Katrina Tomas

Associate Attorney California Office

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Media Inquiries

Miranda Fox
Public Affairs and Communications Strategist
mfox@earthjustice.org

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Katrina Tomas is an associate attorney with the California Regional Office in San Francisco. Prior to joining Earthjustice, Katrina was an environmental law fellow at Shute, Mihaly & Weinberger LLP, a San Francisco public interest land-use and environmental law firm. Katrina holds a J.D. from the University of Miami School of Law and a B.A. in Art History from the University of Pennsylvania.

The Latest from Katrina Tomas

September 19, 2024

In the News: Sacramento Bee

Environmentalists file lawsuit against Port of Stockton over ‘dirty’ hydrogen project

“This is dirty hydrogen, delivered by dirty trucks, for potentially dirty uses. If the port wants to build this project, it must do a better job explaining how it will clean up all of this pollution.”
September 19, 2024

In the News: Capitol Alert

Environmentalists file lawsuit against Port of Stockton over ‘dirty’ hydrogen project

“This is dirty hydrogen, delivered by dirty trucks, for potentially dirty uses. If the port wants to build this project, it must do a better job explaining how it will clean up all of this pollution. At a time when the climate crisis is devastating our state with wildfires, the port approved a project that will increase greenhouse gas emissions and keep us hooked on fossil fuels.”
July 3, 2024

In the News: Los Angeles Times

San Bernardino County has targeted majority Latino community for warehouse development, complaint alleges

“In our analysis, it was clear that there was a systematic targeting of Bloomington for warehouse development in a way that wasn’t occurring in other unincorporated parts of the county that have much fewer people of color, Latinos specifically.”
In an aerial view, shipping containers sit on trucks and train cars at the Port of Oakland on October 24, 2022 in Oakland, California.
February 22, 2024

A Common-sense Guide to Port Management: More people-centered policies, less pandering

The California State Assembly Select Committee on Ports and Goods Movement misses the mark by convening hearings on the impact of freight while focusing almost exclusively on industry needs.