On the agenda: Chevron money, civil-rights litigation and crime trends

The Richmond City Council will meet Tuesday to debate competing proposals for spending millions in Chevron settlement funds, consider changes to how council liaisons are appointed to boards and commissions, and weigh a $4 million contract amendment for sewer rehabilitation, while also conferring in closed session on a federal civil rights lawsuit tied to a 2021 in-custody death and moving through a packed consent calendar of appointments, budget items and resolutions, including a measure expressing solidarity with the people of Iran.

Closed session litigation

The council will talk with attorneys about a federal civil rights lawsuit stemming from the 2021 in-custody death of Ivan Gutzalenko. Court records show the case has moved into its final pretrial stage, with recent court orders issued in January 2026 and the judge ruling on evidentiary motions. The matter is proceeding toward trial while settlement discussions remain ongoing, according to the docket.

Study and action items

Chevron cash is back on the agenda

Two proposals for spending millions in Chevron settlement funds are back on the agenda. Councilmember Claudia Jimenez, Mayor Eduardo Martinez, and Vice Mayor Doria Robinson want to hire a consultant to gather community input on spending Polluters Pay settlement funds.

Separately, Councilmember Cesar Zepeda proposes six annual district meetings to collect public input on settlement expenditures before budget deliberations. Zepeda’s item sits near the very end of the agenda, where proposals have recently gone to quietly not be heard.

Advanced life support first responder devices

The council will receive an update on the Advanced Life Support (ALS) First Responder Services, Fire Station Upgrades and Replacements, and associated Five-Year Financial Forecast.

$4 million Veolia contract amendment

The council will vote on a $4 million contract amendment with Veolia Water for sanitary sewer rehabilitation work, increasing the total project cost to $6.5 million.

The price of maintenance

The Public Works department is also requesting $269,747 for three fuel-reduction mowing units, $125,000 for bicycle circulation improvements near West Cutting Boulevard, and approval of a $25,000 agreement with Union Pacific Railroad for Barrett Avenue pedestrian project engineering. The council will also consider a $44,500 contract amendment for moving and storage services.

Synchronising the machinery of city hall

Mayor Martinez proposes shifting to a two-year appointment cycle for council liaisons to boards and commissions, aligned with election cycles. Current liaisons would serve through December 2026.

Fine-tuning city hall’s pay machine

The council will consider three human resources measures, including approval of updated salary schedules for all employee unions to meet state retirement system requirements.

The council will also vote on adding a new salary range for the City Attorney position ($341,391.60) to the municipal pay schedule. Councilmembers will review proposed changes to salaries and benefits for unrepresented executive management employees that would align their compensation with represented management staff in the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers Local 21 bargaining unit.

December crime report

The council will receive the December 2025 crime report from the Richmond Police Department. The department reported a rise in both violent and property crimes during December 2025, driven largely by a spike in robberies and thefts…

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