Sacramento, California – Clean air work often moves quietly, one meeting at a time, until the paper trail finally becomes something bigger: a community plan with names, dates, targets and people behind it.
That was the scene Monday as Team Caity joined residents, community groups and agency partners to mark the completion of the Community Emissions Reduction Plan, or CERP, for South Sacramento. The moment was framed not as a finish line, but as proof that years of neighborhood advocacy can make its way into official action.
The plan grew out of California’s community air protection work, a process meant to focus pollution-reduction efforts in neighborhoods that have carried heavier environmental burdens. South Sacramento-Florin was selected by the California Air Resources Board on July 25, 2024, to develop a CERP, according to the Sacramento Metropolitan Air Quality Management District. The plan is designed to lay out the process, timeline, metrics, priorities and targets for cutting emissions and reducing exposure to local air pollution.

For residents, that kind of language can sound technical. But the issue behind it is simple: cleaner air, healthier blocks and a stronger voice for communities that know their own streets better than anyone else. The work included monthly meetings hosted by La Familia Counseling Center, with the Community Steering Committee helping shape the plan through local input and steady participation.
The public-facing process also included a draft plan released Jan. 16, 2026, followed by a 30-day public comment period. Materials were made available in multiple languages, including Spanish, Vietnamese, Hmong and Farsi, reflecting the diverse communities tied to the South Sacramento-Florin effort.
On Monday, that long process reached a milestone as Dr. Steven Cliff accepted the completed CERP on behalf of the California Air Resources Board. Councilmember Caity Maple’s team thanked the Community Steering Committee for its dedication, La Familia Counseling Center for hosting the meetings, and the agency partners who helped guide the work.
“This achievement reflects years of collaboration and advocacy from residents, community organizations, and agency partners working toward cleaner air and healthier neighborhoods for South Sacramento,” Councilmember Caity Maple wrote.
The celebration carried a clear message: the plan may now be complete, but the real test comes next. Implementation, accountability and continued community involvement will decide how much difference the CERP makes on the ground.
For South Sacramento, though, Monday was still a moment worth pausing for. A neighborhood air-quality plan built through patience, meetings and public pressure had finally arrived — and the people who pushed it forward were there to see it.