EnviroJustice Secures Lower-Intensity Alternatives to the Concord Naval Weapons Station Reuse Plan EIR

Victory Banner

The draft environmental impact report for the Concord Naval Weapons Station Reuse Plan is scheduled for release to the public the first week of May. On Thursday, October 9, 2007, the Concord City Council approved a broad range of alternatives for study in the EIR. In a significant victory for those seeking a safe, sustainable and just community, the draft EIR will study a broad range of alternatives, including two lower-intensity additions to the original staff recomendations.

photo by Daniel Schwen, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 2.5 LicenseOne alternative called for as many as 13,000 homes and 7.9 million square feet of commercial development, bringing 30,600 residents and employment of an additional 29,000 to the project. The alternative supported by EnviroJustice calls for 6,250 homes and 5.2 million square feet of commercial development. At least 15,000 people would be employed in the new development, even under the lower-intensity EnviroJustice alternative.

In a letter to the Mayor and City Council, EnviroJustice urged support for the additional alternatives. "This is an opportunity for the citizens of Concord and the surrounding region to come together," said Gregory Hile, EnviroJustice founder and president, "and begin to use our common goals and perspectives to support a reuse plan that is safe, sustainable and just." A copy of the letter, is available for download and distribution. EnviroJustice will be actively involved in preparing analysis and comments on the draft EIR.

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Table Justice — The EnviroJustice Campaign for Safe, Sustainable and Just Sources of Food and Water

Farmer's Market Martinez, CaliforniaNational Denomination Adopts Local Food Resolution

With the active help of EnviroJustice's Table Justice campaign, the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) has just become the first major American faith community to formally recognize the importance of our connection with the source of our food and encourage participation in sustainable, local food systems, including community gardens, sustainable small farms, and farmers markets. Concerning a Movement to Reconnect with our Food and the Natural World also urges support for national movements toward the passage of legislation requiring that a certain percentage of food consumed annually is sustainably produced locally.

Join us in a faith-based approach to environmental justice that encourages individuals and faith communities to support sustainable agriculture, clean water and the development of local agricultural initiatives.

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The EnviroJustice Campaigns for Safe, Sustainable and Just Communities

photo by Gregory Hile, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 2.5 LicenseContra Costa Justice

Join us in supporting community participation and sustainable development of the former Concord Naval Weapons Station, save the hillsides of Pittsburg from over-development, and preserve productive agricultural land and the economic viability and vitality of agriculture in East Contra Costa County.

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Mexico Mission Trip 2005Tijuana Justice

EnviroJustice is proud to join other environmental and faith-based organizations in promoting environmental justice in Tijuana, Mexico and to be a part of the solutions to the crisis that unchecked expansion of industry has reaped on the city.

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In the News . . .


Pittsburg Work Begins Without Approval (Contra Costa Times, May 9, 2008)

MTBE Settlement Could Grow if More Contamination Is Found (Associated Press/Law.com, May 9, 2008)

EPA Might Not Act to Limit Rocket Fuel in Drinking Water (Associated Press/Salon.com, May 6, 2008)

Fighting Global Warming Block by Block (Washington Post, May 4, 2008)

Interfaith Group Protests Banks (Contra Costa Times, May 2, 2008)

'An Evangelical Manifesto' Criticizes Politics of Faith (CNN, May 2, 2008)

Local Air Quality Gets an "F": Lung Assn. Rates Bay Area's Air Quality (San Francisco Chronicle, May 1, 2008)

Shortages Threaten Farmers’ Key Tool: Fertilizer (New York Times, April 30, 2008)

Poison Ice (Salon.com, April 30, 2008)

U.S. Push to Get More Farmworkers in Visa Plan Draws Criticism (Sacramento Bee, April 29, 2008)

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