News Coverage 22 July 2022

FRONT PAGE LIVE: Conservation Meets Rumba on Capitol Hill

On July 20, four national conservation organizations convened a Congressional Briefing to bring attention to the vagaries of climate change as part of Latino Conservation Week. The event, hosted by Congresswoman Nanette Barragan, and created for Hill staffers, focused on the impact of pollution and environmental injustice on Latinos around the country, along with an outline of conservation efforts and their impacts on communities throughout the U.S.

News Coverage 22 July 2022

SIERRA CLUB: People of Public Lands: Ramon Cruz

In celebration of Latino Conservation Week, today's People of Public Lands feature is Sierra Club President Ramón Cruz. Cruz is an environmental policy and advocacy expert and has served as the president of Sierra Club since 2020, the first Latino person to hold the position in the organization's 130-year history.

News Coverage 22 July 2022

GREEN 2.0: Learning About Nature Comes in Many Forms

Growing up, each year, I would look forward to one day out of the whole year. Just one day may sound odd but this day brought me the most joy. It was the only day in the summer when my parents would take a day off from work and take our family to the beach. Going to the beach meant the most to me because I would get to finally spend quality time with my parents instead of being in summer camps or school throughout the year.

News Coverage 22 July 2022

DEFENDERS OF WILDLIFE: New Wildlife Refuge in Southern California Would Promise Equitable Access to Disappearing Nature

If you have ever been to Western Riverside County in Southern California, you might not believe that a plan to create a refuge for wildlife could be possible in this rapidly developing area. Hispanic Access Foundation and Defenders of Wildlife have teamed up to advocate for a new Western Riverside National Wildlife Refuge in southern California, which would provide access to a rapidly-disappearing natural landscape for some 12 million people within 25 miles of the area, as well as vital habitat for many vulnerable species of plants and animals.

News Releases 21 July 2022

Hispanic Access President and CEO Joins Roundtable for Ceremonial Signing of the Federal Interagency Council on Outdoor Recreation

Today, Maite Arce, Hispanic Access Foundation President and CEO, was invited by the Biden-Harris administration for a roundtable discussion and the ceremonial signing of the Federal Interagency Council on Outdoor Recreation (FICOR), which will work to create more safe, affordable, and equitable opportunities for Americans to get outdoors as part of the President’s America the Beautiful Initiative.

News Coverage 20 July 2022

CALIFORNIA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY: Hasta La Tierra (To the Earth): Closing the Nature Gap in Latino Communities and Beyond

When Brenda Gallegos’ family immigrated to the United States, her parents wanted what so many immigrants across the world dream of for their children—a better life. Education was their top priority, and outdoor activities like camping or fishing weren’t part of Brenda’s experience as a child, she explains.

Not until her early teens did Gallegos have her first significant outdoor experience on a field trip to Carlsbad Caverns National Park.

“At that time, I did not know what public lands were,” recalls Brenda, a conservation program associate with Hispanic Access Foundation. “I did not know what any of that meant. Little by little, I kind of started just investigating on my own and sparking the interest, especially because I was in love with animals.”

Her passion for animals inspired her to become a wildlife biologist, a choice that introduced her to nonprofit advocacy work.

“I got to discover that when I was a lot older, and I wish I would have done that earlier,” she says.

Brenda’s experience mirrors that of many people belonging to historically marginalized communities, where families may not have time or financial resources for vacations, and parks, trails, or beaches are often far away. Advocates and some policymakers refer to this as the “nature gap,” and Brenda is part of a movement to close it.

Today, Gallegos is focused on improving Latinos’ access to nature through her work at the foundation and as chair of the equity committee for the 30×30 Power in Nature coalition. The coalition is a diverse mix of advocates, including CNPS, who are working to advance the State of California’s commitment to protect 30% of lands and waters by 2030. California’s goals are part of an international 30×30 effort, but what’s different here is that equity and access are core values of the initiative, driven by Governor Newsom’s October 2020 Executive Order N-82-20.

