barrio live EHC

With BarrioLive!, we invite you to explore the environmental justice problems, milestones and solutions in our communities first hand.

Each year, EHC staff and community leaders guide guests through our neighborhoods, offering rich detail on significant moments in history that have shaped who we are today and the challenges we face on the path to achieving environmental justice in the San Diego and Tijuana region.

Thank you for making our most recent BarrioLive! a success. Click here for a recap and to view photos from the inspiring day in Tijuana.

Stay tuned for 2018 dates, and see you at the next BarrioLive!

For more information or interest in sponsorship, please contact our Fund Development Manager, Clay Myers-Bowmanat at (619) 474-0220 ext. 118 or by email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Environmental Health Coalition is committed to respecting the privacy of our donors. Environmental Health Coalition assures donors that their names and contact information will not be shared or sold with any third party. EHC collects and maintains the following information for internal use only: name, address, telephone number, email address, donation information such as credit card and billing address, events attended, publications received and special requests, comments and suggestions.

For those who wish to be removed from our mailing list please email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. with the subject line REMOVE, or call (619) 474-0220 and information will be removed in a secure manner.

EHC CELEBRATES 30 YEARS IN 2010

We recently celebrated the 30th Anniversary of EHC! This means 30 years of creating meaningful change and improving the health of people in the San Diego/Tijuana region. This celebration was an opportunity to reflect on the past 30 years of struggles and victories with our friends, families, allies and dedicated supporters who make the work for environmental justice possible.

EHC's work incorporates the struggles of many progressive movements, including human rights, civil rights, public health and the environmental movement. We address issues that affect people in their everyday lives.

Air quality, toxic chemical exposure at home and on the job, affordable housing, environmental preservation, immigrant and indigenous people's rights, globalization, and climate change - these issues have common challenges and solutions.

With your support, EHC meets these challenges by empowering people, organizing communities and achieving justice. These concepts always have been at the core of the EHC mission, and we are thankful to have had 30 years (and many more to come) of working towards better lives for our communities.

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EHC extends thanks everyone who helped make this celebration a success!
We're planning our next awards event. Please contact us for information.

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With BarrioLive!, we invite you to explore the environmental justice problems, milestones and solutions in our communities first hand.

Each year, EHC staff and community leaders guide guests through our neighborhoods, offering rich detail on significant moments in history that have shaped who we are today and the challenges we face on the path to achieving environmental justice in the San Diego and Tijuana region.

Thank you for making our most recent BarrioLive! tour in Barrio Logan a success. Click here for a recap and view photos from the inspiring evening.

Stay tuned for 2018 dates, and see you at the next BarrioLive!

CRG1The movement for border environmental justice lost a dedicated researcher with the untimely death of Colin Rodríguez Griswold on January 22, 2005. EHC is honored that the Rodríguez-Griswold family established a fund to continue his interests and deep concern with environmental issues in the U.S./Mexico border region. The "Colin Rodríguez Griswold Memorial Fund"  subsidizes internships for high school and college students working on environmental issues in the border region.

We invite you to join Colin's family and friends in honoring his life by making a donation to this fund.

If you wish to donate online, through our secure web server:

Go to Environmental Health Coalition's donation page. Under "Gift Information" mark "In memory of" and fill in Colin's name, then complete the rest of the form.

If you would like to donate by regular mail:

Write a check to "Environmental Health Coalition" with the notation "Colin Rodríguez Griswold memorial fund." Mail to: Environmental Health Coalition, 2727 Hoover Ave., Suite 202, National City, CA, 91950.

Articles:

"San Marcos man left his mark" - North County Times

Biography - Colin Rodríguez Griswold

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With an Irish-American father and a Mexican-American mother, Colin Rodríguez Griswold was bilingual and bicultural. A longtime resident of San Marcos, he spent an equal amount of time on either side of the border and traveled widely in Latin America. He had a deep love for Brazil, and besides speaking fluent Spanish, he was also fluent in Portuguese. While an undergraduate student at UCSD, Colin was also a deejay on a radio program that featured his keen enthusiasm for Rock en Español. Many of you will remember him by his on-air name: "Café con leche."

While pursuing his Masters Degree in Business Administration at SDSU, Colin worked with the Southwest Consortium for Environmental Research and Policy where he became a leading figure in a project to measure the effects of hazardous wastes and air and water quality in the border region.

Working with government officials in Mexico City, the Pan American Health Organization, and local townspeople, this then 23-year-old developed ways of measuring and improving health along the entire U.S./Mexico border. A week after he was killed, the U.S. and Mexican governments met in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, to adopt a series of protocols largely created by this young man.

At the time of his death, Colin was pursuing a PhD in Management and Public Policy at the University of Arizona. Saddened by the environmental impacts of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), Colin was positioning himself to play a leading role in improving environmental conditions when the Central American and Latin American Free Trade Agreements (CAFTA and LAFTA) come to be negotiated in the future.

The loss of this wonderful and dedicated young man has, of course, brought deep sorrow to his family and friends. To continue the work he began, they have created the "Colin Rodríguez Griswold Memorial Fund" with the Environmental Health Coalition in order to subsidize internships for high-school and college students living on either side of the border and concerned with environmental issues.

Colin Rodríguez Griswold died in a car accident in Tucson, early in the morning of January 22, 2005. He was struck by a speeding car that ran a stop sign following a police chase. Colin, 25 years old, died instantly at the scene. This tragedy ended the life of a promising young man who was deeply involved with environmental issues along the U.S./Mexico border.