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2023 Grants Challenge

Color the Water

Since 2020, Color the Water (CTW) has offered free anti-racist surf lessons, media, and education to all Black, Indigenous, and People of Color. CTW strives for a liberated surf culture rooted in racial justice, and envisions a space of belonging and support for physically disabled People of Color. Our goal is to not only welcome Disabled People of Color but create an inclusive surf culture that uses disability justice principles that center the advancement of physical, mental, and emotional health and wellness for people of all abilities.

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What is the primary issue area that your application will impact?

Play Equity to Advance Mental Health (sponsored by the Los Angeles Dodgers Foundation)

In which areas of Los Angeles will you be directly working?

Central LA

East LA

San Gabriel Valley

San Fernando Valley

South LA

West LA

South Bay

Antelope Valley

County of Los Angeles

City of Los Angeles

In what stage of innovation is this project, program, or initiative?

Expand existing project, program, or initiative

What is your understanding of the issue that you are seeking to address?

Surfing has, for many generations, flown under the radar of deep examination of the white supremacist, heteronormative, ableist, patriarchal legacies it perpetuates. What was once a communal practice invented by People of Color all over the world is now considered a sport and culture predominantly composed of white men. Whether it's settler colonialism that pushed Indigenous People of Color away from coastlines or forced POC into a relationship of labor and trauma with the ocean; a systemic exclusion from water and swimming through the Jim Crow era, or an establishment of cultural norms ("Black people don't swim") and embedded exclusionary practices like redlining; surfing embodies marginalization that harms us all, with greatest impact on BIPOC, LGBTQIA+, and disabled people. This is greatly reflected in the existing adaptive surf community where BIPOC participation is limited to a handful of individuals in a growing field of recreation and competitive sports for disabled people.

Describe the project, program, or initiative this grant will support to address the issue.

This grant will support the development of three phases of work: knowledge-sharing + capacity building, reflection, and offering support, to create a more inclusive surf space that actively supports disabled BIPOC people. Knowledge-sharing, Capacity-building: From the start of Color the Water to now, we have been able to support and learn from one physically disabled surfer - Ty Duckett, the first Black American adaptive surfer. It starts with our own education. Capacity to support physically disabled people in the water requires training, both in specialized water safety and in disability justice and accessibility. Examination, Reflection, Revision: With this increased knowledge and capacity, we will prepare to offer space to Disabled BIPOC while at the same time applying our learnings to our existing space. We will elevate all our accessibility practices to become a new standard to ensure that the most marginalized among us, especially the disabled, are fully supported. Qualified, Justice Centered Offerings: With all these tools, we will extend this offering to the Disabled BIPOC community. This will include reimagined surf lessons with accessibility at its core. From site conditions to specialized wave riding and surf gear, inclusive media for people of all abilities, and on-going educational opportunities foster attunement to the intersection of racial and disability justice, we want to be more intersectional, anti-ableist, and truly inclusive of all abilities.

Describe how Los Angeles County will be different if your work is successful.

Success in this program means a continuation of the journey to liberation with more of us in mind. The chance for our community to develop a model for surf instruction training that involves our anti-racist philosophies and disability justice principles that could be used well after this project by us and others is a distinct pillar of success for us. Then, as we seed and grow the practice of making surfing a safer place for disabled people of color to heal and play, the implications of that move far beyond the project window. Ty has been our guiding light in this all, constantly showing us that there are deeper levels of belonging that we can create for our people. Our vision is that this becomes a lasting and integral aspect of our community as a whole. A space where we can receive all those who suffer from the harm of systemic racism and have the intention and the capacity to support them as they are. Similar to our growth over the years, we seek deep rooted, lasting impact.

What evidence do you have that this project, program, or initiative is or will be successful, and how will you define and measure success?

This project expands what we have done in the BIPOC community to now include Disabled BIPOC. The measures of success are deep and multifaceted. Impact on CTW: principles of water safety and surf instruction all bound together by disability justice principles positively transform our entire organization - Increased depth of knowledge and capacity of CTW community. - CTW transformation through trainings and implementation with greater understanding of accessibility - CTW surfers indirectly impacted through education, programming changes, and media Impact on Disabled BIPOC: A place of equitable ocean access for disabled BIPOC has great impact - Increase in Disabled POC with open ended access to to surf support - Creation of disabled surf programming based on disability justice principles. Impact on Surfing & World: Representation with power for disabled BIPOC surfers - diverse representation of disabled surfers of color - Increased spread of awareness of disability justice

Approximately how many people will be impacted by this project, program, or initiative?

Direct Impact: 15

Indirect Impact: 11,000