Belinda Faustinos works with Brenda on the 30×30 Power in Nature campaign, serving on both the equity and government affairs committees. A strategic advisor for L.A. Waterkeeper, Belinda explains that many Latinos live in communities without natural spaces accessible by foot or bus.

“I feel like I fought this battle back in the ‘60s, and it’s still being fought,” says Faustinos. As part of her work, she has championed a specific request coming from the coalition: asking California’s leaders to set aside 50% of its 30×30 funds for investments in the communities who need it most.

Brenda’s organization, Hispanic Access Foundation, has tracked these needs for years and in 2014 created Latino Conservation Week to encourage Latinos to join together to enjoy the outdoors and participate in conservation. This year, Latino Conservation Week runs from July 16 – 24. To help commemorate the week, Gallegos and Faustinos talked to Flora about equity in outdoor spaces and conservation.

Siobhán: In your bio on the Hispanic Access Foundation website, you, you say that failing a 9th grade biology exam pushed you to pursue it and grow to love it. What you describe is a key pivot point for many students. What do you feel is most needed to support students at these moments and increase the diversity of people entering fields like ecology and plant science?

Brenda: I think the best way to start is actually engaging kids in high school. I definitely feel like a lot of folks forget that students should still be engaged in high school. There’s a lot of early education opportunities. High school students sometimes need that extra push, because that’s when they’re trying to find themselves and figure out what they want to do.

There are a lot of ways to understand science and ecology. Do you ever feel like sometimes there’s maybe so much of an emphasis on academic process, that it closes people off who perhaps have, or would have, talent if they weren’t so worried about the grade?

Brenda: Sometimes academics aren’t as important as the passion part of it. It’s sometimes rough, because a lot of these tests are standardized. Every student learns differently.

One thing we love about the work both of you are doing is that it focuses on both people and conservation. Too often, we treat people as the problem, not part of the solution, when in fact people are nature too. What do you think is needed to shift our society’s perceptions toward that of belonging to rather than separation from nature?

Belinda: Field trips don’t exist anymore in a lot of educational spaces. I think we need to advocate for that. Having access to the outdoors is just so critically important, and most of our school yards are asphalt. There is a big movement nationally to convert school yards, so that students have the opportunity to experience biodiversity and nature. Even if you could do a butterfly garden, that starts cascading to other things—having the opportunity so that kids can experience nature in different ways. How can we have camping outings that are part of the school experience for those who can’t do it with their families?

Brenda: I think one of the things that should be a little bit more focused on is engaging different communities, diverse communities. I know for the most part there is focus on the green groups, but there are also other communities that are focused on conservation. Hispanic Access, for years, has been working with faith-based groups. Their purpose is to protect God’s creation. In the Latino communities, people look towards their community leader, which usually is their faith leader. Not only should government agencies and state agencies start engaging with different communities, but also look for those community leaders that they haven’t seen before.

Let’s talk some about the changing face of the conservation community. Recently, there’s been a lot of internal reckoning in the environmental community about its colonialist origins and overwhelming whiteness. Today, we’re seeing an exciting shift in greater respect for Tribal land management and Traditional Ecological Knowledge. At the same time, groups like Hispanic Access Foundation, Latino Outdoors, Outdoor Afro, and many smaller community-based organizations are emerging in the environmental space. How can those of us that care about both nature and equity better support these movements?

Brenda: I think equity has many definitions. Equity in the environment and the outdoors means having the access to clean air, clean water and having it truly accessible. We can have access to a park, but it could still not be accessible. If it’s an hour away, that doesn’t make it accessible. So, one of the huge things that we like to advocate for is having the ability to have a park 10 minutes away or having access 10 minutes away or having some kind of barrier broken down.

Belinda: If we don’t deliver on the promise of the potential for 30×30—to invest in communities that have been disinvested over the years—then we’ve really missed the mark. In urban areas, it’s tough to do that, because there are so many needs. These projects take longer and they take more money because of where they are. The same thing is true for rural communities where you may live next to 500 acres of agricultural land, but that doesn’t mean that you have access to nature. I think it’s got to be flexible, and we need to have that local community self-determination as to what they want and what they need for their own community. Maybe something is really important to one community but maybe not so much to another one. What I really want is, if the funding is there to create parks or support other projects, and there’s a need in the community, let’s try to merge the two.

