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Offering family practice, pediatrics, and obstetrics and gynecology, the clinic also housed The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), a Maternal Child Outreach Program, Patient Navigators, and a lab creating a seamless system of care.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.8788,35.2237],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"green-glow","name":"South Los Angeles, Boyle Heights, Long Beach","win1":"2014: The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors created the My Health LA program and committed $61 million per year to provide a no-cost health care program for uninsured Los Angeles County residents regardless of immigration status. 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","win3":"2017-2018: TCE health career pathway investment led to a partnership between OUSD and an Alameda Health pathway team to educate policymakers in DC on funding and health workforce development policies.","win4":"2017-2018:TCE contributions helped leverage funding from the CA Workforce Board and Kaiser Permanente to launch a regional health sector employer-led organization to focus on policy and systems changes, pipeline development, and regional workforce investment.","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-122.1804,37.765],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"green","name":"East Salinas (Alisal)","win1":"2016: Salinas Valley Health Professions Pathways Partnership successfully engaged 16 regional health employers to provide leadership on employer workforce needs for the region, strengthening the capacity of the pathway to train a locally grown workforce to match regional demand.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-121.6353,36.6995],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"green","name":"Richmond","win1":"2017-2018: TCE contributions leveraged additional investments from West Contra Costa School District, Contra Costa Workforce Investment Board, and Contra Costa Health Services to increase opportunities for work-based learning programs for students in West Contra Costa County.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-122.3518,37.9466],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"green","name":"South Kern","win1":"2013: More than 100 students from Arvin High have benefited from dual enrollment and on-the-job training from Arvin High Health Careers Academy.","win2":"2014: The California Endowment funds provided start-up for the Rio Bravo Family Medicine Residency Program in Kern. The family medicine program trained primary care residents in relevant delivery models (e.g., patient-centered medical homes), developed educational initiatives that address primary care practice in underserved areas, and transformed organizational and funding structures to support community-based training. 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This amendment reduced police ticketing and fines to youth for being late on their way to school and, as an alternative, allowed students to be directed to counseling and remediation resources.","win2":"2016: The Labor Community Strategy Center reached an agreement with the Los Angeles Unified School District and the Los Angeles School Police Department to return all military-grade weapons to the Department of Defense (a.k.a. 1033 program).","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2867,33.989],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"blue","name":"South Sacramento","win1":"2011: Sacramento City Unified School District (SCUSD) adopted an anti-bullying policy to better support students, particularly LGBTQ students. This was a recommendation that came about after a mental health needs assessment was completed with TCE funding. This assessment focused on the needs of LGBTQ students. 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The program allowed youth to be diverted from incarceration to a comprehensive program that offered community service with educational, mental health, and social support services.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2867,33.989],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange-glow","name":"South Los Angeles, Boyle Heights","win1":"2018: Supervisors approved $3.2 million from Juvenile Justice Crime Prevention Acts fund to be distributed to youth development community-based organizations after years of mismanagement by governmental agencies.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2576,34.0297],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange-glow","name":"South Los Angeles, Boyle Heights, Long Beach","win1":"2016: Approved a motion to develop a juvenile diversion program; Dr. Robert Ross, CEO, testified in support of the resolution.","win2":"2017: Los Angeles County Youth Diversion and Development Department. Partners advocated for the creation of the Youth Diversion and Development Department within the county's Office of Diversion and Reentry. The YDD implemented a comprehensive, community-based diversion plan in partnership with law enforcement agencies and service providers.","win3":"2018: Organizers worked with LA County Supervisors to replace plans to build a new downtown jail with plans to build a mental health facility focused on healing, not punishment.","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2292,33.9058],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Sacramento","win1":"2018: The Sacramento County Probation Department’s Youth Detention Facility received the 2018 Performance-Based Standards Barbara Allen-Hagen Award. The Youth Detention Facility was recognized for innovative programming resulting in most improved culture change, practice, and performances, increased safety, and the ability to sustain those changes.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-121.4675,38.5482],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Southwest Merced/East Merced County","win1":"2014: Implemented victim-offender reconciliation & mediation for first-time youth felony offenders—resulted in record sealing after community service.","win2":"2015: City of Merced general fund dollars were allocated to create a youth liaison position within the City of Merced Police Department.","win3":"2016: Merced Union High School District allocated $1 million from the Local Control Accountability Plan (LCAP) to hire nine new foster and homeless youth education liaisons (one for each campus). The additional staff contributed to the educational success of foster youth and other vulnerable populations in the district.","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-120.3284,37.305],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"CROSSLINK","name":"(OVER NEVADA)","win1":"crossLinkTo(1,44)","win2":"crossLinkTo(2,'4-YI')","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.4,39.7],"type":"Point"}} ]}, {"type": "FeatureCollection","crs": { "type": "name", "properties": { "name": "urn:ogc:def:crs:OGC:1.3:CRS84" } },"features": [ {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Central Santa Ana","win1":"2014: Project Kinship developed the first landscape analysis of reentry programs in Orange County and the needs of this vulnerable population. As a result, Project Kinship launched an intervention program for the formerly incarcerated with the City of Santa Ana Police.