Contra Costa Justice — The EnviroJustice Campaign for a Safe, Sustainable and Just Community


Central to EnviroJustice's mission is the notion of safe, sustainable and just communities. Contra Costa Justice is one such campaign that seeks a faith-based approach to environmental justice.

A recent report prepared for the Bay Area Environmental Health Collaborative by the Center for Justice, Tolerance & Community, University of California, Santa Cruz demonstrates that for many in Contra Costa County environmental justice is an illusion.

photo by Daniel Schwen, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 2.5 LicenseOne such area for concern is the site of the former Concord Naval Weapons Station is one of the largest remaining developable areas in the San Francisco Bay Area. Consisting of more than 5,000 acres, much of the former weapons station is relatively pristine rolling hills visible from Highways 4 and 242. In addition, Mount Diablo Creek, the last freely flowing creek in Contra Costa County, flows right through the heart of the military base. The cold clean water of this stream attracts salmon and trout, among many other species.

There are a number of competing ideas about how to develop the property and the U.S. Navy has even proposed bypassing the city and trading the land to a consulting company to be developed without public input.

EnviroJustice is working with a coalition of environmental and faith-based organizations to fashion a sensible development that would address the location and amount of open space, the type and number of new houses, the transportation system, and many other factors. Click here for a timetable and history of the Concord Naval Weapons Station.

For Sale signs in Brentwood, CaliforniaIn addition, EnviroJustice, in conjunction with our Table Justice campaign, is supporting grassroots efforts to preserve and protect productive agricultural land and to promote the economic viability and vitality of agriculture in East Contra Costa County, and in particular, the city of Brentwood. We again will be organizing faith-based communities to support these goals and to adopt environmentally safe and sensitive practices in their own households and meeting places.

The Contra Costa Justice campaign is also producing John Muir's Martinez, a documentary film that explores environmental justice from a faith-based perspective.

John Muir's Martinez — An EnviroJustice Documentary Film Project

Main Street Martinez, California, photo courtesy CoolcaesarMartinez, California is a small town of just under 40,000 people on the northern tip of the San Francisco East Bay. Originally established in 1849 as a way station for the California Gold Rush, Martinez became the Contra Costa county seat in 1850, but could not incorporate at the time because it lacked the 200 registered voters required. The town couldn't incorporate until 1876. In many respects it still retains its small-town charm. Rumor has it that it has the only MacDonalds in the country that is closed nights and on Sundays.

Martinez has several claims to fame. Some consider it the birthplace of the martini cocktail and it definitely is the birthplace of Joe DiMaggio.

John Muir House, photo in public domainToday, if one were to stand on the large hill rising up in the middle of Martinez, California and look to the west one would look down upon the home of John Muir, noted naturalist and founder of the Sierra Club. Martinez was the home of John Muir from 1880 until his death in 1914. He was buried about one mile south of the building that is now the John Muir National Historic Site.

Run by the National Park Service, the site preserves the Victorian residence and a part of the fruit ranch where Muir and his family lived from 1890 to his death in 1914. While living in Martinez, Muir laid the foundations for the creation of the National Park Service in 1916. Visitors today can tour the home, see Muir's "scribble-den" where he wrote his various conservation articles and books, and stroll the orchards.

On full moons during the summer, visitors are led on a hike up Mount Wanda, named after his daughter, where John would hike and is buried nearby.

Martinez, CaliforniaBut, standing on that same hill in the middle of town if you look to the east you will see oil refineries, chemical plants, and Superfund sites nestled into residential neighborhoods and adjacent to schools.

In 1915 Shell Oil Company built an oil refinery near Martinez, which sparked a building boom in the area. Martinez's oil refineries can still be seen today from Interstate 680 and the Benicia Bridge, and it continues to be a significant port and petroleum processing center.

This hour-long documentary film will examine the challenges a community like Martinez, including its faith communities, faces in creating and maintaining a toxic-free, economically sustainable community in the light of its treasured heritage.

The documentary will also look at how one of the city's neighbors is handling new development on the site of the former Concord Naval Weapons Station on the border between Martinez and the city of Concord.

Contra Costa Justice News . . .

