Tuesday, June 28, 2011

City of Pittsburg: Pittsburg court will offer family law services beginning July 5


Pittsburg court will offer family law services beginning July 5
Posted Date: 6/28/2011


By Malaika Fraley
Contra Costa Times
Posted: 06/27/2011 04:22:43 PM PDT




PITTSBURG -- Family law cases involving a petitioner who lives in East Contra Costa County will be filed and heard at the new Pittsburg courthouse beginning July 5, the Contra Costa County Superior Court announced Monday.
It will be the first time that the Richard E. Arnason Justice Center offers family law services since the courthouse opened in November at 1000 Civic Center Drive.
From July 5 onward, all new family laws cases with an East County petitioner resident will be automatically assigned to Judge Jeffery Huffaker at the Pittsburg court, according to a court spokeswoman.
Existing such family law cases will be transferred to Huffaker at the next hearing. The files for any case assigned to the Pittsburg court will be kept there.




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City of Pittsburg: Redistricting in Contra Costa County


Redistricting in Contra Costa County
holds meeting in Pittsburg
Date: 6/30/2011 12:00 PM
Cost: Free
Location: Pittsburg Senior Center
300 Presidio Lane
Pittsburg, California 94565
Redistricting in Contra Costa County




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Monday, June 27, 2011

City of Pittsburg: Pittsburg moves toward OK for BART transit village


Pittsburg moves toward OK for BART transit village
Posted Date: 6/27/2011


By Rick Radin
Contra Costa Times
Posted: 06/24/2011 09:22:09 PM PDT
Updated: 06/25/2011 12:28:42 PM PDT

Plans are on track for a transit village on a 50-acre site around the Pittsburg/Bay Point BART station.
City planning commissioners are expected to weigh in on revises to the project's master plan in August. After that, it could go to the City Council for approval as soon as late August or early September, said Leigha Schmidt, a Pittsburg associate planner.
Pittsburg is hosting a final open house on the master plan Tuesday as part of a public review period that ends Aug. 1.
The master plan calls for retail stores, plazas and high- and medium-density housing, enabling residents to leave their cars at home while commuting to any part of the Bay Area served by BART.
"The housing market is what it is, but City Council approval would pave the way for development," Schmidt said. "It doesn't mean development will occur right away."
With the master plan and an environmental study in place, the city could form a joint powers authority with BART, leading to a deal with a master developer, Schmidt said.
The master plan calls for transforming the area around the station "from a suburban neighborhood to an urban center," said Loreli Cappel, a senior urban designer with Oakland-based PMC, a consultant on the master plan.
The goal is to build a self-contained community around the BART station, Cappel said.
The areas in and around the current BART parking lot would be developed with condominiums and apartments in buildings from two to five stories, with retail stores spread throughout the development.
BART owns the eastern half of the site, which is mostly covered by parking lots, and the vacant western half is owned by West Coast Homebuilders, an affiliate of Concord-based A.D. Seeno Construction.
Planners have remedied traffic-related concerns cited in study sessions on the master plan last year, Schmidt said.
"We made changes to the traffic patterns that give more consideration to pedestrians and pedestrian drop-off," Schmidt said.
"The planning commission felt that too much of the plan was given over to vehicles."
Similar transit villages have been built around the Pleasant Hill, Dublin-Pleasanton and Union City BART stations, she said.




