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Commentary: Swim program creates paradigm shift for non-swimming low-income Oxnard, CA youth

By Armando Vazquez
Amigos 805.com

This summer the city of Oxnard has the opportunity to provide low income non-swimming youth with the opportunity of a lifetime. City officials can be the driving force in making ACCESS to water safety and recreation a reality for 200 to 400 non-swimming youth of our community.

The benefit to the individual non-swimming youth is obvious, but to the beachside city of Oxnard that has a staggering 90 percent-plus non-swimming low income youth population, the ACCESS water program is a radical paradigm shift.

There are a number of important water recreation, safety, health, exercise, and environmental/conservation issues that we believe are closely interrelated and uniquely impact Oxnard’s non-swimming low income populations, and we believe that the ACCESS to water summer swim program can create an incredible win-win situations for the entire Oxnard community.

We at the KEYS Leadership Academy @ the Café on A believe that conservation activism is directly related to educational awareness and ownership/stewardship of local conservation and environmental actions.

Traditional environmental movements both local and national have often ignored unique and sensitive cultural issues affecting communities of color that prevent these communities from fully participating in the local environmental movement. Think about Ormond Beach and the potential involvement by these new swimming environmental stewards of Oxnard.

One of the most glaring examples of omission by the conservation movement of the local communities of color is the notion of access/lack of access to water and the corollary and logical relationship to conservation/stewardship of beaches, rivers and waterways in the Oxnard plains.

We contend that this is one issue; not a separate issue. So as a long we have 90 percent plus non-swimmers in many of the communities of color in the Oxnard plains area we will have a difficult time getting all of our communities to own and become responsible stewards of the magnificent land and waterways we have locally.

The communities of color toil in this magnificent agrarian and beachfront community, but ironically, they have incredibly limited ownership, access and recreational usage of the public land and waterways in Oxnard…

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