Citizens Environment Alliance [of Southwestern Ontario] Mourns Death of Founder
 
Ric Coronado
 1941 - 2019

Citizens Environment Alliance Mourns Death of Founder
 With heavy hearts, we inform you of the death of our                 founder, Ric Coronado on Tuesday July 30th, 2019. He is survived by                 his son, Derek.
 
 For more than three decades, Ric was a tireless and                 effective citizen advocate for environmental                 and labour issues in Essex County and beyond.
 
 In the 1980’s, Ric established and chaired the                 environment committee at Local 444. In 1990, he                 was responsible for pushing for the first environmental                 contract language between Chrysler and                 the CAW that established a joint National environment                 committee. This became the model for                 joint workplace environment committees that were later                 established in all Canadian big three                 manufacturing facilities. Ric was also instrumental in                 the formation of the City of Windsor's                 Windsor Environmental Advisory Committee and the                 formation of the Labour caucus of the                 Canadian Environmental Network. Simultaneously, he spent                 years working on Detroit River issues                 through the Binational Public Advisory Committee.
 
 Ric was a spirited mentor to countless environmental                 activists in the Windsor area and beyond. In                 1985, he founded the Windsor and District Clean Water                 Alliance, later renamed the Citizens                 Environment Alliance of Southwestern Ontario (CEA). This                 established a diligent and powerful                 international voice for environmental issues in the                 Great Lakes watershed. In a local appearance                 many years ago, Dr. David Suzuki referred to Ric as a                 “silverback” among environmentalists. This                 was fitting because Ric was both a fearless protector                 and a gentle and respected elder who had                 an enormous influence on his community.
 
 Ric believed that every citizen has a responsibility to                 inform themselves and contribute to the                 improvement of their communities however they are able.                 It is a testament to his character that                 many of the politicians and power brokers whom he held                 to account so fiercely later sought Ric’s                 friendship and approval.
 
 Ric led by example. He faced his own health challenges                 with determination and grace, and                 persevered where many would have surrendered. His                 commitment to the CEA was unwavering,                 and he was rightfully proud of the work the organization                 continues to do under the capable                 leadership of his beloved son.
 
 Ric’s personal encouragement inspired generations of                 people who took up causes as citizen                 advocates. His wonderful sense of humour and unflinching                 loyalty will be missed by all those                 lucky enough to call him a friend. We mourn his passing                 and call on all those who remember Ric to honour his memory the way he would have appreciated                 most: keep pushing for clean air, clean                 water and healthy natural habitats in your community.
[The above is as posted by CEA. Beyond Nuclear note: Beyond Nuclear's Kevin Kamps, who is a Don't Waste Michigan board member, has long worked with Ric, since the mid-1990s. An early project, in 1997, was fighting together against Mixed Oxide (MOX, plutonium and uranium) fuel, to be made from U.S. weapons-grade plutonium. More recently, CEA and Beyond Nuclear worked together in an environmental coalition to challenge the Fermi nuclear power plant in southeastern Michigan, and the Davis-Besse atomic reactor in northwestern Ohio, both on the Lake Erie shoreline. Several years ago, Kevin was honored to have been invited to speak on a Detroit River cruise, at an annual fundraiser for CEA. Ric's decades-long commitment to protect the environment of the Great Lakes, his sense of humor, and his joie de vivre, will be sorely missed.]





August 1, 2019