Richmond People

Save the Date! Richmond Rainbow Pride June 2nd Event

Come Celebrate Richmond Rainbow Pride’s Fifth Birthday!

WHEN: Sunday, June 2, 10am – 3pm

WHERE: Marina Bay Park – Regatta Blvd & Melville Square in Richmond

WHAT:  Annual Richmond Rainbow Pride Event  – This year they are also commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall riots against a police raid that took place in the early morning hours of June 28, 1969, at the Stonewall Inn, a gay club in Greenwich Village.

What’s happening this year?

  • Proclamation – presented by Supervisor John Gioia representing West County
  • Community Awards
  • Free STD testing by CCC Public Health Services
  • Get a job! UPS will interview and hire for jobs on site again this year. They had 6-8 HR people at the park in 2018.
  • New flag presentation
  • Annual art project for the whole community
  • Water will be provided. Bring your own picnic lunch and a cup for the water. Taco truck and drinks. Friendly dogs allowed – on leash only.

Celebrating five years, Richmond Rainbow Pride values and welcomes its community partners and LGBTQI – friendly businesses and organizations to its annual Pride event. Since the beginning the group wanted to be visible. “By having this family-friendly event, we are visible,” says Richmond Rainbow Pride vice president, BK Williams. ”And people can be grateful Richmond Rainbow Pride is part of their community.”

“We are building community and we want people to know they are not alone.” According to Williams, board members talk to every person that comes to the pride event. “We want them to have a good time. We are proud to celebrate and come together.” Conversations are very important. “Everyone is able to sit down and talk,” continues Williams. “It’s a way to connect.”

You can become a community event sponsor! Find out more. Want to volunteer? June 2nd is coming up and they need all the help they can get at Marina Park from 8-10am. Sign up here.

Thank you Sponsors!

  • Airbnb
  • Green Remedy
  • Holistic Healing Collective
  • Left Side Printing
  • New West Company
  • Office of Mayor Tom Butt
  • Renewal by Andersen
  • UPS
  • Various community individuals
  • Zell and Associates

Thank you Community Partners!

  • BWOPA
  • Contra Costa Public Health
  • Contra Costa County Health Services Department
  • Divas Entertainment
  • GRIP
  • LAMBDA Democratic Club
  • Mira Vista School
  • Multicultural Bookstore
  • New York Life
  • Oasis Legal Services
  • Office of Supervisor John Gioia
  • Open Door United Methodist Church
  • Point Molate Alliance
  • Richmond Arts and Culture Commission (RACC)
  • Rainbow Community Center
  • Richmond Progressive Alliance (RPA)
  • RYSE
  • Sierra Club
  • Somos Familia
  • West County Democratic Club

ABOUT Richmond Rainbow Pride ~ Family . Friends . Community

Richmond Rainbow Pride (RRP) is a group of LGBTIQQ individuals and allies who live, work and/or play in or near Richmond, CA, coming together for the collective benefit of the LGBTIQQ community of Richmond. RRP creates spaces that are safe and welcoming to the LGBTIQQ community of Richmond; holds events of interest to the community; advocates for the interests of the community; and promotes LGBTIQQ visibility in the greater Richmond community.

By |2020-07-08T21:01:42-07:00May 28th, 2019|Tags: , |0 Comments

Groundwork Richmond Does More Than Enhance the Environment: Meet Jesus Cervantes

Jesus Cervantes changed his future by becoming a member of Groundwork Richmond.

He said he met major influencers in his life starting with Richmond Youth Works, an organization that tutored young kids in the Iron Triangle District. There he was inspired by their leader Pedro Lespier and met Matt Holmes who he ran into later on in life in 2014.

“Matt talked to me about the ideas behind Groundwork Richmond,” Jesus said. ”He told me how it could help me as a student and give back to my community. Giving back to my community was something Pedro had instilled in me early on. He taught me there is more to life when you give back.”

Groundwork Richmond, originating from the National Park Service, offers two levels of participation for young people. Program Director Lorenzo Plazola explained that he Green Team is for youth 13-19 years and introduces them to nature and engages them in service-learning opportunities. The Green Team participates in environmental stewardship projects, relevant pre-employment training, community art projects, and STEAM education, all while getting exposed to the world of careers in the outdoors. The Green Corps training program is for those over 19 years and they work closely with the City of Richmond’s Parks and Landscaping Division, on the Richmond Greenway and other natural spaces in the city, and at the same time learn about careers in the outdoors.

