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AS TRUMP WORKS TO CRUSH CLIMATE EFFORTS, LOCAL PROJECTS PERSEVERE AT
THE GRASSROOTS
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Greg Harman
October 2, 2025
Deceleration
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_ Far from the image of social breakdown so often depicted in
Hollywood blockbusters, every disaster survived deepens a
community’s knowledge of itself. It reinforces and strengthens the
relationships people can actually rely upon. _
Cmmunity advocates pushing to end policies of electric and gas
disconnections in San Antonio, Texas, (Image: Greg Harman).
Standing before the United Nations last week, U.S. President Donald
Trump unleashed long-held animosity for the body dating back decades
to when his company was apparently rejected for a renovations gig.
Trump swore he would have delivered mahogany walls and marble floors
to the tower. And now look at the state of the place, he grumbled.
“You walk on terrazzo. Do you notice that?”
Something far worse than composite flooring is in store for nations
that fail to rally to Trump’s hypernationalism, anti-immigrant
fervor, and fawning embrace of fossil fuels. “Your countries are
going to hell,” he said, apparently addressing his comments
primarily to the “English-speaking world.” In a room filled with
heads of state already reckoning with global warming as an existential
threat, Trump called climate change “the greatest con job ever
perpetrated on the world.”
He dismissed the decades of warnings about an overheating planet
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increasingly frequent and extreme weather events
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that the World Economic Forum has estimated are costing the world $16M
every hour.
It was a do-as-I-say-and-as-I-do lecture, with Trump modeling a
domestic climate response that can best be described as ecocidal. He
is burning up the evidence of climate crisis while directly attacking
renewable energy and other planet-cooling strategies that could keep
more people safer the world over. This includes intentionally crashing
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climate-observing satellites, shutting down a Hawaii observatory that
tracks atmospheric changes
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and a national climate monitoring network, closing federal
environmental justice programs serving many of those most impacted
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dirty fuels and climate disruption, curtailing federal assistance
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for disaster-struck communities, and more.
In the wake of the government shutdown, Trump just this week froze an
estimated $26B in federal dollars
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for transportation and renewable-energy projects that had been headed
to Democrat-led states, seeking revenge on Democrats who demanded that
Republicans restore public healthcare services stripped in the federal
budget bill.
Of course, dismantling federal research efforts and denying assistance
does nothing to slow climate harms. Instead it both accelerates
warming and puts more people at risk of harm. Teams rooting out
so-called DEI initiatives during the opening months of Trump’s term
have targeted climate efforts
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tied to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and clawed
back
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$16B granted under the Biden Administration to help local communities
fight climate change.
If anything, these attacks only prove the wisdom of initiatives
undertaken in partnership with city and county governments and
nonprofits, which aim to foster community resilience not only in
response to climate destabilization, but also from potentially
unraveling governmental support.
In San Antonio, Texas, for example, austerity measures in a tightening
economy have already defunded two widely hailed efforts that are
putting power—both literally and figuratively—into the hands of
the community. But the project design and creative accounting born
from legacies of distrust in government will likely see both efforts
continue, even in the shadow of federal antagonism and potential local
government retreat.
_Sarah Woolsey of the Impact Guild presenting about Climate Ready
Neighborhoods earlier this year. Image: Greg Harman_
The ‘Beacon’ of Beacon Hill
A few miles north of downtown San Antonio sits the Beacon Hill
neighborhood, one of the earliest “suburban” neighborhoods for
relatively affluent residents of a colonial city. Today it’s
populated by older and often ornate single- and two-story homes in
various states of repair, an area that has captured the attention of
those looking for affordable housing as well as those looking to flip
rundown homes at a profit. Its strength is in new and established
residents, a vibrant homeowners association, and deepening social
networks. In many cases, these are residents aware of the needs of
their neighbors and already trained in disaster response.