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Friday, June 24, 2011

City of Pittsburg: Developer renovates Pittsburg Catholic church


Developer renovates Pittsburg Catholic church
Posted Date: 6/24/2011


By Rick Radin
Contra Costa Times




PITTSBURG -- A 41-year-old Catholic church that was showing its age has a new look thanks to its most prominent parishioner.
Albert Seeno III, an executive with the construction company named after his grandfather, renovated the interior and exterior of the Good Shepherd Catholic Church, helping the Rev. Helmut Richter complete a long-term goal of converting the church from the way it was originally built -- with the altar in the middle of the sanctuary -- to having the altar against the wall.
"The church was built with the pews encircling the altar," Richter said. "After I came here in 1997, I moved the altar, but people were still looking at each other, which is not liturgically correct."
For the first time, there is an aisle leading to the altar, so the church is better equipped to host weddings and funerals.
Besides the refurbished and realigned pews, there are new doors, tile, carpeting, paint and energy-efficient lighting, as well as a handicapped ramp behind the altar.
"Everything that is visible is new," Richter said.
The church exterior was painted and a protective surface placed over the stained glass. Much of the landscaping has been replaced with drought-resistant plants that will help the parish lower its water bills.
"The outside had nothing done to it since the church opened in 1970, not even any paint," Richter said.
Richter has commissioned a new wooden crucifix from his native Germany that will be mounted behind the altar once it arrives.
The marble top of the altar was retained, but Seeno had a new wooden base built and installed.
Richter tried for several years to raise money for the renovation, but the campaign lapsed after the recession began in 2008. He said he received word from the Seenos in fall 2009 that they would take care of the whole project.
Seeno had crews working on the exterior of the building late that year and began the interior work about two months ago.
"Once we got the basic concept down, Albert just did it," Richter said. "I've never gone and asked him 'Can you do this, or can you do that?' "
Richter celebrated the first Masses in the new church last weekend.
"It's not the same church," he said. "People were speechless."
The renovation was not the first project Seeno has undertaken for the parish. Shortly after the church hosted the funeral of family patriarch Albert Seeno Sr. in 2001, Albert Seeno III refurbished a park, with a baptismal pond, on church property used by both the parish and the surrounding community.
"We're devoted Catholics, and I have been attending the church since I was a little boy," Albert Seeno III said. "My youngest son is going to be baptized there this weekend."
Contact Rick Radin at 925-779-7166.



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Wednesday, June 22, 2011

City of Pittsburg: Developer wants to move 193-acre parcel into Pittsburg


Developer wants to move 193-acre parcel into Pittsburg
Posted Date: 6/22/2011


By Rick Radin
Contra Costa Times
Updated: 06/22/2011 06:11:01 AM PDT




PITTSBURG -- A major East Bay homebuilder is circulating a petition for a ballot measure that would move a former petroleum tank farm within Pittsburg's urban limit line, paving the way for it to be developed according to the city's rules.
West Coast Home Builders, an affiliate of Concord-based A.D. Seeno Construction, is trying to smooth the permitting process to build homes on the 193-acre site, near Buchanan and Somersville roads, according to Pittsburg City Councilman Ben Johnson, who said he favors the effort.
The proposed initiative also would eliminate a provision in the city's general plan for the area south of the site limiting new residential development to a maximum of three units per acre up to a maximum of seven units per acre.
The density change may be a signal that Pittsburg is trying to raise money through developer fees to build a long-coveted extension of James Donlon Boulevard from Somersville to Kirker Pass Road, according to former county supervisor and state Assemblyman Joe Canciamilla.
"The city seems intent on (the extension), and will pretty much do anything to get it done," Canciamilla said. "The problem I've always had with the bypass is that the new construction that will pay for it will generate the congestion it's intended to relieve."
The ballot measure would amend Measure P, a 2006 Seeno-sponsored initiative that expanded Pittsburg's urban limit line and added 2,200 acres of open space to the city's sphere of influence.
The land sought for eventual annexation is within Antioch's urban limit line and sphere of influence.
Seeno cleaned up and built homes on an adjacent 50-acre parcel, known as Highlands Ranch Phase I, between 2001 and 2003.
Signatures to place the measure on the November ballot have been gathered at Pittsburg shopping centers and other locations since early May.
"I want (the development) in Pittsburg," Johnson said. "I would love to have the developer fees and the property taxes (from the homes), and obviously so would Antioch."
Seeno owns about 90 percent of Pittsburg's developable land, Johnson said.
Pittsburg Councilwoman Nancy Parent, who co-signed the notice of intent to circulate a petition filed with the city, did not return calls seeking comment.
Antioch City Manager Jim Jakel said he has only heard about the petition from residents, though the city is aware of Seeno's intentions based on copies of the developer's correspondence with the Contra Costa Local Agency Formation Commission, which regulates changes to local government boundaries.
"Seeno's going to look for the most effective plan for him and try to maximize the deal from his perspective," Jakel said.
It is a Pittsburg issue until it qualifies for ballot consideration, he said.
"If it moves forward, then we would do an analysis of what the possible impacts on Antioch would be if enacted and then approved by (the local agency commission)," Jakel said.
Pittsburg associate planner Kristin Vahl said the ballot measure would change the urban limit line, general plan amendment and zoning.
The developer could then apply to the city to initiate a sphere of influence amendment with the local agency commission, Vahl said.
"This is probably the most likely next step," she said. "After that, there would probably be a development proposal and then annexation."
Pittsburg has taken steps lately to encourage home development. In September, it reduced developer fees from $17,795 to $15,795 for a single-family home and from $10,924 to $9,700 for a unit in a multifamily project.
In December, the City Council also agreed to allow builders to defer the payment of fees to the time of the final property inspection or for 12 months after the developer pulls the permit, whichever comes first.
Previously, builders had to pay the fees at the time they took out construction permits.
Pittsburg also pulled out of a regional transportation funding authority on the grounds that it wanted to put more emphasis on its transportation priorities.
Chevron's Los Medanos Tank Farm was built almost a century ago and once contained 40 aboveground tanks that stored crude oil before refining.
It was used until 1980, and all but one of the tanks was removed within a year. Chevron uses the remaining tank at its Buchanan Road pump station.
The site required a cleanup of soil contamination from petroleum residue, according to a 2007 report from the California Regional Water Quality Control Board.
Staff writer Paul Burgarino contributed to this story. Contact Rick Radin at 925-779-7166.



