada, Montara, Pittsburg, Corte Madera, San Francisco, Antioch, Redwood City, Dublin, San Leandro, Albany, Berkeley, Woodside, Vallejo, Menlo Park, Benicia, Sausalito, Pleasanton, Foster City and Hayward.

The problem isn’t new, said Sejal Choksi-Chugh, executive director of San Francisco Baykeeper, a nonprofit focused on the health of the San Francisco Bay. But the constant rain has exacerbated the issue.

“Over the years, and typically every time it rains, we see sewage spills in the streets and wastewater overflows,” she said. “But the back-to-back-to-back-to-back major storm events is causing a continuous discharge. That’s what is new.”

With continued population growth, the demands on our sewer systems have increased, say experts. Meanwhile, more development leads to more asphalt and cement, so the bulk of the rainfall ends up in our sewage systems.  And our wastewater pipes, often made of clay, are aging, so water infiltrates through cracks and gaps.

The rate at which the urban Bay Area is adapting to these threats is lagging behind the speed at which rain is drowning it, said Choksi-Chugh.  Cities need to invest in replacing pipes and upgrading wastewater treatment systems to increase storage capacity and install more recycling technologies, she said. Cities also could incentivize homeowners to replace old pipes through grants or low-interest loans.

In the absence of major improvements to our sewer infrastructure, these dangerous overflows will increase as climate change leads to more extreme weather, say experts.

“Our old infrastructure is just not going to be up to snuff,” Choksi-Chugh said. “It’s not going to be able to handle these larger storm events, year upon year. So we really need to be thinking about the future.”

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‘There’s never enough.’ Surge in need for shelter, housing overwhelms Bay Area providers https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/15/theres-never-enough-surge-in-need-for-shelter-housing-overwhelms-bay-area-providers/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/15/theres-never-enough-surge-in-need-for-shelter-housing-overwhelms-bay-area-providers/#respond Sun, 15 Jan 2023 14:00:16 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8716890&preview=true&preview_id=8716890 Pleas from people who were homeless or struggling to keep their housing spiked last year, according to new data from the Bay Area’s helplines — reaching a four-year high that highlights just how desperate the region’s affordable housing crisis has become.

Nearly half of the almost 52,000 people who called 211 — the nationwide social services hotline — in six Bay Area counties last year needed housing help, from a place to shelter for the night to assistance paying their rent so they wouldn’t be evicted. That’s up from about a third the year before.

The surge in demand, which came as the last statewide COVID-19 eviction protections expired and inflation soared, is overwhelming the Bay Area’s resources, meaning many people in need are turned away or left to languish on long waitlists.

“We’ve always received calls about housing needs, but the past quarter especially we’ve been seeing thousands of our neighbors reach out about housing,” said Clare Margason, 211 director for United Way Bay Area. “Our residents are struggling to pay their rent, to meet basic needs.”

United Way recently released its first public, online database tracking the number and types of calls it receives at the 211 centers it operates for San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Marin, Napa and Solano counties. (The call centers in Alameda and Contra Costa counties are run by different organizations.) Margason hopes the data will help make their services stronger by identifying gaps in resources.

A worker in the Alameda County 211 call center in Hayward, Calif., on Wednesday, June 2, 2021. The 211 call center helps community members with housing information as well as health and human services. (Aric Crabb/Bay Area News Group)
A worker in the Alameda County 211 call center in Hayward, Calif., on Wednesday, June 2, 2021. The 211 call center helps community members with housing information as well as health and human services. (Aric Crabb/Bay Area News Group) 

After housing at 47%, food was the second-most needed resource last year, comprising nearly 17% of requests, followed by help with health care, at 13%. Requests for help with mental health or substance abuse, at nearly 7%, also ticked up despite the launch last summer of 988 — a nationwide mental health crisis hotline.

Pleas for housing help have soared in Alameda County as well, jumping up 27% last year, according to Eden I&R, which operates the county’s 211 line locally. The call center, which keeps an extensive housing database, sometimes can refer callers directly to affordable housing units or shelter beds, or help them get on waitlists. Because of the bureaucratic nature of the county’s affordable housing system, 211 operators often have to refer callers to other resource centers where they can begin a complicated screening process to determine if they are eligible for help.