Elizabeth Eichhorn, for instance, knows two businesses within walking
distances whose owners have agreed to open as unofficial warming or
cooling centers in the event of extreme temperature shifts. She knows
who on the block has gas stoves ready and available to cook or purify
water if the electricity is knocked out. She also knows which local
business always has a minimum of 80 gallons of drinking water set
aside for her block in case the water system fails. It’s information
her immediate neighbors share also.
Such understandings arose from necessity starting in the hours after
power failure during a 2021 winter storm. In February 2021, hundreds
of thousands of residents across the city lost electricity, many for
several days. Many others also lost water when the gas-powered
generators at those water towers also failed.
Sarah Woolsey, founder of the nonprofit Impact Guild, which at the
time operated a brick-and-mortar community center in the area, was
soon helping residents stage a door-to-door response to the
disaster.
“What happened over those next few days changed me,” she said.
“Mostly it was neighbors that needed boiled water but also brought a
dozen eggs over. It was this really cool few days of mutual aid with
people showing up with what they had, and others needing things, and
everybody needing things and receiving.”
That outreach taught her something else about her community. She
learned that food insecurity was a daily reality for many before the
freeze, with many already “hanging on by a thread,” she told
_Deceleration._
Beacon Hill has since become a showcase community for the City of San
Antonio’s Climate Ready Neighborhoods effort, led by the City’s
Office of Sustainability. Impact Guild is a key partner in a program
that has intentionally put power into the hands of community by
helping them first and foremost deepen their social relationships,
identify their resources and talents, and negotiate in advance how
they will support one another when disaster hits.
The neighborhood’s experiences in 2021 now inform some of the key
literature being distributed by Climate Ready Neighborhoods as it
seeks to activate “pods” across the city, neighborhood by
neighborhood, teaching the power of interdependence
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at the level of the city block.
_Climate Ready Neighborhoods Field Guide and Community Connections
Plan and worksheets. See more at __the Impact Guild_ Image: Greg
Harman [[link removed]]
“It’s a matter of realizing that the city can’t be everything,
so we have to figure out how to take our own responsibility,”
Eichhorn told _Deceleration_. “Taking care of our neighborhood is
shared.”
These neighbors weren’t passively waiting for someone in government
to help them prepare for the extreme weather of climate change. They
started that for themselves, years before the birth of the Climate
Ready effort.
It was a natural shift for Eichhorn, who had lived in areas with
frequent disruptions before. “I happened to live in Pasadena,
California, where you have to learn to live with earthquakes and
wildfires. Most every single person has a safety kit or recovery
bag,” she said.
In the world of disaster response, the local—that is, the
neighborhood—has long been recognized as a determining factor as to
whether someone lives or dies in the aftermath of climate shock.
And that’s not lost on Beacon Hill’s City partners either.
“I think I’m really leaning into that aspect [of the project].
It’s just building up the community connections, the social capital,
whatever you want to call it—get to know your neighbor and … build
those systems,” said Kate Jaceldo, the City of San Antonio Office of
Sustainability’s climate adaptation manager.
Even before the Trump administration started regularly rejecting calls
for FEMA assistance and lurching toward dismantling the agency
entirely
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Beacon Hill residents were asking each other: “What can we do as a
community?” Eichhorn said. “How do we connect with people who are
already suffering? Let’s say they don’t have access to food,
water, or shelter. How do we help with that?”
The summers of rising temperatures
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growing awareness of heat deaths in the city
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only validated the wisdom of those efforts. A recent assessment found
the largest of the world’s capital cities are now experiencing 25
percent more extreme heat days
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than they were as recently as the 1990s. That heat is no surprise and
likely to blame for more than 260,000 deaths
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“The human case for climate change adaptation is obvious,” write
the authors of the cities study at the International Institute for
Environment and Development. “That’s why city administrations
should get the funding boost they need to work closely with
communities, civil society groups, and health and other policy
experts, on solutions to the growing heat problem.”
_Early arrival of summer temperatures in San Antonio in May 2025
showed temps approaching 110F outside a downtown homeless services
center. Image: Greg Harman_
Gathering Heat Deaths
About 20 years ago, thousands of people died tucked away in their
homes without adequate air conditioning or living on the street
without access to a cooling center or home to retreat to.