Jesus said when he joined Groundwork Richmond his first task was to learn about the environment. “I learned the benefits of trees and landscaping – how it economically benefits the community.” His favorite job was working on the Carlson Meadow’s project part of the Watershed Project. In this project they took an empty lot near the BART station and turned it into a beautiful park. Jesus said they cleared it of debris and then mulched the ground, added trees, a couple of benches, a water fountain and plants. He learned about different species of plants and trees and said it felt friendlier with the landscaping and was glad he could leave something behind. He added that he really appreciated the support form Matt Holmes and Sarah Calderon at Groundwork Richmond.

“Jesus Cervantes, has successfully matriculated from being a high school participant,” says Executive Director Matt Holmes, “now becoming a staff member supervising our Green Corps training program. Through his service here with Groundwork Richmond Jesus is making a difference in his hometown and having fun enjoying the outdoors at the same time.”

Jesus is now going to college and working part time as a Groundwork RIchmond Green Corps Supervisor.

More information about community involvement in Groundwork Richmond here.

They have a fleet of kayaks that help them have fun out in nature and recently took visitors to the Pacific Sail & Power Boat SHow for rides in the Marina Bay Yacht Harbor.

By |2020-07-08T21:03:29-07:00April 12th, 2019|Tags: , |0 Comments

Pop-up Community Chess Games @ Shops at Hilltop with R&R Coffee Saturday!

When: Saturday, January 27th

Time: 12pm – 3pm

Where: The Shops at Hilltop, Lower Macy’s Court, 2200 Hilltop Mall Rd in Richmond

What: The West Coast Chess Alliance and R&R Coffee are teaming up to present Community Chess Day.  Everyone is invited to this free community chess pop-up workshop! 

Fun chess activities include a chess tournament, play on a giant chess set,  causal play and chess instruction. Chess sets and clocks will be provided. Community chess is a Richmond Main Street Initiative supported event.

According to  the WCCA founder TC Ball, aka the Black Knight, “Pop-up Chess is a way of creating more opportunity to expose the community to chess. Richmond has a long history of chess.” And recently has created the Main Street Community Chess Park in Downtown Richmond. “Chess gives the citizens a way to enjoy this incredible game. Some benefits are academic enrichment, some are civic engagement. Chess is the best metaphor for life out there.”

According to TC, there are benefits to kids, “Their reading improves. Math improves. Behavior improves.” When asked why their behavior changes he replied, “Chess teaches you to concentrate on your next move. Plus, I push chess etiquette and respect. We open and end with a handshake.”

He said the Giant Lawn Chess set has had a positive impact.

“One time playing the big lawn game – other kids were so excited and talking among each other, a sixth grader called out, ‘Guys be quiet – I want to think.'” What he likes is that kids embrace the game and that the game brings the community together. One senior laughingly, though grimacing, said, “This is the look you get when you get beat by a 3rd grader!”

Chess enhances diversity. You have young community kids and teenagers mixing it up with their parents and elderly citizens. TC proclaims, “Chess let’s us celebrate this diversity we have!”

More Info: TC Ball  at (510) 439-6311 or Phillip Mitchell at (415) 875-0786. Website.

By |2018-01-26T11:06:02-08:00January 25th, 2018|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

Have Fun & Learn About Coral with Pt. Richmond’s MARE at SF’s Waterbar

Did you know that some deep-sea coral live to be over 4,000 years old? Did you know we still have large coral and sponge colonies off the coast of California that support rich communities of fish? They need our protection.

Join Dirk Rosen, founder and executive director of MARE (Marine Applied Research & Exploration), at the 5th Annual MARE Soirée and learn more about exploring and protecting deep-sea corals, the old growth forests of the ocean.

WHEN: Thurs., Nov. 16 – 6-9pm

WHERE: Waterbar, 399 The Embarcadero in San Francisco

WHAT: Enjoy drinks and sustainable seafood with MARE’s Executive Director Dirk Rosen, their Board of Directors, staff and supporters as you learn more about exploring and protecting deep-sea corals. Waterbar is the perfect setting on the waterfront because they continue to set new standards of sustainability, variety and excellence in the sourcing, preparation and presentation of food from the sea.