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City of Pittsburg: Pittsburg cuts, squeezes to produce balanced 2011-12 budget


Pittsburg cuts, squeezes to produce balanced 2011-12 budget
Posted Date: 6/22/2011


By Rick Radin
Contra Costa Times
Updated: 06/21/2011 05:48:23 PM PDT




PITTSBURG -- Facing continuing declines in property and sales tax revenue, city leaders passed a budget this week that cuts spending by $840,000 while using $2 million in rainy-day savings.
The $30.9 million budget for 2011-12 included seven layoffs and cutting vacant positions, reducing the city's workforce from 261 to about 240.
It also relies on the $8 million budget-stabilization fund to stay in balance.
"The use of the $2 million from the rainy-day fund enabled us to minimize layoffs," City Manager Joe Sbranti said.
Employees chipped in with salary and benefit givebacks, according to Councilwoman Nancy Parent.
"Our employees have really stepped up and worked hard to maximize what we can do," she said. "They've made considerable financial sacrifices."
Pittsburg has tentative agreements with its police officers' association and its police department management team for savings on salaries and benefits in a new contract that will replace the one that expires June 30, Sbranti said.
The terms of the new agreements will be announced next month, he said. "There will be significant savings without reducing the number of officers on the street."
Pittsburg has about 80 police officers, including managers and officers on leave.
The city is continuing to consolidate executive positions. Pittsburg Power Co. Director Garrett Evans will also serve as assistant city manager, replacing Sbranti. Assistant city engineer Keith Halvorson has been promoted to city engineer; his old position will not be filled, Sbranti said.
Pittsburg negotiated new contracts with non-police unions a year ago that raised employee contributions to their pensions, capped the city's contribution to their medical insurance, and lowered the retirement benefit for new employees.
It also reduced the retiree health care benefit for current employees and eliminated it for new workers.
The changes have slowed -- but not eliminated -- increases in the cost of fringe benefits, which will rise to $17.5 million in the 2011-12 budget from about $16.2 million in 2009-10, according to the budget document approved Monday by the City Council.
The city is trying to reopen discussions with non-safety unions and nonrepresented employees to get further cost reductions, including furloughs.
The budget-stabilization fund was created after former City Manager Marc Grisham took charge in 2004. In addition, the city has a $6.8 million general fund reserve that it can use to eliminate deficits.
Contact Rick Radin at 925-779-7166.




