By Davida Herzl, Co-founder and CEO, Aclima
The air we breathe is critical infrastructure. Access to clean air is a human right, yet 90% of us don’t have it. Systemic racial injustices have led to disproportionate environmental burdens for communities of color. And the same emissions that harm our health are changing the climate. These converging crises call on each of us to pool our collective resources, energy, and ingenuity to innovate for environmental justice.
As a Public Benefit Corporation, Aclima is dedicated to catalyzing bold climate action that protects public health, reduces emissions, and supports environmental justice. We work in collaboration with environmental advocates across sectors to diagnose air pollution hotspots, target emissions reductions and interventions, and measure progress.
To guide the principles, priorities, and actions of our company, we have expanded the Aclima Advisory Board to include leaders in climate action and environmental justice:
Peggy Shepard, Co-founder and Executive Director of WE ACT for Environmental Justice: Peggy is a pioneer in the environmental justice movement, having played a catalytic role in groundbreaking legislation in the state of New York. She is a national leader in advancing environmental policy and the perspective of environmental justice in urban communities. She was recently named to the first White House Environmental Justice Advisory Council.
Dr. Sacoby Wilson, Associate Professor and Director, Community Engagement, Environmental Justice, and Health (CEEJH), University of Maryland: Dr. Wilson is an environmental health scientist and environmental justice advocate with expertise in exposure science, environmental justice, community-engaged research including community-based participatory research (CBPR), the built environment, geospatial visualization tools, environmental health disparities, air pollution and water quality studies, climate change, and community resiliency.
Ms. Margaret Gordon, Co-founder and Co-director of the West Oakland Environmental Indicators Project: Ms. Margaret has defined new models for local environmental justice advocacy, organizing, policy, and collective action. Under her leadership, the West Oakland Environmental Indicators Project has led the creation of the groundbreaking “Owning Our Air” emissions reductions plan as part of the implementation of California Assembly Bill 617. Her organization was an essential community partner in our groundbreaking 2017 findings that pollution varies by up to 800% from one block to the next.
Gloria Walton, President and CEO, The Solutions Project: Gloria leads The Solutions Project, which supports climate changemakers, innovators, and solutionaries at the grassroots. Previously, she was President & CEO of Strategic Concepts in Organizing and Policy Education (SCOPE), a South LA-based community organization widely recognized as a leader in the development of cutting-edge strategies to ensure that black and brown, poor and working-class communities have an equal voice in the democratic process. She is committed to frontline community climate solutions and knows deeply that our problems are interconnected, and therefore, so are our solutions.
Heather McTeer Toney, Climate Justice Liaison, Environmental Defense Fund and Senior Management Advisor, Moms Clean Air Force: Heather McTeer Toney served as the first African-American, first female and youngest mayor of Greenville, MS. In 2014, she was appointed by President Barack Obama to serve as Regional Administrator for Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Southeast Region, where she served until 2017. Her work has made her a national figure in public service, diversity and community engagement.
Christine Harada, Vice President of Government Affairs, Heliogen: Christine is a nationally recognized climate and sustainability expert. She leads Government Affairs at Heliogen, a clean energy company. Christine was formerly the President of i(x) investments, Partner at Ridge-Lane LP, the Federal Chief Sustainability Officer for the Obama administration, and the Chief Acquisition Officer at the U.S. GSA. She has extensive experience in driving operational excellence in government and business in service of bold climate action.
Kerry Duggan, Principal at SustainabiliD: Kerry is a connector and change agent. She currently serves on the State of Michigan’s Council on Climate Solutions. In 2020, Kerry was a Biden appointee to the Biden-Sanders Unity Climate Change Task Force. She served in the Obama-Biden White House as Deputy Director for Policy to then Vice President Joe Biden for energy, environment, climate and distressed communities. Simultaneously, she served as Deputy Director of the Detroit Federal Working Group.
The Aclima Advisory Board is a braintrust that ensures the science and technology we develop is continuously attuned and calibrated to the needs of the communities we seek to serve. Each new advisor brings a unique combination of deep experience, relationships, and insights to the table.
The community-centric model Aclima implements has been shaped over years through direct engagement with communities and environmental justice leaders.
Aclima methodologies have been developed over a decade by leading scientists and validated by research institutions. This newly expanded Advisory Board will build and strengthen connections with community-engaged researchers.
Today we are formalizing our relationships with key movement leaders so that we can cooperatively advance and implement new models for building engagement and economic prosperity with impacted communities.
The same emissions that disproportionately impact public health in communities of color are also accelerating climate change. The extreme weather events, flooding, fires, and displacement caused by climate change also pose greater risk to people of color and other communities made more vulnerable by systemic injustice.
There is a sea change in climate action underway in the U.S., with the requirement for investment in environmental justice across all sectors.
The Aclima managed sensor network and software-as-a-service platform translates billions of air pollution and greenhouse gas measurements into hyperlocal intelligence that supports environmental justice and informs climate action.
These new members of the Aclima Advisory Board, which was originally formed in 2015, will join existing advisors Bill Reilly, Martin Goebel, Luc Vincent, Nick Parker, Greg Niemeyer, and David Sherman. Jane Lubchenco, now an advisor emeritus, was recently named deputy director for climate and the environment for the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.
I am deeply grateful and humbled to welcome these climate and environmental justice leaders to the Aclima Advisory Board. I look forward to working together to deliver on our mission at this defining time for the country and the world.