
The following excellent commentary is from Richmond Ciity Councilman Tom Butt's EForum for 10/8/14:
  At last nights City Council meeting, 40 people testified on an agenda 
  item that initially proposed reallocating $20 million in the Chevron Environmental 
  and Community Investment Agreement (ECIA) from various greenhouse gas (GHG) 
  reduction programs to some plan for saving Doctors Medial Centre (DMC) (Item 
  I-3 - DIRECT staff to send a letter to Chevron requesting an amendment to the 
  Community Investment Agreement to redirect a portion of the $90 million to Doctors 
  Medical Center - Councilmember Booze')
  Specifically, the staff report stated, In order to reinstate Doctors Medical 
  Center as a full service hospital, staff is directed to write a letter to Chevron 
  directing them to redirect a portion of funding earmarked for Marin Clean Energy, 
  Richmond Promise, Electric City and Easy Go to Doctors Medical Center. Only 
  $1 Million will be redirected from Richmond Promise. The total amount directed 
  to Doctors Medical Center is $20 Million. The City Council also directs the 
  City Manager to research potential funders to provide the $20 million up front. 
  The funder will be reimbursed according to the scheduled disbursements set forth 
  in the Community Investment Agreement.
  
  The Chevron Environmental and Community Investment Agreement (ECIA) can be found 
  at http://chevronmodernization.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/14_0804_Executed-Copy-of-ECIA.pdf. 
  
  
  The original proposal was fraught with complications, the first of which is 
  the challenge of reducing the amount previously allocated to greenhouse gas 
  (GHG) reduction. The ECIA has $30 million in cash committed to GHG reduction, 
  and that amount is included not only in the ECIA but also in the Final EIR and 
  its Mitigation Monitoring and Reporting Plan (MMRP). It would have to be agreed 
  to by both Chevron and the City, and it would open up the already certified 
  EIR and make it vulnerable to a new challenge. The time for legal challenge 
  has now lapsed without one, but that could change. The city attorney deemed 
  that reallocating the GHG mitigations would be risky, perhaps unacceptably so.
  
  The second challenge is that the remaining $50 million in cash disbursements 
  from the ECIA can only be reallocated once a year, with a 2/3 vote, but year 
  one does not start until the program begins, which is not until 60 days after 
  all litigation is resolved. That could happen as early as the spring of 2015, 
  or it could take years. The City Council cannot actually reallocate the funding 
  at this time.
  
  The third challenge is that with the $3 million recently directed from state 
  funds by the Assembly Member Skinner legislation, DMC has only enough cash to 
  keep open through February of 2015, and only on a substantially reduced basis. 
  It no longer receives ambulances, and Its 70 beds have been reduced to 30. The 
  outpatient clinic has been closed and the staff has been trimmed from approximately 
  598 full-time equivalents, to 391 full-time equivalents. That is what keep 
  open would mean in the near term. According to both the Health Care District 
  board president Eric Zell and the Interim CEO Dawn Gideon, it would take months 
  to staff back up to a full-service hospital even if funds became available.
  
  The fourth challenge is in the timing for release of funds. The ECIA covers 
  ten-year period with annual releases as follows:
  
  Year 1 $11 million ($ 8 million for Promise Program)
  Year 2 $8 million
  Year 3 $8 million, and so on
  
  There is not enough money in the first year release, even if it went all to 
  DMC, to pay the approximately $18 million cost of keeping it open on even a 
  limited basis. And whatever funds might be made available probably would not 
  be there at the end of February. For funds to be available on March 1, all litigation 
  challenging the Chevron project would have to be resolved 60 days prior, or 
  the end of 2014, which is not going to happen because the hearing on the writ 
  that stopped the prior project will not be held, at the earliest, before late 
  January.
  
  What the City Council eventually did is vote 6-0-1, with Booze abstaining, to 
  register its intent to reallocate, at a later date, $15 million 
  from $50 million of ECIA funds to DMC, but with the condition that the funding 
  is part of a plan that has the additional funding required to operate it once 
  again as a full-service hospital. The conditions also included instructions 
  to the city manager to try and convince Chevron to release more money earlier 
  and to try to convince other West County cities and Contra Costa County to make 
  up the balance of the funding needed. 
  
  A progress report from staff will be back on the Agenda for October 21.
  
