Toxic Waste and Race at 20
(Download the full report)
Feb. 16,
2007
Contact: Carlos J. Correa Bernier, (216) 736-3722 or (630) 926-4041
or correac@ucc.edu
Report shows minorities hurt by environmental injustice:
Katrina
response is not an anomaly
ANN ARBOR, Mich.--- Environmental injustice in minority communities
is as much or more prevalent today than 20 years ago, according
to a follow-up study to the landmark “Toxic Waste and Race” report
that put the environmental justice movement on the map two decades
ago.
Both that initial study and the subsequent study, “Toxic Waste
and Race at Twenty: 1987-2007,” were commissioned by The
United Church of Christ. The recent study commemorates the 20th
anniversary
of the ground-breaking first study.
“
Our new report again signals a clear racial pattern where waste sites
are located and the way government responds or does not respond to
contamination emergencies in people of color communities,” said
Carlos Correa, Minister for Environmental Justice with the United
Church of Christ’s Justice and Witness Ministries.
The findings show that 20 years later, disproportionately large
numbers of people of color still live in hazardous waste host communities,
and that people of color are not equally protected by environmental
laws. “People of color across the United States have learned
the hard way that waiting for government to respond to toxic contamination
can be hazardous to their health and health of their communities,” said
Robert Bullard, director of the Justice Resource Center at Clark
Atlanta University. Bullard was the principal investigator for
the study.
The 180-plus page report points to the dismal post-Katrina response
in New Orleans as one poster example of unequal treatment of minorities
in hazardous waste emergencies. The findings also show that environmental
laws don’t protect minority communities any more than they
did 20 years ago when the original report was commissioned.
Paul Mohai, Professor of Environmental Justice at the University
of Michigan School of Natural Resources and Environment and a co-author
of the report, described the results as dismaying. “You can
see there has been a lot more attention to the issue of environmental
justice but the progress has been very, very slow,” Mohai said. “Why?
As important as all those efforts are they haven’t been well
executed and I don’t know if the political will is there.”
Bullard, Mohai and colleagues Robin Saha, assistant professor of
environmental studies at University of Montana and a former student
of Mohai’s, and Beverly Wright, founding director of the
Deep South Center for Environmental Justice at Dillard University
and
a Hurricane Katrina survivor, released the executive summary of
the study at a special news briefing at the annual meeting of the
American
Association for the Advancement of Science in San Francisco. The
full report will be available in mid-March.
“
The cleanup and reconstruction efforts in New Orleans have been shamefully
sluggish and patchy, and the environmental injustice may be compounded
by rebuilding on poisoned ground,” Wright said.
The report uses a new method of data that better locates people in
relation to hazardous waste sites, and uses 2000 census data to show
that the racial disparities are much greater than previously reported.
“We think this study and the findings in it, as well as the case studies
that show the human side to the national statistics, make a really strong case
for environmental injustice to be on the policy agenda of Congress,” Saha
said. “It’s clear the policies we are trying aren’t working
and that something else needs to be done.”
More than nine million people are estimated to live in host neighborhoods within
three kilometers of one of 413 hazardous waste facilities nationwide. The study
found that the proportion of people of color in host neighborhoods is almost
twice that of the proportion of people of color living in non-host neighborhoods.
Host neighborhoods are typically economically depressed, with poverty rates 1.5
times that of non-host communities.
The report analyzed the percentages of all people of color in host communities
by EPA region, including 50 select metropolitan areas. Every region with commercial
hazardous waste facilities had a disproportionate number of minorities in host
neighborhoods.
In addition to analyzing the total percentage of people of color in host communities,
the report analyzes separately the percentages of African Americans, Asians and
Pacific Islanders, Hispanics/Latinos/as, and Native Americans. For example in
Michigan, which had the largest disparity in the proportion of people of color
living in host neighborhoods, the majority of those minorities affected were
African American.
The report also gives more than three dozen recommendations for action at the
Congressional, state and local levels to help eliminate the disparities. It also
makes recommendations for nongovernmental agencies and the commercial hazardous
waste industry.
The report includes testimonials on the progress of the environmental justice
movement by some of its founders and key leaders. There are also two detailed
case studies: one on post-Katrina New Orleans, and the other on toxic contamination
of an African American community in Dixon, TN. Finally, the report includes a
timeline of milestones in the environmental justice movement that Bullard solicited
from environmental justice leaders around the country.
The United Church of Christ has more than 5,700 churches throughout the United
States. Rooted in the Christian traditions of congregational governance and covenantal
relationships, each UCC setting speaks only for itself and not on behalf of every
UCC congregation. UCC members and churches are free to differ on important social
issues, even as the UCC remains principally committed to unity in the midst of
our diversity.
For more information:
--Carlos Correa, United Church of Christ: (630) 926-4041(c); correac@ucc.org
--Robert Bullard, Clark University-Atlanta; (678) 725-0435, rbullard4ej@worldnet.att.net
--Paul Mohai, University of Michigan; (734) 255-2124, pmohai@umich.edu
--Robin Saha, University of Montana; (406) 546-4836, robin.saha@umontana.edu
--Beverly Wright, Dillard University; (504) 782-8989, bhwright@aol.com
Reference sites:
--United Church of Christ: www.ucc.org
--Clark Atlanta University: www.cau.edu
--University of Michigan: www.umich.edu
--University of Montana: www.umt.edu
--Dillard University: www.dillard.edu
Download the report.
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