Ensure decisions about infrastructure do not result in the exclusion of improvements to existing communities.
Our Objectives
With leadership from OHM’s Justice Strategist and in partnership with the communities we serve, we are working to:
What’s happening on the coast?
Strengthening community organizations
No single organization can achieve lasting change alone. Strong partners and partnerships are the key to building a sustainable movement. To effectively leverage the collective impact of our work, we need to develop greater capacity for the collaboration and collective work we do. OHM is proud to partner with the Lucas Center for Entrepreneurship through 6Seed, a no-cost six-week program “designed specifically for startups, side hustles, and volunteer-run nonprofits that are ready to grow into their first full time employee.”
Healing a toxic legacy
In 2022, OHM joined forces with several other non-profit organizations and the Emory School of Public Health to form what has come to be known as the Healthy Coastal Neighborhoods Coalition. The coalition formed around the pilot study conducted by Emory that showed residents of Brunswick and Glynn County have high levels of harmful chemicals in their blood system. The coalition works to raise awareness about the impact contamination on our environment and local residents through education and advocacy efforts.
Protecting Land & Heritage
Climate resiliency policies, community-minded zoning ordinances, sustainable development practices, land preservation organizations, cultural heritage celebration and connection—all of these are tied to the land under our feet. The loss of land destabilizes coastal cultural identity. Traditional conservation organizations, communities, local government, institutions, and heritage groups must partner to combat land loss to sea level rise, tax increases, zoning changes, and more. Examples of this vital collaboration include the “Keep Sapelo Geechee” fight for fair zoning in McIntosh County and community organizing against the harmful effects of the Savannah Port expansion.
Water, water, everywhere
Coastal Georgia simultaneously suffers from having too much water and not enough. While rampant development in Chatham, Bryan, Effingham, and Liberty Counties places severe strain on drinking water resources, poor planning and aging infrastructure in those counties and their southern neighbors lead to destructive flooding events (and not just during hurricane season). Sea level rise exacerbates these challenges. We’re working with local governments, community groups, and at the state level to ensure residents, businesses, and our wild neighbors have access to healthy, clean water.
In the News
Atlanta Journal-Constitution | 4/25/26
Oceana | 3/20/26
PBS Frontline | 2/3/26
The Conversation | 2/2/26
Savannah Morning News | 12/23/25
SPLC Story | 12/15/25
Capital B News | 12/2/25
Inside Climate News | 11/20/25
Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership | 11/19/25
The Current, Notre Dame | 11/18/25
Georgia Recorder | 10/28/25
The Current | 9/29/25
The Washington Post | 9/27/25
The Current | 9/16/25
GPB | 9/12/25
Financial Times | 9/10/25
WABE via The Current | 9/9/25
Capital B News | 9/4/25
The Conversation | 9/2/25
The New York Times | 8/16/25
USA Today | 8/13/25
The Current | 8/11/25
The Current | 6/19/25
The Current | 6/18/25
Washington Post | 5/14/25
The Conversation | 5/13/25
The Current | 5/9/25
E&E News | 5/5/25
The Hill | 4/29/25
Emory University SPH | 4/26/25
The Guardian | 4/24/25
Associated Press | 4/23/25
GPB | 3/31/25
The 19th News via The Current | 3/7/25
Atlanta Journal-Constitution| 2/14/25
GA House of Representatives | 2/13/25
The Current | 2/13/25
Associated Press | 1/26/25
SELC | 1/25/25
PoliticoPro | 1/23/25
“Our work is about painted buntings and sea turtles, yes. But it is also about people who need to drink clean water, breathe clean air, and who have been connected to our landscapes for generations.”
Please contact Megan Desrosiers, CEO & President, to learn more.


























































Here you see

