Menu
Washingtoner
  • Home
  • Health
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Aerospace
  • Technology
  • Books
  • Society
Washingtoner

City of San José Could Lose Access to Millions Under New CalEnviroScreen Tool 5.0
Washingtoner/10327931

Trending...
  • Beware of Fake City of Spokane Development and Permit Invoices
  • Spokane: Housing and Human Services Dept. Provides Update on Housing and Homelessness Initiatives
  • Spokane: City Closures Planned for Juneteenth
SAN JOSE, Calif. - Washingtoner -- Most people have never heard of CalEnviroScreen, but it has a major impact on neighborhoods like East San José. CalEnviroScreen is California's environmental justice mapping tool, created by the California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA). It identifies communities facing the greatest environmental, health, and economic challenges. The tool examines factors such as air pollution, traffic, contaminated drinking water, asthma rates, poverty, and other conditions that affect people's quality of life. Every neighborhood in California receives a score based on these combined factors. Those scores help state agencies determine which communities receive priority for billions of dollars in state grants and public investments.

Why is CalEnviroScreen so important? CalEnviroScreen does not provide funding directly to the City of San José or Santa Clara County. Instead, it serves as one of California's primary tools for determining which communities qualify for many state grant programs. Communities identified as disadvantaged often receive priority for funding that supports:
  • Cleaner air and pollution reduction
  • Affordable housing
  • Tree planting and neighborhood greening
  • Extreme heat and climate resilience projects
  • Safe streets and transportation improvements
  • Public health programs
  • Energy efficiency and home electrification
  • Community development and neighborhood revitalization
For frontline communities like East San José, CalEnviroScreen has become one of California's most important tools for directing resources to neighborhoods with the greatest environmental and public health needs.

More on Washingtoner
  • Webtronix Designs Web Agency Launches "LocalFind" to Revolutionize AI Local SEO for Local Businesses
  • Christmas Miracle Chronicles - New movie coming up this holiday season !
  • Healthi Life, Bangkok's Urban Longevity House, Honoured at Asia-Pacific Awards 2025
  • ReviewsAlly Launches Evidence-Based Review Platform for VPNs, Business Software, and Online Services
  • Week 47 Final Freedom Vigil at Alligator Alcatraz: Truth Out

Why are community leaders concerned? California is preparing to finalize Draft CalEnviroScreen 5.0, and many environmental justice organizations, public health experts, local governments, and community advocates are raising concerns. The issue is not that the State is updating its data. Updated information is essential. The concern is that changes to the scoring methodology could cause some communities to lose their disadvantaged community designation even though the environmental and health conditions affecting residents have not significantly improved. If that happens, neighborhoods may become less competitive or even ineligible for funding that supports cleaner air, affordable housing, climate resilience, public health, and community development. "A community shouldn't lose access to critical resources because the formula changes while the challenges remain the same," said Adam Ybarra, Executive Director of The Tenacious Group. "Families in East San José continue to face poor air quality, traffic pollution, extreme heat, and economic hardship. Environmental justice tools should reflect those realities and ensure communities continue receiving the investments they need to thrive."

What could this mean for East San José? If portions of East San José are no longer identified as disadvantaged under CalEnviroScreen 5.0, the community could experience significant impacts, including:
  • Reduced access to millions of dollars in state environmental and climate funding.
  • Fewer investments in parks, tree canopy, clean transportation, and neighborhood improvements.
  • Reduced funding for affordable housing, public health, and climate resilience projects.
  • Greater financial pressure on local governments to replace lost state funding.
  • Slower progress toward reducing long-standing environmental health inequities.
Why this matters? Environmental justice means every family regardless of their ZIP code deserves clean air, safe neighborhoods, healthy housing, and the opportunity to thrive. CalEnviroScreen was created to help ensure that public investments reach communities with the greatest need. As California updates this important tool, it is essential that neighborhoods with persistent environmental and socioeconomic challenges are not unintentionally left behind.

More on Washingtoner
  • Psychiatric Hospitals Fail to Warn Electroshock Patients of FDA-Cited Risks in Estimated $7 Billion Industry
  • City Asks for Feedback on Design Concepts for Spokane Falls Boulevard
  • EasySpanishTax.com Launches Simple DIY Modelo 210 Filing Solution for Non-Resident Property Owners in Spain
  • Spokane: New Scam Targeting Families Of Out-Of-Custody Defendants
  • Finland Sets Casino Gambling Risk Limits at 2% of Income, 4 Days, 2 Game Types

A call to action. The Tenacious Group respectfully urges state, county, and local leaders to carefully evaluate the proposed methodology before finalizing CalEnviroScreen 5.0. We encourage California to adopt transition strategies or supplemental safeguards that prevent communities from suddenly losing eligibility for environmental justice and climate funding because of changes to the scoring methodology.