  With GHG reduction funding off the table, the largest share of any redirected 
  funding would have to come mostly out of the Promise Program, which proportionately 
  would be reduced by $10.5 million. The typical tuition and fees for CSU is about 
  $6,500/year. See http://www.calstate.edu/sas/costofattendance/. 
  Cal is about $13,000/year. A four-year scholarship for CSU would cost about 
  $26,000, so a $10.5 million cut in the Promise Program would deprive about 400 
  students of a four-year scholarship. 
  
  If the DMC funding is front loaded, there may not be any funding available for 
  the Promise Program for three years or more, which means it would probably not 
  launch next year and would be severely cut back when it does.
  
  However, there were 40 speakers supporting the DMC funding and not a single 
  one supporting the Promise Program, indicating that the public places a huge 
  value on DMC and virtually no value on the Promise Program. 
  
  Following are some articles from the last few days about DMC:
  
  Richmond looks to earmark $15 million to save Doctors Medical Center
  By Jennifer Baires Contra Costa Times
  
  Updated: 10/08/2014
  RICHMOND -- The City Council voted late Tuesday night to try to redirect $15 
  million from a $90 million Chevron community benefits package to help beleaguered 
  Doctors Medical Center stay afloat.
  The money would come from the $50 million in funds that comprise the community 
  programs section of the Chevron package and would be given under the condition 
  that it go to support DMC as a full-service hospital. The money would be carved 
  out for the hospital by taking an equal percentage cut of all the programs in 
  the community program section, but the bulk of it would come from a $35 million 
  college scholarship fund for Richmond public school students. 
  The Richmond City Council voted Tuesday night to try to redirec
  The Richmond City Council voted Tuesday night to try to redirect $15 million 
  from a $90 million Chevron community benefits package to help beleaguered Doctors 
  Medical Center stay afloat. (Kristopher Skinner/Bay Area News Group Archives)
  As part of the resolution, the city will also lobby other West Contra Costa 
  agencies and cities to contribute to saving the hospital, which has drastically 
  cut services in recent months and is no longer receiving emergency ambulance 
  traffic. 
  The council directed city staff to meet with Chevron about reallocating the 
  money and report back on Oct. 21. Chevron had said previously that the city 
  could decide how to allocate the money from the community programs section of 
  the agreement, which was a condition of its $1 billion refinery modernization 
  project. 
  The vote came after pleas from community members and hospital representatives 
  to help the hospital sustain its operations in the face of a crippling financial 
  crisis. Some claimed that the diversion of ambulance traffic, which began in 
  August, has already resulted in the loss of lives. 
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  The infusion would come on top of $3 million in one-time funding from a bill 
  signed into law by Gov. Jerry Brown last month. But questions remain about whether 
  the money -- if and when it becomes available -- will change the long-term prospects 
  for the San Pablo hospital 
  A stakeholders group including local hospitals and health care experts is studying 
  the possibility of restructuring the hospital into a satellite emergency department 
  or, more likely, an advanced urgent care center, while many DMC nurses and doctors 
  push to keep it open as a full-service facility.
  City Council members and the chairman of the West Contra Costa Healthcare District, 
  which manages and funds DMC, came under fire this summer for failing to earmark 
  any money from the $90 million Chevron investment package for the hospital, 
  and the exclusion led to finger-pointing about whom was to blame. The package 
  included funding for college scholarships, a solar farm and green transportation 
  programs. 
  Councilman Corky Boozé added the item to Tuesday's council agenda to 
  carve out $20 million for the hospital. The council ultimately voted on an amended 
  resolution to provide $15 million, with Boozé abstaining. 
  DMC is the only public hospital in West County but does not receive any subsidies 
  from the county.
  The Chevron agreement mandates that $30 million go toward greenhouse gas reduction 
  programs. Boozé's item suggested redirecting money from some of those 
  programs. 
  Before the meeting, Dr. Richard Stern, DMC's chief of staff, had said a one-time 
  cash infusion of $20 million would at best provide the hospital with enough 
  money to stay open as a full-service facility for one year. But it would not 
  solve the problems of low reimbursement rates and need for a costly retrofit 
  at its current facility. 
  In an email Monday, Chevron spokeswoman Melissa Ritchie confirmed that the bulk 
  of the funding from the community benefits package would not be made available 
  until all legal challenges to the modernization project are resolved and Chevron 
  receives the go-ahead to begin construction. 
  Under the best-case scenario, Chevron would start construction during the first 
  quarter of 2015 -- which would mean that it would start paying out 60 days later 
  -- but pending litigation and the permit process could push that date back months, 
  or even years. 
  Check back for updates to this story. 
  Contact Jennifer Baires at 925-943-8378. Follow her at Twitter.com/jenniferbaires.
  
