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Case Study Hubs | NorCal Resilience Network
Case Study: Boyle Heights

Case Study: Boyle Heights

Boyle Heights Case Study 

The  Boyle Heights Art Conservatory, located in just south of Downtown Los Angeles, has a rich history of collaborative spirit and energy, starting with its original construction as a multicultural gathering place in 1925.  Today, as climate change continues to disproportionately affect communities, the staff and youth at the conservatory is tasked with expanding their endurance. 

Climate Resolve is a non-profit organization that works with predominantly Black, Indigenous, and People of Color to achieve a “just and resilient future” through equitable climate solutions. In partnership with Climate Resolve, the Boyle Heights Art Conservatory serves as a model example of a Resilience Hub: a trusted space that displays both their deep-rooted culture and disaster preparedness.   

Building Resilience 

As of 2021, the conservatory includes cooling and heating facilities. The building has been retrofitted for earthquakes, water filtration systems have been set in place, and the landscaping is drought tolerant. Back-up power is also available in case of a disaster. 

Climate Resolve and the Boyle Heights Art Conservatory regularly communicate with their community members in order to keep up with their needs. Because of their diverse environment, this resilience hub is able to translate their information in languages in English and Spanish. Their strong connections to the Indigenous community in the area allows them to understand and learn about native edibles and medicinal plants. Role models such as Tochtli Orozco have paved the way for environmental activism and awareness within the resilience hub. In fact, Tochtli lives in a tree!   

Throughout the pandemic, staff members like ​​Joey Rodriguez (a Youth Coordinator) volunteered at vaccination sites to help distribute vaccines and guide people in both Spanish and English. Throughout his teen years, Joey learned to “keep an ear open and listen to community members.” The conservatory plays an important role in Joey’s perception of the community: “Do not treat your neighbors like a business.” Instead, Joey is a firm believer in fruitful and long-lasting work that benefits the whole community. 

Similarly, Chase Engelhardt, a Policy Analyst & Organizer at Climate Resolve, has learned to engage with people at their comfort levels: “People can feel overwhelmed by not being able to accomplish their goals. But the important thing is: do something.”

A Rich History: Setting a Precedent  

In the early 1920s, members of the Cooperative Consumers League, a Jewish Socialist group, commssioned the construction of a building that would serve as a gathering place for Mexicans, Japanese and African Americans. At the corner of North Mott Street and East Cesar Chavez Avenue, the building provided a bakery and café on the first floor, a large ballroom in the middle, and meeting rooms on the top floor. The Jewish Bakers Union 453, who ran the bakery, played a valuable role in distributing low-cost bread. During the Great Depression, the café served as a soup kitchen. 

During the 1930s, The Cooperative Center was pivotal in organizing marches, rallies, and protests against police harassment during the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) Red Squad’s persecution of communists. In 1931, fellow community members were arrested for helping Mexican and Filipino farmworkers strike against hazardous and inadequate work conditions.

Later in the 1940s and into the 1960s, this site continued to embrace its multi-ethnic community. The Paramount Ballroom hosted Latinx and African American musicians such as Tito Puente, Arsenio Rodríguez, and The Six Teens. The ballroom welcomed all kinds of music such as punk, ska, goth, reggae, hip-hop, doo-wop and oldies. Flamenco, tap, ballet and boogie-woogie dancing decorated the ballroom floors every weekend.  

Modern Day: Continuing Community Building 

The long history of arts and activism function as the foundations of the Boyle Heights Arts Conservatory, which began in 2011. The Boyle Heights community is marked by their ability to continuously provide vulnerable members with a safe space rich with culture, education, and opportunities. 

Now, celebrating almost 100 years since the building’s opening, the Boyle Heights Art Conservatory “provides a focus on career development for historically disenfranchised and impacted youth who are interested in pursuing careers in film, television, broadcasting, music and digital content creation.”  The conservatory hosts 101.5 FM KQBH L.A., which is a community radio station run by local youth. In addition to the radio station, classes for their community range from stop motion animation to introduction to DJing, to YouTube/acting. 

