We begin in Oakland

Our Work

The Challenge

More than 181,000 people are living unhoused in California today. A disproportionate number of these Californians are people of color, specifically, Black and Indigenous People. 

Like every person, people of color need and deserve healthy, high-quality homes that shelter them from increasingly dangerous climate events; are close to those they love; and allow them to maintain a sense of belonging and place. And like every community, communities of color deserve the economic and political power to shape their work, spaces, and lives. 

Sadly, in the Extractive Economy housing is treated as a commodity, an investment, and a political tool, rather than a human right. As a

result, housing has become increasingly expensive for Californians. Meanwhile, racist economic policies and practices have rendered BIPOC communities more economically vulnerable and at risk of losing their homes in the face of rising costs. Climate change only exacerbates these economic vulnerabilities and displacement by further increasing housing costs and rendering homes unsafe. 

The compounding impacts of these economic, housing, and climate crises render people living unhoused unable to build the economic and political power they need to help transform our economy and political systems from systems of oppression to systems of liberation.

Our Solution