Amos White, founder of 100K Trees For Humanity, stands in Washington Park, on Monday, June 5, 2023, in Alameda, CA. This park used to be full of coast live oaks, once a vital keystone species to the ecosystem, but only a few remain. “We're missing 6000 trees in Alameda,” said Amos White. “Alameda was the nation’s largest coast live oak forest, until the late 1880’s, when they became furniture, ships, shovel handles and boats.”
Alameda, California was once a densely forested wetland, and home to an abundance of birds and marine life, as well as the Ohlone Native Americans, before it was colonized, separated from Oakland by a shipping channel, and developed into a naval base. The island is now a suburb full of Victorians, parks and beaches on the east side, and affordable housing, warehouses and abandoned naval buildings on the west side– home to the island’s densest population of people of color, the least tree coverage and highest exposure to air pollution from Oakland’s nearby highway system and ports.
100 K Trees For Humanity is an Alameda-based nonprofit, founded by Amos White, who plans to facilitate the planting of 100,000 new trees in every city in the bay area by 2030, to meet the United Nation’s carbon emission reduction goals, and to equitably invest in the public, social and environmental health of communities with low tree coverage. “It's really impressive what trees do to clean our air, to filter our air of toxins and volatile organic compounds, and diesel emissions off of the ports,” said White.