Looking Ahead

The Boyle Heights Resilience Hub has come a long way in building resilient structures, and are now turning their focus to broadening their conservation efforts. The staff is eager to incorporate potential programs that further educate community members in native plants and gardening. The staff also learned that the hub will need more space and supplies like masks and air filters. They have recognized the need to start implementing more programs that allow community members to be trained in CERT and/or First Aid. Nonetheless, the Boyle Heights Art Conservatory will continue to serve its community members with labor, time, and money. The strong relationships they fostered with their culture and environment will aid Boyle Heights on their journey towards resilience.  

You can learn more about the Boyle Heights Art Conservatory and how to support them through their website and this video:   

 

Case Study: West Oakland Resiliency Hub

Case Study: West Oakland Resiliency Hub

Project Overview                          

This project, which is coordinated by the West Oakland Environmental Indicators Project, seeks to adapt existing West Oakland community spaces at 18th and Adeline Streets into the West Oakland Resiliency Hub. Working closely with the community of West Oakland and the City of Oakland, the West Oakland Resiliency Hub aims to connect with, support, and strengthen existing networks of neighborhood churches, schools, parks, community organizations, and crisis responders. 

Existing buildings and outdoor spaces to be incorporated into the program include: the West Oakland Senior Center, West Oakland Branch of the Oakland Public Library, and the DeFremery Recreation Center and Park – all of which are owned and operated by the City of Oakland. This hub would offer regular programming to increase neighborhood resilience every day and provide vital community services during environmental crises, while serving as a Cooling Center during high heat days and as a Warming Center during cold days. Other proposed infrastructure includes but is not limited to: 

    • Sanitation: sufficient on-site sanitation facilities for large scale disaster us
    • Energy: renewable, non-polluting energy sources and back-up power to run critical operations when the power grid is down
    • Communications: access to information, cell phone and computer charging, communications systems not reliant on cell or wifi infrastructure
    • Shelter: emergency, temporary shelter managed through the Red Cross or a similar organization 
    • Clean Air: reduced neighborhood pollution and access to clean air spaces; filtered indoor spaces during forest fires and high air pollution times
    • Transportation: shared community bikes, electric vehicles, and ADA accessible vans or buses for regular use; vehicles to transport or evacuate people and resources as needed in a disaster\
    • Medical care: access to acute medical care and mental health care in the wake of a natural disaster, public health, or other emergency
    • Ongoing resiliency efforts: education courses, tool library, expert advising, community meetings, peaceful protests, and other vital environmental and social services. 

                 

                Feasibility Phase: Completed in Summer 2020

                The feasibility phase identified the physical infrastructure upgrades that are needed to retrofit the centers into a resilience hub and worked with technical experts to assess feasibility and costs. This phase began with a series of community and stakeholder engagement events to define resilience for West Oakland and identify relevant infrastructure. We then worked with a cohort of urban design and planning students from UC Berkeley to explore additional infrastructure options. The team then brought in a solar energy and HVAC consultant, mechanical air filtration company, and structural engineer to assess the feasibility and cost of making the necessary upgrades. This phase was completed in close collaboration with Center Directors and stakeholders across the City of Oakland. 

                The feasibility phase thus identified broad areas and types of resilience and explored how the areas of resilience can be manifested and/or supported with physical infrastructure. Project consultants then helped to identify cost-effective measures to increase resilience at a reasonable cost. And, over the course of this phase, we also considered the possibility of a more substantial upgrade and revisioning of the site into a modern resiliency hub that can truly be a city wide and regional model.

                Project Stakeholders

                This project has strong support and involvement from center staff and directors at all three centers; city staff across departments; and community members and organizations connected to the three centers. City department involvement includes: Office of Aging and Adult Services, Oakland Public Libraries, Parks and Recreation, Public Works, Environmental Services, Emergency Services, Chief Resilience Officer, District 3 Councilmember. PG&E and the Bay Area Air Quality Management District are also involved and supportive. PG&E funded the initial feasibility phase. Community networks include: St. Mary’s Center, Friendship Christian Church, Oak Center Neighbors Group, West Oakland Library Friends, West Oakland Neighbors, NCPC Beat 2X & 5X, and West Oakland Senior Center Community.