“There’s never enough,” said Eden I&R Executive Director Alison DeJung. “It can be pretty common that a caller will call and there’s no shelter bed available.”

Because the need is so great, her team launched a new “housing specialty unit” in October designed to help callers hold onto their housing and avoid ending up on the street. They hired three employees specially trained in tenant rights to help callers who are at risk of eviction or struggling to pay rent. The Bay Area’s other 211 call centers are working on similar experimental programs.

United Way outsourced its 211 call centers to Southern California in 2012 due to financial challenges and now calls from San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Napa, Marin and Sonora counties are answered in Ventura County.

In Santa Clara County, there has been such a desperate need for emergency shelter that during the COVID-19 pandemic, the county launched a separate hotline just to connect people to beds. Dubbed the Here4You hotline — 408-385-2400 — the number is now operated by the Bill Wilson Center, which runs shelters and housing programs in the county. Before the recent storms wreaked havoc on the region, the hotline received about 300 calls per day, said CEO Sparky Harlan. Now, that’s up to between 400 and 450. There are so many people in need, that the call center is constantly turning people away.

Tom Tamura, Executive Director of the Contra Costa Crisis Center, on Thursday, Feb. 9, 2018 in Walnut Creek, Calif. The non-profit organization is dedicated to helping individuals and families through crisis. (Laura A. Oda/Bay Area News Group)
Tom Tamura, Executive Director of the Contra Costa Crisis Center, on Thursday, Feb. 9, 2018 in Walnut Creek, Calif. The non-profit organization is dedicated to helping individuals and families through crisis. (Laura A. Oda/Bay Area News Group) 

“We’re probably able to place a third of the people right now that are calling,” Harlan said.

The need is similarly high in Contra Costa County, where the number of calls specifically related to evictions nearly doubled — increasing from 681 in 2021 to 1,196 last year.

“It’s always our number-one reason people are calling us, is for housing needs,” said Tom Tamura, executive director of the Contra Costa Crisis Center, which operates the county’s 211 line.

Tom Myers, executive director of the nonprofit Community Services Agency in Mountain View, isn’t surprised by the spike in 211 requests for housing. He’s seen a similar increase at his own agency — both in the number of people who need help paying rent and in those who are trying to claw their way out of homelessness. Unable to keep up with demand, his team is forced to put people on waiting lists. The average wait for rental assistance is between two and four weeks, he said.

“Unfortunately, I think we’ve known for some time that we have a group of people who are living in incredibly housing insecure environments,” Myers said. “And that number increased. It multiplied during COVID. And it’s not going away. Until the Bay Area solves its affordable housing crisis, we are going to continue to have this problem.”

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Richmond man gets prison for selling child porn https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/13/richmond-man-gets-prison-for-selling-child-porn/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/13/richmond-man-gets-prison-for-selling-child-porn/#respond Sat, 14 Jan 2023 05:05:40 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8716318 OAKLAND — A judge sentenced a 24-year-old Richmond man Thursday to a decade in prison over use of a messaging platform to sell and offer child pornography in exchange for gift cards, the U.S. Justice Department said.

According to a statement, Tariq Lamont Johnson pleaded guilty last June after admitting to using an account on Telegram “to sell visual depictions of a minor engaged in sexually explicit conduct to another person,” as well as several interlinked Instagram accounts, in exchange for Amazon gift cards.

Johnson admitted that on Nov. 5, 2021, he told a person he later learned was a Homeland Security Investigations agent who had contacted him that he could provide images for money.

He then sold the agent access to a Telegram chatroom and a link to hosted material on a cloud-storage site in exchange for a $25 gift card.

Soon after, he sold the agent a second link to similar cloud-stored material, with “more than 600 depictions of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct” including depictions of infants and toddlers, for a $45 gift card.

On March 4, 2022, the government charged Johnson with a count of distribution of child pornography.

U.S. District Court Judge Jon Tigar sentenced Johnson on Thursday to ten years in prison, as well as a ten-year term of supervised release.

Tigar also ordered a hearing on April 6, 2023, to look into restitution for Johnson’s victims.