  
  
  
  Richmond council mulls using Chevron community benefit funds to help DMC
  October 8, 2014 by Mike Aldax 
  
  Less than a month before the Nov. 4 election, the Richmond City Council voted 
  in favor Tuesday of using a portion of the $90 million community benefits package 
  tied to the Chevron Richmond Refinery Modernization Project to fund Doctors 
  Medical Center, even after multiple warnings that the money to save the financially-struggling 
  hospital would come too little, too late.
  In July, council voted 5-0 against using a portion of the $90 million to fund 
  the San Pablo safety net hospital, which with an annual deficit of at least 
  $18 million has reduced 
  services and is set to shut down early next year. Mayor Gayle McLaughlin 
  and Vice Mayor Jovanka Beckles abstained from that vote in protest.
  The council had voted against setting aside funds for DMC after being told by 
  officials with the countys health district and Chevron that the money 
  would not be available in time to save the hospital and also that it wouldnt 
  be enough.
  Council instead voted to use $35 million of the $90 million to fund Richmond 
  Promise, a program aiming to fund full college tuition for all Richmond high 
  school graduates over 10 years, and to use about $40 million on various projects 
  and programs to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
  Only $50 million of the $90 million can be legally redirected to fund DMC. Funds 
  used for the hospital would cut into other programs, including the Richmond 
  Promise college scholarship program.
  None of the funds, however, can be released until the start of construction 
  on the modernization project, which is being held up by lawsuits filed against 
  the project by environmental groups Communities for a Better Environment (CBE) 
  and Asia Pacific Environmental Network (APEN).
  With the legal challenges, it could take two years or more before Chevron is 
  cleared to proceed with construction, according to Chevron Richmond officials.
  And after construction begins, the $90 million in funding is set to be dispersed 
  annually over 10 years, meaning only a portion of money set aside for DMC will 
  be available up front.
  DMC, which is scheduled to close down in March, would need funds by February 
  at the latest, Councilmember Jael Myrick said.
  On Tuesday, several councilmembers called on city staff to urge environmental 
  groups to reconsider their lawsuits
  If the legal challenges are dropped, Chevron Richmond pledged to expedite the 
  start of construction so that the community benefit funds can be released.
  We will work with the courts to lift all impediments to construction and 
  hope to have clearance to proceed with construction promptly, spokesperson 
  Melissa Ritchie said.
  How much should DMC get?
  Should environmentalists agree to drop their lawsuits, questions still remain 
  over whether funds supplied from the community benefits package would be enough 
  to maintain DMC as a full-service hospital.
  According to the health district, DMCs doom was sealed after a May parcel 
  tax measure that would have provided the hospital $20 million annually failed 
  to garner enough votes. District officials warned multiple times in the past 
  that a one-time infusion of funds  even as much as $20 million  
  would barely keep the hospital open for another year.
  Last month, a group of health experts tasked with finding solutions to DMCs 
  financial troubles ruled out the possibility of preserving a full-service hospital, 
  citing a lack of possible funding sources from the county and other agencies, 
  and said it will instead push for a scaled down version providing only urgent 
  care.
  Myrick said he was nervous about earmarking community benefits funds for DMC 
  knowing there is no plan in place to ensure the survival of a full-service hospital.
  Despite that concern, Mayor Gayle McLaughlin proposed a motion at Tuesdays 
  council meeting to provide $15 million from the Chevron Richmond community benefits 
  package toward saving the hospital.
  She also directed city staff to return to council Oct. 21 with a plan to expeditiously 
  release the funds to DMC once legal challenges of the modernization project 
  have been removed. Additionally, she asked City Manager Bill Lindsay to urge 
  county corporations such as other refineries, along with officials from neighboring 
  cities and the county, to identify more funding.
  Lindsay warned that the Oct. 21 deadline given to his staff to solve DMCs 
  problems was undoable. He reminded the council that experts from multiple agencies 
  have been unsuccessfully trying to save DMC for the last five months.
  Still, the council voted in favor of the mayors motion, with several members 
  hinting that they were forced to vote in favor of finding solutions for DMC 
  with the Nov. 4 elections coming up. Myrick mentioned that a lot of the councils 
  discussions on DMC have been theater.
  We have seen a lot of demagoguery going on tonight, Councilmember 
  Tom Butt said. I can tell you there are no heroes and no villains. If 
  you want this thing to work, most of the council is going to have to work together, 
  and Chevron is going to have to be a part of it, and probably CBE is going to 
  have to be a part of it. It is not a divide and conquer exercise. This is an 
  exercise in team building.
  Another lifeline for West Contra Costa County hospital proposed
  By Jennifer Baires Contra Costa Times
  