“A week or so into the heat wave, city officials began running out
of places to store bodies,” recounts Jeff Goodell
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Austin-based writer, in the online journal _Yale360_.
All told, nearly 15,000 died from the heat across France. The year was
2003.
Whether Paris, France or Paris, Texas, the heat has continued to rise
virtually unabated as atmospheric levels of heat-trapping gases,
caused primarily by the burning of fossil fuels, continue to increase.
In 2024, sustained daily temps of 108 degrees Fahrenheit, which Save
the Children said was roughly 16 degrees more than the annual average
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shut down schools for more than 30 million children across
Bangladesh—for the second year in a row. More than 1,300 taking the
Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca in Saudi Arabia died the same year after
walking in daytime temperatures that ranged between 117F and 120F
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In the United States, more than 1,000 heat-related deaths were
reported while efforts to secure a federal heat standard for workers
floundered
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Such “once in a hundred years” extreme heat events now “need to
be expected every 2–5 years
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locations,” due to industrially driven climate change, recent
research shows.
Heat-related deaths are just one obvious result of a hotter planet.
Another are the sudden storms known as “cloud bursts
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“rain bombs,” which have wreaked havoc across India and Pakistan
but are no longer unfamiliar in Texas. The link between climate change
and flash flooding is easy to understand if we think of the atmosphere
as a sponge. Because warmer air holds more water, climate change means
a bigger sponge—and when it finally gets wrung, the accumulation can
be disastrous.
This is how hundreds can be swept away in Kashmir in one day. It is
how 12 inches of rain can fall in just a few hours
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in the Texas Hill Country and spark a flood that would ultimately
claim more than 130 lives.
Texas this year didn’t blow past our recent summer scorchings,
thankfully, although summer temps arrived early and have continued to
run hotter than normal, well into the upper 90s, despite the arrival
of fall. Around the world, temperatures recorded across land and sea
continue to show an Earth moving deeper into unprecedented territory,
with some of the hottest temps ever experienced
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recorded in recent years. In spite of Trump’s slurs against the
science, this has all played out as the decades of climate models
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said it would.
It is for this reason that Trump’s UN climate denialism prompted
Ilana Seid, an ambassador from the island nation of Palau and head of
the organization of small island states, to call the US reversal on
climate under Trump “a betrayal of the most vulnerable
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a sentiment echoed by Evans Davie Njewa of Malawi, who said: “we are
endangering the lives of innocent people in the world.”
Some long-committed climate activists see that betrayal too—and have
started calling for local communities to take survival into their own
hands.
_Daily surface air and water temperatures continue to break records
around the world. Source: __Climate Reanalyzer_, via University of
Maine Climate Change Institute
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‘Dagger in the Heart’
“It’s too late.”
This pronouncement about averting worst-case climate outcomes by
Canadian scientist David Suzuki, also one of the world’s leading
environmental activists, shook anyone paying attention to climate.
The basic science behind global warming has been understood since the
late 1800s. Exxon’s own scientists understood at least since the
1970s that their products were changing the chemistry of the
atmosphere, threatening to dangerously overheat the planet, and
stating that humans had “a time window of five to 10 years
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before the need for hard decisions regarding changes in energy
strategies might become critical.”
_David Suzuki_
Shell knew too. In the 1980s its scientists confirmed
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“global changes in air temperature would … ‘drastically change
the way people live and work.’ All told, Shell concluded, ‘the
changes may be the greatest in recorded history,’” as the Guardian
recounts
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It would take decades more before any tangible federal legislation
advanced to tackle the problem. President Obama got behind a proposal
known as “cap and trade,” which—for better or worse—aimed to
use market mechanisms to wean the nation off fossil fuels. San
Antonio’s Valero Energy helped beat that effort back, warning
customers in pumpside placards of the cents it would add to the price
per gallon. Another 13 years would transpire before President Biden
advanced a federal vision of energy transition that sent an
unprecedented hundreds of billions of dollars
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to the states to reduce energy demand and facilitate the transition to
renewable energy and battery systems.