Contact George Kelly at 408-859-5180.

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In brief: $21.7 million in federal funds secured for Contra Costa projects https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/11/in-brief-21-7m-in-federal-funds-secured-for-contra-costa-projects/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/11/in-brief-21-7m-in-federal-funds-secured-for-contra-costa-projects/#respond Wed, 11 Jan 2023 17:30:59 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8707280 RICHMOND

U.S. Rep. Mark DeSaulnier, D-Richmond, recently announced that he successfully included $21.7 million in federal funding for 15 projects to benefit Contra Costa County in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 (H.R. 2617).

The act passed the House of Representatives in a Dec. 23 vote of 225-to-201 and will soon be signed into law by President Biden. Also included in the bill is language DeSaulnier authored to add the Nystrom Elementary School in Richmond to the Rosie the Riveter/WWII Home Front National Historic Park. For a list of the 15 Contra Costa projects included in the bill, visit bit.ly/3W1uFgw online.

“My priority in Congress is that I work for you to improve your daily lives and the funding included in this bill will do just that by bolstering public safety, reducing commute times and improving quality of life, increasing access to education and more,” said DeSaulnier.

“I am also delighted that the critical role families in Richmond and West Contra Costa County played in our nation’s World War II home front effort is being recognized. By expanding the Rosie the Riveter/WWII Home Front National Historic Park, visitors will learn more about the East Bay’s trailblazing history,” he said.

The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, also makes significant investments for families, veterans, and workers by expanding quality, affordable health care, increasing benefits for veterans and delivering critical emergency disaster relief to states. The projects DeSaulnier secured funding for were subject to a strict transparency and accountability process, which is detailed by the U.S. House Appropriations Committee. Funding for these projects is expected to be disbursed in short order.

— U.S. Rep. DeSaulnier’s office

WEST CONTRA COSTA

Garamendi sworn in, represents new district in Congress

U.S. Rep. John Garamendi, D-Walnut Grove, was sworn in Monday to representat California’s newly drawn 8th Congressional District, which includes the cities of El Cerrito, Richmond, San Pablo, Hercules, Pinole, Martinez, Suisun City, Pittsburg, Antioch, Vallejo and Fairfield.

“It’s a great honor to continue representing Solano and Contra Costa counties in Congress,” Garamendi said. “My title is ‘Representative,’ and that’s exactly what I will be. My team and I are here to listen and address every need in our community, and I will always lend my voice in service to the people of California’s 8th Congressional District.

“As I was sworn in, I stood with renewed optimism ready to work tirelessly on behalf of the people of Solano and Contra Costa counties to meet the great challenges of our day,” Garamendi concluded.

— U.S. Rep. Garamendi’s office

ALBANY

City seeks applicants to serve on council advisory bodies

Get involved in local government! The city of Albany is seeking applicants to serve on advisory bodies to the City Council. Positions are vacant on all advisory bodies.

Visit the Boards, Commissions & Committees webpage at albanyca.org/government/boards-commissions-committees for more information and to complete the online advisory body application. Please note that the Planning & Zoning and Policing commissions have additional supplemental questionnaires to complete the application.

— city of Albany

To submit an item for our “In brief” section, please email it, at least three days before publication, to njackson@bayareanewsgroup.com. Each item should be 90 to 180 words, include the name of the group or individual to whom it is to be credited and should include a brief headline.

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Contra Costa County to allow for sale of non-flavored cannabis vape products https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/10/contra-costa-to-allow-for-sale-of-non-flavored-cannabis-vape-products/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/10/contra-costa-to-allow-for-sale-of-non-flavored-cannabis-vape-products/#respond Tue, 10 Jan 2023 22:52:42 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8711598&preview=true&preview_id=8711598 MARTINEZ — The Contra Costa Board of Supervisors passed an ordinance on Tuesday allowing for the sale and delivery of non-flavored cannabis vaping products, a partial repeal of legislation adopted three years ago that also banned sale of flavored tobacco products.

The new law is intended to ensure that seniors and other adults — in particular those who rely on cannabis for medicinal reasons — have access marijuana vaping products. Proposed by Supervisor Diane Burgis, the ordinance allows permitted cannabis retailers located in unincorporated areas to sell and deliver the products.