Martinez Townhomes Get "Green" Seal of Approval (Contra Costa Times, July 5, 2008)

Concord, Navy at Odds over Land Use Plan Deadline (Contra Costa Times, June 23, 2008)

Navy Re-evaluating Truck Routes Through County in Light of Community Outcry (Contra Costa Times, June 16, 2008)

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

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

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

Green Gardening Requires Thought, Planning (Contra Costa Times, April 26, 2008)

Turning Blue Collars Green (Contra Costa Times, April 20, 2008)

Under Plan, Farmers Would Aid Inner Cities (Contra Costa Times, April 6, 2008)

Berkeley Business Man Jailed for Pollution (Contra Costa Times, March 21, 2008)

Martinez Refinery is Top Polluter (Contra Costa Times, February 22, 2008)

Burlingame Being Sued over Sewage (San Francisco Chronicle, February 10, 2008)

Water Well Plan Concerns Residents (Contra Costa Times, January 28, 2008)

City Gets $750,000 to Clean Landfill (Contra Costa Times, December 14, 2008)

Maritime Administration Sued Over Rusting Mothball Fleet in Suisun Bay (San Francisco Chronicle, October 29, 2007)

Council to Look at Seven Ideas for Base (Contra Costa Times, October 11, 2007)

Proposals Released For Undeveloped Land In Concord (KGO Channel 7, October 9, 2007)

Concord Considers Future Of Naval Weapons Station (CBS Channel 5, October 9, 2007)

Weapons Station Options Increase (Contra Costa Times, October 7, 2007)

Petition Supports San Ramon Fruit Market (Contra Costa Times, September 24, 2007)

Developers Scrap Wal-Mart Plans (Contra Costa Times, September 12, 2007)

First Military Base Superfund Cleanup Privatized, More Planned (Environmental News Service, August 29, 2007)

Supervisors Rebuff Urban Limit Line Move (Contra Costa Times, August 7, 2007)

Guy Houston to Challenge Mary Piepho for County Supervisor Seat (Contra Costa Times, August 2, 2007)

Over 4,000 Pounds Of MTBE Pulled From Contaminated Site (KGO TV, July 30, 2007)

Bill Would Make Site of WWII Explosion Into a National Park (Contra Costa Times, July 20, 2007)

Reps Seek Funds for Mercury Mine Cleanup (Contra Costa Times, July 18, 2007)

Vineyard is More Than Land to Grower (Contra Costa Times, July 9, 2007)

Ships to be Cleaned Despite Risk (Contra Costa Times, July 6, 2007)

Camp Lejeune Water Pollution, Cancer Link Investigated (CNN, June 12, 2007)

Larger Stands Spell Relief for Farmers (Contra Costa Times, June 8, 2007)

Shell to Pay $3M Fine for Martinez Refinery Emissions (San Francisco Chronicle, May 9, 2007)

Contra Costa Farmers Lose Foothold (Contra Costa Times, April 29, 2007)

Acid Maker Must Spend $50 Million to Cut Air Pollution (Environmental News Service, April 26, 2007)

Concord Council Postpones Wal-Mart Ruling (Contra Costa Times, April 25, 2007)

Wastes of War: Out in Open (Sacramento Bee, April 23, 2007)(part two of series)

Wastes of War: California Has Hundreds of Current and Former Military Sites That Pose Environmental Risks (Sacramento Bee, April 22, 2007)

Brentwood Land Trust Vows to Continue Mission (Contra Costa Times, April 19, 2007)

Walnut Creek Leaning Toward "Green" Priorities (Contra Costa Times, April 18, 2007)

Plan to Raise Rate for Water Criticized (Contra Costa Times, April 15, 2007)

Walnut Creek Looks to Make City Greener (Contra Costa Times, April 14, 2007)

Beavers, Dam May Remain, Officials Say (Contra Costa Times, April 5, 2007)

Navy Surpluses Concord Base (Contra Costa Times, March 7, 2007)

Access to Clean Air Unequal, Study Says (Contra Costa Times, February 21, 2007)

Concord to Jump into Planning as Soon as Navy Gives Go-Ahead (Contra Costa Times, February 18, 2007)

Concord Sees Land of Plenty at Navy Base (Contra Costa Times, January 8, 2006)