About this Event
This is a Reiney Lin Consultants 2-day Asian American Challenges Toward Racial Justice Workshop hosted by the California Anti-Racism Alliance and sponsored by Alameda County Community Food Bank.
Scholarships may be available for this workshop–contact [email protected] for more information.
Workshop Description
Asian American Challenges Toward Racial Justice is a two day workshop for people who are a part of, live in, or work with Asian American communities and who are invested in eliminating racism and racial inequities in our society. Using a race analysis, this workshop unpacks how racism uniquely disempowers Asian Americans, undermines cross-racial solidarity, and keeps a structural arrangement of power in place. Over the two days, participants will also explore the social, political, cultural, and economic ramifications resulting from geopolitical histories and realities and from the way Asian Americans have been racialized that shape Asian American identity and outcomes today.
Asian American Challenges Toward Racial Justice can serve as a complement to existing workshops that ground people in understanding racism as historically and structurally rooted such as the Racial Equity Institute’s Phase I workshop or as an entry point for Asian Americans to understand how racism impacts their communities.
Time
This workshop will go from 9:00am - 5:00pm PT on Monday and Tuesday, May 18-19, 2026. Sign-in and breakfast will start at 8:30am PT, so we encourage you to arrive and get settled during this period as the workshop will start right at 9:00am PT.
This workshop is designed for participants to attend the FULL 2-day training as each part of the workshop builds on the pieces that come before. If you miss one piece of the workshop, you may miss the foundation for the rest of the experience. If you are unable to attend the full workshop, please look at for a future opportunity where you can attend the full workshop.
Food
A breakfast (light) and lunch will be served for both days of the workshop. There will be vegetarian, vegan, and gluten-free options for lunch. You may want to bring your own water bottle as well during the workshop.
Attire
Wear something you are comfortable in for the two days, keeping in mind that you may want to consider layered options in case you feel too warm or too cold.
Devices
We ask that you do not use your devices such as your phone or laptop during the workshop as it can be distracting to other participants. If you would like to take notes, we prefer you do it by hand over using a device for this reason. There will be breaks during the workshop, so feel free to use those devices during those times.
Location/Transportation Options
Alameda County Community Food Bank (ACCFB) is located near Oakland International Airport at 7900 Edgewater Drive; as you're driving from the airport on Hegenberger Road, you'll turn left at Edgewater Drive (there's a shopping center there [where Walmart used to be]; you’ll see the Cane’s restaurant). Continue down Edgewater Drive approximately another half mile (past the Toyota dealership). The Food Bank will be on the right side of the street (it's the driveway just past the Uber sign). Please turn into the parking lot and proceed to the building at the back of the property – past the loading docks; it is marked “Community Engagement Center”. Please park in one of these spaces in front of this building and enter under the orange awning. Let the person at reception know that you are here to attend the race equity training.
Parking Details
If you will be driving to work, please park in the back lot in front of the Community Engagement Center (CEC), which is the gray building at the rear of our driveway with the orange awning. Please do not park in the small guest parking lot that runs along Edgewater Drive or in the Member Agency Shopping parking lot located just past the parking lot security gates.
When you arrive at the Food Bank, please mind all on-site traffic signs and drive all the way to the back of the building toward the orange awning. Note that the speed limit is 5 mph. Once you have parked, please walk to the front door of the Community Engagement Center and enter under the orange awning. Let the person at reception know that you are here to attend the race equity training.
If you will be walking to another part of the complex or need to enter the administrative offices facing Edgewater Drive, please use the yellow path painted on the asphalt. This yellow path is a safety feature intended to keep pedestrians safe from the commercial trucks, vehicles, forklifts and other material handling equipment.
Bicycles
The Food Bank has a bike rack adjacent to the Member Agency Parking lot (near the sliding glass doors inside the front gate). Please bring your own lock for your bicycle.
Public Transit
There are a few ways to get to the Food Bank on public transit. We strongly recommend that you confirm operation and schedules when planning your trip.
The Oakland Coliseum BART station is about 1.0 mile from the Food Bank. While it is possible to walk over Hegenberger Road to the Food Bank, it is not ideal since the sidewalks for pedestrian traffic are limited. AC Transit’s 98 bus line stops about ½ block away across the street from the Food Bank. Please visit the http://www.ACtransit.gov website for fare details and scheduling (about every 30 minutes).
Alameda County also runs a free shuttle service from the Oakland Coliseum BART station to the Edgewater County Offices, which are about a block away, on the opposite side of Edgewater from the Food bank. Ours is the East Oakland Shuttle toward Edgewater (not Eastmont). The shuttle stop is on San Leandro Street, on the same side of the street, but on the far side of the Coliseum Bridge, from the BART entrance. Shuttles are blue and green, and you have to ask the driver which direction they are going (there are two loops, but they don’t have signs, you want to ask for Edgewater).
Shuttles run every 20 minutes from 6:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Please visit http://www.acgov.org/sustain/what/transportation/sp.htm for details. You can download the county’s DoubleMap app from the Apple App Store or Google Play in order to track real-time arrivals.
About RLC
Reiney Lin is a consultant based in Los Angeles, CA. She currently serves as a trainer and a team leader with the Racial Equity Institute, as a consultant with the Groundwater Institute, as a co-director and instructor for the Asian American Justice + Innovation Lab, and as the founder, a core team member, and an organizer with the California Anti-Racism Alliance. In these roles, Reiney works with organizations and communities across the nation to build collective power based on a shared analysis of historical and structural racism, including the ways in which Asian Americans have been impacted.
About CARA
The California Anti-Racism Alliance (CARA) is a network of people committed to building relational power and advancing racial equity in California who share a historical, cultural, and structural analysis of racism and inequity as alumni and partners of the Racial Equity Institute (REI) and the Groundwater Institute (GWI).
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
7900 Edgewater Dr, 7900 Edgewater Drive, Oakland, United States
USD 450.00









