Meeting the Moment of the Climate Crisis

By Giving List Staff   |   October 28, 2021
Community Environmental Council CEO and staff on an educational outing to the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden.

The time for action on climate change is now. For the Community Environmental Council (CEC), an environmental stalwart on the Central Coast for the past 50 years, that moment could not have come any sooner.

“For people who’ve been in the trenches for years like us, it feels like finally the world is really paying attention and realizing that the stuff is hitting the fan and we really need to make this a top priority,” says Michael Chiacos, CEC’s Energy & Climate Program Director. “We have the technology, and it’s fairly easy to do if we had the political will to just change some things.”

The Community Environmental Council doesn’t just have the will, it also has a plan. Meet CEC’s Reverse, Repair, Protect, an ambitious plan for how the local community can go all in together at this urgent moment to put a rapid, equitable halt to the climate crisis. 

The plan is broken into three parts. The first is Reverse, which pushes for ambitious, equitable zero emissions and zero waste goals for the energy, transportation, food, and agriculture sectors. The second is Repair, which taps into the power of nature to draw down excess carbon from the atmosphere and repair the disrupted carbon cycle. The last step, Protect, encompasses safeguarding public health and vulnerable populations from the impacts of climate change that are already underway.

The goals of Reverse, Repair, Protect are ambitious. For instance, they call for our region to reach 100 percent renewable energy by 2030, 15 years earlier than the California timeline. The plan calls for using that clean electricity to power not only transportation – especially electric vehicles – but also buildings.

“That will necessitate redesigning our cities so that it’s easier to not have to drive in traffic alone everywhere and that more people can bike, walk, take transit, and telecommute,” Chiacos says.

Chiacos acknowledges that this plan will take decades to fully realize. But if the Community Environmental Council has learned anything in half a century fighting for climate change, it’s how to play the long game.

 

Community Environmental Council

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www.cecsb.org
(805) 963-0583
CEO: Sigrid Wright

Mission

The Community Environmental Council (CEC) advances rapid and equitable solutions to the climate crisis – including ambitious zero carbon goals, drawdown of excess carbon, and protection against the impacts of climate change. CEC was recognized as a 2020 California Nonprofit of the Year and a City of Santa Barbara Climate Hero and is led by CEO Sigrid Wright who was recently named 2022 Congressional Woman of the Year. CEC has worked since 1970 to incubate and innovate real-life environmental solutions that directly affect the California Central Coast. Our programs lead to clean vehicles, solar energy, resilient food systems, and reduction of single-use plastic.

Begin to Build a Relationship

We know you care about where your money goes and how it is used. Connect with this organization’s leadership in order to begin to build this important relationship. Your email will be sent directly to this organization’s director of development and/or Executive Director.

Clear Thinking on Climate Change

CEC helped me understand the basics and the complexities of climate change, and how to take steps in my life to make positive changes. I also gained a deeper understanding of how to strategically bring environmental sustainability into my work to help clients be successful.
Lisa Murphy Rivas
Principal, LMR Consulting, Inc.
Alumna, CEC’s UC Climate Stewards

Training the Next Generation of Climate Activists

The Community Environmental Council (CEC) builds on-the-ground momentum to reverse the threat of the climate crisis and ensure a vibrant and resilient future for California’s Central Coast. 

Training the next generation of climate activists – young and old – is critical to achieving this mission. 

Funds are needed for CEC’s youth climate workshops, community advocacy training, and climate change education and outreach activities. 

Every $300 donation supports training one certified CEC Climate Steward. 

2024 Board of Directors

Jon Clark, President
Chandler Buie
Bill Cuttler
Christine DeVries
Nadra Ehrman
Geoff Green
David Jackson
Dr. Barbara Lindemann
Elliott MacDougall
Pat McElroy
Dr. David Pellow
Ivette Peralta
Peter Schuyler
Tammy Sims Johnson
Michelle Weinman

Key Supporters Foundations

James S. Bower Foundation
Patricia and Paul Bragg Foundation
Hutton Parker Foundation
Natalie Orfalea Foundation
Ann Jackson Family Foundation
John C. Mithun Foundation
Errett Fisher Foundation
Kenneth Rainin Foundation
Living Peace Foundation
Santa Barbara Foundation
Weingart Foundation
El Gato Channel Foundation
McCune Foundation
Schlinger Family Foundation