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.8808,33.7395],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Del Norte County & Tribal Lands","win1":"2015: Crescent City committed to embedding cultural awareness strategies in all departments; the city police committed to Peace Officer Standards and Training (POST) certification, including cultural training and co-training with Sheriffs (county law enforcement) and Tribal Police.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-124.0081,41.6515],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"East Oakland","win1":"2013: EOBHC grantees led negotiations that resulted in a comprehensive community benefits package (with provisions to benefit East Oakland residents as well) for a major development in West Oakland. The landmark Oakland Army Base Redevelopment Good Jobs Polic included living wages for every worker, local hire and disadvantaged worker requirements, and access to employment for the formerly incarcerated and those with other barriers to employment.","win2":"2015: County supervisors approved a resolution to allocate 50% of public safety funds to a community-based reentry program.","win3":"2016: 1,400 jobs for the formerly incarcerated were promised within the Alameda County system.","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-122.1804,37.765],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"East Salinas (Alisal)","win1":"2015: City of Salinas adopted a work plan submitted by the BHC-City of Salinas Governing for Racial Equity Committee that laid out capacity-building priorities necessary to eliminate racial inequities for the next 12 months. Priorities included a focus on communications, policy analysis, and budget allocations through a racial equity lens. The first participant departments were the Salinas Police Department, the Public Works Department, and the Libraries/Parks & Recreation.","win2":"2015: MILPA & Monterey Bay Central Labor Council (MBCLC) partnered with the Salinas Police Department to provide 1-day long community training to all new police recruits as a strategy to build community-police relations.","win3":"2017: Monterey County Board of Supervisors moved away from video visitation as the proposed sole mode of visitation at County Jail to retaining in-person visitation.","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-121.6353,36.6995],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Richmond","win1":"2015: The Reentry Success Center—a comprehensive resource and support center for people reentering society from prison or jail—opened in Richmond. AB 109 dollars funded the center.","win2":"2015: Public defender launched a comprehensive outreach program to reach all eligible residents using the county’s justice database, as well as through hosting large-scale outreach events.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-122.3518,37.9466],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange-glow","name":"South Los Angeles, Boyle Heights","win1":"2015: A task force formed to help eligible people update their records and link them to jobs and services, such as housing, healthcare, and substance abuse treatment. Adopted resolution to improve tracking and transparency of Prop 47. Devoted 50% of savings toward community-based prevention.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2576,34.0297],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange-glow","name":"South Los Angeles, Boyle Heights, Long Beach","win1":"2014: Probation used social services and enrollment counselors from community clinics to reach probationers. In jails, custody assistants collaborated with social services to submit applications while nurses assisted with discharge planning and connection to community treatment services.","win2":"2019: TCE leadership led a LA County workgroup (Alternatives to Incarceration) that aimed to scale alternatives to incarceration and diversion so care and services are provided first, and jail remains a last resort.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2292,33.9058],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Sacramento","win1":"2018: County Supervisors unanimously adopted a proposal that strengthened independent oversight of the Sheriff by stating that the Inspector General (IG) must “monitor” significant use of force incidents, including officer-involved shootings and in-custody deaths. IGs must report such incidents to the board, and supervisors can now request an independent investigation.","win2":"2018: Sacramento Police Department changed policies and ordered rank-and-file officers to keep their body-worn cameras and microphones on until the investigative or enforcement activity involving a member of the public has concluded, with fewer exceptions, after community outcry in response to the Stephon Clark police shooting.","win3":"2018: District Attorney agreed to reclassify or expunge the records of 6,000 people with previous marijuana convictions in the County, and also review those currently incarcerated for similar convictions.","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-121.4675,38.5482],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Southwest Merced/East Merced County","win1":"2014: Provided social services referrals to pretrial individuals who were released before seeing an eligibility worker. This enabled the county to reach a higher proportion of those cycling in and out of jail.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-120.3284,37.305],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"CROSSLINK","name":"(OVER NEVADA)","win1":"crossLinkTo(1,45)","win2":"crossLinkTo(2,'4-EMI')","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.4,39.7],"type":"Point"}} ]}, {"type": "FeatureCollection","crs": { "type": "name", "properties": { "name": "urn:ogc:def:crs:OGC:1.3:CRS84" } },"features": [ {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Central Santa Ana","win1":"2014: The probation department changed its policy on referring youth to ICE.","win2":"2014: Orange County (OC) Sheriffs and OC Probations changed their detainment policy on referring undocumented immigrants to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.","win3":"2017: Santa Ana Unified School District Board approved a resolution urging the US Congress to immediately pass the Dream Act of 2017 and to protect immigrant youth and families from deportation.","win4":"2017: A county-wide, multi-sectoral rapid response network of immigration attorneys, immigrants’ rights advocates, and academic institutions was founded, providing support for incidents of arrest, detention, and deportation proceedings. Partners included AAAJ-OC, Resilience Orange County, Western Law School, Immigrant Defenders, Latino Bar Association, and the University of California, Irvine (Immigrant Law Clinic).","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.8808,33.7395],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"City Heights","win1":"2018: Federal Court issued an injunction prohibiting the separation of immigrant families at the border and requiring reunification of thousands of children separated from their families in a case based on a separated family identified by the San Diego Rapid Response Network (Ms. L. vs US Customs and Immigration Enforcement).","win2":"2019: Mayor of San Diego adopted and budgeted for the community-driven Welcoming San Diego plan to improve immigrant integration in city programs and policies, including the appointment of a senior advisor in the mayor’s office to oversee implementation.