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Tuesday, June 21, 2011

City of Pittsburg: Keep Safety in Mind on our Independence Holiday Weekend


Keep Safety in Mind on our Independence Holiday Weekend
Posted Date: 6/21/2011

With the July 4th weekend approaching, the City of Pittsburg asks all citizens to join help make this holiday happy, enjoyable and safe for everyone. All citizens should remember that fireworks, as enjoyable as they are to watch, can be dangerous and should only be handled by professionals. According to the U.S. Consumer Product and Safety Commission, there are nearly 9,000 emergency room-treated injuries associated with fireworks each year. Fireworks also pose a severe fire hazard, especially in the hot, dry and windy summer conditions we experience. As a reminder, it is unlawful for any person in to possess, purchase, sell or light any fireworks in Contra Costa County, including Pittsburg. Fireworks includes "safe and sane" fireworks, and firecrackers. There are no fireworks celebration in Pittsburg this year.



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Monday, June 20, 2011

City of Pittsburg: Pittsburg council to weigh cuts, fundraising plans


Pittsburg council to weigh cuts, fundraising plans
Posted Date: 6/20/2011


By Rick Radin
Contra Costa Times
Updated: 06/16/2011 04:11:11 PM PDT




PITTSBURG -- City leaders will consider a proposed 2011-12 budget Monday that includes a list of ideas to cut services and raise money to erase millions in deficits anticipated in coming years.
The primary goal of the cuts and fundraising would be to preserve police services, which account for 80 percent of the city's spending, according to the budget document.
The budget proposal calls for:

  • Leaving four police department positions vacant, which could limit law enforcement and code enforcement investigations and result in longer waits for evidence, booking, police reports and customer service.
  • Eliminating a $100,000 budget for police and maintenance employees at the annual Seafood Festival in September.
  • Seeking alternatives to the city's financial support for its senior center.
  • Keeping the Sullenberger Swim Center closed after its renovation is completed at the end of the year. "We have the money to complete the pool, but there is no money in the current budget to operate it," Finance Director Tina Olson said. "We can go out to get grants to see if there's another way (to raise the money)."
  • Raising $100,000 in 2011-12 and $200,000, plus inflationary increases, in future years by completing a deal to place an electronic billboard along Highway 4.
  • Directing profits from new Pittsburg Power Co. projects to the general fund. Power company money has also been spent in the past on economic development, a community arts nonprofit and redevelopment ventures.
  • Consider a fee or parcel tax to pay for existing services. The budget proposal also calls for eight layoffs and eliminating 14 vacant positions, reducing the city's work force from 261 to 239 employees.
    It would use $2 million from an $8 million budget-stabilization fund to balance the 2011-12 budget.
    The city is forecasting a deficit of more than $30 million over the next 10 years, even if salaries for all employees remain the same, according to a finance department report. The proposed 2011-12 budget is about $31.4 million.
    Contact Rick Radin at 925-779-7166.



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    City of Pittsburg: Pittsburg city manager heads into retirement


