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In
The Spotlight: Toxic
Wastes and Race
Sign the UCC Petition to End Toxic Racism in Dickson, Tennessee
It has now been a year since the United Church of Christ released "Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty." The 2007 UCC report profiled the failure of various levels of government to protect the African American Harry Holt family's in Dickson, Tennessee who's wells were contaminated with the toxic chemical TCE from a county owned landfill. To view and sign petition click HERE.
EPA sets tougher air-quality standards
The EPA's new smog limit is 75 parts per billion of ozone, down from the current level of 80. Because of rounding, the old standard was effectively 84 parts per billion. The EPA failed to head the advice of its independent science advisory panel who unanimously had said the standard should be no higher than 70 parts per billion. In a March 2007 letter to the EPA, panelists said there is "overwhelming scientific evidence" for a reduction of that magnitude.
Local Citizens, Conservation Group File Suit Seeking Cleanup of Alleged Water Contamination in Dickson County, Tennessee
The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and two residents of Dickson, Tennessee, Sheila Holt-Orsted and Beatrice Holt, today filed a lawsuit against the Dickson County and City governments. The Complaint alleges that trichloroethylene (TCE), an industrial chemical disposed at the Dickson Landfill that has been linked to neurological and developmental harm and cancer, poses an imminent and substantial endangerment to human health and the environment.
MLK and the struggle for environmental justice
As we celebrate the birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and consider the effects Dr. King's work have had on the United States, I want to highlight an often overlooked aspect of that work, how Martin Luther King and the civil rights struggle have influenced American notions of environmental health and justice.
NBEJN
Joins HBCUs to Expose Environmental Racism in Tennessee
A half-dozen historically black colleges and universities
(HBCUs) joined forces with the National Black Environmental
Justice Network (NBEJN) for the “Take Back Black Health
Toxics Tour” in Dickson, Tennessee. The tour showcased
a slam-dunk case of environmental racism. A broad coalition
of environmental, civil rights, and faith-based groups met
at Nashville’s Fisk University Race Relation Institute
(RRI) and boarded two 30-passenger buses to Dickson, a small
town of 12,244 residents located about 35 miles to the west.
Toxics
Tour Planned to Highlight Environmental Racism: National Campaign
to Spotlight the Deadly Mix of Toxic Racism and TCE Contamination
on an African American Family
On Thursday, November 29, a coalition of national leaders,
representing environmental justice, civil rights, scientists,
women’s health, academia, faith-based and religious
groups, legal, and elected officials, including congressional
staffers, from around the country will meet at Nashville’s
Fisk University and board a bus for Dickson, a small town
located about 35 miles to the west. The national leaders will
travel to Dickson and participate in the “Take Back
Black Health Toxics Tour” and see for themselves in
real time a slam-dunk, in-your-face case of environmental
racism.
The
environmental justice braintrust: A dispatch from the Congressional
Black Caucus conference
Appropriately, the theme of this year's 37th annual Congressional
Black Caucus Legislative Conference in Washington, D.C., was
"Unleashing Our Power." For the first time in history,
the U.S. House of Representatives has four African-Americans
serving as chairpersons of major committees. In addition,
17 African-Americans lead major subcommittees, and Rep. James
Clyburn of South Carolina is the House Majority Whip. Activists
and health experts hope that this change in leadership will
help enact serious environmental justice legislation to promote
safe and healthy communities.
Standing
on Principle: The Global Push for Environmental Justice
Climate change, acid rain, depletion of the ozone layer, species
extinction—all of these issues point to one thing: environmental
health is a global issue that concerns all nations of the
world. Now add environmental justice to the list. From South
Bronx to Soweto, from Penang to El Paso, communities all over
the world are finding commonality in their experiences and
goals in seeking environmental justice.
Joint
Center Forms Partnership to Bring More African American Voices
Into Climate Change Debate
The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies (Joint
Center) is launching an effort to engage the African American
community on the issue of climate change. The move is being
funded by the Bipartisan Policy Center which is providing
the Joint Center with a $500,000 grant to expand its capacity
to conduct climate change research and outreach.
Black
Mayors’ Judgment Clouded by Smog: The Air is Tough to
Breathe
Environmental racism has moved to the forefront of African
American concerns, but some Black mayors have crawled into
bed with the polluters. Desperate to get job-creating industry
into their communities at any environmental cost, these city
executives throw health issues to the winds, their minds clouded
by dreams of "economic development." Sadly, the
National Conference of Black Mayors' executive director is
urging federal officials not to raise standards of allowable
air pollution, in fear of chasing away investment in their
cities. The result: the populations of Black-led cities will
literally choke on the chimera of growth.