                Resilience and West Oakland

                West Oakland is a socioeconomically vulnerable, historically marginalized, and disenfranchised community, yet it is also and a community with a strong social network that has survived numerous historical crises, including decades of systemic racism and industrial dumping, and the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake and subsequent Cypress Freeway collapse. West Oakland is a majority community of color (76%) and working-class community overburdened by poverty, underemployment and low education (median household income of $38,169). People of Color disproportionately experience poverty and other indicators of negative well being as indicated in the Oakland Equity Indicators Report.

                 

                West Oakland is also a low-lying neighborhood with significant infilled land from the San Francisco Bay which puts residents at high risk for flooding and significant earthquake damage, both of which could lead to sewage overflows, toxic soil from contaminated industrial sites spreading, and road and transportation infrastructure damages. Adjacent to the Port of Oakland, national rail yard, and bounded by freeway, West Oakland also experiences disproportionately high levels of air pollution which will likely be exacerbated by increasing ground level ozone production with rising global temperatures and intensified wildfire seasons.

                Current Disaster Response 

                Baseline disaster response in West Oakland is largely reactive and insufficient to fully meet the community needs in the event of a significant disaster. Response only happens once a disaster has occurred and is often centralized and militarized, failing to meet the needs of people of color and poor communities. Oakland Fire Department has publicly said that they will take from 72 hours up to one week to respond in the aftermath of a major disaster. And while there are community organizations and large national organizations (such as the Red Cross) that are experts in providing disaster support and temporary, setting up and running shelters, many Oakland city buildings do not meet Red Cross requirements, particularly because they do not have backup power.

                Next Steps: 2021 and Beyond

                  • Design Phase: The next phase is to build off of the feasibility assessments with more detailed design. This phase may include a design competition with design professionals and will conclude with permit ready drawings for building and site upgrades. This phase will require hiring consultants from various disciplines. 
                  • Implementation: After the conclusion of the design phase and procurement of permits and funding, project implementation will begin. Implementation will likely happen in tiers and phases as funding becomes available and permitting progresses for various sections of the project. While the immediate need is for funding for the design phase, we are also starting to explore funding options for implementation. 
                  • Social Infrastructure: The social infrastructure of resilience and the West Oakland Resiliency Hub is equally critical. Next steps include finalizing the core team of individuals and organizations, then acquiring funding for the organizing and programming to build the Hub’s social infrastructure.
                • Scaling: This project phase has been completed in coordination with various City of Oakland staff and departments who are using this project as a model for future replication in other parts of the City. Oakland’s Equity and Climate Action Plan includes the implementation of three additional Resiliency Hubs across the City. 

                Estimated Implementation Budget

                Note that there is potential funding for mechanical and air filtration through a pending Supplemental Environmental Project through the California Air Resources Board. This project has also been submitted through the City of Oakland’s 2020 to 2022 Capital Improvement Program. Both the West Oakland Library and the West Oakland Senior Center are also currently being prioritized for needed building repairs to maintain basic safety and functioning. 

                • Design phase: $500,000
                • Initial known implementation estimates 
                  • Library: $245,120
                  • Senior Center: $177,291
                  • DeFremery Recreation Center (Gymnasium Roof): $130,220
                  • Library: $216,000 to $696,000
                  • Senior Center: $72,000 to $132,000
                  • DeFremery Recreation Center: $36,000 to $96,000
                  • Library: $25,873
                  • Senior Center: $18,466
                  • DeFremery Recreation Center: $18,194
                  • Library: $31,395
                  • Senior Center: $38,860
                  • DeFremery Recreation Center: $46,104 
                  • Rooftop Solar 
                  • Solar Battery System (with and without air conditioning capacity): 
                  • High-efficiency HVAC Systems with new or repaired air conditioning
                  • Energy efficiency lighting and other upgrades: paid through PG&E’s On-Bill Financing
                  • Air filters added to new HVAC with 5-year initial maintenance contract
                • Additional implementation needs without cost estimates
                  • Seismic structural upgrades
                  • EV charging stations 
                  • Additional refrigeration and cold storage
                  • Potable water harvesting and storage
                  • Not-potable water system