The ordinance passed 3-2 with supervisors Federal Glover and Candace Anderson voting no.

During the first reading of the ordinance on Dec. 6, Burgis said the motivation behind the revised ordinance was that the 2019 law hurt seniors and other adults who rely on cannabis vaping products for both recreational and medical reasons. In particular, it affected homebound seniors in unincorporated areas, she said.

“What we’re trying to do by having policies here in Contra Costa County is to give people a way to access safe products,” Burgis said.

At the December meeting, both Glover and Anderson voted against the ordinance, saying it would send mixed messages to the public and betray an effort led by Contra Costa youth who wanted the ban in the first place.

“We clearly took a leadership position back in 2019 when we had a number of our students throughout this county that came before us and asked for the leadership to put this ban in place,” Glover said. “And I’m not going to turn away from that. I think it’s important that that we listen to our youth when they cry out and ask for this help.”

Glover said there is no evidence “that vaping does not cause problems to individuals” and partially lifting the ban would send “false messages or confusing messages to our public that it’s OK to do this this while at the same time saying that we want to prevent it.”

On Tuesday, groups advocating for cannabis access told the Board of Supervisors that banning pot vape products has created an illicit black market for the product and disproportionately affected vulnerable populations who rely on cannabis primarily for medical reasons.

Renee Lee, a resident of the retirement community of Rossmoor who runs an organization with a mission to help seniors legally access and safety use cannabis, said the majority of medicinal cannabis users in the unincorporated community near Walnut Creek prefer vaping.

“I am so happy,” Lee said after Tuesday’s vote. “It’s like a big weight off my shoulders … (the ordinance) had been very unfair.”

Sarah Armstrong of American for Safe Access, the country’s largest and oldest advocacy organization for medical cannabis patients, said forcing people to travel medicinal marijuana “often stimulates a black market because they simply cannot go to the nearest dispensary if they don’t have one near them.”

“The black market is awash with high-potency products, products that are contaminated,” Armstrong told the supervisors. “Anytime you take actions which promote the black market, you do a disservice both to patients, law enforcement and many others who then have to make some choices.”

Before the vote, Burgis emphasized that the ordinance makes no change to the current ban of tobacco and flavored tobacco vaping products; nor does it allow for new dispensaries in unincorporated areas.

“This does allow the sale of one particular set of cannabis products, which are already sold in many cities of Contra Costa County and are available to purchase in nearly every other part of the state that has approved cannabis retail sales,” she said.

In passing the ordinance, the board also directed Contra Costa Health Services to begin working on an awareness program about the dangers of youth cannabis vaping. Supervisor John Gioia said creation of such a program was a major factor in his decision to support the new legislation.

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Snapp Shots: Brothers raising funds for nephew with Alzheimer’s https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/10/snapp-shots-brothers-raising-funds-for-nephew-with-alzheimers/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/10/snapp-shots-brothers-raising-funds-for-nephew-with-alzheimers/#respond Tue, 10 Jan 2023 13:00:55 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8707359 When my nephew, Ben, was a little boy, his beloved mother died after a long illness. He was 10; his brother, Jon, was 6; and his other brother, Marc, was 12. And there was more bad news to come. They had three stepmothers in rapid succession, the first two of whom remind me of Cruella de Vil.

But they somehow got through it by sticking together and looking out for each other. And they all grew up to have interesting lives. Marc is an indie radio promoter who gets artists played on radio stations all over the world. Jon is the general manager of an international entertainment company with offices in Los Angeles, Hong Kong and Japan.

But Ben has had the most interesting career of all. His entry-level job was at CNN as the “designated John 3:16 tackler.” Let me explain: Back in the 1970s and ’80s, there was a guy called the Rainbow Man who used to insert himself into the picture at televised sports events wearing a multicolored wig and holding a sign reading, “John 3:16” (the Bible passage that reads, “For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life.”). Ben’s job was to tackle him to get him out of the shot.

His next job was as private secretary for Zsa Zsa Gabor. His third job came when he heard that Vin Scully, the great Dodgers announcer, was having trouble setting up his computer. So Ben, a big baseball fan as well as a techno geek, offered to set it up for him.