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.1026,32.7521],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Del Norte County & Tribal Lands","win1":"2018: Board of Supervisors declined proposed ordinance to exempt county from SB 54, which ensured no state or local resources are used by federal agencies to carry out mass deportations and ensured hospitals, courthouses, and schools remain safe for all.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-124.0081,41.6515],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"East Salinas (Alisal)","win1":"2017: Salinas City Council, four months after narrowly defeating a resolution to become a sanctuary city, approved a “welcoming city” resolution intended to assuage fears in the immigrant community.","win2":"2018: BHC Immigration team worked with districts and schools to implement training and school-wide polices to use Children Safety Plan Documents to protect undocumented families from potential deportation.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-121.6353,36.6995],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Long Beach","win1":"2014: Pressured city to provide funding to make services accessible in multiple languages, including Spanish, Khmer, and Tagalog.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.1657,33.799],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Richmond","win1":"2017: Contra Costa County Board of Supervisors approved a funding partnership with local philanthropy, including TCE, to launch Stand Together Contra Costa—a rapid response system to meet the needs of immigrants facing deportation in the county. The $1 million budget sustained the program for its first two and a half years and brought together multiple agencies and community providers to provide high-quality legal defense and support services.","win2":"2018: Contra Costa County ended its contract with ICE to detain immigrants at the West County Detention Center after considerable public pressure. Approximately 200 people housed at the jail were moved to other sites while advocates continued to press for their release.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-122.3518,37.9466],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Kern","win1":"2018: Kern High School District Board approved a new policy designed to help students focus on learning without fear of ICE while at school or school events.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.8788,35.2237],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Sacramento","win1":"2018: As a result of the City’s $300,000 funding for an immigrant legal defense fund in 2017, the Family Unity, Education and Legal (FUEL) Network was created to provide legal representation in court for residents. FUEL also worked in partnership with community-based organizations to conduct trainings and education. The rapid response network, with support from TCE, was also part of this network.","win2":"2018: Board of Supervisors voted not to renew a 5-year contract with the US Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement to detain immigrants in county facilities.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-121.4675,38.5482],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Southwest Merced/East Merced County","win1":"2017: Planada Elementary School District Board of Education adopted a Safe Haven Resolution protecting undocumented students and families by creating safe spaces, protecting immigration status information, and forbidding ICE agents on school grounds.","win2":"2017-2018: Merced County Board of Supervisors voted to conduct a first-of-its-kind, formal Study Session to explore the health access needs and solutions for undocumented adult residents in Merced County; this session elevated the profile and contributions of the immigrant community and prompted the development of options by County staff to expand access.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-120.3284,37.305],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"CROSSLINK","name":"(OVER NEVADA)","win1":"crossLinkTo(1,46)","win2":"crossLinkTo(2,'4-PI')","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.4,39.7],"type":"Point"}} ]}, {"type": "FeatureCollection","crs": { "type": "name", "properties": { "name": "urn:ogc:def:crs:OGC:1.3:CRS84" } },"features": [ {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Boyle Heights","win1":"2014: Successfully halted the proposed private development at Wyvenwood Apartments which would displace low-income families.","win2":"2016: Los Angeles city voters approved Measure JJJ, creating more affordable housing and requiring a percentage of work-hours for union members and local residents on development projects.","win3":"2016: LA City Council passed an ordinance creating the City's first rent registry, requiring landlords to register charged rates in Rent Stabilization Ordinance units.","win4":"2017: Linkage Fee passed by LA City Council. This policy required developers to pay a fee (based on a sliding scale) to be used for affordable housing development. This plan was projected to generate $100 million per year for the City of Los Angeles’ affordable housing trust fund.","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2023,34.0389],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange-glow","name":"Boyle Heights, South Los Angeles","win1":"2016: Metro passed a policy of providing a 30% discount to developers who build affordable housing and established a 30% goal for affordable housing. City Council passed an ordinance to create first rent registry","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2576,34.0297],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Central Santa Ana","win1":"2016: Santa Ana City Council approved the Housing Opportunity Ordinance which allocated a portion of development dollars specifically for low-income, affordable housing.","win2":"2018: Advocates established a community land trust nonprofit, Thrive Santa Ana, and entered negotiations to convert a surplus plot into a small urban farm that would grow healthy food for residents.