Join us on Sept. 26th at 6 pm. for the premiere of “The Flow of Justice”. The film uplifts the stories of AGUA members from the communities of Cutler and Alpaugh in Tulare County. We hope you’ll join us to reflect on the fight to achieve safe and affordable drinking water for all. https://flowofjustice.com/
Community Water Center
Public Policy Offices
Visalia, CA 875 followers
Clean water is a basic human right, not a privilege.
Über uns
Clean water is a basic human right, not a privilege. Vision All communities have access to safe, clean, and affordable water. Mission Statement The Community Water Center acts as a catalyst for community-driven water solutions through organizing, education, and advocacy in California’s San Joaquin Valley. The Community Water Center helps build strategic grassroots capacity to address water challenges in small, rural, low-income communities and communities of color. Since opening its doors in 2006, CWC has worked with local residents from 82 California communities (69 in the southern San Joaquin Valley) to improve access to safe, clean, and affordable water. CWC has trained over 2,674 residents as clean water advocates and provided technical assistance to over 15 local water boards struggling with how to manage efficient and accountable water systems in their communities. CWC has also served as legal counsel to a number of small, disadvantaged communities with water systems. As a result, many rural, economically disadvantaged communities in the San Joaquin Valley now have improved access to clean and affordable drinking water. In 2009, CWC published a comprehensive Guide to Community Drinking Water Advocacy in both English and Spanish. This highly acclaimed guide has been distributed to hundreds of individuals, groups, and local water boards. See Here for more information. CWC also coordinates the coalition Asociación de Gente Unida por el Agua (AGUA), which is comprised of representatives of more than 17 local impacted communities and six nonprofit organizations, as well as youth and community-based organizations, all focused on addressing the root causes of unsafe and unaffordable drinking water for local communities.
- Website
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http://www.communitywatercenter.org
External link for Community Water Center
- Industrie
- Public Policy Offices
- Größe des Unternehmens
- 11-50 Mitarbeiter
- Hauptsitz
- Visalia, CA
- Typ
- Nonprofit
- Gegründet
- 2006
Standorte
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Primäre
900 W. Oak Ave.
Visalia, CA 93291, US
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716 10th St. Suite 300
Sacramento, CA 95814, US
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406 Main Street, Suite 421
Watsonville, CA 95076, US
Employees at Community Water Center
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Justine Massey
Policy Manager and Attorney at Community Water Center
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Ryan Jensen
Community Engagement in Drinking Water Project Development, Water Resources Management, and Policy Advocacy
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Katie Havens
Development Director at Community Water Center
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Bessma Mourad
Operations and Planning Lead at Energy Peace Partners
Aktualisierungen
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"We have the ability to make their lives better, and to address the climate effects that threaten our clean drinking water supplies and our ability to breathe clean air."- Horacio Amezquita via CalMatters https://lnkd.in/gKFHDV-X
Climate costs will only go up if California fails to act. Voters should back a $10 billion bond
https://calmatters.org
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“It is morally outrageous that we can’t provide the level of basic human rights that people need, and that it’s primarily low income communities of color who are facing these disparate impacts,” said Kyle Jones via CalMatters
‘I won’t let them drink the water’: The California towns where clean drinking water is out of reach
https://calmatters.org
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Bill tracking: More than a dozen proposed new water laws are racing to the end of the legislative process in Sacramento https://lnkd.in/gFErmNYJ
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“Management zone proposals will take 20 years, and it’s neither aggressive nor justified, considering there are no new technologies needed to meet those milestones. So we would like to see those accelerated.” https://lnkd.in/g5PGnPDk
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"The heaviest use is in Monterey County. Researchers at UC Berkeley found that more than half of nearly 100 Latina girls between the ages of 14 and 16 living in farmworker communities in the Salinas Valley were exposed to DCPA." CalMatters
Dangerous herbicide used on California crops banned
calmatters.org
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“The work is not finished... As we solve this issue we need to work alongside the impacted residents to get it right because if we don’t we’re going to fail once again."-Susana De Anda, executive director of Community Water Center https://lnkd.in/gcTT4FeA
State celebrates five years and secure water for hundreds of thousands of Californians thanks to the SAFER drinking water program - SJV Water
https://sjvwater.org
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In 2019, state water resources board established the Safe and Affordable Funding for Equity and Resilience (SAFER) program to provide sustainable safe drinking water to disadvantaged communities. https://lnkd.in/g6DTf9Vg
State offers help to Tulare County's 33 failing water systems
visaliatimesdelta.com
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“It’s a moral outrage. It’s unconscionable in a state that has so many resources that we can’t ensure that everybody has access to the human right to water,” said Kyle Jones, policy and legal director with the Community Water Center via CalMatters https://lnkd.in/gPHVGKMf
Drinking water of almost a million Californians failed to meet state requirements
calmatters.org