To right the ship, Richmond councilmembers and leadership talk better collaboration tactics

RICHMOND — Top city officials and elected leaders here have visions of overhauling operations and improving conditions for residents, but before those goals can be achieved they first needed to set clear ground rules around collaboration and expectations.

At a special meeting this week, they discussed having more effective communication — or being more thoughtful to each other — a discussion that comes on the heels of tense council discussions.

“There was clearly an inherited dynamic,” Richmond Councilmember Doria Robinson said of historically contentious relationships between leadership. “I don’t think anybody wanted to function that way. We want to function more as a team and move in a way more respectful way.”

For starters, the City Council asked that staff provide more frank communication and realistic timelines on various initiatives, noting the updates are also for the public. City department heads, meanwhile, asked council to recognize they’re doing the best they can with limited resources and largely new teams, and stressed restraint in adding more tasks to their plates.

Some discussions during recent council meetings have grown tense at times between the council and staff. Most recently, Councilmember Soheila Bana and City Manager Shasa Curl were heard speaking over each other and growing visually frustrated while discussing street safety measures during an April 16 meeting. Mayor Eduardo Martinez, Vice Mayor Claudia Jimenez and Robinson said Tuesday that respectful collaboration among top city officials is getting better.

City Manager Shasa Curl agreed. While calling municipalities “dynamic places” she said she ultimately feels supported by the seven-member council, referring to them as her bosses.

“Things ebb and flow,” Curl said. “Overall, the council is extremely supportive of myself and staff.”

As evidence conditions in the city are improving, Curl pointed to the city’s crime rates. Homicides dropped in 2023, with eight killing compared to the 18 reported in both 2022 and 2021 and 22 reported in 2020, according to the city’s crime statistics dashboard. Robbery rates similarly are trending downward, from between 240 and 298 reported annually since 2020, a drop from the more than 400 reported in 2018 and 2017.

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