The Change Engine
Pathways
Focus Areas
Activities
· Loading...
TEMP
loading
AIR QUALITY
loading
NWS ALERTS
loading
LIVE NEWS
loading
BAYOU LEVELS
loading
Explore Dashboard
Loading...
Loading...

Real-time air quality for Houston's environmental justice communities. Current citywide AQI: 85 (Moderate) as of Feb 22, 2026. Sources: aqicn.org, TCEQ, Air Alliance Houston, NRDC.

Loading...

Live bayou water levels from USGS stream gauges across Houston. Gage heights update every 15 minutes. Data is critical during heavy rain — know your nearest bayou.

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

Key indicators from the Kinder Institute 2025 State of Housing, 45th Houston Area Survey, Census ACS, and Good Reason Houston. Real data on affordability, climate risk, and economic mobility.

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Detail
THECHANGELAB THECHANGELAB

Houston Wilderness

Local ecosystems like coastal marshes, pine savannahs, and prairie meadows provide critical services—from flood resilience to climate mitigation. Houston Wilderness supports large‑scale planting, green infrastructure, and planning frameworks—empowering underserved communities and building climate‑smart infrastructure regionall

Read More
ORGANIZATIONS THECHANGELAB ORGANIZATIONS THECHANGELAB

GOODR

By redirecting millions of pounds of surplus food away from landfills, Goodr reduces greenhouse gas emissions and improves food accessibility, offering a triple‑win: lower costs, positive ESG impact, and hunger relief.

Read More
ORGANIZATIONS THECHANGELAB ORGANIZATIONS THECHANGELAB

Agents of Change in Environmental Justice

Most environmental policies are shaped without the voices of communities most impacted. Agents of Change shifts that balance by empowering underrepresented scholars to lead in media, science, and policymaking—redefining power, participation, and truth in public health and environmental spaces.

Read More
THECHANGELAB THECHANGELAB

The Power of Peace: How Nonviolent Movements Fuel Civic Engagement and Strengthen Communities

Across history and ideologies, people have used nonviolent action to shape their societies. From Gandhi’s Salt March to the ADA movement and the Tea Party, peaceful resistance has transformed laws, norms, and opportunities for millions. This paper explores how nonviolent civic engagement works across multiple pathways—from addressing food insecurity and inequality to expanding democracy and reimagining public access.

Drawing on research by Erica Chenoweth, we show that nonviolent strategies are not only morally grounded—they are strategically effective, and invite widespread participation from people of all ages, beliefs, and abilities.

Read More

SUBMIT A RESOURCE