Supervisors form committee to consider half-cent sales tax measure for Nov. 2020 ballot
Demand NuStar Energy safety probe before Crockett plant is reopened following fire
By Daniel Borsuk
At their meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2019, Contra Costa County Supervisors voted 4-0 to create an ad hoc committee to explore the feasibility of placing on the ballot a sales tax measure. The committee will consist mainly of union leaders, county agency heads and nonprofit organizations leaders.
On the vote, District 5 Supervisor Federal Glover was absent.
At the recommendation of District 4 Supervisor Karen Mitchoff, who serves on the Finance Committee, proposed the establishment of a citizen-based ad hoc committee to study a proposal that could wind up on a ballot for county voters to decide on perhaps by the November 2020 general election.
In California, the maximum sales, use, and transactions tax rate is 9.25 percent. That includes a statewide base sale and use tax of 7.25 percent and up to 2 percent for local district transaction and use taxes.
Current projections for annual revenues for a countywide transaction and use tax are one half cent $93 million and quarter cent $46.5 million. Current projections for annual revenues for an unincorporated area transaction and use tax are one half cent: $8.32 million and one.
So far, the ad hoc committee will study several potential tax scenarios. Current projections for annual revenues for a countywide transaction and use tax area:
. 0.50 percent (1/2 cent): $93 million
. 0.25 percent (1/4 cent): $46.5 million
Projections for annual revenues for an unincorporated area transaction and use tax are:
. 0.50 percent (1/2 cent): $8.32 million
. 0.25 percent (1/4 cent): $4.16 million
Mitchoff said she is promoting the sales tax ad hoc committee because she frequently hears from constituents why Contra Costa County does not have a sales tax while other counties like Alameda, San San Mateo, Santa Clara and others do draw additional revenues for county services from a sales tax.
The ad hoc committee will be led by stake holders, not supervisors, Mitchoff said. “We want all comers at the table,” she said. “This will be a difficult lift.”
“This is a huge opportunity,” said Sean Casey, executive director of the nonprofit organization First 5. “16,000 families could benefit from this in Contra Costa County.”
Demand NuStar Energy Plant Safety Probe
Also during their meeting, the Supervisors demanded that county officials confirm that operators of the fire damaged NuStar Energy plant in Crockett not resume operations until its fire and hazardous materials safety measures have been completely reviewed and upgraded by state and federal authorities.
“I want updated progress reports on your investigations,” demanded Board Chair John Gioia, whose District 1 covers the Crockett refinery location where the fire erupted from a tank filled with ethanol at 1:45 p.m. on Tuesday, October 15. The fire spread, catching a nearby tank also containing ethanol. Some 250,000 gallons of ethanol were destroyed in the fire.
The blaze forced county authorities to call a Shelter in Place in the Crockett area. Interstate 80 was closed for six hours. The incident was officially over at 8:10 p.m. when I-80 was reopened to traffic by the Highway Patrol, said Contra Costa County Director of Hazardous Materials Randy Sawyer.
“At the end of the day, the incident was contained, “said Contra Costa County Fire Protection District Chief Lewis Broschard. “No other tanks were destroyed. No other materials were discharged.”
Broschard told supervisors it was through the fire fighting resources of NuStar Energy and several other refineries that were able to promptly respond to the fire site to assist CCCFPD in extinguishing fire. Those refineries – Shell, Chevon, Phillips 66, Tessoro, and Marathon – supplied foam that the county fire district did not have to adequately extinguish the blaze, said Chief Broschard.
Chief Broschard said at this time there is no known cause for the fire including whether arson may have been a factor.
Gioia made it clear to Contra Costa County Fire Protection District Chief Broschard and Contra Costa County Hazardous Materials Program Director Randy Sawyer that he wants a thorough investigation completed before “there is a reopening” of the NuStar plant.
Supervisors heard from eight speakers, all critical of NuStar and its safety track record.
