East Bay Times

Seven take aim at two seats, including five in District 6

- By Joseph Geha jgeha@bayareanew­sgroup.com

FREMONT >> For the first time since Fremont switched to district elections in 2018, an open seat is up for grabs in City Council District 6, representi­ng the city’s historic Irvington district and surroundin­g areas.

In the broad District 5, which includes Mission San Jose, Warm Springs, and much of the city’s industrial areas where Tesla is located, an aerospace engineerin­g student is going up against an incumbent in the Nov. 3 election.

The five hopefuls running for the District 6 seat are: Yogi Chugh, 55, a corporate real estate adviser and current economic developmen­t commission­er in the city; Teresa Cox, a senior procuremen­t executive for Santa Clara County and a 12-year Ohlone College board member; Charles Liu, 52, who runs his own solar installati­on business and is a planning commission­er, Andrew Nguyen, 50, a database engineer for a local government; and Roman Reed, 45, who founded and runs an organizati­on that raises funds for stem cell research.

In District 5, incumbent Raj Salwan, 46, a veterinari­an, is seeking his second consecutiv­e term on the council, is being opposed by Dolev Gandler, 20, an aerospace engineerin­g student whose long had a passion for volunteeri­ng.

A ll of the District 6 candidates said the city should do more to suppor t small businesses, as well as those who run them and work for them, especially during the pandemic, though they differ on how to best do so.

Reed, if elected, said he’d use cit y reser ves to immediatel­y fund a $5 million COVID-19 relief fund for anyone in the city who needs help because of the pandemic, including businesses owners, renters, and homeowners.

Cox said she’d push the city to establish a requiremen­t that Fremont look to local companies first for all of its contractin­g needs, and require that all businesses in the city give first hiring priority to Fremont residents, especially major operations such as Tesla, Lam Research, and Facebook. To that end, she wants the city to create a job- employee matching service.

Liu said he wants to eliminate red tape in the cit y ’ s business permitting process to encourage more entreprene­urs to create startups in Fremont, and wants to lower business taxes and fees, as does Nguyen.

Nguyen also wants to institute a waiver on sales tax for a few months to encourage more patronage of local businesses.

Chugh thinks the city should continue emergency support funding to businesses during the pandemic and expand city efforts like “pop- up patio,” which streamline­d the ability for businesses to use outdoor space.

Salwan wants to build on a commercial study he previously requested on the historic Mission San Jose area, and work up a specific plan for business and property owners to follow in an effort to boost the dining and entertainm­ent options in the area.

On the issue of homelessne­ss, Liu said he thinks “where we are is a fairly decent situation r ight now,” and while he’s not opposed to spending more on solving the problem, he would like to see how well the recently opened homeless navigation center works first.

T he council’s discussion­s on where to lo - cate the center last year sparked protests and fierce debate among hundreds of residents from different neighborho­ods who pushed against it.

The center is located behind City Hall and is expected to cost the city almost $ 9.5 million over the next three years with a mix of state, city and county funds. The center aims to help connect up to 50 people a year during the pandemic with permanent housing, and up to 90 per year outside of the pandemic, the city said. The last pointin- time survey in January 2019 showed the city had 608 homeless people, mostly unsheltere­d.

Cox said the nav igation center was “too big of a project” for the council to decide and they should have asked voters whether or not to build it. She said she needs more data about the current homeless population, such as “understand­ing if they have been under meth use for 15 years,” before pushing for other homeless solutions.

Re e d sa id t he c it y should use $1 million from city reserves to give housing or hotel vouchers to a significan­t number of the city’s hundreds of homeless people for the short term, while working to help them find more permanent housing situations.

Chugh said the navigation center is a step in the right direction, and while waiting to see the outcomes from that, the city should expand its current efforts by opening another winter warming shelter and investing in another mobile hygiene unit for homeless people.

Nguyen said one area of the city shouldn’t bear the burden of the navigation center alone, so the city should consider opening “a couple more” of them, and placing them in other parts of the city.

Salwan, who voted with the rest of the council to approve the nav igation center, said he’d like the city to offer more hotel or

housing vouchers to homeless people in the short term, and would like to expand rental assistance for those on the edge of losing their homes to help stem the rising tide of homelessne­ss.

The council has called twice for a safe parking program to be created for those living in RVs and cars to use since July 2018, but the project has yet to materializ­e and Salwan said he’s not sure why.

Gandler said the city’s navigation center effort to help dozens find housing annually is admirable, but it falls short of what’s needed.

“T hat’s simply not a number that’s going to cut it if we actually want to help shelter a majority of Fremont’s homeless residents,” he said.

He proposes a threemonth commission be formed to explore cheaper homebuildi­ng options and materials, such as prefabrica­ted panels and hollow- block concrete structures, and thinks voters should be asked in 2022 if they would support a bond measure to build hundreds of lower- cost structures on open city land in District 5 to house homeless people.

None of the candidates supported the idea of “de

funding the police,” a call heard in the city during protests against police brutality and during council meetings in the wake of the Minneapoli­s police killing of George Floyd. Nguyen wants to hire more police for city patrols and schools.

Salwan and Liu both received Fremont’s police union endorsemen­ts. Salwan said that eventually he thinks the police department budget should be reduced, that can’t be done until other resources such as a separate department for mental health responses can be establishe­d.

“We need a transition,” he said.

Liu said in his conversati­ons with residents that people are mostly satisfied with the job police are doing in the city and said he’s in favor of keeping the status quo.

“I’m not in here to really shake things up dramatical­ly,” he said.

Gandler said the police depa r tment ’s $96.5 million annual budget, which accounts for nearly 48% of the city’s general fund, shouldn’t be allowed to exceed 50% of the budget over the coming years.

Both Chugh and Cox said the recent “Engage Fremont” discussion­s the city held about policing were a positive step, though Cox said the department also needs better training “on how to deal with people of color, how to deal with people of diverse groups.”

In recent years, the city has seen an increase in the number of affordable housing units going up or getting city building permits, but Fremont is still nearly 3,000 units short of its regional housing needs for affordable homes and the average home sale price is still about $1 million. Most candidates agreed the city should plan with developers early on, and offer a mix of incentives to get them to build more affordable units, but offered no concrete plans.

Reed, Liu, Salwan, and G and le ra ll suggested the city’s current affordable housing ordinance — which allows developers to pay in-lieu fees to make up for not building affordable units into their projects — should be made less permissive to increase the number of guaranteed affordable units built among the city.

Candidate Jhansi R. Kalapala will appear on the District 6 ballot, but is instead running for the Fremont school board and not campaignin­g for council, she said.

District 1 City Councilwom­an Teresa Keng is running unopposed.

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