Now, with MAGA’s return to power, we’re facing what Suzuki
experienced like a “dagger in my heart.”
Trump’s decision to prize the perceived needs of fossil fuel
companies while demonizing and attacking lower-carbon
alternatives—power sources credited with keeping the power on in
Texas
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since its near grid collapse of 2021—has “flatlined” US climate
pollution rates with an expected 7B tons of additional climate
emissions
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over the coming five years, according to _Carbon Brief_. (Before
Trump’s election, the same publication estimated he would inject 4B
tons of emissions
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into the atmosphere and thereby push beyond reach international
climate goals of limiting global warming beneath 1.5 degrees
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1990 levels.)
For those who had been warning for years of a “last call” on
climate action, this policy lurch backwards within the largest economy
on Earth dashed all hopes that we might avert the so-called “worst
manifestations” of industrially driven climate change.
“Trump’s win was the triumph of capitalism and neoliberalism, and
he’s going to wreak havoc,” Suzuki told Davis Legree at Canada’s
iPolitics
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in July 2025. “For me, what we’ve got to do now is hunker down.
The units of survival are going to be local communities, so I’m
urging local communities to get together.”
While not surrendering the struggle to move beyond fossil fuels,
Suzuki stressed that local adaptation efforts are now imperative,
while citing the efforts of the Finnish government on emergency
preparedness in particular.
“Governments will not be able to respond on the scale or speed that
is needed for these emergencies, so Finland is telling their citizens
that they’re going to be at the front line of whatever hits and
better be sure you’re ready to meet it. … _YOU’RE GOING TO HAVE
TO INVENTORY YOUR COMMUNITY, AND THAT’S REALLY WHAT WE HAVE TO START
DOING NOW.”_
In San Antonio, the Climate Ready Neighborhoods and another effort
rooted on the South Side have been seeking to do just that. Both were
defunded by San Antonio’s City Council under the new city budget,
with funds from a recently established resilience fund diverted to pay
local firefighters. However, the city’s Chief Sustainability Officer
Doug Melnick said a week before the budget vote that these programs
would continue through 2026 by drawing forward dollars from the
previous year’s budget. After that, their future is uncertain.
“2025 dollars will be setting the stage for implementation through
2026,” Melnick told Council members at a budget hearing. “I think
it will be a different conversation as we go forward into the future.
But this year’s work … will continue.”
_Nancy Parrilla, Fuerza Unida’s chief financial officer, said that
local efforts can’t grow overly reliant on government
assistance—lest those forces fail them. Image: Greg Harman_
Withering FEMA
In South San Antonio, Fuerza Unida’s small office and clothing
alterations shop is abuzz with climate activity. Maps on the wall
denote zones to be planted with mid-sized trees, jobs for arborists
are being advertised, and the last homes being gifted heat pump
cooling systems
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are being checked off.
Although the role of fossil fuels tends to grab most of the attention
in discussions of global warming, climate change is also a product of
deforestation. Both are the targets of neighborhood-based climate work
on San Antonio’s Southside, undertaken beneath the banner of the
South San Heat Resiliency Project (PDF)
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Here demographics dramatically shift from those of Beacon Hill. The
per capita income drops significantly as the number of immigrant
families rises. Homes here are mostly not yet buffeted by the waves of
would-be gentrifiers prowling other quarters of the city. Instead they
bake within the dust, heat, and fumes of ubiquitous scrap metal
recyclers and auto salvage yards. Southside residents also persist on
the edge of the former Kelly Air Force Base and its toxic legacy
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that many blame for high levels of cancer in the area, which claimed
the lives of beloved community organizers Lupe and Robert Alvarado
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Led by a team of Latina workers who began collectively working to
support local women after aLevi’s factory closedin 1990, Fuerza
Unida (“united strength”) has served residents for more than 30
years. The city was never a partner here, said Nancy Parrilla, the
organization’s chief financial officer. “ never saw them as an
ally before,” she said.