That led to a friendship and working relationship that had Ben doing a lot of research and writing for Scully and eventually the whole Dodgers organization, for which he set up the first major league team website. And that led in turn to a career as an ace reporter and West Coast producer for Major League Baseball’s website, MLB.com.

He was a welcome visitor at every ballpark in the country. Let me put it this way: He’s on a first-name basis with Sandy Koufax! It doesn’t get any better than that.

But his home base was always Dodger Stadium, and that’s where Ben found a way to indulge his mischievous streak. In the late innings it’s common for fans in the nosebleed seats to move down to the more expensive seats near the field if they see they’re not being used. But it’s technically against the rules.

So Ben would wander through the stadium, and when he spotted a family doing it — usually a father and his kids — he’d tap the guy on the shoulder and say, “Sir, you and your family will have to come with me.”

By the time they got to the elevator, the guy would be sweating bullets. Ben would push the button, and the elevator would descend to the ground floor. When the door opened, they’d find that they were inside the Dodgers dugout — while the game was still going on! Then Ben would hand each kid a brand-new baseball and a sharpie and say, “OK, kids, go get those autographs!” And all the players would sign.

But it all came to a sudden halt five years ago when he and everyone else his age at MLB were laid off and replaced by people 25 years younger. It was more than the loss of a job; it was the loss of a career. And the lost income created strains on his marriage that led to divorce.

And now comes more bad news: Ben has been diagnosed with middle-stage Alzheimer’s disease. Naturally, his brothers are rallying around him (with considerable help from their significant others). They’re trying to provide not only for his medical treatment, but also his living expenses for the rest of his life.

“In the meantime, we’ve created a project for Ben to work on to keep him focused and energized,” says Jon. “He not only loves baseball; his other big passion is sports movies. We’re creating a sports movie website and database with Ben’s old boss for him to watch films, research and provide information that will be part of this website’s database. We shipped him about 40 sports movies last month, and there will be a lot more to come.”

The website is scheduled to go online in April. They’ve also set up a GoFundMe campaign (gofund.me/e5ff381f) to help pay his bills. I know their mom would be proud of all three of them. I sure am.

Martin Snapp can be reached at catman442@comcast.net.

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Bay Area rainfall chart: Updated totals since the weekend https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/09/bay-area-rainfall-chart-the-totals-since-the-weekend/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/09/bay-area-rainfall-chart-the-totals-since-the-weekend/#respond Mon, 09 Jan 2023 22:59:47 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8710364&preview=true&preview_id=8710364 After a break in the rain Thursday, another series of storms is expected to arrive Friday morning and continue into next week.

The following totals from the National Weather Service are from Saturday, Jan. 7 — when rain began in the evening for most of the Bay Area — through 6 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 12. They are raw numbers, not yet checked for quality control.

The site of the greatest reading, Uvas Canyon, is at 1,100 feet elevation near the Casa Loma fire station, about 2 miles east of Loma Prieta.

Higher totals were reported to the south: Mining Ridge, at 3,288 feet elevation in Big Sur, had 21 inches.

Find the chart for the previous week of rain here.

