The document proposes a vision to build a health data infrastructure that shares every public health file from California counties, nonprofits, and state and national organizations. It describes a process to convert datasets to common formats, clean the data, and distribute it to websites and analysts' desktops for easy analysis. This would be done through an industrial data management system called Ambry.io at a cost of $1000 per month per county. The system involves data wranglers converting datasets for $100 each and systems administrators selecting datasets for analysts. This would make health data easier to find, understand, and use to allow more analysis and coordination between organizations.