    Pittsburg city manager heads into retirement
    Posted Date: 6/20/2011


    By Rick Radin
    Contra Costa Times




    PITTSBURG -- City Manager Marc Grisham will put in his last day on the job Monday, ending a busy seven years in which he has shaped the redevelopment of what was once a moribund, crime-ridden downtown.
    Although he wouldn't comment directly about his tenure, Grisham, 60, included a few remarks as part of a proposed 2011-12 budget the City Council will consider Monday evening. He retired at the end of last year but stayed on as city manager on a contract basis.
    Grisham cited a 50-year-low crime rate, the remodeling and reconstruction of the Pittsburg district's schools and the redevelopment of the city's Old Town as the city's major achievements during his tenure. Assistant city manager Joe Sbranti is replacing Grisham.
    Several community leaders and residents had nothing but praise for Grisham and the ideas, knowledge and skill he brought to the job.
    "He's done a fantastic job," said Mayor Will Casey, who joined the City Council six months into Grisham's tenure and was a previous Pittsburg city manager and police chief. "His expertise in redevelopment is unequaled in the state of California."
    Casey said Grisham began in 2004 by revitalizing the city's marina area, dredging the harbor and attracting a new Elks Club that helped bring more people downtown.
    "He took that start and ran with it," Casey said.
    Councilman Sal Evola, who has generally been the only no vote when a council decision on a Grisham recommendation wasn't unanimous, called the city manager "an absolute visionary."
    Evola credited Grisham with the Old Town redevelopment and also praised him for bringing new businesses to town, including guiding Pittsburg Power Co. projects to successful conclusions.
    The power company invests in projects to produce and transmit energy, yielding additional revenue for the city.
    While Grisham was city manager, the power company laid a cable under San Francisco Bay that sends electricity from the state's power grid from Pittsburg to San Francisco. The city will receive $900,000 in annual royalties from the cable project for 40 years.
    Grisham also drew raves from Pittsburg schools Superintendent Linda Rondeau and retired city employee Merl Lewis-Craft.
    Rondeau described Grisham as "creative and energetic" and credited him with putting together partnerships to build playing fields at Marina Vista Elementary and Hillview Junior High that are used by the schools during the day and adult and children's leagues and groups at other times.
    "He always saw the importance of the connection between the city and school district," she said. "He's a good person to brainstorm with."
    Lewis-Craft was the city's recreation supervisor when Grisham arrived. She credits him with broadening youth programs to include vocational training for high school-age kids.
    Grisham helped re-establish the city's teen center that had been closed since the 1980s, said Lewis-Craft, who retired in 2009 after 35 years with the city.
    "It wasn't until Marc came along that we got the mentoring and training programs for older teens," she said. "When they pulled the teen center, there was no place for them to go and nothing for them to do."
    A smaller group of Grisham critics wondered whether the city incurred too much debt while he was city manager and whether money from redevelopment and the power company had been spent wisely.
    Pittsburg's redevelopment agency was among 18 statewide reviewed by the state controller's office this year, and was singled out for some "questionable" accounting that Grisham disputed.
    Pittsburg is anticipating more than $30 million in budget deficits over the next several years, even if city employees, including police, don't receive raises.
    Al Affinito, a longtime resident who served as mayor from 1965 to 1968, said the City Council could have scrutinized some of Grisham's proposals more closely.
    "We don't have a strong City Council that recognizes that responsibility," he said.
    Affinito criticized the city's Arts and Community Foundation, which he said spends money without direct public scrutiny.
    The foundation uses money generated by the power company and other sources to pay for community-enrichment programs, such as library services, a community bookstore and literacy programs.
    Affinito knocked a foundation-sponsored trip to China that Grisham and some council members took.
    "That money goes from the city to the foundation, so where does the public get its voice in how it is spent?" Affinito said. "Why can't they decide how to spend the money at a City Council meeting instead?"
    One of Grisham's most vocal critics has been Joe Canciamilla, the former Pittsburg school board trustee, mayor, county supervisor and Democratic Assembly member.
    Many of Grisham's downtown redevelopment projects have had "no foreseeable net return, jeopardizing the fiscal well-being of the city," Canciamilla said.
    Some of the ventures, such as three or four high-end restaurants and a $6.5 million brewery, probably will need continued city subsidies to stay in business, he said.
    "There's no disagreement that everything looks better than it did, but public funds have been used over private money by 10, 20, 30 to one," Canciamilla said. "My fear is that it all comes to a grinding halt long after Marc is gone."
    Contact Rick Radin at 925-779-7166.



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    Wednesday, June 15, 2011

    City of Pittsburg: City Council Meeting


    City Council Meeting
    Date: 6/20/2011 7:00 PM - 10:00 PM
    Location: City Council Chambers
    65 Civic Avenue
    Pittsburg, California 94565
    Click here to view the agenda


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    City of Pittsburg: Redistricting in Contra Costa County


    Redistricting in Contra Costa County
    Redistricting in Contra Costa County
    Posted Date: 6/15/2011
    Redistricting in Contra Costa County




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    Monday, June 13, 2011

    City of Pittsburg: Start Summer Break with the Green Footprint Festival at Small World Park!


    Start Summer Break with the Green Footprint Festival at Small World Park!
    Posted Date: 6/13/2011


    City of Pittsburg Invites the Community to a Day of Eco-Friendly Fun and Entertainment

    The City of Pittsburg will host the Green Footprint Festival on Thursday, June 16th in Small World Park. The event will run from 11 AM to 3 PM, and will celebrate the many aspects of living "green" with a lighter footprint on the Earth. To help start lightening your footprints, the event will have a special admission fee is $2.00 per person for all ages.

