 If it's difficult to live here, then you know that it's crazy here. Time goes crazy. We don't have a lot of options to move here. Housing and where we live and the changing climate will make it work. It's like you're in a metal box. In the areas, as they say, the electric system is better, the water is safer. It has better resources. Our residents are working for agricultural companies that are multimillion-dollar companies. Five-star hotels, country clubs, and yet they're taking home the absolute bare minimum wages. It's 100% a structural problem. We've been more ignored by the fact that the majority doesn't have documents. In these areas, the electricity is not safe. The arsenic, the electricity, the garbage. Those are the three similar problems that the majority of the parking lots have. These are trails that go up from 10 to 20 years. If you don't have good air conditioning, you realize you're in hell. You feel ugly. There's no insulation anymore. When it's hot, all the heat enters. There are cracks, so the air doesn't stay inside. There are trails that are even worse than this. It's difficult right now. When it's hot, it comes out to cook outside so that it doesn't get hot inside. I thought the north was pretty. I didn't think the north was ugly. It also makes my town better than Ikea here. When we met, I was like 14 years old and he was like 11 years old. Excuse me, please. At 22, what is said in Mexico, he stole me and left me there. Come here. Come here. I'm going there. I'm going to build my house. Then I'm going back and I'm going to look for a girl. I was 9 years old. When I imagined it, it was my dreams. In 2006, that's when my story began. Sometimes I get depressed because of the situation that I can't give my children a safe home. That's what I have and that's what I can do right now. Just need this. Think like this. If you're living in a mobile home, most likely you're at the most vulnerable in housing and in experiencing crazy temperatures. 2pm in August in Indian Wells, you're literally living a very different life than at 2pm also in August in thermal California. It is hot. Feels suffocating. You just drive through Avenue 66 and you see these mobile home parks here, mobile home park here. And then you see this big sign that says Thermal Beach Club Public Hearing. Thermal Beach Club is a project that was introduced August, September of 2019. It would have luxury homes, vacation homes and a lagoon with surfing wave technology that you can have up 7 feet waves. Why are we okay with this multi-billion dollar vacation home development in our community? It's just going to contribute to the perpetuation of income inequality in the area. It's laughable. It's a slap in the face for residents. Riverside County is essentially a really poor county overall. Our unincorporated areas just don't have the revenue streams we need to put the infrastructure in. So we don't have a choice. We just want to partner with private sector developments to get more infrastructure. You can't expect Thermal Beach Club to solve the problems of the legacy of under-investment and poverty in the Eastern Coachella Valley. This is what Thermal Beach Club is going to be. This is the Thermal Race Track. This is where Oasis Mobile Home Park is. The Race Track, it had a very similar beginning to Thermal Beach Club. It's right there. You hear the sounds of the Race Tracks. Wealthy folks use it as a playground for the rich. And Thermal Beach Club would not be any different from that. Everywhere in California is going to experience extreme climate effects. It's hard to think about how they'll cope with a change as severe as what we expect. Temperatures of 130 Fahrenheit are not something we think of for the weather. It's setting for your oven, right? It's shocking. The droughts are going to become more extreme. We know that a lot of the water supplies in the Coachella Valley have naturally occurring arsenic in them, which is a poisonous compound for humans to ingest. Because water supplies are going to be so stressed, these problems could be exacerbated by climate change. The water doesn't come out as white, it comes out yellow, or sometimes it comes out as chocolate. And with that water, you have to bathe. The officials didn't tell us that it could cause some kind of illness. I don't know how many years ago, we had been consuming contaminated water. We started giving water for the saving that the API gave us. A gallon per person, per day. And that's what they were doing well at the beginning. They started giving water to the three of us. How do we start? The last thing is that we had a meeting. There's not much that has changed. We're exploring other options. It's because of the despair that I've seen, that it works very slowly. And they didn't even give us any proposals from the Commander, nor did they give us any answers. It's the only relief that they've told us that we could qualify for Montevideo, some of us. The Mountain View hasn't been the solution that they've made them to see. There are families that didn't qualify. The process has been very slow. The county created this housing problem by not providing enough housing for our residents. At some point in the 80s or 90s, residents started developing on their own new forms of housing that were affordable. And that took the form mostly of mobile home parks. The housing was being developed, but in a way that was not safe for residents. Kind of Riverside became aware of the problems and in the late 1990s, starting to shut them down. And this is during a time when there was no alternative housing options for families. It was really pushing them into even worse circumstances. The fact that a lot of those residents have ended up in tribal land has provided a convenient escape hatch for county representatives to say, well, it's in tribal land. What can we really do? It did come by design. Elected officials are elected to prioritize budgets on what gets built and what doesn't get built. Local government are struggling to find resources and meet the demand of our ever-growing affordable housing prices. Mm-hmm. This room was the one we used, but we no longer use it. Since it's the most damaged part, we can no longer feel the Maria's workshop, so to speak. Do you carry it or tomorrow? Well, tell him to go. But tell him there are parts that we don't teach him, that he doesn't fill it. And at the end of the day, they deny it to me. That's what makes me a little more desperate and anxious. This is the second time we apply it. You're under pressure. Good afternoon. Hello. Hello. Hello. Well, I just tried the new trailer, so I'm happy. The people from here won't make it to this land. There are a lot of people who live there. 625? 220. That's it. The fourth trailer. And I almost gave up. Two, three, four. 12 feet. I have it here. That's good. It's right for the guys to play here. Take it. That's easy. What's the number? 228. Is that all? That's all. Hey, Charlie. Charlie, come over here with us. Oh, well, this is good. We're leaving tomorrow. You take care of the key. Thank you for letting us go there. Motivate. Motivate. Well, to fight here and fight over there. We're already without key. They're stopping the water directly from what they use, from the water tank. That doesn't mean that, because I'm going to grab the trailer, I'm not going to keep supporting the company. Of course, we're going to continue because I already lived it, and the truth is, it's great the need that we're going through most of the people here. Thank you. For now, Pedro's win is amazing. Here you see, what is the washing machine and the dryer. Look, the key is from our new house. It goes directly to the key, but look at this. What are the new keys? This one. Ah, you know. Look, and here comes the light. It's transparent. There's a lot of difference. And it doesn't smell. It's a safer community. It has the appropriate infrastructure. It has potable drinking water. It has a level of security and attention from law enforcement. Still, mobile home housing itself is not a great model of housing for anybody. It's not just about Oasis Mobile Home Park. For the rest of the Oasis residents, their fight still continues. Every day, with contaminated water and all the poor housing conditions. I think this is going to be the first good part of our lives.