  Updated: 10/06/2014 
  Click photo to enlarge
  http://extras.mnginteractive.com/live/media/site571/2014/0806/2
  Doctors Medical Center pharmacy technician DeeAnn Barnes, right, and National 
  Union of...
  RICHMOND -- The effort to save Doctors Medical Center from closure could receive 
  a significant boost Tuesday as Richmond city leaders weigh whether to redirect 
  $20 million from a community benefits package negotiated with Chevron toward 
  the moribund San Pablo hospital, which has drastically reduced services in recent 
  months.
  The infusion would come on top of $3 million in one-time funding from a bill 
  signed into law by Gov. Jerry Brown last month. But even if the City Council 
  approves the expenditure at Tuesday's council meeting, questions would remain 
  about when the money would become available and the impact it could have on 
  the hospital's long-term prospects for survival. 
  "It'd be a tremendous short-term solution to basically give us some time 
  to find other solutions, get other components in place," said DMC's chief 
  of staff, Dr. Richard Stern, before cautioning that a one-time infusion is not 
  enough. "We still need the county, the community and philanthropic organizations 
  to be part of a long-term solution." 
  A stakeholders group including local hospitals and health care experts is studying 
  the possibility of restructuring the hospital into a satellite emergency department 
  or, more likely, an advanced urgent care center, while many DMC nurses and doctors 
  push to keep it open as a full-service facility.
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  City Council members and the chairman of the West Contra Costa Healthcare District, 
  which manages and funds DMC, came under fire this summer for failing to earmark 
  any money from the $90 million Chevron investment package for the hospital. 
  The package was a condition of the city approving Chevron's $1 billion modernization 
  project and was negotiated between Chevron lobbyist Eric Zell, the chairman 
  of the health care district board, and Richmond council members Tom Butt, Jim 
  Rogers and Jael Myrick.
  The council members said they were led to believe any money for the hospital 
  would be too little, too late to make a difference, but Zell disputed that, 
  saying Rogers and Butt showed no interest in helping DMC despite a proposal 
  by Myrick to fund the hospital. 
  Councilman Corky Boozé added an item to Tuesday's council agenda that 
  would carve out $20 million for the hospital, which is no longer receiving emergency 
  ambulance traffic and has closed some units. DMC, which runs an $18 million 
  annual deficit, is the only public hospital in West County but does not receive 
  any subsidies from the county.
  "I want the hospital open," Boozé said. "Therefore, I 
  am willing to rework the contract. Chevron says they don't care how we spend 
  the money as long as they get the (refinery modernization) permit."
  Butt, Myrick and Rogers say that while they support finding a way to keep the 
  hospital open, the money from the Chevron package cannot be cut from some of 
  the proposed projects that are required for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. 
  They also question whether the money would come in time to help the hospital, 
  which only has enough cash to run as-is through February 2015.
  "I really think that the hospital is important," Butt said. "Having 
  said that, trying to get the money out of this Chevron agreement to guarantee 
  the hospital is going to stay open, well, there are very few ways that it'd 
  be effective."
  The Chevron agreement mandates that $30 million go toward greenhouse gas reduction 
  programs. Boozé is looking to redirect funds from a solar farm project 
  and green transportation programs. 
  If the council passes the item, it remains unclear whether the $20 million could 
  be made available up front or spread over the 10-year span of the package. Boozé 
  suggested the city could advance DMC the money then reimburse itself from the 
  Chevron funds. 
  A one-time cash infusion of $20 million would at best provide the hospital with 
  enough money to stay open as a full-service facility for one year, Stern estimated. 
  But it would not solve the problems of low reimbursement rates and need for 
  a costly retrofit at its current facility. 
  In an email, Chevron spokeswoman Melissa Ritchie confirmed that the company 
  would not negotiate on changing the funding timeline for the benefits package. 
  