                West Oakland Environmental Indicators Project (WOEIP)

                WOEIP is the Project Lead and is a resident-led, community based organization with over twenty years of experience and national recognition as an expert in collaborative problem-solving and policymaking that centers residents’ voices and leadership. WOEIP’s work centers on air pollution in West Oakland, community resilience to climate change, and renewable energy production and energy efficiency. 

                For further information, please contact: 

                 

                 

                 

                Case Study: Bay Area Maker Farm

                Case Study: Bay Area Maker Farm

                The climate crisis is already here. Every year, the threat to vulnerable communities rises. In order to meet the moment, we must act quickly to protect those at risk. Recognizing the urgency to adapt, a group of skilled craftspeople have rapidly developed a new resilience space in the City of Alameda. At its current location, the Bay Area Maker Farm has only been around since the beginning of 2021. Since then, they have developed their allotted plot of land into a dynamic site. Their new location is on land owned by Alameda Point Collaborative (APC), the largest supportive housing community in Alameda County, which has provided them with the opportunity to support their residents, many of whom previously struggled with homelessness. This partnership has already proven fruitful, with many of the residents regularly showing up at volunteering events and workshops. 

                The Bay Area Maker Farm is in a unique situation, being the only resilience site in the City of Alameda. Although it is relatively new, the site will most likely act as a model for other potential hubs who are interested in building resilience in the face of climate change.

                 

                One area where they stand out is their incorporation of various makers, whose expertise and ingenuity contributed to the rapid establishment of the site in its current location. The members of the Maker Farm are skilled in a variety of crafts including woodworking, sewing, blacksmithing, and gardening. The site contains several shipping containers which have been converted into workspaces for the makers to rent out. Some of their projects include NorCal Resilience partner Wholly H2O, which promotes water conservation, and the Foodz Project, which turns food waste into hot meals for the homeless. During the pandemic, the makers have put their skills to good use, producing personal protective equipment and painting murals in support of Black Lives Matter during the height of the George Floyd protests. 

                 

                Recognizing the lack of diversity in the maker community, the site has made efforts to promote equity by hosting community events for local BIPOC organizations as well as offering skill shares for their local community to bring new people into the maker’s space. These efforts are especially important given the fact that their area is 90% people of color while a majority of the makers are overwhelmingly white. 

                Although they have made remarkable progress since coming to their new location, the Bay Area Maker Farm acknowledges its need to further develop as a resilience hub, especially in the area of disaster preparedness.  One area, in particular, they seek to flesh out is setting up clear procedures to respond to natural disasters such as extreme heat, smoke from wildfires, earthquakes, and flooding. Currently, the farm does not act as a food distribution hub despite its connection with the Foodz Program and the refrigerated truck on-site, but they are interested in setting up a food distribution program in the future. In terms of supplies, they do not have enough food, water, masks, air filters, first aid kits, or emergency go-bags to withstand a sizable disaster. There is currently no committee dedicated to disaster preparation, but there are ongoing efforts to rectify this shortcoming. 

                One area of strength for the Maker Farm is their connection with their community. The site itself is designed to be as open and inviting as possible. The gates are always open for visitors and anyone can come to their volunteer days. This has made them incredibly accessible to their APC neighbors and has brought in assistance from across the area including the local Coast Guard base. They also host regular meetings for groups such as BIPOC Alameda and have partnerships with Community Action for a Sustainable Alameda (CASA) as well as APC’s Farm2Market.  

