Ohlone Tribe
The Beginning of Progress Starts Here
About
Since 2013, the Ohlone Chumash Tribe has been providing technical assistance, project financing, management, and other resources to the tribal communities across the United States. We partner with cities, municipalities, and tribal factions to help elevate tribal communities through guidance in entrepreneurship, job training, and other resources that promote independence and self-sufficiency for community members.
The Ohlone Chumash Tribe
Original People of the San Francisco Peninsula
Mission
To make available education and economic development resources to all tribal communities in our efforts to improve the quality of life for all Native Americans and others.
Vision
To be the conduit that helps eradicate the barriers that have divided and prevented tribal communities from thriving.
Our Why
Native Americans make up a disproportionate number of underrepresented and marginalized communities; consequences of the history of devastating legacies—from displacement, poverty, and economic disadvantages to segregated education and unequal criminal justice involvement due to substance abuse and domestic violence, these disparities are directly connected to imposed strategies that have been oppressive with disproportionate impacts that have been successfully divisive and have created deep roots of distrust amongst the various Native American Factions as well as those of non-Native American descent.
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Our Approach
The Ohlone Tribe offers a multi-pillar approach to combatting and changing the trajectory of Native American people. There are many Factions, yet one Nation, a Nation rich in diversity, and culture: a resilient people. We see equity as a four pegged instrument in approaching initiatives that can begin to rewrite the history for many Native American Tribes:
Mobilize
Invite and embrace a community of Native Americans (Diverse Factions), and others with shared and lived experiences in the areas of injustices that plague
Identify
Common goals and those goals that are specific to the tribal participant’s mission, wrapped with hosted trust-building activities
Support
Train, Equip, and Plan. We walk alongside our program participants from start to conception and equip providers with tools for the greatest achievement of success.
Execute
We aid in developing a moves management matrix that serves as a blueprint for our participants to scale their respective endeavors as seamlessly as possible.
Hosted By Ohlone Tribe
Partnerships
Guiding Principles
Integrity – We are locked in honesty and moral principles
Respect – We engage others with kindness, understanding, and humility
Advocacy – We promote the values and practice of diversity, equity, and inclusion in all that we do on behalf of others
Altruism – We are concerned about the well-being, happiness, and quality of life of others.
Education – We believe education opens the world for students. We aim to educate all of our participants so that they may make calculated decisions that will benefit them.
Bringing California Home

California Department of Housing and Community Development
Grants & Funding (/grants-and-funding)
Manufactured & Mobilehomes (/manufactured-and-mobilehomes)
Building Standards (/building-standards-hcd)
Planning & Community Development (/planning-and-community-development)
Policy & Research (/policy-and-research)
About HCD (/about-hcd)
Homekey is an opportunity for state, regional, and local public entities to develop a broad range of housing types, including but not limited to hotels, motels, hostels, single-family homes and multifamily apartments, adult residential facilities, and manufactured housing, and to convert commercial properties and other existing buildings to Permanent or Interim Housing for the Target Population.
History of Tribe
History of Tribe
The Ohlone Chumash Tribe, formerly known as Costanoans (from Spanish costeño meaning ‘coast dweller’), are a Native American people of the Northern California coast. When Spanish explorers and missionaries arrived in the late 18th century, the Ohlone inhabited the area along the coast from San Francisco Bay through Monterey Bay,
However, the arrival of Spanish colonizers to the area in 1769 vastly changed tribal life forever. The Spanish constructed missions along the California coast with the objective of Christianizing the native people and culture. Between the years 1769 and 1834, the number of Indigenous Californians dropped from 300,000 to 250,000. After California entered the Union in 1850, the state government perpetrated massacres against the Ohlone people. Many of the leaders of these massacres were rewarded with positions in state and federal government. These massacres have been described as genocide. Many are now leading a push for cultural and historical recognition of their tribe and what they have gone through and had taken from them.
The Ohlone living today belong to one or another of a number of geographically distinct groups, most, but not all, in their original home territory.
What We Do
Technical Assistance-Business Development-Training
From training workshops, we provide training and support for Native Americans and others in their business endeavors. From start-ups to businesses that are ready to scale or apply for their first business loan, our team of highly skilled professionals have you covered.
Telecare
Through our partnerships with doctors and clinics, we are able to provide telecare to under-served Native American communities and others.
Grants
We have a team of researchers and business developers that can help identify tribal grant resources
Funding & Project Management
Through our partnerships with a Tribal CDFI and Tiger Eye Capitol Mana, the Ohlone tribe of Carmel is committed to helping the homeless community by becoming a housing navigational organization resourced with HUD and HMIS, and LAHSA.
Training Workshops
We provide job preparation, resume writing, business etiquette, and specialized job training.
Product For Sale
Leadership
David Vargas
David Vargas is an experienced CFO for three different tribes with 30 years of experience specializing in role development, single-family and commercial including grants made available to Native Americans.
Projects
Know More About Ohlone Tribe Events
Contact Us
Office Address
112 S. Euclid Avenue, Second Floor Ontario, CA 91762
Phone Number
Office 909-983-1135
or
Text 562-964-4620
Business Hours
Monday – Friday: 10am – 6pm
Saturday: 3pm – 6pm























