  "Distribution of the bulk of the funding will not be initiated until all 
  legal challenges to the modernization project are resolved and Chevron USA Inc. 
  is given clearance to proceed with construction," Ritchie wrote.
  Under the best-case scenario, Chevron would start construction during the first 
  quarter of 2015 -- which would mean that it would start paying out 60 days later 
  -- but pending litigation and the permit process could push that date back months, 
  or even years. 
  While the $20 million redirect might not be possible, Butt and Myrick said the 
  council is considering other options.
  "I think when this thing comes up, there may be some alternative plans 
  floated out and something ultimately supported by the council," Butt said. 
  "I don't think it's going to be $20 million, and I don't think it's going 
  to be a slam dunk."
  Contact Jennifer Baires at 925-943-8378. Follow her at Twitter.com/jenniferbaires.
  If You Go What: Richmond City Council meeting
  When: 6:30 p.m. Tuesday
  Where: Community Services Building, 440 Civic Center Plaza 
  Barnidge: That $3 million for Doctors Medical Center won't go very far
  By Tom Barnidge Contra Costa Times Columnist
  
  Updated: 10/06/2014 
  
  http://extras.mnginteractive.com/live/media/site571/2014/0806/2
  Doctors Medical Center pharmacy technician DeeAnn Barnes, right, and National 
  Union of...
  The headline was uplifting -- "Hospital given reprieve" -- and Assemblywoman 
  Nancy Skinner's comments conveyed hope: "I would like to see the hospital 
  remain open." 
  But the state legislation enacted last week that provides $3 million for Doctors 
  Medical Center was like tossing water wings to a guy drifting toward Niagara 
  Falls.
  "The $3 million basically gets us two months of operation," said Eric 
  Zell, board chairman of the West Contra Costa Healthcare District. "Before 
  this, we felt we could keep the hospital open through the end of the year. The 
  new money would get us until February."
  Don't misunderstand: DMC welcomes any help. It's begging for help, in fact. 
  But when a hospital operates at an $18 million annual deficit -- nonpaying patients 
  and low Medicare and Medi-Cal reimbursements are largely to blame -- one-time 
  funds only slow the bleeding. Band-Aids on an ax wound, if you will.
  "Over the seven years I've been on this board, what's kept this hospital 
  open has been one-time money," Zell said. "Kaiser gave us $12 million 
  over three years. John Muir Health gave us $1 million. The state medical assistance 
  commission, which no longer exists, gave us $36 million over three years.
  "Until there's some sustainable source of funds to address an $18 million 
  annual deficit, we're constantly faced with the same problem."
  DMC, which formerly handled 40,000 emergency room patients annually, is downsized 
  now. It no longer receives ambulances. Its 70 beds have been reduced to 30. 
  The outpatient clinic has been closed and the staff has been trimmed.
  Two Hail Mary passes have already fallen incomplete. A legislative effort to 
  designate the hospital a "public health" facility -- qualifying it 
  for the increased Medicare and Medi-Cal reimbursement rates afforded county 
  hospitals -- failed in the face of opposition by the California Association 
  of Public Hospitals and Health Systems.
  "It's a zero-sum game," Zell said. "If we got that designation, 
  the available dollars would be spread to an additional hospital."
  DMC's attempt to become a less costly free-standing emergency room -- which 
  requires legislative approval -- appears unlikely to succeed because of opposition 
  from nurses and doctors.
  What now appears to be its last-ditch survival effort is as what Zell calls 
  a "Hub" urgent care facility. It would have ER physicians on its staff, 
  with specialists on-call, and beds available solely for outpatient services. 
  An ambulance would be on site to transport patients requiring overnight care 
  to a hospital.
  "I think of it as urgent care on steroids," Zell said. "It has 
  a lot of the qualities of an emergency room, but by not calling it that you 
  no longer need state approval and you don't need to operate under a county license."
  The good news is that it would supply direly needed services at a reduced cost. 
  The bad news is that one funding source might dry up. A 2011 parcel tax that 
  provides the hospital with about $5.7 million per year is in jeopardy.
  "That parcel tax was contingent on there being either a hospital or an 
  emergency room in place," Zell said.
  Hospital officials now are grinding numbers to see if this hybrid solution pencils 
  out. Privately, they are also saying a prayer that an unforeseen benefactor 
  steps forward.
  Maybe the $3 million will be of some help. Maybe it'll keep the hospital afloat 
  until it finds a way to keep from going over the falls.
  Contact Tom Barnidge at tbarnidge@bayareanewsgroup.com.