                 

                The farm also has made excellent progress to be more self-reliant with its water and energy practices. The entire site runs on renewable energy supplied by a solar panel owned by FEMA and operated by the makers. They are also looking to install backup batteries and generators to prepare for power shutoffs. Through Wholly H2O, the site is also working on adopting more water sustainable practices such as rainwater catchment.

                 

                The new Bay Area Maker Farm has quickly established itself as an innovative and dynamic resilience space that could serve as a model for the entire city of Alameda. Thanks to the creativity and ingenuity of the MakerFarm members, the site will continue to find innovative ways to better serve its community. 

                 

                 If you wish to learn more about the Maker’s Farm or assist in their projects, check out their website here: Bay Area Makerfarm

                Case Study: The Oakland Peace Center

                Case Study: The Oakland Peace Center

                As climate change drastically upends our daily lives, promoting peaceful cohabitation, conflict resolution, and cooperation will be essential for humanity’s survival. To this end, the Oakland Peace Center is dedicated to community building through the work of its 30+ community partners, whose programs support nonviolent communications, mental health, healing, and community-based conflict resolution.  At the Peace Center, the various organizational partners offer a variety of services including therapy, meditation, youth workshops, and immigration services. 

                Founded at the First Christian Church of Oakland on MLK Day ten years ago, the Oakland Peace Center has taken a unique approach to promote resilience. Beyond just maintaining supplies of emergency resources, their connections have given them the ability to promote resilience on a daily basis and strengthen their community before a disaster even hits.

                There are many elements of the Oakland Peace Center which distinguish it from other resilience hubs. Their most unique elements are their partners. In total, there are ten in-house partners and more than thirty-five external partners who work closely with the organization. Through these, the Center shines. Acting as an intermediary, the Peace Center excels at coordinating resources and expertise to promote nonviolent conflict resolution and provide assistance to vulnerable community members. Some of the organizations include East Point Peace Academy, which offers conflict resolution training to the general public and prisoners, the Niroga Institute which teaches trauma-informed mindfulness practices at Oakland schools, and Project Darreis, which provides basic needs in an effort to curb violence. By themselves, these organizations provide vital services to the community, but with the assistance of the Peace Center, they are able to break out of their silos to collaborate with other organizations and find creative ways to build resilience. 

                Another central element of these organizations, and the Center at large, is their focus on promoting equity and supporting marginalized communities. This can be seen in their agreed-upon values where they recognize the persistent legacy of slavery and commit themselves to always center racial equity in their work.

                The Oakland Peace Center stands as a model resilience hub thanks to their extensive disaster preparations, relationships with their community, and their efforts to fight climate change. In the event of a disaster, the facility will be prepared thanks to their regular evacuation drills, designated meeting places, and supplies of essential resources. Currently, they have enough food and water to supply thirty people for over a week, a reserve of bunk beds and sleeping bags, as well as go-bags that contain feminine hygiene products. 

                To ensure that nobody is left behind in the event of a disaster, one of their most important roles as a resilience hub is to stay connected to the community that they serve. As an organization whose primary purpose is networking, the Oakland Peace Center is perfectly situated as an intermediary in their community. Through their partners, they are able to identify those who need the most assistance and connect them with resources. When one partner is working with someone who needs mental health counseling, they are able to work with another partner who provides these services. Finally, the Center has been making efforts to combat climate change. This is mainly done through partners such as The Sunflower Alliance, Urban Releaf, and the Alliance for Climate Education. These community organizations work with the Peace Center to educate the community about climate change and fight for climate justice. Recently, they have been retrofitting the facility with sustainable appliances such as energy-efficient lights and low water usage faucets and toilets. One area of potential growth for both disaster preparedness and fighting climate change is switching to renewable energy and expanding backup power options.

                In the near future, the Peace Center plans on adding solar panels as a form of renewable energy, as well as adding backup power in case of power shutoffs. The Center is also looking to build up a larger network of volunteers to assist them in their endeavors and to create a list of people’s skills so they can better assign people to various work projects

                If you wish to help them promote nonviolence and create a more equitable and resilient future, you can click the link below. 

                https://www.oaklandpeacecenter.org/volunteer