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.8808,33.7395],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Central/Southeast/Southwest Fresno","win1":"2014: Won adoption of land use policy that emphasized smart growth and neighborhood reinvestment to benefit low-income residents.","win2":"2017: Fresno City Council designated $1 million for the development of new affordable housing projects throughout the city. This allocation was influenced by the Fresno BHC Neighborhoods Action Team's ongoing healthy housing campaign.","win3":"2018: City of Fresno Code Enforcement Department agreed to focus slum housing code enforcement efforts in BHC neighborhoods and neighborhoods identified by BHC advocates and residents. The 12-member code enforcement department was established as a result of BHC’s slum housing advocacy which led to the city adopt the Rental Housing Inspection Act.","win4":"2018: Under the Rental Housing Improvement Act (earlier BHC win), more than 80,000 rental housing units were registered through the city of Fresno property owner registry, which is the initial step toward further code enforcement.","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-119.7583,36.7237],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"City Heights","win1":"2015: City of San Diego agreed to improve housing health and safety enforcement through the addition of four City Inspectors for substandard housing in the Code Enforcement Department, and an additional position in the City Attorney’s Office that oversaw safe and healthy housing codes.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.1026,32.7521],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"East Oakland","win1":"2016: Alameda County authorized a $580 million bond to support residents to rent and/or buy affordable homes in places they want to live throughout Alameda County.","win2":"2016: EOBHC stakeholders helped win $14,844,762 in competitive Affordable Housing and Stable Community funding for the Coliseum BART Transit Oriented Development project to fund 50 percent of 110 new units to be affordable to families earning below 60 percent AMI.

2016: Won ballot measure to strengthen rent control measures and tenant protections.","win3":"2018: East Oakland Anti-displacement organizing and advocacy pushed for the passage of Measure Y, amending and strengthening the City of Oakland’s Just Cause Eviction Ordinance. Measure Y changes address landlord loopholes by removing the exemption for owner-occupied duplexes and triplexes and allowing the city council to limit a landlord’s right to evict.","win4":"2018: Voters approved a vacant property tax and an increase in the city's tax on real estate sales for high-end homes. The two measures are expected to generate a total of nearly $20 million per year toward housing.","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-122.1804,37.765],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"East Salinas (Alisal)","win1":"2015: The Salinas City Council voted to conduct a Farmworker Housing Study, a comprehensive analysis of needs, providing policy and resource recommendations to address farmworker housing shortages. The study expanded to a regional farmworker housing study that included all cities in the Salinas Valley (Monterey County) and Pajaro Valley (Santa Cruz County), and informed policy priorities and resource allocations within the Salinas Housing Element.","win2":"2015: Salinas City Council voted unanimously to approve and implement the City of Salinas Housing Element, which included BHC’s Top 5 Housing Element Recommendations: 1) Housing for farmworkers; 2) Housing for the undocumented; 3) Reducing patterns of housing segregation; 4) Community-based code-enforcement strategy; 5) Tenant’s rights education. Leveraged resources of $120,000 were allocated to the project.","win3":"2016: Held bilingual teach-ins about the housing planning process leading to an increase in the Land Use Action Team membership, as well as the ability of residents and youth to organize.","win4":"2017: The Community Housing Improvement Systems and Planning Association, Inc. (CHISPA) purchased the Sanborn Ranch House, a 1-acre parcel that sits in the middle of the Acosta Plaza Neighborhood of East Salinas. This acquisition, a joint investment by TCE and Packard Foundation, supported the ongoing visioning process for the development of health-promoting land-use policies and resource allocation rooted in anti-displacement and racial equity frameworks.","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-121.6353,36.6995],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Richmond","win1":"2016: Richmond City Council voted to approve a \"Fair Chance Access to Affordable Housing\" ordinance to protect the rights of people who were re-entering society and were excluded from housing opportunities due to their criminal record.","win2":"2018: Contra Costa County Housing Authority agreed to incorporate a community-driven vision statement into the Request for Proposals that will be issued to solicit private developers to the North Richmond neighborhood. The visioning process was led by the North Richmond Resident Leadership Team, which organized resident voice and power in the face of mounting redevelopment pressures. ","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-122.3518,37.9466],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange-glow","name":"South Los Angeles, Boyle Heights, Long Beach","win1":"2018: Metro approved the Transit Oriented Communities Policy that committed LA Metro to goals and activities aimed at achieving housing affordability and economic vitality in transit hubs across LA County.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2292,33.9058],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Sacramento","win1":"2015: Sacramento County Board of Supervisors dedicated 20% of former redevelopment funds (boomerang funds) toward the County’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-121.4675,38.5482],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Southwest Merced/East Merced County","win1":"2017: Merced County Board of Supervisors approved its County Housing Element, which specifically included policies to address and respond to farmworker housing needs, as well as priorities regarding wastewater and safe drinking water. Community needs were determined through local surveys of residents who then advocated with the County for desired additions to the Housing Element. ","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-120.3284,37.305],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"CROSSLINK","name":"(OVER NEVADA)","win1":"crossLinkTo(1,47)","win2":"crossLinkTo(2,'4-RD')","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.4,39.7],"type":"Point"}} ]}, {"type": "FeatureCollection","crs": { "type": "name", "properties": { "name": "urn:ogc:def:crs:OGC:1.3:CRS84" } },"features": [ {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Boyle Heights","win1":"2014: City Planning Department adopted several recommendations developed by advocates for the draft Boyle Heights Community Plan. The Plan del Pueblo documented the community's vision for Transit-Oriented Development, construction of affordable housing, environmental buffer zones, and economic development.