A couple years ago, however, the organization was approached by the
Office of Sustainability about a climate resilience project.
“The City came knocking on our door. We didn’t go looking for
them,” Parrilla said. “They came and were like, ‘We need a
stakeholder in the neighborhood’ because everything they had been
trying had been unsuccessful.”
Community meetings followed that sparked interest among local
homeowners, where temperatures in some homes—suffering from lack of
insulation, cooling, and elevated street temperatures due in part to a
lack of green space—routinely topped 100F degrees during peak
summer. The effort began building trust and attracted the attention of
Austin-based Adaptation International, which bills itself as a
woman-owned business helping bridge the gap between climate science
and community efforts.
Adaptation International’s work is intended to “identify climate
vulnerabilities and develop sustainable cooling strategies that
enhance resilience,” the organization writes on their website
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climate science with local knowledge, the project advances
environmental justice and empowers communities to shape solutions
through storytelling, research, and collaborative planning.”
This summer the effort was awarded an additional $96,000
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nation-wide Climate Smart Communities Initiative.
While the project clearly emphasizes climate adaptation, it also
promotes the language of “workforce development.” While similar
projects have suffered elsewhere under Trump’s targeting of projects
rooted in equity concerns, the inclusion of more favorable buzzwords
has had no impact on the actual work, said Celine Rendon, a climate
resilience specialist with Adaptation International. “That’s not
really changing the way that we’re engaging with community members
that are on the frontlines of the climate crisis,” said Rendon.
“It’s not really stopping the work.”
While the San Antonio Office of Sustainability dodged layoffs this
budget, colleagues working elsewhere, including for the City of
Denver, didn’t fare as well
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_A resident holds up a poster documenting recent fires at a local
metal recycling yard during a “toxic tour” of San Antonio’s
South Side. Image: Marisol Cortez_
Data released earlier this month by the U.S. Government Accountability
Office suggests these sorts of community efforts will be more valuable
than ever—especially as FEMA cuts back its operations.
Workforce reductions and loss of training capacity have severely
compromised FEMA’s reliability as a partner in disaster response,
GAO researchers write. FEMA’s slow mobilization to the July Hill
Country floods that claimed more than 130 lives in a few days is well
documented. But the GAO makes another fact clear: When the rain began
to fall over Kerr County, only 15 percent of FEMA’s incident
management workforce were available. That number was a mere 12 percent
at the start of the year’s hurricane season, according to the GAO.
It’s bad news as the country today moves through peak hurricane
season.
As the GAO report concludes
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“Should the U.S. experience a similarly catastrophic peak hurricane
season in September and October 2025, as it did in 2024, meeting
response needs could be a major challenge. Moreover, no concrete
changes to disaster response roles have yet been made. FEMA and other
federal agencies spreading a reduced number of staff across the same
or higher number of disasters nationwide could reduce effectiveness of
federal disaster response for upcoming disasters.”
The government shutdown is not expected to further erode FEMA’s
response capacity(such as it is). However: “If the agency required
additional funds to respond to serious damage caused by a natural
disaster during the shutdown,” Simmone Shah writes at _Time,
“_they would be unable to appeal to Congress.”
Fuerza’s leadership say they have experienced the benefit of
partnering with the City and Adaptation International. It’s allowed
them to install cooling systems to homes in need. But it also kindled
hope among their neighbors and helped them to imagine alternative
positive visions of the future, the absence of which had been among
the project’s “biggest challenges,” Parrilla said.
“I think the saddest part is that they don’t know that [the
wealth] you see on the Northside, it’s because that’s what the
city has invested in. And they can do the same over here. They have
just chosen not to.”
But the program is being intentionally built to advance with or
without a governmental partner. Meetings with fellow community-based
organizations have increased. Skills and lessons learned are being
shared.
Parrilla said the driving goal behind the heat pump installation
project, of advocating for better controls over local sources of
pollution, of an ambitious urban forestry project now offering
neighborhood youth $18 per hour, is for the community to learn how to
be sustainable on their own.
