[3] She is known for organizing protests against a lead smelting plant located in the middle of Owino Uhuru, a slum near Mombasa.
Omido's sister is named Susan Monyani Kasuki, while her youngest brother is Silas Enane.
Omido is a single,devoted mother of two children named Kingdavid Jeremiah Indiatsi[5] and Margaret Esma Ehwa[6] She studied Business Administration at the University of Nairobi and worked in industries in Kenya for more than 15 years.
While working there as a community liaison officer, Omido commissioned an environmental impact assessment (EIA).
After getting no results from company leaders and government officials to close the plant, she organized a demonstration.
Registered in Kilifi County and based in Mombasa, the organization was established to address environmental issues faced by the settlements near Kenya's industrial areas.
Programmes that the organization provides are climate change and environmental governance, activism and human rights, legal aid, and education.
CJGEA partnered with Human Rights Watch in the creation of a film on the poisoning of communities with toxic materials.
It will focus on the death and health issues, as well as impunity and disregard for the environment and rule of law committed by the offenders.
From September 5 to 7, 2014, she attended the 3rd United Nations Institute for Training and Research-Yale Conference on Environmental Governance and Democracy at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
In 2014, three toxic waste smelters in poor, urban settlements were relocated to other parts of Mombasa.