Home » Riggers Loft to Hold Fundraiser to Help Fund Appeal Against City of Richmond

Riggers Loft to Hold Fundraiser to Help Fund Appeal Against City of Richmond

by CC News
Riggers Loft

As Riggers Loft continues to battle the city of Richmond, they will be hosting a benefit concert this weekend.

They are hoping to raise $30k. Ahead of the fundraiser event, they have launched a GoFundMe which has already raised $6,818 of the $30,000 goal.

Riggers Loft, 1325 Canal Boulevard, offers a place for locals and visitors from around the country gather to enjoy live music, locally made wine and cider, weddings, events, and breathtaking views of the San Francisco Bay. It’s also the last remaining public venue where people can still experience Richmond’s working waterfront. However, since 2022, they have been battling legal issues with the City of Richmond.

According to Riggers Loft Wine Company, when the pandemic hit, we—like many others—they were forced to defer rent just to survive. In 2022, they worked in good faith with the City of Richmond to negotiate a fair and reasonable repayment plan through the City Attorney. But that agreement was apparently never presented to the City Council. While cities like San Francisco and Alameda forgave pandemic-deferred rent for their port tenants, Richmond took a different path—returning months later with a crushing demand: over $100,000 in interest and penalties, plus a threat to slash their lease by up to18 years.

To help fund a legal battle that continues, six bands will be lending their superb talents and their generous support for Riggers Loft in an all-day concert that is being held from 1:00 pm to 7:00 pm. Tickets are $20 and all proceeds go to the Save Riggers Loft fund, raising money to appeal the City’s Unlawful Detainer against them.

The lineup includes:

  • 1-1:45 –  Bob Roden Quintet
  • 2-2:45 – Bryan Girard Quartet
  • 3- 3:45 – Brazilian Project
  • 4-4:45 – Adrian West Trio
  • 5-5:45 – The Elmwoods
  • 6-6:45 – Albany Jazz Big Band

If you cannot attend the concert, they have established a GoFundMe which also includes more information. Click here

Help Save Riggers Loft — A Bay Area Treasure Under Threat

Riggers Loft Wine Company, a beloved small business on Richmond’s historic shoreline, is in a fight for its life. We are asking the community to help us raise $30,000 through a Go Fund Me appeal.

When the pandemic hit, we—like many others—were forced to defer rent just to survive. In 2022, we worked in good faith with the City of Richmond to negotiate a fair and reasonable repayment plan through the City Attorney. But that agreement was apparently never presented to the City Council.

While cities like San Francisco and Alameda forgave pandemic-deferred rent for their port tenants, Richmond took a different path—returning months later with a crushing demand: over $100,000 in interest and penalties, plus a threat to slash our lease by up to 18 years.

We tried to resolve things peacefully but were forced into litigation. The City opted to file an unlawful detainer to evict us based on claims that were refuted with hard evidence. Still, we lost the initial ruling.

But we’re not giving up!

We’re appealing, and our legal team believes we have strong grounds to win. But we need to raise $30,000 to fund the appeal. As a small, independently owned business, we simply do not have that kind of money and we cannot do this without your help.

Riggers Loft is more than a business.

It’s a community cornerstone—a place where Richmond locals and visitors from around the country gather to enjoy live music, locally made wine and cider, weddings, events, and breathtaking views of the San Francisco Bay. It’s also the last remaining public venue where people can still experience Richmond’s working waterfront—a space filled with history, heart, and hope, and is an irreplaceable link to the city’s past, present and future.

This fight is bigger than our business—it’s about protecting public access to Richmond’s shoreline and preserving a vital piece of the City’s history and identity.

Your donation–no matter the size–directly supports our fight to keep the doors open to a place embraced by so many: a home for local artists, small businesses, and a community that comes together to celebrate, connect and belong.

Please stand with us. Donate today. Share our story. Help save Riggers Loft.


City of Richmond:  Statement on Riggers Loft Wine Company

The City of Richmond’s Surplus Property Authority (SPA) has taken legal action to recover unpaid rent and address lease violations involving Riggers Loft Wine Company, a tenant at the Port of Richmond.

Since 2015, RLWC has leased space at the historic Riggers Loft building under an agreement that required monthly rent payments and compliance with certain public access and permitting conditions. Despite multiple accommodations—including payment plans and rent forbearance during the COVID-19 pandemic—RLWC has not met its financial obligations. As of late 2024, the business owes nearly $400,000 in past-due rent.

The City has made multiple efforts to find a resolution, but due to continued non-payment and other lease violations, the SPA has filed two unlawful detainer cases seeking to reclaim the property. These actions are necessary to ensure the fair management of public assets and maintain the financial sustainability of the Port, which relies on lease payments to fund operations, maintenance, and improvements.

The City remains committed to fostering a strong business community while ensuring that all tenants operate under fair and equitable terms.

Update:  Per the Judgement provided by the Court on March 6th.

Conclusion

Due to the monetary and non-monetary defaults by Riggers Loft, the Surplus Property Authority of the City of Richmond is entitled to judgment in its favor and awarded possession of the premises. Further, the court declares that Riggers Loft has no interest under the lease. — source


For more upcoming events around Contra Costa County, visit our events calendar.

Back in November, former Mayor Tom Butt stated on his website:

The campaign of the RPA to oust the Riggers Loft for failure to pay full rent during Covid, is based on petty political motives and misguided aspirations to make Richmond the supply depot for an offshore wind industry that is, at best, years (and hundreds of miles) away. The political motive is based on my involvement in restoring the Riggers Loft and in advocating for its tenant, the Riggers Loft Wine Company. The RPA City Council continues to pursue, to the detriment of the City, every opportunity to erase whatever beneficial act I had the good fortune to be involved in when I was mayor. They have never forgotten that they ultimately had to admit complete defeat after their effort to speciously sue me was unsuccessful.

It is entirely possible that the only way left to save the Riggers Loft Wine Company and the Riggers Loft as an event venue is to oust the RPA candidates in the November 5 election. A new majority of the City Council could put the brakes on the eviction and negotiate a resolution that would benefit everyone.

Without a tenant to protect it, the Riggers Loft will fall into the same state of disrepair and neglect as the other historic Port of Richmond Buildings, including the Cafeteria and the General Warehouse.

Butt also stated back in October 2023:

Since the inception of the lease with Riggers Loft Wine Company on January 1, 2015, the tenant has paid nearly a million dollars in rent (actually $946,882 as of September 2023), and the City has spent almost nothing maintaining the building, which was completely rehabilitated about a decade ago. The rehabilitation, which included the office and EOC for the Port, was mostly paid for by a grant from State of California OES. The Riggers Loft Wine Company currently pays $132,412 annually in rent with an annual CPI rent increase. In addition to rent, the Riggers Loft Wine Company pays $2,470 annually for business license taxes and has paid $345,000 in sales taxes since 2015. The Riggers Loft Wine Company has invested approximately $2 million in capital improvements to the building. Since opening the Tasting Room in March 2016, the Riggers Loft has hosted approximately 130,000 visitors, many from outside Richmond, despite a significant drop during COVID. The current visitation is trending towards 50,000 a year, more than the Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front Visitor Center. There are currently 40 people employed, some part time, at the Riggers Loft. The Riggers Loft has made significant in-kind donations to City-sponsored and community-oriented events, including: Taste of Richmond for first three years, with 300 to 750 attendees (value $40,200) Chamber of Commerce breakfasts, candidates’ forums and City staff meetings (value $24,000) Mayors Roundtables & Contra Costa County Mayors Conference (value $5,000 per event)

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