EPA
Urged to Strengthen Ozone Standards to Protect the Most Vulnerable
Air pollution threatens the health of millions of Americans,
especially those who live in urban areas. More than half of
U.S. population lives in counties with unsafe air. Ground-level
ozone or smog affects more than 158 million Americans in ten
of the eleven most populous states (California, Georgia, Illinois,
Michigan, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania
and Texas). Air pollution claims 70,000 lives a year, nearly
twice the number killed in traffic accidents.
HBCU
Experts Call on Congress to Assist Minority Communities Near
Toxic Waste Sites
Experts from two Black colleges are calling on Congress to
help low-income, minority communities, which are disproportionately
more likely than other communities to live near toxic waste
sites with health hazards for children and families. The House
and Senate should hold hearings, clarify legal mandates and
adopt new regulations to promote environmental justice, the
witnesses told a Senate subcommittee in late July.
Environmental
racism takes Senate stage
Sheila Holt-Orsted sat quietly in the Senate hearing room
in the Dirksen Senate Office Building while before her a dream
was fulfilled: the first Congressional hearing on environmental
justice. Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.), chairwoman
of the Environmental and Public Works Committee's Subcommittee
on Superfund and Environmental Health, held the unprecedented
hearing on July 25.
More
than 100 Groups Call on U.S. Senate to Address Environmental
Justice
On July 25, 2007, professor Robert D. Bullard (Director
of the Environmental Justice Resource Center at Clark Atlanta
University) presented the Senate Subcommittee on Superfund
and Environmental Health “Oversight of the EPA’s
Environmental Justice Programs" hearing, chaired by Senator
Hillary Rodham Clinton, with a copy of a letter signed by
more than one hundred environmental justice networks, civil
rights and human rights organizations, faith based groups,
and health allies, representing millions of Americans from
New York to Alaska, endorsing the 2007 United Church of Christ
Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty: 1987-2007 report findings
and recommendations.
EJ
Scholars to Present 2007 Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty Report
at USSF
The principal authors (Robert D. Bullard, Paul
Mohai, Robin Saha, and Beverly Wright) of Toxic Wastes and
Race at Twenty 1987—2007 will present the report findings
and policy recommendations at the United States Social Forum
(USSF) scheduled in Atlanta, GA June 27 thru July 1, 2007.
Toxic
Wastes and Race at Twenty
The new United Church of Christ report finds African
Americans and other people of color more concentrated near
wastes facilities than two decades ago. In 2007, people
of color now make up 56 percent of the residents living in
neighborhoods within two miles of the nation’s commercial
hazardous waste facilities; they make up a whopping 69 percent
in neighborhoods with clustered waste facilities.
Warren
County (North Carolina) Protests at Twenty-Five
It has now been twenty-five years since the 1982
protests against a controversial toxic waste dump in Warren
County, North Carolina gave birth to the national environmental
justice movement. The protests also put environmental
racism on the map.
A
Well of Pain: Their Water Was Poisoned by Chemicals
Was Their Treatment Poisoned by Racism? The
Harry Holt family in Dickson, Tennessee wells were poisoned
with trichloroethylene or TCE from the Dickson County Landfill
while the government stood by and did nothing.
Wrong
Complexion for Protection in Post Katrina New Orleans
In August 2006, government officials gave Post-Katrina
New Orleans a “clean bill of health,” while pledging
to monitor a handful of toxic “hot spots.”
Officials caution residents to “keep children from playing
in bare dirt.” They also instruct homeowners to
“cover bare dirt with grass, bushes, or 4-6 inches of
lead-free wood chips, mulch, soil, or sand.” On
the other hand, Church Hill Downs, Inc., the owners of New
Orleans’ Fair Grounds, cleaned up and hauled off soil
tainted by Hurricane Katrina’s floodwaters and replaced
it with clean soil. Certainly, if tainted soil is not safe
for horses, surely it not safe for people, especially children
who play and dig in the dirt.
The
Black Metropolis in the Twenty-First Century: Race, Power,
and Politics of Place
This new book brings together key essays that
seek to make visible and expand our understanding of the role
of government (policies, programs, and investments) in shaping
cities and metropolitan regions; the costs and consequences
of uneven urban and regional growth patterns; suburban sprawl
and public health, transportation, and economic development;
and the enduring connection of place, space, and race in the
era of increased globalization.
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