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November 21, 2022 – LOS ANGELES –The California Strategic Growth Council (SGC) announced a $35 million Transformative Climate Communities (TCC) grant for the South LA Eco-Lab, a collection of environmental and economic development projects in South Los Angeles. The funding will be leveraged with additional $24.6 million from the City of Los Angeles, Metro, and non-profit partners – totaling nearly $60 million for mobility, clean energy, and green job development projects in South Los Angeles.

“South Los Angeles is the heart of LA, and this investment will set our sights on what tomorrow should look like in a community with big dreams for the future,” said Mayor Eric Garcetti. “This grant is a big step toward building the South LA that residents have envisioned for years – with improved quality of life, public health, and access to economic opportunity.” 

With a final project budget of nearly $60 million, the South LA Eco-Lab will invest in infrastructure projects such as LADOT Stress Free connections and EV Car Share, StreetsLACool Pavement, Metro free monthly pass program, home solar installation through GRID Alternatives, street trees, and school greening that will provide open space and stormwater capture benefits. The South LA Eco-Lab project area includes 3.9 square miles bordered by Vernon Avenue, 60th Street, Western Ave, and Central at its northern, southern, western, and eastern limits respectively. The project is expected to be completed in 2028. 

The grant was put together by a coalition of community based organizations, including SLATE-Z, Community Partners, CicLAvia, Climate Resolve, Coalition for Responsible Community Development, GRID Alternatives, LACI, LA Neighborhood Land Trust, SAJE, SCOPE, TreePeople, and TRUST South LA, who were able to secure the funding in partnership with the City of Los Angeles, LA Metro, LADOT, LADWP, and Los Angeles Trade-Technical College, and with support from the Broad Foundation.

“I am excited and humbled to be part of the South LA Eco-Lab where the Coalition for Responsible Community Development (CRCD) will serve as the lead organization for workforce development training. Working in partnership with GRYD Alternative and other reputable organizations, CRCD will lead Multi-Core Curriculum Training (MC3) that will offer in-demand skills to individuals from the South LA Eco-Lab area, providing an opportunity to work in their community and earn family-sustaining wages. We look forward to continuing our work with the community and collaborative partners,” stated CRCD President and CEO, Mark Wilson. 

The South LA Eco-Lab builds on the work of the South LA Climate Commons Collaborative, a project which won a planning grant from TCC for $200,000 in 2018. Mayor Garcetti’s Offices of Sustainability and Economic Opportunity worked with SLATE-Z, the Los Angeles Equity Alliance, and Brotherhood Crusade to help create the neighborhood level climate resiliency plan, and the Department of City Planning was the fiscal sponsor for the planning grant.

The South LA Eco-Lab is the product of intensive, multi-year community engagement to bring healthier air, cleaner energy, new mobility options, and economic opportunity to a community with a history of racial injustice, disinvestment, and disproportionately high levels of pollution. The South LA Eco-Lab will also leverage or connect to other climate related investments and programs within South Los Angeles and throughout the SLATE-Z area, including LADOT’s Universal Basic Mobility Program, Metro’s Rail-to-Rail, and expansion of the Baldwin Hills Conservancy.

“The South LA Eco-Lab project is an example of what can happen when we let communities lead and identify the projects that best meet their needs,” said Connie Llanos, Interim General Manager of LADOT. “This grant helps us expand on our commitment to deliver Universal Basic Mobility for South LA and deliver much-needed improvements for local residents including safer streets, cleaner air, and more options to get where they need to go reliably and affordably.”

“Our community has been working to address poverty in South Los Angeles by revitalizing the economy in environmentally sustainable ways,” said Zahirah Mann, President and CEO of SLATE-Z. “SLATE-Z is proud serve as the strategic advisor for the South LA Eco-Lab, and form part of the lead applicant team with Community Partners and the City of Los Angeles; we have the privilege of working with incredible, mission driven governmental, nonprofit, and resident leaders who developed holistic and transformative projects and plans.  The South LA Eco-Lab will result in deep transformative change for South Los Angeles, launching our community as a leader in climate mitigation and preparing our businesses, residents, and students for the climate resilient economy.”

“The Strategic Growth Council’s Transformative Climate Communities Program supports under-invested communities who have built a network of organizations, residents, and businesses that have created a shared vision for the future. TCC provides resources to help catalyze this vision– whether that be affordable housing, community gardens, safe transit options, community resource centers, and more,” said Lynn von Koch-Liebert, Executive Director of the California Strategic Growth Council. “We are honored to work in meaningful partnership with the South LA Eco-Lab, a group that has been an important leader in South LA, working for years to advance equitable and lasting community development.”

About CRCD

About the Coalition for Responsible Community Development

CRCD’s overall approach is neighborhood-based community development. The nonprofit organization has a long-term commitment to improving the quality of life in South Los Angeles, focusing on youth in the community and assisting them with education, opportunities to pursue career pathways, and meetingbasic needs such as adequate housing. CRCD also addresses longstanding neighborhood conditions in South Los Angeles – such as poverty, unemployment, public safety issues, and the lack of affordable housing. Since its founding in 2005 by concerned community members, CRCD has partnered in a combined investment of $350 million in South LA housing and real estate, including 370 units of permanent supportive and affordable housing and another $711 million in development. CRCD properties include community space for support services, youth and adult workforce development programs, reentry services, a homeless youth drop-in center, and a commercial space for social enterprise.  CRCD has connected more than 4,000 young people with diplomas, jobs, and housing. Learn more at www.coalitionrcd.org