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2023,34.0389],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Central/Southeast/Southwest Fresno","win1":"2016: Won ~$70 million in state cap and trade funds to transform Fresno into a Transformative Climate Community. Benefits included improved transit, access to affordable housing, and support for various urban greening initiatives throughout the region.","win2":"2018: Fresno City Council approved a $1 million general fund allocation to support the development of an environmental impact review (EIR) for the city’s industrial development plan. The allocation also supported revisions to the environmental impact report concerning industrial development for the city’s general plan.","win3":"2018: Grassroots resident group South Central Neighbors United, with support from Fresno BHC partners, filed a lawsuit against the City of Fresno for unlawfully fast-tracking a two-million square foot industrial development project without completing any environmental review. California Attorney General Xavier Becerra intervened in support of the resident lawsuit shortly after.","win4":"2019: Fresno City Council agreed unanimously to pull the plug on developer Richard Caglia’s two million square foot industrial development and initiate a full environmental review. This action resulted directly from a lawsuit filed by a grassroots resident group affiliated with BHC (South Central Neighbors United).","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-119.7583,36.7237],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"City Heights","win1":"2016: TCE provided $100,000 in capital, ramp-up, and capacity-building funds for the Living Lab, a new ocean science and natural resource conservation facility providing City Heights students with educational, environmental improvement, and advocacy opportunities.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.1026,32.7521],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"East Oakland","win1":"2015: Partners developed “The Healthy Development Guidelines,” a health equity tool used to evaluate development project approval processes. Under the guidelines, all projects in Oakland had to consider impacts to the environment, safety, economic opportunity, culture, food, transport, housing, and open space.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-122.1804,37.765],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Eastern Coachella Valley","win1":"2014-2015: Air pollution mitigation funds were secured for the pavement of 25 mobile home parks to reduce exposure to dust and improve quality of life.","win2":"2018: The California Air Resource Board entered into a partnership with Alianza CV to ensure that the South Coast Air Quality District was more responsive to the Coachella Valley’s poor air quality. BHC shared environmental data to identify communities that were experiencing high levels of asthma. These communities worked with the Board to identify potential outreach and mitigation solutions.","win3":"2018: Riverside County’s Environmental Justice Element in the General Plan Update incorporated language developed by Alianza CV’s Environmental Justice Team (California Institute for Rural Studies and Pueblo Unido Community Development Corporation), raising the profile of rural infrastructure issues in the Eastern Coachella Valley. ","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-116.1128,33.6622],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Long Beach","win1":"2013: City received California Environmental Protection Agency funding to plan for the removal of a freeway.","win2":"2018: City of Long Beach added Green Zones provisions to the City’s Land Use Element, a general planning document to reduce environmental hazards near already impacted neighborhoods.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.1657,33.799],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange-glow","name":"Los Angeles, Long Beach","win1":"2017: Los Angeles and Long Beach mayors signed agreement directing the nation’s biggest port to move toward zero emissions.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2746,33.9416],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Kern","win1":"2017: Advocacy efforts originating from South Kern environmental justice partners resulted in the California Department of Pesticide Regulation issuing a state-level rule to strengthen and enforce pesticide spraying buffer zones preventing pesticide use.","win2":"2017: Community advocates secured County funds ($50,000) to address a poorly designed road that had flooded for decades, repeatedly resulting in environmental hazards and loss of work and school attendance.","win3":"2018: Environmental Justice (EJ) advocates successfully advocated for the adoption of a new Oil and Gas Ordinance in the City of Arvin that created buffers between drills and residences, increased permit fees, and updated standards from 1965. For EJ advocates in Kern, the 3rd largest oil-producing county in the country, this was a great victory in protecting the health of families, communities, and the environment.","win4":"2018: EJ advocates had a ripple effect beyond South Kern. Advocates succeeded in influencing the California Air Resource Board to deploy air-monitoring sensors, begin emission reduction plans for the City of Shafter, create the SNAPS (Study of Neighborhood Air near Petroleum Sources) program, and create a community steering committee to monitor and hold regulators accountable. This was part of a larger 10-community project. The community of Lamont was prioritized because of an existing refinery.","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.8788,35.2237],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Los Angeles","win1":"2013: Grantee advocacy resulted in an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) investigation, a fine and a city lawsuit against an oil extraction site for failing to prevent the release of toxic chemicals in a residential community. The facility was forced to close until updates were completed to bring the site up to code.","win2":"2014: Partners created, adopted, and implemented a health equity component in the city’s General Plan. The component included many changes: reforms to the Quimby Code to bring more park space to BHC sites; use of resources via Funder’s Collaborative for a Sustainable LA; outreach and engagement; and collaboration among city departments, including the Departments of Health and City Planning.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2867,33.989],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Sacramento","win1":"2017: Sacramento County established an Environmental Justice Advisory Committee to provide the county with advice and technical expertise as they updated their general plan in accordance with the newly enacted SB 1000. Several Sac BHC partners were members of the Committee, representing community voices through equity lenses.