Over the objections of dozens of residents upset that Seeno Companies/Discovery Builders is part of the equation, the Concord City Council unanimously decided early Wednesday morning to begin negotiations with Concord First Partners to develop the former Concord Naval Weapons Station.
After the meeting had stretched well past midnight, Mayor Tim McGallian said:
“We’re going to go down the right path on this. … And this is something that, again, it’s for all of us to make sure that we are going to honor all the commitments that are in front of us.”
The 5,046-acre site on the city’s northeast side has been the city’s largest and most complicated single issue since the Navy abandoned it in 1999. The Navy officially designated the property as surplus and made Concord the local reuse authority for the site, of which 2,300 acres are targeted for 13,000 housing units and millions of square feet for commercial space.
It will also be home to a new 2,540-acre East Bay Regional Park, named Thurgood Marshall Regional Park – Home of the Port Chicago 50, commemorating the nearby Port Chicago tragedy during World War II.
The council voted 3-2 in August — with Carlyn Obringer and Laura Hoffmeister dissenting — to move forward with Concord First Partners, a group of companies allied for the massive project, including Seeno Companies and its housing arm Discovery Builders Inc., Lewis Group of Companies and California Capital & Investment Group.
Using local developers with ties to local organized labor has been key throughout the lengthy process. Concord selected Lennar Five Point as master developer in 2016. That agreement crumbled in March 2020 when negotiations with local labor unions failed and Lennar’s initial exclusive negotiating agreement expired.
Councilman Edi Birsan said at Tuesday’s meeting:
“This council was, by a 3-2 vote, able to fire Lennar. I know we have the backbone to fire this one if we don’t get what we want. And that’s what it’s all about.”
Founded in 1938, Seeno has a history of running afoul of environmental laws, having been fined millions of dollars over the years for destroying wildlife habitat while developing projects in East Contra Costa County. The company has been accused of a long list of financial accusations over the years, including mortgage fraud. Federal agents raided the company’s Concord offices in 2010.
Hoffmeister followed up on public comments concerning the bidding process, asking how many developers were contacted about the project.
Guy Bjerke, the city’s economic development and base reuse director, said the city did its due diligence, but the project’s massive size limited how many companies could realistically be considered.
Bjerke said:
“If we were to reverse course today, I’m not sure how many people — given what happened to Lennar and given what reversing course might mean tonight … it’s not clear to me how many people would be willing to come in and participate in a process in Concord.”
Councilmembers said they are committed to allocating 25 percent of the future housing for low-income residents, with another 130-200 units committed to homeless residents.
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