Plants represent a distinct intersection between people and natural habitats. For thousands of generations, Native Californians have carefully tended and relied upon native plants. Today, all kinds of people are seeking a relationship with plants, from super bloom followers to foragers. How do we encourage each other to nurture that connection while also honoring respectful reciprocal relationships with plants and other living creatures?

Brenda: I definitely think it has to do with education—teaching each other about respecting the land and respecting plants and respecting nature, figuring out the best communication for each generation. For Generation Z, maybe we use Tiktok; maybe Facebook for other folks, maybe the newspaper, and for some other folks, that might be radio. I think just figuring out the best communication to get that information across is definitely a good starting point. That’s also how a lot of our communities are missed, because we don’t know the communication that they use the most and what’s effective for them.

Thousands of CNPS members will be reading this interview; what’s something that you really want readers to know about equity in the outdoors and 30×30?

Brenda: Any type of engagement in 30×30 is important. If you could just do an email, a call, a comment of any kind [it] is helpful. Anything that is going to help your community, anything that’s going to help conservation is important. It can be small, but it can always stack up to help out in the larger picture.

Belinda: I would ask that they also have an open mind about the opportunities for addressing those issues in underserved communities, and how nature can be restored. We all know that our little part of the state that we’re coming from was at one time full of nature, and we as humans have altered that ecosystem. In the same way that we altered it, we can bring it back. And so making sure that there’s an appreciation for the benefits of restoration, and how that can better serve the overall goals of 30×30, is just as critical to understand. There are still some people that really feel like, ‘Yeah, you need to restore nature in those areas, but it’s not as important as protecting what already exists.’ Unless people understand what the value of nature is close to where they are they’re never going to appreciate this bigger goal. The types of policy actions that are going to be necessary to implement 30×30 have to be supported by a broad-based population, including BIPOC [Black, Indigenous, and People Of Color] people. If we don’t make it relevant for them, we’re going to miss the boat.

Latino Conservation Week

Disfrutando y Conservando Nuestra Tierra is an initiative of Hispanic Access Foundation. Latino Conservation Week was created to support the Latino community getting into the outdoors and participating in activities to protect our natural resources.

During this week, community, non-profit, faith-based, and government organizations and agencies hold events throughout the country. From hiking and camping to community roundtables and film screenings, these activities promote conservation efforts and provide opportunities for Latinos to show their support for permanently protecting natural resources.

Latino Conservation Week has also resulted in broader coverage of the Latino role in conservation in both English and Spanish media. It’s led to recognition from local, state and national elected officials of the important role Latinos play as stewards. Latino Conservation Week has emphasized the Latino community’s passion for the outdoors. Get involved: LatinoConservationWeek.com

Written by Siobhán Eagen for the California Native Plant Society. 

 

News Releases 19 July 2022

Activists Deliver 137,000+ Signatures Calling for Castner Range to be Designated a National Monument to the Department of Interior Offices in DC

On Tuesday, July 19th, at 10:00am ET, activists and community leaders from the Castner Range Coalition will hold a press conference outside of the Department of Interior headquarters urging the Biden administration to use its authority under the Antiquities Act to designate Castner Range as a national monument. At the press conference, members of the Castner Range Coalition will deliver a petition signed by more than 137,000 people in support of the creation of Castner Range National Monument.

Blog 18 July 2022

Critical Vision: Vista vs Mindsight Una LCW Edición

Como te parece una semana—one week—when we from Latinx/Hispanic roots are not just encouraged pero organized, supported, and led by others que suenan y lucen como nosotros celebrating y [RE]connecting with our (minorities) World.

News Coverage 18 July 2022

EL PASO TIMES: Conserve Home of the Mexican Yellow Poppy: Designate Castner Range as a National Monument

As a long-time resident of El Paso, I remember visiting Castner Range with my family during the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic was the first time I realized I could hike the mountains, and visit Castner Range to find a quiet place away from the commotion of the city.

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