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-121.4675,38.5482],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"CROSSLINK","name":"(OVER NEVADA)","win1":"crossLinkTo(1,48)","win2":"crossLinkTo(2,'4-EJ')","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.4,39.7],"type":"Point"}} ]}, {"type": "FeatureCollection","crs": { "type": "name", "properties": { "name": "urn:ogc:def:crs:OGC:1.3:CRS84" } },"features": [ {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Boyle Heights","win1":"2015: Hazard Park Armory youth center renovation. Total project funding = $6.0 million; TCE funding = $300,000.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2023,34.0389],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Central Santa Ana","win1":"2012: Pacific Electric Exercise Park ($380,000) opened in Santa Ana's Madison Park neighborhood, funded by federal trail enhancement funds.","win2":"2018: City Council approved the development of a park in the Lacy neighborhood of Santa Ana. Ongoing efforts by community residents from the Kennedy Commission and the Equity for All workgroup were instrumental in advocacy and collaboration with city staff. This approach ensured adequate resources for the park.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.8808,33.7395],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Central/Southeast/Southwest Fresno","win1":"2015: Held press conference on the lack of park space, and conducted continued advocacy. The city unanimously awarded $450,000 for updates to the Park Master Plan.","win2":"2016: Fresno City Council allocated approximately $11 million for park upgrades and maintenance. These set-asides resulted directly from Fresno BHC's advocacy on #Parks4All.","win3":"2017: The Fresno Unified School District Board of Trustees approved an agreement with the City of Fresno to open up several school campuses for community recreational use on the weekends (8 in the BHC place). This victory was an extension of the Fresno BHC #Parks4All campaign.","win4":"2018: Residents and youth led a valiant effort to pass Measure P, which would have levied a tax to improve disinvested parks in the city. The measure lost in the mid-term election by a small margin: 48% approved while 51% opposed.","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-119.7583,36.7237],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"City Heights","win1":"2013-2015: City of San Diego dedicated park space at two locations for a new skate plaza and a full-size skate park. The City subsequently added park improvements and the renovation of a recreational facility to create the Skate Park Complex.","win2":"2016: A $1 million canyon restoration project in Manzanita Canyon promoted healthy behaviors and access to outdoor open green space for young people of color and their families in City Heights. The project received public and private support, including funds from TCE, Price Charities, REI, the San Diego Foundation, and the state Department of Parks and Recreation.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.1026,32.7521],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Del Norte County & Tribal Lands","win1":"2017: Residents of True North’s Klamath Local Organizing committee held an action with Yurok and Resighini Tribes and Del Norte County, resulting in the County improving the maintenance of a County-owned park in the remote neighborhood of Hunter Creek.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-124.0081,41.6515],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"East Salinas (Alisal)","win1":"2015: City of Salinas invested $40,000 in Acosta Plaza Neighborhood Youth Leaders (Youth for Change) efforts to complete a basketball court & community park.","win2":"2015: Salinas Regional Soccer Complex. Total project funding = $4 million; TCE funding = $490,000.","win3":"2016: For the first time in several years, the City of Salinas increased funding to the Parks, Recreation, Library and Community Services Department by 4 percent. Thanks to the advocacy efforts of BHC partners, the city raised the funding by another percent, bringing the budget increase to 5 percent or $538,000.","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-121.6353,36.6995],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Eastern Coachella Valley","win1":"2015: North Shore Regional Park funding secured. Total project funding = $5 million; TCE funding = $250,000.","win2":"2018: The community of North Shore had its grand opening of a five-acre park, the culmination of a six-year, community-led design process in partnership with BHC partners and Desert Recreation District.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-116.1128,33.6622],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Long Beach","win1":"2018: Los Angeles County voters approved Measure W to provide new resources to capture stormwater and improve stormwater infrastructure in underserved neighborhoods. With the investment of Measure W, communities historically impacted by flooding and health disparities had new opportunities to reclaim water, improve the environment, and benefit from rainwater in their own backyards.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.1657,33.799],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Richmond","win1":"2014: Pogo Park helped to secure $7 million in State Prop. 84 funds for Elm Playlot and Unity Park on the Richmond Greenway.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-122.3518,37.9466],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Kern","win1":"2012: TCE funds ($25,000) helped leverage nearly $500,000 for park improvements in Greenfield, including a newly constructed walking path, repaved basketball courts, and improved lighting for safe park use by youth and local women providing who attend daily Zumba classes.","win2":"2013-2015: Youth in South Kern advocated and successfully pushed the City of Arvin to reallocate $400,000 originally earmarked for roads to support the construction of a new skate and bike park. Out of these funds, $70,000 aided in the development of a Master Bike Plan that kept youth at the center of the design process. In addition, Kern Parks and Recreation allocated $125,000 for a new indoor soccer field in Greenfield, a new $30,000 KaBOOM! playground in Lamont, and three new park murals.","win3":"2014: Successfully advocated for a law restricting alcohol and tobacco use in public parks.","win4":"2018: Board of Supervisors approved $2.65 million in new budget allocation for parks and recreation capital projects.","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.8788,35.2237],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Los Angeles","win1":"2013: 76th Street Park, completed with $87,484 in TCE funds, provided recreational space for residents in South Figueroa Corridor and South LA. Residents were engaged in visioning and stewardship aspects to ensure the park remained a community asset.","win2":"2016: L.A. City Council reformed the Quimby Act, increasing funding and equitable distribution throughout the city for parks, gardens, and recreation amenities.

