San Francisco Chronicle

North Bay trains’ fate rides on tax initiative

- By Rachel Swan

A salestax measure on the March ballot could be a doordie vote for SonomaMari­n Area Rail Transit, the charming but struggling commuter rail that links North Bay residents to jobs in San Francisco.

As the clock ticks down to March 3, big players have begun to weigh in. This week a string of antiSMART ads popped up on local television and radio, decrying the 30year salestax extension — called Measure I — as a blank check with no accountabi­lity.

Sponsored by a committee called NotSoSmart.org, the ads feature evocative images of cars stopped at empty railroad crossings and checks made out to the “SMART Bureaucrac­y.” Molly Flater, the daughter of the influentia­l Sonoma County developer Bill Gallaher, is funding the effort.

So far, Flater has chipped in

$559,183 to defeat Measure I, according to Mike Arnold, a committee treasurer. The committee has not yet made its financial disclosure­s public.

Flater is chief operating officer of Gallaher Homes, a familyowne­d real estate firm with developmen­ts throughout Sonoma County, including luxury apartments, town houses and a shopping center. Its sister division, Oakmont Senior Living, includes more than 40 retirement communitie­s on the West Coast.

“If I end up spending $1 million to save our community taxpayers from a $2.4 billion mistake, then I feel it is worth every penny,” Flater wrote in a letter she has circulated to reporters and others. That’s her estimate for the total revenue the tax extension will generate. Officials estimate the quartercen­t tax will produce $40 million a year.

Without Flater’s backing, the antiSMART bloc seemed outnumbere­d by the politician­s and commuters who want functionin­g public transporta­tion in the North Bay. Arnold is among the dissenters who criticize the train as a waste of taxpayer money.

“That’s my primary concern,” he said, noting that SMART, which carries 2,700 passengers on weekdays, is sparsely filled when compared to San Francisco’s Muni system, which packs about 720,000 weekday riders.

Flater laid out her arguments in the letter, upbraiding the rail system for failing to meet the promises of its original taxmeasure campaign in 2008: a 71mile railroad from Larkspur to Cloverdale, with a 71mile bike path snaking alongside it and shuttle service to and from stations. Those plans stumbled as constructi­on costs soared and tax revenue dropped significan­tly during the recession. To date, SMART has only built 45 miles of rail and 23 miles of bike path.

It’s not the first time members of the family have sparred in local politics.

Flater’s husband, Scott Flater, and father sued the Santa Rosa Press Democrat for defamation after the newspaper documented Scott Flater’s independen­t expenditur­es to support three Santa Rosa City Council candidates. The two plaintiffs lost their case last year.

Sales taxes are the lifeblood of Bay Area public transporta­tion systems, and the quartercen­t tax that Marin and Sonoma county voters approved in 2008 is critical for SMART. It’s set to expire in 2029, and if voters choose not to extend it, then officials will have to eat through the rail system’s reserve funds.

With debt payments mounting annually, SMART would deplete its reserves by 2024 if the system continues to spend at the current rate and the tax is not renewed, said SMART board chair Eric Lucan. A 30year extension would allow the transit agency to restructur­e the debt, freeing up $12.2 million annually that could go back to operations.

“This is critical,” Lucan said. He emphasized the growing popularity of the rail line, which recently opened stations in Larkspur and downtown Novato and now runs trains every 32 minutes during peak commute hours.

It’s beloved by riders who sought relief from the choked traffic on Highway 101. On the SMART train, they could plug in their laptops and start work early, or gaze out the window at a landscape of wetlands and grassy hills. Some cheekily applaud when the train whooshes by a particular­ly painful stretch of 101 called the Narrows, where the freeway shrinks from three lanes to two.

“For me, it was just a great way to start and end the day, particular­ly when you’re cruising past standstill traffic both ways,” said Mike Grant, who rode the train for 14 months from his home in Petaluma to work at the Marin County Office of Education in San Rafael.

Lucan is hopeful. An outside poll by the North Bay Leadership Council showed that 69% of respondent­s favored Measure I, surmountin­g the twothirds threshold for approval.

But the salestax extension is by no means a done deal. Voters rejected the tax before — the SMART ballot measure lost in 2006 before passing in 2008. And this year it will wind up on ballots alongside parcel taxes for schools and a sales tax for fire prevention in Sonoma County. When voters get intimated by a taxheavy ballot, they often vote “no.”

A wellfunded campaign by a rich family could be the biggest threat, according to Lucan.

“That’s something that could change the dynamics of this campaign,” he said. “I think the people of Marin and Sonoma County need to wonder why there’s influence in this election by a multimilli­onaire family to take away transit options for seniors, disabled people and working families.”

 ?? Paul Chinn / The Chronicle 2019 ?? The SonomaMari­n Area Rail Transit system is depending on a 30year sales tax extension to keep its trains running.
Paul Chinn / The Chronicle 2019 The SonomaMari­n Area Rail Transit system is depending on a 30year sales tax extension to keep its trains running.

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