Don’t wait, ticket prices go up on Nov. 7th! Tickets

Photo/MARE

Every ticket helps fund the discovery of uncharted deep coral ecosystems, and provides the scientific basis for their protection. 

About MARE

MARE’s mission is to explore and document the world’s oceans ​​to support their conservation and management. Recently in collaboration with Oceana and the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary, MARE explored conducted a scientific expedition to “never before explored” waters in Southern CA. The group documented the living seafloor (more than 14,000 invertebrates, including 4,786 corals, sponges and sea pens) off Southern California along with species that rely upon healthy coral gardens, sponge beds, and rocky reefs for habitat, breeding, feeding, nurseries and survival. In their report they urged federal fishery managers to safeguard these special places from destructive bottom trawl fishing.

MARE works collaboratively with state and federal agencies, academic institutions, and other non-governmental organizations.  To date, MARE has documented over 2,700 kilometers of seafloor off California’s coast alone—much of which had never been viewed before. MARE also designs, builds, upgrades and repairs underwater robotic vehicles and offers post-survey data processing and analysis.

Photo/MARE

About Dirk Rosen, MARE founder and executive director

Dirk has over 25 years of deep-water engineering experience. He was president and director of Deep Ocean Engineering before selling the company in 2000. At DOE, he was project manager and test pilot for all three Deep Rover 1,000 meter-rated manned submersibles, and a designer/operator of the Phantom and Bandit ROV systems. At Hawkes Ocean Technologies he served as project manager for the 11,000 meter rated Challenger, a manned submersible designed to go to the deepest point in the ocean, the Marianas Trench. He served on the board of Save the Bay for nine years. MARE is located in Brickyard Cove in Richmond, CA.

About Corals

  • Deep-sea corals and sponges create large structures that support rich and abundant communities of fish and other invertebrates, many of commercial importance.
  • Deep-sea corals and sponges grow slowly and live a long time – a black coral was found to be over 4,200 years old and thousand year-old individuals are common.
  • These “old-growth forests of the deep ocean” are very vulnerable to bottom-contact fishing, especially trawling, which can destroy an ecosystem that has been in place for millennia.
  • The waters off the US West Coast still contain large colonies of corals and sponges, along with a myriad of other organisms that depend on them. The challenge is to find these communities before they’re destroyed.
  • To help protect the remaining coral and sponge habitats of the Pacific coast, MARE is combining their existing exploration capability with sophisticated machine learning algorithms to pioneer efficient new methods of locating and documenting these vital ocean places.

 

 

 

 

By |2017-11-03T11:17:57-07:00November 3rd, 2017|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

Luna Rossa Challenge Launches Second Foiling AC45 – Swordfish

big__MG_9288Both the Luna Rossa Piranha and Swordfish  are foiling about in Cagliari, after being modified with on-board systems that allow the AC45 catamarans to fully foil like the AC72s in the 2013 America’s Cup races. (take a look)

The new design protocol for the 35th America’s Cup allows for modifications of the AC45s of any sort, except for the shape of the hulls. Apparently these new catamarans will outperform the old ones and can simulate the sailing conditions of the new AC62s which will be used in the 2017 races. Practicing on the new AC45s will enrich the crews’ training program and better prepare them for maneuvers, boat handling and foiling techniques that will relate to the new AC62s. They are out at sea now testing all the boats’ components and systems in their full foiling modes.

“This is an important day for the team,” according to Max Sirena, skipper of Luna Rossa, “sailing with two boats offers a significant advantage not only for performance comparison but from all points of view. We participated in the last America’s Cup to set the basis for our 35th America’s Cup and now we can count on a solid team and a close collaboration between designers, sailing team and shore team. There is a constant exchange of information between these areas to address the design and optimize its applications.”

Watch Pirahna and Swordfish foiling in Cagliari.

Photo courtesy of lunarossachallenge.com

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.lunarossachallenge.com

By |2014-10-05T23:22:30-07:00September 16th, 2014|0 Comments

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