2016: Measure A passed in LA County, providing an annual parcel tax to develop or implement programs consistent with the 2016 Countywide Park Needs Assessment.","win3":"2017: 10,500 square-foot Vermont Miracle Park opened in South Los Angeles with $175,000 in TCE funds. The blighted lot was transformed into a safe and healthy space for families and community building.","win4":"2018: Los Angeles City Council approved the Adopt-A-Lot pilot program across 10 city-owned lots across Los Angeles. The program worked with residents to repurpose vacant, publicly owned lots into parks, gardens, or marketplaces.","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2867,33.989],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Sacramento","win1":"2015: Louise Perez Community Center. Total project funding = $2.5 million; TCE funding = $10,000.","win2":"2018: Funding was secured for a beautification project to convert a Pansy Ave vacant lot in Oak Park into a safe park and play space for kids, a community garden, and a neighborhood gathering space. The property was owned by SHRA and transferred to Alchemist Community Development Center to develop the site with community engagement.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-121.4675,38.5482],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Southwest Merced/East Merced County","win1":"2013-2015: Residents, partners, and advocates successfully advocated for increased youth development services/funding with the City of Merced through its annual budget processes. Increased funding produced tangible benefits: the re-opening of the Youth Center at McNamara Park; the re-opening of the Youth Center at Stephen Leonard Park; the re-opening of the McNamara public swimming pool.","win2":"2016-2017: City of Merced increased funding to the Parks and Recreation Department to include a full-time Department Manager and a Department Director to provide increased leadership for the department's youth development programs, Youth Council, and other efforts in the community.","win3":"2018: The Planada Municipal Advisory Committee and Planada Parks and Recreation Department approved a community-developed park improvement plan for the Planada community public park, incorporating community priorities and needs.","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-120.3284,37.305],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"CROSSLINK","name":"(OVER NEVADA)","win1":"crossLinkTo(1,49)","win2":"crossLinkTo(2,'4-P')","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.4,39.7],"type":"Point"}} ]}, {"type": "FeatureCollection","crs": { "type": "name", "properties": { "name": "urn:ogc:def:crs:OGC:1.3:CRS84" } },"features": [ {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Central Santa Ana","win1":"2013-2014: The City of Santa Ana incorporated health in all policy language in the update for the Transportation & Housing Elements. The transportation/ circulation element adopted SABHC Santa Ana Bike Master Plan and completed street assessments developed by the youth.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.8808,33.7395],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"City Heights","win1":"2011: San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG) approved funding and began implementation of Bus Rapid Transit and the Mid-City Bike Path to increase access to transit and active transit resources.","win2":"2015: Bus Rapid Transit line connected residents to opportunities downtown. Total project funding = $45 million; TCE funding = $100,000","win3":"2018: San Diego Architectural Foundation presented an Orchid Award in Urban Planning to the community-driven SR-15 Visions Project for the completion of a 40-year advocacy process that culminated in California’s only freeway cap park, two transit plazas, two bike/pedestrian bridges, two adjacent parks, a parallel-running bike path, and the region’s first-ever in-line Bus Rapid Transit Stations known as the “Centerline.”","win4":"2018: County approved $1 million for youth bus passes.","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.1026,32.7521],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"East Oakland","win1":"2013: A multi-stakeholder alliance won a campaign to improve transit in East Oakland, leveraging $180 million in state and federal funds. The Bus Rapid Transit project reduced transit time and operations costs, resulting in more service for less funding.","win2":"2013: Metropolitan Transportation Commission committed $14 billion in One Bay Area Grant funds over the life of the Regional Transportation Plan, at least 70 percent of which must be spent in Priority Development Areas (East Oakland is in this geography).","win3":"2014: Safe Routes to Schools program attracted significant federal funding to run the program as a whole. The program also assisted Oakland Unified School District and the Alameda County Public Health Department to win another $1,000,000 from the state Active Transportation Program, making it easier and safer for all Oakland kids to walk, bike, and take transit to school.","win4":"2017: Groundbreaking commenced in deep East Oakland (East High Street) for the $200 million International Boulevard. This project included $42 million in pedestrian improvements in East Oakland, such as high-visibility crosswalks, hundreds of improved curb ramps, and 29 new traffic signals—several of which were installed in 2017 and 2018.","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-122.1804,37.765],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"East Salinas (Alisal)","win1":"2015: City allocated $250,000 towards the Alisal Vibrancy Plan (guided by racial equity principles) to improve pedestrian safety, calm traffic, and encourage bicycle use.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-121.6353,36.6995],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Eastern Coachella Valley","win1":"2014-2015: Students’ media work was documented in Health Impact Assessment for the CV Link, a 50-mile bicycle, pedestrian, and low-speed electric vehicle pathway.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-116.1128,33.6622],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Long Beach","win1":"2013: CalTrans included Community Alternative 7 as an alternative in the Draft Environmental Impact Report for the 710 freeway expansion.","win2":"2017: LA County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro) Board of Directors adopted the Master Guidelines for Measure M, which, through the advocacy efforts of LA region BHC partners, included more equitable transportation development principles. These new principles directed the $120 billion in new transportation measure spending approved by voters in 2016.