Comunidades Receives Funding

“There are many Latinos who want to protect clean water, clean air, and all of our natural resources, but have not engaged in traditional environmental groups—Comunidades aims to change that,” -Ubaldo Hernández, senior organizer with Columbia Riverkeeper.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

New Gorge-Based Organization, Comunidades, Awarded Group Health Foundation Grant 

comunidades meeting, sept. 26, 2018
Comunidades Meeting, September 2018.

March 11, 2020 (Hood River, OR)—Group Health Foundation awarded a game-changing three-year operating grant to Comunidades, a new collaborative project that provides space for more Latinos and people of color to get involved in social justice and environmental issues in the Columbia River Gorge. Comunidades formed in late 2018 and includes Columbia Gorge-based educators, activists, parents, and students. Comunidades provides an inclusive, Latino-led space. Group Health Foundation awarded Comunidades $225,000 over three years.

“Growing up in Hood River, I saw how vast the information gap was between Latinos and environmental issues,” explains Lisa Muñoz, a volunteer with Comunidades. “Comunidades is a stepping stone in narrowing that gap. By actively engaging with the Latino community about problems that they face on a daily basis, we can inform and facilitate the kind of environmental stewardship Latino community members have always been capable of.” 

Group Health Foundation funding will provide critical seed funding to hire Comunidades’ first paid-staff member to support the all-volunteer group in advancing its goals, including membership recruitment, leadership training, and public outreach on priority environmental and social justice issues in the Gorge. The Foundation’s mission is to shape and accelerate efforts to improve health equity and advance community aspirations for a vibrant, healthy future in Washington.  

“There are many Latinos who want to protect clean water, clean air, and all of our natural resources, but have not engaged in traditional environmental groups—Comunidades aims to change that,” said Ubaldo Hernández, senior organizer with Columbia Riverkeeper.

The Group Health Foundation recently announced $15 million in Community Learning Grants to 75 organizations and projects throughout Washington that are leading community-defined efforts to advance equity. Grantees were selected following review of almost 700 applications.

“The Gorge needs Comunidades and we need it,” states Dez Ramirez, community engagement manager with Columbia Land Trust. “The beauty of the Gorge is for everyone, and so is the good work that is being done reclaiming the natural environment we all have a responsibility to take care of. Latinos are here in the Gorge, and they’ve been here. It's time for a community based group that is for us and by us.”

Our team of attorneys and community organizers are hard at work, responding to a flurry of federal actions to gut environmental and public health protections.