Wednesday, April 23, was a great reminder that climate change is global, but climate action is local. Save The Bay hosted our most recent Climate Conversation at the iconic Manny’s Café in San Francisco as part of SF Climate Week, and we were blown away by the ~100 members of our Bay Area community who came out to support.
Our conversation featured three speakers who are all leading projects in different parts of the Bay Area that help solve our region’s sea level rise problem. Jackie Zipkin talked about how a project to protect a wastewater facility in Hayward is leveraging nature, and Danielle Cwirko-Godycki told her own personal story about how she became a city councilmember after watching her neighborhood in San Mateo flood multiple times. Finally, Elaine Forbes from the Port of San Francisco talked about how nature-based concepts are a key part of robust plans to protect San Francisco’s historic Waterfront despite the significant constraints of working in such a fortified urban environment.
Our panelists all expressed the value of retaining nature as key components of coastal resilience projects because so-called ‘nature-based projects’ are adaptive to changing climate conditions. While a traditional seawall may protect a location from historic flooding for instance; a project that incorporates more elements of natural ecosystems (e.g. a living levee) can actually evolve to accommodate different rising sea levels over time.
Climate-related flooding will have a big impact on our communities in the coming years, and Save the Bay is grateful to have leaders like those who spoke to us on Wednesday to help steer our ship in the right direction.
More Actions for a Resilient Bay

Discover Where Horizontal Levees Began
Learn more about the Oro Loma Horizontal Levee Demonstration Project and discover the experiment inspired the First Mile Levee. Explore the levee >>

Explore Our Strategy for Sea Level Rise
Dive into Save The Bay’s Sea Level Rise and Flood Resilience Strategy and learn how we are advocating for a resilient region. Discover the Strategy >>

Take Action for Climate and Community
Volunteer with Save The Bay to restore wetlands, protect wildlife, and keep the Bay healthy for everyone who lives, works, and plays here. Volunteer on the shoreline >>
Scenes From a Night of Conversation and Community
Thank you to everyone who joined us at Manny’s for Climate Conversations: Rising Seas, Resilient Communities as part of SF Climate Week. We were blown away by the energy and engagement of our community coming together to learn, connect, and imagine a resilient future.



















Thank You To Our Sponsors