“We cannot depend on outside sources to keep our spaces green, to
give us a safe environment,” she said. “When we leave it in their
hands, we’re the ones who suffer.”
_FEMA by the Numbers. Source: GAO Report, “Disaster Assistance
High-Risk Series: Federal Response Workforce Readiness”
(__GAO-25-108598_
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_Percent of FEMA Workforce Available. Source: GAO Report, “Disaster
Assistance High-Risk Series: Federal Response Workforce Readiness”
(__GAO-25-108598_
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ADELANTE JUNTOS
Since the surge in heat deaths more than 20 years ago, the people of
Paris, France, have put a tremendous amount of energy into responding
to accelerating heat waves. A report from 2019 documents efforts to
pull up pavement, plant thousands of trees, and cultivate networks of
interlinked cool “islands”
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to help residents cool off.
The intentional greening of Medellín, Colombia was also recently
cited as inspiration by a Bexar County commissioner, as another
example of concerted city-scale efforts that have brought down
temperatures
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for their residents in a time of overheating.
While San Antonio is putting more money than ever into “cool
pavement” efforts this year, a practice with debatable results
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there is also a burgeoning movement to green the city that is driven
largely from the grassroots. Fuerza’s project is just one part of
that. What participants in both city programs said they found most
useful has been the power of deepening relationships with neighbors.
Some also referenced the skills of flexibility and creativity—about
how to be prepared for rapidly changing circumstances—including
positive ones, such as when new potential partnerships present
themselves.
“There’s still funding and resources available,” said Rendon,
“you just have to be strategic and make sure you are ready when it
comes.”
In the world of adaptation under stress, partnerships deliver in
different ways, added the Impact Guild’s Woolsey. Sometimes it is
shared knowledge to help neighborhoods organize themselves, efforts
that hinge exclusively on volunteer labor. Sometimes it is a check
(whether from a public or private source) that facilitates purchases
families couldn’t afford otherwise. Sometimes it is changing
policies and large-scale infrastructure investments, which typically
require massive public pressure on elected leaders.
“Just the way any ecosystem has a lot of biodiversity, our
resources—the more diversity we have in them—the better off we
are,” Woolsey said.
In recent weeks, Woolsey has been operating outside of San Antonio,
helping families collect the things they need to return to homes
abandoned after July’s Hill Country floods. There too, she has found
that some of the most valuable assistance is low cost, she said. It is
more about organizing and time. “There’s a lot that we’re
sourcing that’s in-kind. We need dollars to close the gaps to get
people into their homes,” she said. “But also it’s the shared
meals, it’s the volunteer hours, it’s people giving the furniture.
“The bigger question we are all holding is like: How can be the
manpower showing up for one another? … How can it be physical
sharing of resources that are more this barter/exchange kind of thing?
Then when can it be the dollars, as strategically as possible, to
close the gaps where those other things can’t do it?”
Far from the image of social breakdown so often depicted in Hollywood
blockbusters, every disaster survived deepens a community’s
knowledge of itself. It reinforces and strengthens the relationships
people can actually rely upon. Each disaster is also “shared
seeds,” Woolsey said. And the lessons that are reaped from those
seeds often point toward something new, those interviewed told
_Deceleration_. Lessons that point to deepening and rooting further in
place, in belonging, in neighborhood—as the old world, oftentimes
literally, washes away.
_Deceleration Founder/Managing Editor Greg Harman is an independent
journalist and community organizer who has written about environmental
health and justice issues since the late 1990s. His journalism has
been recognized by the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies,
Houston Press Club, Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club, Public
Citizen Texas, and Associated Press Managing Editors. He holds a
bachelor’s in English from Texas Wesleyan University and a
master’s degree in International Relations (Conflict Transformation)
from St. Mary’s University._
_Deceleration is an online journal responding to the roots of our
shared ecological, political, and cultural crises—journalistically,
academically, and creatively._
_Rooted in the greater South Texas bioregion, Deceleration is inspired
by intellectual and political movements around the world for degrowth,
buen vivir, the right to the city, and the rights of nature/mother
earth._
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