    The Festival will feature a new show by Rock Steady Juggling at 11:30 AM and 1:30 PM, kids' crafts with reused materials by East Bay Depot for Creative Reuse, and interactive kids' activities throughout the park with many green community organizations. The park will be filled with educational exhibits for both kids and adults, highlighting topics like recycling, saving energy and water, and alternative transportation. Kids will receive an event "passport" to get stamped in exchange for event souvenirs.

    Admission on the day of the Green Footprint Festival will be $2.00 for everyone, and $1.00 additional for ride wristbands. This celebration marks the beginning of the park's summer season. Small World Park will be open Thursday through Sunday from 11:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
    Small World Park General Information
    Location: 2551 Harbor Street, Pittsburg, CA 94565
    Phone: (925) 439-4879

    Summer Schedule: June 18th until school starts
    Thursday - Sunday, 11 AM - 5 PM

    Admission Fees: General Admission $4.00; Children (age 1 to 14) and Senior Citizens $2.00
    Ride Wristbands: $1.00

    Small World Park, where family time is quality time. Take pleasure in the beauty and family atmosphere of the park as you picnic, play or enjoy the rides. You are always welcome to drop-in, or for those special occasions, reserve a large picnic site or the party castle. No smoking or alcohol is allowed.

    To learn more about the event, visit the City's website (www.ci.pittsburg.ca.us) and Pittsburg LivinGreen on Facebook (www.facebook.com/pittsburglivingreen), or call 925-252-4129.



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    City of Pittsburg: Pittsburg fast-tracks movie palace restoration


    Pittsburg fast-tracks movie palace restoration
    Posted Date: 6/13/2011


    By Rick Radin
    Contra Costa Times
    Updated: 06/12/2011 05:43:35 PM PDT




    PITTSBURG -- The city is going full speed ahead on restoring the 91-year-old California Theater, converting the long-closed Beaux Arts building into a community playhouse that it hopes will lure more people to its redeveloped downtown.
    Last month, the City Council directed $1.6 million in redevelopment money left from completed projects toward the expected $5.8 million restoration cost.
    Workers have stripped the theater space and lobby to the walls, cleaned up mold and bat guano, and installed a $42,000 replica of the original 1920 marquee over the entrance.
    The city hopes to complete the project in about a year, making it look close to what historical photos of the interior show, said assistant city manager Joe Sbranti.
    "This project didn't have its full funding, and we directed savings from other projects to it," Sbranti said. "This is a good time to do construction, because generally prices are down."
    The theater opened in May 1920 and showed movies continuously until closing in 1954. The city's redevelopment agency purchased the building in 1971, but it remained boarded up until 1998 when preliminary cleanup efforts began, according to senior civil engineer Dick Abono, a fifth-generation Pittsburg resident.
    The marquee was removed in 1975, but what happened to the seats and other fittings is unclear, Abono said.
    "There was no work done to it at all after it closed," he said. "There were so many roof leaks that probably destroyed the seats."
    Architect Albert Cornelius designed the structure. Cornelius also designed the California Theater, near the UC Berkeley campus, the Elmwood Theater in Berkeley and the City Market on Park Street in Alameda, all of which are still in use.
    A handful of other Cornelius-designed movie houses in Richmond, Oakland, Berkeley and Modesto have been demolished or converted to other uses.
    The city plans to restore the original chandelier and organ and re-create the pattern of the original ceiling, Abono said. Pittsburg City Manager Marc Grisham located the organ at a winery in the Central Valley. It was used as a church organ in parishes in Oakland and Castro Valley after it was removed from the theater, Abono said.
    "The winery never used it, and it was still in the box it was shipped in," he said.
    The restored theater will have about 375 seats on the main floor and in the balcony.
    San Francisco-based Architectural Resources Group, which also restored the Napa Opera House, is carrying out the project.
    The theater has more than 2,000 square feet of retail space on either side of the entrance, which the city will try to lease, as well as three smaller offices upstairs behind a pair of statues on the facade.
    "I know people who remember going to movies here," Abono said. "We need to get this done so they can see it again as it was. That's our goal."
    Contact Rick Radin at 925-779-7166.




