ParkScore, a project of the Trust for Public Land, ranked the 100 largest U.S. cities on their needs for parks by using mapping technology and demographic data on a 0-to-100 scale. Five California cities as appear in the top 20: San Francisco with 77.5 (ranked 5 overall), Irvine 75 (8), San Diego 71.5 (12), Oakland 70 (14), Sacramento 67.5 (17); other cities fared poorly, including Stockton 40 (82), Santa Ana 38.5 (83), and Fresno 29 (97). The score, out of 100, is based on acreage (median size of parks), investments and amenities (spending per resident), access (percentage of people within ten-minute walk of a public park). Twenty points are given for median park size and another twenty for percentage of city area. Twenty for investment and forty for percentage of population within short park distance.

West Coast Cities Agree to Climate Change Pact           
San Francisco, Oakland, Los Angeles and three other West Coast cities have agreed to work together to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and fight climate change under the Pacific Coast Action Plan on Climate and Energy. The plan encourages zero-emission vehicles, reporting of energy usage for large buildings and install more charging stations for electric vehicles. These cities are working with California Gov. Jerry Brown, governors of Oregon and Washington and the premier of British Columbia. Together this region hopes to build an electric car-charging network that allows individuals to drive from Southern California to British Columbia. 

 Grand Jury Faults Shasta County LAFCO

A new Grand Jury report criticizes Shasta County Local Agency Formation Commission for failure to meet deadlines and poorly managed staffing. Between 2001 and 2012 the agency did not complete any mandatory reviews of special districts or municipal services in the county. The agency then depleted its budget in order to finish the required paperwork. The report contends that the agency “is not fulfilling its purposes and programs.”  It cites complaints voiced by city staff in Anderson, who said that the agency delayed on an annexation. The report also recommends review of executive officers performance and a revision of the budget to bring back staff that had hours cut.

 Income Gap Grows in Silicon Valley

In the past 25 years the gap in Silicon Valley between wealthy and lower income groups has increased dramatically, according to a new report from the California Budget and Policy Center. For instance in San Mateo County (where the gap is largest), the top 1 percent earn roughly $4.2 million annually which is 46.2 times more than the average income of the bottom 99 percent. The report analyzes these trends and speculates on what could be exacerbating income inequality in the region. The report makes further links between inequality and economic mobility for future generations, income inequality and economic prosperity, and Silicon Valley’s role in combating inequality. The report looks at the dwindling middle class of Silicon Valley, and what could be done to allow this group to afford to live and work in one of the wealthiest areas of the country.

Giants Ask City for Tax Break for Stadium Depreciation

The San Francisco Giants are asking the city for millions of dollars of property tax refunds, claiming the value of AT&T Park has dropped below $200 million. This means in the 2011 to 2014 term the property-tax bill be slashed in half for $8 million total. The Giants will make a case with the San Francisco Assessment Appeals Board that deals with such disputes. City officials valued the park at $407 million in 2014, while the Giants said it was more like $158 million. A similar case was made in 2003 when the Giants sought refunds from the years 2001 to 2003, the Appeals Board agreed and gave the Giants $3.6 million in refunds. Then the two groups came to a truce and agreed to a ten-year payment schedule that kept the value constant. The agreement has now expired and both groups are making bids to estimate the value of the property.

Updates & Quick Hits

 Humboldt County Supervisors voted unanimously to support removal of four hydroelectric dams in the Klamath River by 2020. Instead of seeing congressional approval, the decommission of the dams is now through the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The removal will cost $450 million.

Humboldt County is asking AirBnb to pay county lodging tax. This means the company will deduct 10 percent of gross revenues from its renters in unincorporated Humboldt County. 

San Jose has moved up to the third-most expensive to city to rent in after San Francisco and New York. Zumper, an apartment rental website, announced that Boston moved down to fourth while Oakland and Washington D.C. are tied at fifth. This means three Bay Area cities are in the top five most expensive cities.

A group of non-union construction companies and workers, Coalition for Fair Employment in Construction, announced its opposition to the Chargers’ initiative for a downtown stadium and convention center. The Chargers recently announced they would partner with labor unions and ban non-union construction workers for the $1.8 billion project.

Kings County officials have decided not to appeal a Sacramento County judge ruling that the high-speed rail system did not violate promises made to voters in the 2008 bond initiative.