An unnamed speaker said volunteers cleared brush across multiple Los Angeles neighborhoods on California Climate Action Day, marking five years since the launch of the Climate Action Corps.
“This is where the fire started,” the speaker said, describing the site where volunteers were working. The speaker thanked volunteers and noted the work as part of countywide action: “We get to celebrate the nearly 2,000 volunteers across the county and city of LA today who are taking climate action, part of the California Climate Action Day.”
The speaker said the anniversary recognizes local recovery and broader climate efforts. They described activity across the city — citing Northwest Los Angeles, Southeast Los Angeles and a site identified as Eaton — and framed the day as both environmental work and community rebuilding: “renewal of the land, renewal of our spirit, renewal of our communities.”
The remarks also noted the five‑year milestone for the Climate Action Corps and said the program “has inspired tens of thousands of Californians to take climate action” since its launch. The transcript does not specify a precise statewide total beyond that phrase.
The event combined volunteer field work (brush clearing) with a public acknowledgment of community resilience at a location the speaker identified as the origin point of a past fire. The transcript does not record any formal motions, votes, staff directives or funding decisions related to the event.
Organizers and volunteers were thanked for turnout and local collaboration; no follow‑up actions, budgets or policy changes were specified in the recorded remarks.
The day was presented as both a commemoration of recovery in a specific fire‑affected place and a broader civic volunteer effort tied to California Climate Action Day and the five‑year anniversary of the Climate Action Corps.