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    Friday, June 10, 2011

    City of Pittsburg: Old Town Pittsburg Chock-Full of Free Art & Entertainment


    Old Town Pittsburg Chock-Full of Free Art & Entertainment
    Date: 6/15/2011 6:00 PM
    Cost: FREE
    Location: Old Town Pittsburg
    (see below for specific venues)
    Pittsburg, California 94565


    Special Evening Includes A Charitable Art Gallery Reception, A Free Outdoor Concert,
    And Live Music Around Old Town.
    Old Town Pittsburg continues to host amazing free art and entertainment for local residents and visitors to this vibrant city on the Delta. Wednesday, June 15th is a great example of just how much fun you can have in Old Town Pittsburg.

    Steeltown Coffee & Tea will host an opening night reception of new art in the coffeehouse's gallery.
    The new art, a collection of charcoal on canvas drawings by well-known East Bay artist Dan Jones, will debut that evening and the reception will introduce his collection of celebrity portraits as a fund raiser for AIDS Walk San Francisco. Dan Jones is donating all proceeds from the sale of his amazingly detailed art to this important charity and the reception will be hosted by Steeltown Coffee & Tea with complimentary brewed coffee and cookies during the event.

    At the same time, 6pm, the Pittsburg Art & Community Foundation's summer Pittsburg Pops concert series presents the Michael Jackson tribute band Foreverland at 6pm. All Pittsburg Pops events are free for the community to enjoy.

    Also happening in Old Town that evening, E.J. Phair hosts free music by Blues To Go during their Pint Night featuring the beers of Moylan's brewery starting at 6pm.

    And don't forget to drop by the Railroad Book Depot where you'll find a gathering of the Steeltown Irish Music Ceoltas playing traditional Irish music from 7 - 9pm.

    Don't forget to stop by the other shops and restaurants in Old Town while you're enjoying the evening. Visit Old Town, quickly becoming East County's center of arts, entertainment and fun!



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    City of Pittsburg: Cake Decorating Class Now Offered


    Cake Decorating Class Now Offered
    Posted Date: 6/10/2011
    Cake Decorating Class


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    City of Pittsburg: Pittsburg to link city, high school security camera systems


    Pittsburg to link city, high school security camera systems
    Posted Date: 6/10/2011
    By Rick Radin
    Contra Costa Times
    Updated: 06/09/2011 01:28:44 PM PDT




    PITTSBURG -- Police and school officials plan to link cameras at the city's year-old high school to a citywide security system that has been credited with helping to solve crimes.
    The move will help police investigate any crimes that might occur on the 2,500-student campus or respond more quickly to a disturbance, police Cpt. Brian Addington said.
    The intention is not "to actively monitor the kids," Addington said. "If there are any issues at the high school, we can have access to the cameras quickly so we can respond to any emergency there."
    One police officer is assigned full time to the high school campus and another to the city's two junior high schools, Addington said.
    Pittsburg has spent $1.5 million to install 80 cameras at strategic points in the city since 2005. Images from the cameras are stored on the department's computer hard drives for three weeks, giving officers time to review them if a crime is reported near a camera location, he said.
    The department has used the images to corroborate information from victims and witnesses and solve more than 100 crimes, Addington said.
    "In one case, there was an attempted murder in which the suspect was seen riding a bicycle to and from the crime scene and was identified and convicted based on the taped evidence," he said.
    Pittsburg High School Principal Todd Whitmire said no significant incidents have happened in the new campus's first year, but he welcomed the link, saying it will supplement what administrators and teachers are doing to keep the campus safe.
    The campus has 100 cameras in the courtyard, halls and stairwells, and Whitmire and other administrators can view the images on their laptops, he said.
    The cameras haven't helped with one of the most frustrating problems at the $60 million campus: graffiti and other vandalism in the restrooms, Whitmire said.
    "If there is vandalism and graffiti, typically it happens in the bathrooms where cameras are not allowed," he said.
    The citywide system has been funded primarily with developer fees, homeland security grants and redevelopment funds, Addington said.
    The school district will pay about $40,000 for software to establish the link, and the city will pay for upkeep and maintenance of the system, he said.
    Contact Rick Radin at 925-779-7166.