Location Inches
Peninsula & South Bay
Uvas Reservoir 7.24
Los Trancos 6.61
Mt. Hamilton 5.71
Calero Reservoir 5.48
La Honda 5.29
Morgan Hill 5.08
Anderson Dam 5.04
Huddart County Park 5.12
Foothills Preserve 5.11
Rancho San Antonio 4.57
I-280/Edgewood 4.25
Los Gatos (Rinconada) 4.02
San Francisco (Duboce) 3.93
Los Altos Hills (Maryknoll)  3.42
San Francisco airport 3.28
San Jose (Lynbrook) 3.14
Redwood City 2.98
Sunnyvale 2.87
San Jose (Alum Rock) 2.31
Atherton 2.13
Mountain View 2.09
San Jose downtown 1.77
Palo Alto 1.53
Half Moon Bay airport 1.25
East Bay
Mt. Diablo peak 7.67
Tilden Park 4.74
Richmond 4.71
UC Botanical Garden 4.39
Danville 4.11
Rossmoor 4.06
Briones 3.87
St. Mary’s College 3.78
Black Diamond 3.53
Castro Valley 3.49
Dublin/San Ramon 3.46
Chabot Reservoir 3.32
Pittsburg 3.1
Oakland airport 2.76
Oakley 2.67
Hayward airport 2.48
Concord Pavilion 2.42
Union City 2.16
Livermore 1.97
Mission Peak 1.9
Fremont (Auto Mall) 1.79
Santa Cruz Mountains
Uvas Canyon 9.37
Ben Lomond landfill 9.34
Hwy. 17 summit 9.26
Mt. Umunhum 8.39
Loma Prieta 8.31
Sanborn Park HQ 8.19
Boulder Creek 7.83
Mt. Madonna 5.71
Corralitos 5.05
North Bay
Mt. Tamalpais 8.86
Woodacre 8.8
San Rafael 7.12
Novato 5.57
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Richmond can’t shake ‘high financial risk’ of pension debts and mismanagement, state auditor reports https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/09/richmond-cant-shake-high-financial-risk-of-pension-debts-and-mismanagement-state-auditor-reports/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/09/richmond-cant-shake-high-financial-risk-of-pension-debts-and-mismanagement-state-auditor-reports/#respond Mon, 09 Jan 2023 22:27:19 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8710332&preview=true&preview_id=8710332 Richmond is already trying to tackle one of its New Year’s resolutions: get off the state auditor’s “Top 10” list of cities that handle taxpayers’ money poorly.

After analyzing a long, spotty history of managing budget deficits, public housing responsibilities and ballooning employee compensation, the state auditor’s office compiled a list of 11 recommendations to help city officials try to dig themselves out of an ever-looming financial mess.

Last month, the Richmond City Council approved a corrective action plan laying out a timeline of next steps, which City Manager Shasa Curl will submit to the state by Monday — one day before a new lineup of elected officials kicks off the first City Council meeting of 2023.

The good news: Richmond successfully moved from the ninth to the 10th California city at greatest risk.

The bad news: The state auditor still questions whether the city, which faced a debt burden of $250 million in June 2021, can salvage a semblance of financial stability any time soon.

One of the most pressing issues acting California State Auditor Michael Tilden highlighted was that Richmond anticipates having an annual deficit of $6.7 million from now until 2028. He said those grim projections may still be too optimistic — warning that reserves could be depleted so low that city officials would not be able to cover more than two weeks of expenses by fiscal year 2027-28.

Additionally, Tilden reported that the city paid more than $35 million in retirement costs in fiscal year 2020-21, which accounted for almost a quarter of all general fund expenditures. To make matters worse, CalPERS anticipates Richmond’s annual pension costs will reach $53 million within five years.

If the city wants to best set itself up for success, the state audit recommended that Richmond expand its five-year financial projections to include plans for funding operations during a recession or economic downturn, eliminate unnecessary jobs, and dedicate resources to ensure that the city’s Housing Authority complies with federal requirements in order to receive proper funding.

During the Dec. 20 Richmond City Council meeting, Deputy City Manager Nickie Mastay said progress on these changes must happen fast, because the first update on how the city is succeeding — or struggling — with the state auditor’s suggestions is due May 10.

While Councilmember Gayle McLaughlin acknowledged that the city needs to be financially stable, she said during the meeting that she wants to see a balanced approach to any financial overhaul, in order to maintain the long list of services and support that many of Richmond’s 116,000 residents need — from extending library hours to providing rent assistance. The median household income in Richmond is $72,463.

“It’s really important to have solid financial accountability and sustainability, but we also need to meet the needs of our residents,” McLaughlin said. “Our community is clearly different than some cities that have more high-income residents. We have a large amount of low-income community members, and we need to lift them up.”

Outgoing Mayor Tom Butt, who is finishing up his last week in office, agreed that these financial audits often fail to recognize that cities like Richmond have fewer tax dollars flowing into city coffers to fund programs and pay off debts.

