August 19, 2024 – San Diego, CA – At a National City garden that will soon run on solar power and serve as a hub for electricity education, today community members and leaders from San Diego Community Power, San Diego Foundation and Calpine Energy Solutions gathered to announce that they are granting more than $1.2 million toward local clean energy and green workforce development projects in San Diego County.

The Olivewood Gardens Clean Energy Resilience Project submitted by Hammond Climate Solutions will provide a large solar array and battery storage to help the nonprofit reduce its reliance on the electricity grid. It is one of 16 projects throughout San Diego County that is receiving funding.

“The solar project with battery storage at Olivewood Gardens will do more than provide clean, reliable power, it will help create a more sustainable and resilient future for our community,” said Jen Nation, Olivewood Gardens and Learning Center executive director. “We are also inspiring others to embrace sustainable practices through educational workshops about clean energy and workforce opportunities funded by the grant.”

As a not-for-profit public agency, Community Power was designed to reinvest revenues into the people and organizations it serves. This year’s $1.2 million Community Clean Energy Grants more than triple the reinvestment from last year.

“The expansion of this program delivers on Community Power’s commitment to meaningfully reinvest in the people we serve,” said San Diego City Council President Pro Tem and Community Power Board Chair Joe LaCava. “From energy education to electric vehicles to energy resiliency, we are helping build healthy and sustainable communities.”

San Diego Foundation is administering the grants on behalf of Community Power and Calpine Energy Solutions, which provides back-office support to Community Power and other energy providers throughout California.

“Through this expanded partnership, we’re able to have a greater influence on San Diego’s ability to survive and thrive through the challenges of future climate change,” said Mark Stuart, San Diego Foundation president and CEO.

Grants were awarded to the following organizations:

  • Chula Vista Elementary School District – $75,00 for its “STEAMing into Clean Energy with the Energy Station,” which will provide out-of-classroom experiences in science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics (STEAM), often located in the world of work, where students take on different career roles aligned with priority job sectors identified by San Diego Workforce Partnership.
  • GRID Alternatives San Diego – $100,000 to complete 20 single-family clean energy projects in communities of concern within the next year.
  • Groundwork San Diego, Chollas Creek – $94,450 for an energy education project that will enhance energy efficiency and air quality in homes and expand community literacy around the economic, environmental and health benefits of improvements for households and communities.
  • SBCS (formerly South Bay Community Services) – $100,000 to provide low-income, minority and system-involved youth in San Diego with pathways to employment within the solar industry.
  • GoGreenish – $25,000 to continue a student-led research initiative in partnership with the University of California San Diego School of Global Policy and Strategy measuring outdoor air pollutants in underrepresented K-12 high schools in San Diego.
  • Suncoast Market Cooperative – $84,108 to assist with opening South County’s first consumer-owned food cooperative featuring fresh, healthy and locally-sourced food while supporting the local economy, providing education and advocating for environmentally sustainable practices.
  • La Mesa Park & Recreation Foundation – $100,000 to host free community electric vehicle and solar power education and install electric vehicle charging stations at a city park.
  • Ocean Discovery Institute – $50,000 to support over 450 seventh graders from City Heights to engage in hands-on learning experiences centered around climate change and solutions to climate change.
  • South Sudanese Community Center – $84,590 to expand a sustainable energy education and outreach program focused on City Heights.
  • La Maestra Foundation, Inc. – $50,000 to support an after-school and summer enrichment program that provides at-risk, low-income youth ages six to 18 with youth leadership and life skills development activities.
  • Climate Action Campaign – $100,000 toward development of the Refugee and Immigration Cultural Hub (RICH) in City Heights. The project will be built on a 2.2-acre site owned by the Partnership for the Advancement of New Americans (PANA), which aims to establish a healthy, resilient and inclusive development for immigrant and refugee communities and friends.
  • Hammond Climate Solutions Foundation – $100,000 to build a 16.4kW solar with 35kWh storage project for the National City-based nonprofit Olivewood Gardens and Learning Center and a series of clean energy workshops.
  • MAAC Project – $45,000 to support its Electric Vehicle (EV) Access program, which reduces carbon emissions and increases renewable energy usage in low-income and pollution-burdened communities through an increase in the adoption of electric vehicles.
  • San Diego 350 – $100,000 to create and pilot a high school program that engages teachers and students in communities of concern in San Diego County’s South Bay on clean energy and its importance to environmental health.
  • I Am Green Inc. – $100,000 for its Weatherization & Energy Equity (W.E.E.) program that provides education and training tailored to address the unique challenges faced by individuals in communities heavily affected by poverty, unemployment, incarceration and environmental injustice.
  • In Good Company – $50,000 to launch a program that will increase the impact of two existing complementary climate justice educational programs, increase energy literacy in San Diego through an energy-specific learning module and inspire program participants to implement and advocate for clean energy in their communities.

“Calpine has a long history of giving back to the communities we serve, and it’s a special pleasure to do it here, in our backyard,” said Josh Brock, Calpine Energy Solutions vice president. “We were excited to see how many nonprofits responded to the grant and delighted that we were able to help so many organizations electrify and educate San Diego.”

The Community Clean Energy Grant program was informed by a community needs assessment conducted by Community Power as part of its five-year strategy plan for customer energy programs. Community Power garnered feedback from more than 3,400 people in 2022 through listening sessions, workshops, pop-up events in hard-to-reach communities and a customer-wide survey. The community needs assessment findings were critical to develop the grant focus areas.

About San Diego Community Power

San Diego Community Power is a community choice energy program that gives customers an option to run their businesses and homes on significantly higher levels of renewable power at competitive rates. Over the last four years, Community Power has served nearly a million municipal, business and residential power customers in the cities of San Diego, Chula Vista, Encinitas, La Mesa, National City and Imperial Beach as well as the unincorporated communities in the County of San Diego. Learn more at www.SDCommunityPower.org.

About San Diego Foundation

San Diego Foundation inspires enduring philanthropy and enables community solutions to improve the quality of life in our region. Our strategic priorities include advancing racial and social justice, fostering equity of opportunity, building resilient communities and delivering world-class philanthropy to realize our vision of just, equitable and resilient communities. The Environment Initiative preserves and protects our resources, builds a more sustainable path of economic growth and ensures a higher quality of life for those who call San Diego home. For nearly 50 years, San Diego Foundation and its donors have granted more than $1.84 billion to support nonprofit organizations strengthening our community. Learn more at SDFoundation.org.

About Calpine Energy Solutions

Calpine Energy Solutions is the premier provider of data management and customer contact center services for Community Choice Aggregation (CCA) agencies. For over a decade, Calpine has been a trusted business and thought partner serving 21 operating CCAs and managing customer data and billing operations for over 5.5 million meters across California. As part of a Fortune 500 company, Calpine Energy Solution’s best-in-class back-office services help guide CCA partners from initial program launch through mass enrollment phases and continue to evolve alongside their CCA partners. Decades of utility and billing experience, electronic data interchange, customized implementation planning, and robust customer data management enable Calpine’s clients to achieve their missions and long-term operational success.

Contacts

Jill Monroe, San Diego Community Power, jmonroe@sdcommunitypower.org, 619-813-0679
Lorena Nava Ruggero, San Diego Foundation, lruggero@sdfoundation.org, 619-814-1365