Brytanee is the Founder and Principal of emergent labs, a justice-oriented design studio that uplifts the multi-layered experiences of Black, Indigenous, and Communities of Color to navigate complex issues. She brings over 10 years of experience centering people, with a particular focus on the healing of racialized communities through the lenses of transportation, arts and culture, and economic development. Brytanee seeks to leverage her passion for the built environment to develop justice-oriented organizations, governments, and companies while building power in communities of color.
Before starting emergent labs, she launched several regional and local initiatives. Brytanee has complementary work experience in the fields of health equity and affordable housing and has led community engagement projects focused on addressing racial disparities. This unique experience has honed her ability to design comprehensive and crosscutting transportation-related programs, projects, and policies, build coalitions, and deeply understand how vital it is for transportation infrastructure to create healthy communities and connect residents to economic opportunity. Brytanee is a McNair Scholar, Next City Vanguard Alum, and the daughter of the Black Feminist movement. She has spoken and moderated panels for the American Planning Association, PolicyLink Equity Summit, National Association for City Transportation Officials, San Francisco Bay Area Planning and Urban Research Association, and the North American Bikeshare Association.
Robyn Marquis is the Senior Director of Innovative Mobility at CALSTART. She oversees a portfolio of personal mobility, school mobility, and last-mile delivery. This includes the Clean Mobility Options program administrator team and CALSTART’s Innovative Mobility Working Group, a consortium of public agencies, solution providers, and other key stakeholders advancing more equitable mobility options to reduce climate impacts. Robyn previously served as the Program Lead for the New York Clean Transportation Prizes, an $85 million initiative to improve mobility and accelerate electrification in underserved communities. Robyn earned her doctorate in Transportation Engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York.
Terri Steele’s commitment to public service, sustainability, equity and innovation spans the trajectory of her 35-year career. Terri serves as a communications, development and sustainability advisor for the recently-opened Chicano Park Museum and Cultural Center (CPMCC) in the portside San Diego community of Barrio Logan. She is an integral part of the team delivering over $15 million in funding to CPMCC for clean energy program innovations. These innovations address chronic air pollution, extreme heat as a threat to public health, transportation inequities and residential and business parking strangleholds imposed on San Diego’s portside communities for decades. Terri is spearheading the launch of La Via Verde — San Diego’s first no-cost, bilingual, zero-emission, app-based microtransit service. This service aligns with CPMCC’s mission of preserving, celebrating and advancing understanding of the region’s Chican@, Latin@, Mexican and Indigenous cultures, while empowering individuals to be agents of positive change in their communities.
Launching this year, Via Verde is anticipated to eliminate an estimated 26,000 combustion engine vehicle trips a year, reducing greenhouse gas emissions, driving transportation equity and serving as a beacon of sustainability for the community. Via Verde is being fueled by a 163 kW solar cantilever and 860 kW of storage, which supports grid independence, climate resilience and a charging innovation that keeps La Via Verde free for the community while at full buildout creating 18 local jobs for driver/ambassadors.
Josephine S. Talamantez is an Organizational Management, Public Policy and Governmental Relations consultant with a specialization in Arts, History and Cultural Public Programming, Historic Preservation, Cultural Resource Management and Public History. Talamantez has a Master’s degree in History focusing on the Chicano civil rights era and on public history programming and is the Former Chief of Programs/Legislative Liaison for the California Arts Council. Representing a family with 100 years of multi-generational activism in the portside Logan/Barrio Logan community, Josephine S. Talamantez is Founder and Board Chair of the Chicano Park Museum and Cultural Center. As an 8-year elected member of the Barrio Logan Planning Group, Talamantez helped deliver the first community plan update in 43 years.
Ms. Talamantez is an active member of the San Diego Air Pollution Control District’s Portside Communities Steering Committee, the Barrio Logan Association and an appointed member of the Latinx Advisory Committee for San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria. This year, she’s delivering San Diego’s first app-based, bilingual, zero emission microtransit service to San Diego’s portside communities.
Dr. Roger Teal has 4 decades of experience in research, development, and implementation of innovative transportation services. He is a former tenured faculty member at UC Irvine in the field of transportation systems who during the past 30 years has managed large technology development projects in multiple industry sectors, including for demand responsive transit (DRT) services. Dr. Teal organized and chaired 2 international conferences on DRT in 2014 and 2016, and is widely known for his expertise in this field. Dr. Teal oversees DemandTrans transportation technology portfolio, which includes platforms for DRT (microtransit) service management, Mobility as a Service (MaaS), and the automated exchange of trips across multiple DRT service providers in a region, as well as an application for driver/vehicle scheduling optimization for large paratransit operations. He has managed the implementation and functional expansion of DemandTrans’ MaaS platform for the Stockton region for San Joaquin Council of Governments.
Patrick is a Climate Finance Analyst at the California Economic Development and Infrastructure Bank (IBank) developing and deploying financial products to decarbonize California and leverage private capital in California under the United States Environmental Protection Agency’s Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund program. At IBank he covers a variety of clean infrastructure sectors and specializes in zero-emission vehicle and infrastructure markets. Previously he worked at the state’s Department of Finance and was a Fellow in the Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development. He’s also worked as a business development consultant and a freelance sports journalist.
Craig has more than four decades of experience in transportation planning, engineering and project management, both in the private and public sectors. His areas of expertise include traffic engineering, street design, bicycle and pedestrian planning and design, ADA accessibility design, and design for “all ages and abilities.” He is currently the City of Escondido’s Traffic and Transportation Engineer. This position includes the responsibility to lead the Clean Mobility Options program’s Community Transportation Needs Assessment for the City of Escondido, taking an in-depth look at the transportation needs of Escondido’s disadvantaged areas.
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