“I think the state has, for whatever reason, picked on Richmond for years,” Butt said by phone Thursday. “We have a lot of unique challenges, but rather than reaching out asking how they can help, the state seems to ask, ‘What can we do to make you feel bad?’ ”

However, he was also quick to push the onus back on McLaughlin and other members of the Richmond Progressive Alliance, which successfully held onto its political majority of elected leaders for another four years.

“I blame a lot of this on the RPA — they have a list of priorities that are not aligned with sound revenue management, and I don’t think they understand these issues,” Butt said, calling out RPA priorities such as creating a public bank and reducing the size of the police department. “We do the best we can, but we have a lot of burdens that are, in some respects, unfair, and we’re going to be continually challenged to do this.”

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East Bay pets of the week for Jan. 13 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/09/east-bay-pets-of-the-week-for-jan-13/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/09/east-bay-pets-of-the-week-for-jan-13/#respond Mon, 09 Jan 2023 13:00:31 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8706244 Hello, kind earthlings, we’re Starfox and Tigra, two superhero felines that can’t wait to share joy, love and companionship with you for years to come! We’ll enjoy finding our special sunny spots in your homes to lounge about in, but we also look forward to cuddles and snuggles with you whenever we can. And on these cool winter nights, what’s better than a warm and loving cat curling up nearby as we catch up on the latest Netflix (or Animal Planet!)? Visit the website of the Berkeley-East Bay Humane Society (Berkeley Humane) at berkeleyhumane.org to learn more and schedule a meeting with us.

— Berkeley Humane

Hiya! I’m Amtrak, and a super-happy and goofy pup that loves to hang out with people, play with toys and run around outside.

I have lots of energy to burn, and I’m happiest doing something exciting with my favorite humans. I’ve also been told that I’m a pretty smart guy, plus I’m very treat- and toy-motivated and learn new tricks with ease. Overall, I’m an exuberant guy that can’t wait to have an adventure buddy to take on the world with! The East Bay SPCA (EBSPCA) offers walk-in adoptions at its Oakland and Dublin campuses from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. For updated and real-time information on EBSPCA programs and offerings, visit eastbayspca.org/adoptions online.

— EBSPCA

Myute is looking for a family that’s going places! Such places that this 1-year-old shepherd would make a great companion for include hiking trails, beached, parks, your fenced back yard or your couch. You’ll fall in love with this guy’s gorgeous coloring, majestic tail, prancing and one floppy ear. Myute’s new family will need to help him refine his leash manners and how he greets new people and other dogs so his energy doesn’t overwhelm them. To meet this pet at Friends of the Alameda Animal Shelter (FAAS), call 510-337-8565 or visit alamedaanimalshelter.org/adopt online.

— FAAS

Four tigers (including Shadow, pictured) and one black feline make up our delightful litter of kittens. This litter keeps their foster mom endlessly entertained. She finds them bold, extremely active, curious and determined. There is a perfect kitten or two for your family in our bunch. To meet them, contact Susan at susanmulloy58@gmail.com. Community Concern for Cats (CC4C) now holds weekend adoption events at Pet Food Express stores in Martinez and Concord plus our regular location at 1250-H Newell Ave. in Walnut Creek. Visit communityconcernforcats.org online for more information.

— CC4C

With a huge goofy smile on his face, Bear Hug loves to run around and explore. Playing in a yard and walks are high on his list of fun activities. He’s best-suited for an adult, interactive and experienced home with time to give him daily lessons, continuity, exercise and love. Contact the staff at Milo Point Richmond for assistance from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. any day but Tuesdays at 220 S. Garrard Blvd. in Richmond. Our dedicated staff is on duty every day caring for our animals and have saved more than 39,000 lives in 28 years. For more details, visit milofoundation.org/contact-us.

— Milo Foundation

Hi, I’m Fred, and I’m just the cutest 6-month-old orange tabby I’ve ever met. I love to play with everybody, and if I can’t entice you to play, don’t worry. I can find lots of other stuff to play with. I hear my foster owner say I have the best-sounding purr around. While I’m falling asleep I like to kneed and suck on my blanket. Also, I’m here waiting for anyone who wants to give me full body rubs and stroke my head and ears. For more information about this or any other adoptable pets with the Contra Costa (CCSPCA), call Pat at 925-323-0667.

— CCSPCA

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