For East San José and many frontline communities across California, this is about far more than a score on a map. It is about protecting investments that help families breathe cleaner air, prepare for climate change, improve public health, create safer neighborhoods, and build stronger, healthier communities for future generations.

The Tenacious Group is a nonprofit organization based in East San José that advances and advocates environmental health, community climate resilience, and youth leadership. "When people understand how environmental conditions affect their health, they become powerful advocates for change," said Ybarra. "Our mission is to ensure every resident has the knowledge, resources, and opportunity to help build a healthier East San José for generations to come."

Contact
Anna Ybarra
***@thetenaciousgroup.com


Source: The Tenacious Group

Show All News | Disclaimer | Report Violation

0 Comments
1000 characters max.

Latest on Washingtoner
  • Compton to host first Juneteenth celebration with We Are Us Festival
  • DuoKey Launches Quantum Risk Score to Help Enterprises Prioritise Post-Quantum Cryptography Migration
  • Top 5 Most Reliable Used Vans in the UK in 2026
  • Dominican Fashion Designer Raiza Bonaparte presents the Sovereign Despampanante Collection at the Library of Congress
  • Tacoma: A Statement from At-Large Council Member Latasha Palmer on Rental Housing Resolution
  • Tacoma City Council Adopts Six-Year Transportation Improvement Program
  • Tacoma City Council Adopts 2026 Annual Code Amendments
  • What Happens When Congress Says No? New Book Examines the Boland Amendments, Iran-Contra Affair & Jamaican Posse, as US Congress Debate Over Military
  • Beware of Fake City of Spokane Development and Permit Invoices
  • Warm, Dry Summer Forecast Points to a Stronger Wasp and Yellowjacket Season Across the Pacific Northwest
  • Qscription Technologies Appoints Anurag Velekkatt Sunil Kumar to Drive Enterprise Scale
  • Spokane: City Closures Planned for Juneteenth
  • SafeBets Named Presenting Sponsor of IMCX 2026, Bringing Its No-Deposit Prediction Platform to the Creator Economy's Deal-Making Conference
  • A New Pulse for Cardiac Care in Baltimore: St. Elizabeth Rehab & Nursing Welcomes Dr. Hakim Uqdah and Expands Advanced Heart Program
  • Inframark–Slater Joint Venture Selected to Manage Fulton County Wastewater Operations
  • Cancun International Airport Reports Strong Start to Summer 2026 Travel Season
  • Freedomtech Solutions Launches the World's First Pre‑Installed Agentic AI Server — Instant, Sovereign, Infrastructure‑Native Intelligence
  • GitKraken Introduces Code Flow, a Framework for Software Development in the Agentic Era
  • SanctionsLookup Launches Free OFAC Search Tool for U.S. Sanctions Screening
  • RIGHT CARS Announces Landmark African Expansion Through Strategic Collaboration Agreement Across Eight Nations
_catLbl0 _catLbl1

Popular on Washingtoner

  • New Home of the Month: Spacious Luxury Meets Modern Design in The Bristol at Heritage at Manalapan - 362
  • Kevin Francis Design Introduces CHROMA, a Collection of Saturated Solid Color Wool Rugs - 160
  • Joseph Nybyk aka Neibich of Gilbert, Arizona
  • Curious About Mensa? DFW Event Offers a 1-Day Immersion
  • Tacoma: Homicide Investigation – 1200 block of South M Street
  • Book Florida Keys Accommodations Early with KeysCaribbean and Save 15 Percent
  • Evocative Joins the Independent Data Centre Network (IDCN) as Primary USA Operator
  • VIV Welcomes Residents to St. Petersburg's EDGE District
  • Spokane: Flags Lowered for the Victims of the Longview Tragedy
  • Egypt Selects Gonzaga University and City of Spokane as Team Base Camp Training Site for FIFA World Cup 2026™

Similar on Washingtoner

  • Warm, Dry Summer Forecast Points to a Stronger Wasp and Yellowjacket Season Across the Pacific Northwest
  • Inframark–Slater Joint Venture Selected to Manage Fulton County Wastewater Operations
  • Top 15 Mosquito-Infested Cities in Louisiana and East Texas Ranked for 2026 Mosquito Season
  • Community, Conservation & Waterwise Inspiration Bloom on June 6
  • J&J Exterminating Celebrates 65th Anniversary and Unveils Strategic Vision at Annual Team Meeting
  • Love Must Be the Guide: Live Good Shares a Message of Humanity, Compassion and Hope
  • NaturismRE Launches Structured Nudism & Naturism Encyclopedia, Aiming to Reframe Public Understanding
  • Outlier Pest Season Hits Willamette Valley as Mild Winter Drives Early Surge in Ant and Rodent Activity
  • Blue Sparrow Coffee named Best Matcha in Westword's Best of Denver 2026
Copyright © 2026 washingtoner.com | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Contribute