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    Wednesday, June 8, 2011

    City of Pittsburg: Pittsburg OKs affordable housing deals


    Pittsburg OKs affordable housing deals
    Posted Date: 6/8/2011


    By Rick Radin
    Contra Costa Times
    Updated: 06/07/2011 03:03:50 PM PDT




    PITTSBURG -- Two new affordable housing projects are expected to help the city comply with a 2005 lawsuit settlement in which it agreed to create more homes for low-income residents.
    San Francisco-based Domus Development has exclusive negotiating rights to build the projects.
    Pittsburg teamed with Domus, a nonprofit developer, to build Siena Court, a 110-unit senior housing project under construction downtown.
    Preliminary plans for the new projects call for a three-story building with 60 rental units in the 500 block of West 10th Street and a four-story building with 30 rental units at 901 Los Medanos St.
    All of the units will be rented according to federal affordability guidelines. Rents will range from about 30 to 60 percent of the area median income, and some units will be reserved for tenants with disabilities.
    Domus will pursue grants from the state and federal governments and tax credits for the projects, and the city will provide the land, but no construction funding, said assistant city manager Joe Sbranti.
    "Domus has a very high success rate in getting grant funding, including $17 million for Siena Court," Sbranti said. "If they don't go out and get the money, that project doesn't happen."
    Planning for the latest projects is in the preliminary stages, and the cost is still undetermined, according to Domus President Meea Kang. The City Council approved the development deals this week.
    "We're looking for what makes the most sense, the most feasible project to design and implement, and we're still researching the financing options," Kang said.
    The Rev. Greg Osorio, who filed the 2004 lawsuit challenging the city's housing plan, said he thinks Pittsburg has made good progress lately in developing more affordable housing.
    The lawsuit contended that the housing plan favored high-end homes and limited zoning that restricts a broad range of housing options. The settlement committed the city to adding 990 units of affordable housing by 2014, of which 396 must be for people with very low incomes.
    "Considering the economy, I think they're doing pretty well, producing some quality units in the process," Osorio said.
    Sbranti said he was pleased with Osorio's remarks.
    "Our progress on low-income housing has been slow and steady," Sbranti said. "These are difficult times, and we're doing the best we can."
    Contact Rick Radin at 925-779-7166.




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    Monday, June 6, 2011

    City of Pittsburg: Relay for Life of Pittsburg and Antioch


    Relay for Life of Pittsburg and Antioch
    Posted Date: 5/30/2011


    Relay for Life is a fun-filled overnight event designed to celebrate survivorship and raise money for research and programs of our local American Cancer Society.  During the event, teams of people gather and take turns walking or running laps.  We try to keep at least one team member on the track at all times.

    Our Relay for Life runs from 10am on June 25th to 10am on June 26th and will be held at Los Medanos College (2700 East Leland Road; Pittsburg).

    Our Reason to Relay We are making a difference by teaming up to participate in the American Cancer Society's Relay For Life. Saving lives from cancer starts one team, one participant, and one dollar at a time.

    At the Relay For Life event, our team will camp out overnight and take turns walking around the track to raise money and awareness to help the American Cancer Society create a world with less cancer and more birthdays.

    By joining or donating to our team, you will be a part of a life-changing event that gives everyone in the community a chance to celebrate the lives of people who have battled cancer, remember loved ones lost, and fight back against a disease that takes too much.

    Please support our efforts to fight cancer by joining our team or making a donation. The impact we can make together is much greater than what any of us could do alone!

    Please call or visit Meredith Ladich to sign-up as a walker or learn more information.  Meridith can be reached at:

    Meredith B Ladich
    Executive VP/CEO
    Pittsburg Chamber of Commerce
    www.pittsburgchamber.org

    Phone:  (925) 432-7301
    Email:    meredith@pittsburgchamber.org

    Please visit HERE to make a donation.



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    Friday, June 3, 2011

    City of Pittsburg: City Council Meeting


    City Council Meeting
    Date: 6/6/2011 7:00 PM - 10:00 PM
    Location: Council Chambers
    65 Civic Avenue
    Pittsburg, California 94565
    Click here to view the agenda


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