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.1657,33.799],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Kern","win1":"2015: Lamont residents helped secure approximaly $2 million in state funding for pedestrian safety. As a result, the large farmworker populations had better access to sidewalks, new bus stops, and crosswalks.","win2":"2016: Won $5.6 million in state funding to fix flooding, build sidewalks, and improve street safety; previously entire streets would flood with water, forcing children to walk to school into the street.","win3":"2017: A collaboration between community groups, residents, and the Kern County Roads Department led to successfully securing $1.43 million in Active Transportation Program funds to improve walkability in the community of Lamont. The funds bring 4 miles of sidewalks, crosswalks, curbs, and gutters, providing safe walking opportunities throughout the community.","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.8788,35.2237],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Los Angeles","win1":"2015: Rail to River Slauson Walking and Biking Path. Total project funding = $2.9 million; TCE funding = $150,000.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.2867,33.989],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Sacramento","win1":"2016: Sacramento Area Council of Governments issued a $443,000 grant alongside a $450,000 grant from the City of Sacramento to develop a streetscape and traffic plan on Franklin Blvd that included lane reductions, bike lanes, raised median, landscaping, and street parking.","win2":"2018: SCUSD approved a ‘Safe Routes to School’ board policy to recognize and promote walking, bicycling, and other forms of alternative transportation to and from school. The policy sought to encourage active lifestyles, enhance student learning, and reduce vehicle traffic, and air pollution. WALK Sacramento was instrumental in providing leadership and technical assistance on policy development and advocacy.","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-121.4675,38.5482],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Southwest Merced/East Merced County","win1":"2015-2016: Board of Supervisors, with BHC support, won a $1 million grant to build sidewalks, bike paths, and much-needed gutters and draining for a school corridor in South Merced.","win2":"2016: Merced County Association of Governments adopted a Regional Transportation Plan Amendment that included key elements, such as the implementation of a grant program, to improve smart growth planning, inclusion of health outcomes to the land use and transportation planning model, and funding commitments for active travel and increased public transit.","win3":"2018: The Merced County Association of Governments (MCAG) approved a modified Regional Transportation Plan/Sustainable Communities Strategy (RTP/SCS) development process to incorporate the needs of traditionally excluded communities. The process included the development of transportation plans, job growth projections for unincorporated communities, and a needs assessment of rural communities.","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-120.3284,37.305],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"CROSSLINK","name":"(OVER NEVADA)","win1":"crossLinkTo(1,49)","win2":"crossLinkTo(2,'4-TA')","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.4,39.7],"type":"Point"}} ]}, {"type": "FeatureCollection","crs": { "type": "name", "properties": { "name": "urn:ogc:def:crs:OGC:1.3:CRS84" } },"features": [ {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Eastern Coachella Valley","win1":"2012: Through a partnership with US EPA and $45,000 in funding, an innovative point-of-use water filtration system for access to clean potable water was established in 150 individual mobile homes.","win2":"2013: California Public Utilities Commission adopted a policy that sets legal water rates for mobile home parks that operate their own water systems. This policy ensured that residents in rural mobile home parks were charged equitable rates for water consumption.","win3":"2015: Water4All Partnership with Coachella Valley Unified School District and community centers in the Eastern Coachella Valley installed water hydration stations; Thirty-three water hydration stations installed to date (in 2015).","win4":"2016: Between this community and in South Kern, over 120 water stations were installed in public spaces—schools, libraries, and community centers—to guarantee access to safe drinking water for almost 150,000 residents.","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-116.1128,33.6622],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Richmond","win1":"2016: Seven young watershed technicians in-training helped to build a water catchment system and bioswale at the new North Richmond Farm with $300,000 in support.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-122.3518,37.9466],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"South Kern","win1":"2014: Secured an additional $4 million for a total of $8 million in emergency funding for interim water solutions from the State Water Control Resource Board.","win2":"2016: Between this community and in Eastern Coachella Valley, over 120 water stations were installed in public spaces—schools, libraries, and community centers—to guarantee access to safe drinking water for almost 150,000 residents.","win3":"2017: The City of Arvin received 170 point-of-use (POU) filters throughout Arvin Union School District, Arvin High School and Head Start programs, community clinics, and parks. These filters provided over 200,000 gallons of arsenic-free water to nearly 6,000 students and residents. A 1:1 external dollar match helped make this project a success.","win4":"2014-2020: The Agua4All campaign brought seventy refillable water stations to South Kern schools, local parks, clinics, libraries, family resource centers, and other community settings, impacting nearly 76,000 people. Installed eighty-eight certified water filters in Arvin schools and Head Start programs, providing clean drinking water to nearly 4,000 children.","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-118.8788,35.2237],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"orange","name":"Southwest Merced/East Merced County","win1":"2017: Merced County Board of Supervisors approved its County Housing Element, which specifically included policies to address and respond to farmworker housing needs, including improved access to safe drinking water and wastewater systems. Community needs were determined through local surveys of residents who then advocated the County for desired improvements to the Housing Element.","win2":"","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-120.3284,37.305],"type":"Point"}}, {"type":"Feature","properties":{"color":"CROSSLINK","name":"(OVER NEVADA)","win1":"crossLinkTo(1,48)","win2":"crossLinkTo(2,'4-W')","win3":"","win4":"","more":""},"geometry":{"coordinates":[-117.4,39.7],"type":"Point"}} ]} ];