Saturday, March 15, 2025

First Annual San Mateo County Climate Summit to be Held

San Mateo County Climate Summit

The first-ever San Mateo County Climate Summit will be held to foster collective commitment to equitable adaptation to climate change.

The San Mateo County Climate Summit will be held next Monday, October 3rd from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on the Stanford University campus in Redwood City and will be co-organized by local organizations Climate Resilient Communities, Nuestra Casa, Rise South City, and Thrive Alliance.

The summit is supported by Stanford's Doerr School of Sustainability, the Haas Center for Sustainability, the Haas Center for Public Service and the Office of Community Engagement.

“Climate change is not a distant threat, it is already here and impacting frontline communities in San Mateo County,” said Violet Wulf-Saena, executive director of Climate Resilient Communities. 

This comes as climate change exacerbates heat, flooding, wildfires and poor air quality across the region — phenomena that disproportionately affect low-income communities of color. 

Decision-makers must therefore identify and address adaptation strategies that ensure community safety, health and livelihoods.

The theme of this year’s summit is Building Collective Commitment to Ensure Climate Adaptation and Equity, and will bring together local residents, community-based organizations, city and county agencies, elected officials, funders, and business leaders to discuss how to ensure equitable, community-led climate adaptation in San Mateo County. 

“Local residents are the experts in their own community – they live there, take their children to and from school, and shop in the area – so it is important that their views are taken into account when looking for mitigation solutions,” said Julio Garcia, Executive Director of Rise South City, stressing the importance of community-led adaptation.

San Mateo County Supervisor Dave Pine and Menlo Park Councilmember Cecilia Taylor will open the summit, followed by three panels with local leaders and experts.

The Adaptation and Equity panel, moderated by Violet Wulf-Saena, Executive Director of Climate Resilient Communities, will discuss translating science into community-led policy and practice.

Meanwhile, the Community Leadership panel, moderated by Miriam Yupanqui, executive director of Nuestra Casa, will focus on how to shift power to frontline communities.

The summit’s final panel on Resources and Responsibility, moderated by Julio Garcia, CEO of Rise South City, will address how government and philanthropy can better fund climate resilience based on community priorities.

The event will conclude with a special presentation by young people and a call for collective commitment towards equitable climate adaptation that prioritizes frontline communities.

“We are delighted to be coming together during this summit to discuss community-led solutions,” Yupanqui explained. “We strongly believe that our community members hold the solutions to the challenges they face.”

This will be the second of Stanford’s Office of Community Engagement Regional Forums.

The Climate Summit will be held both in-person and virtually. In-person registration is limited to 150 participants.

For those who wish to register in person or virtually, please visit the following site https://www.thrivealliance.org/climate-summit.

You may be interested in: Founder of Patagonia donates his company to organizations fighting climate change

Peninsula 360 Press
Peninsula 360 Presshttps://peninsula360press.com
Study of cross-cultural digital communication

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