NuStar spokesperson Mary Rose Brown told the Contra Costa Herald via an emailed message:
“We absolutely agree, and we are working closely and cooperatively with CalOSHA and other regulatory agencies on detailed plans to ensure that the facility is safe to operate before it is reopened. We also are continuing to work in very close cooperation with all applicable local and state regulatory agencies to investigate the root cause of the incident so that we can take whatever measures are required to ensure the continued safety of our employees, contractors, neighbors and the community. We worked over the weekend to pump liquids out of the incident area and CalOSHA and local fire investigators accessed the area today (Tuesday).”
County resident Carl Davidson suggested that the NuStar plant incident may have been triggered by a seismic event since the facility is located on the Pinole fault and the fire erupted after seismic events were reported in the Pleasant Hill area the previous day.
Twenty-five-year Crockett area resident Isabella Izzi said the board of supervisors and regulators should clamp down on NuStar for this environmental violation and future violations by requiring the refiner to provide hazmat masks to all residents of Crockett. “The Board of Supervisors should make it clear that it will deny any new expansion at that refinery,” she said.
Dan Torres, a representative of an industrial fire sprinkler installation union, questioned the quality and reliability of the fire sprinkler system installed at NuStar.
At the end, Chair Gioia asked that updates on the NuStar fire will be reported at the Public Safety Committee that he chairs.
In other business, the supervisors:
-Approved a $240,000 contract to Concord Yellow Cab, Inc. to provide non-emergency taxicab transportation services for Contra Costa Regional Medical center and Contra Costa Health Center patients for the period July 1, 2019 through June 30, 2020. The county pays taxicab service for patients unable to transport themselves to medical appointments due to medical conditions, including physical disabilities, patients who have verifiable seizure disorder or patients who have received medications which has or could impair their mobility.
-Approved a $1.97 million Public Works Department contract with Debri-Tech, Inc. to provide on-call assistance with trash and abandoned waste cleanup and removal for the Contra Costa County Watershed Program for the program October 15, 2019 through September 30, 2022.
-Approved the issuance of $85 million in Multifamily Housing Revenue Bond by the California Statewide Communities Development Authority for the Fairfield Hilltop LP, a California limited partnership, to provide for the financing of the acquisition and rehabilitation of a 322-unit multi-family housing development known as Hilltop Commons Apartments located at 15690l Crestwood Dr.
the attachments to this post:
CCTA wants a 1/2-cent sales tax increase on top of the Measure J 1/2-cent sales tax.
MTC/ABAG wants a 1-cent sales tax increase for the 9 Bay Area Counties.
Now the County wants a 1/2-cent sales tax !!
Antioch votes approved Measure W 1/2-cent additional sales tax.
SB1 increase taxes on gasoline, diesel and vehicle registration fees.
Bridge tolls increase by another dollar to $6.
When is enough, enough?
Welcome to Demoncat, Grewsome Newsome, Cali!
were the screws have been tightened to the nth degree!
Gas prices are off the charts ON PURPOSE! (by unexplained planned refinery shutdowns…and excessive taxes to pay lotto pension unfunded liabilities)
Toll prices are off the charts (by stilted election mumbo jumbo to confuse the pot headed liberals and pay lotto pensions and unfunded liabilities)
water bills are off the charts! (to pay for lotto pensions and unfunded liabilities)
PG&E prices Are off the charts! ( NOT TO PAY FOR MAINTENANCE OR REPAIRS but to pay lotto pensions and unfunded liabilities …oh and all those deaths and lawsuits)
PROP 13 is now in the cross-hairs of these lotto pensioneer wanna be’s and government school administrators
ARE YOU SEEING A PATTERN?
The public servant has subverted US, the masters and made US. the taxpayers ..THE SLAVES!
This is what is called a frog in slowly boiling water!!
Back in 2012 San Fransisco was feeling its oats and proposed a toll to enter the city from the south bay on 101 and 280. THE OUTRAGE WAS DEVASTATING. The next day the axed the idea and spun it to say it was just a trial balloon!
https://www.mercurynews.com/2010/12/12/peninsula-threatens-toll-in-response-to-san-francisco/
THE MORAL OF THE STORY BOYS N GHOULS IS THAT IF YOU DONT TWITCH..GROWL..STAND UP OR PUSH BACK. These money-hungry ‘public servants’ will run all over you!
TIME FOR THE PITCH FORKS AND TORCHES.