Posted inClimate Change, Environmental Justice, Partner Content

Can ‘Biden’s Billions’ Deliver True Environmental Justice?

This story was produced for In These Times’ August/September magazine edition. It is published digitally in partnership. Two days after a series of tornadoes ripped through Chicago’s South Side, leaving hundreds of thousands of people without electricity, Naomi Davis and Suzanne Waddell met in the front yard of Emmett Till’s childhood home to assess the […]

Posted inAir Pollution, Environmental Justice

The Court Ruling That Guarantees a Future of Environmental Racism

About 45 minutes from New Orleans, cities founded by formerly enslaved people make up St. John the Baptist Parish. As the regional economy has shifted from chains and plantation slavery to smokestacks and petrochemical plants, their descendants still make up most of the people who live there. Those original deadly threats have not disappeared. Today, parts […]

Posted inClimate Change, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Partner Content

As Baltimore’s Sewer System Buckles Under Extreme Weather, City Refuses to Help Residents With Cleanup Efforts

This article originally appeared on Inside Climate News, a nonprofit, independent news organization that covers climate, energy and the environment. It is republished with permission. Sign up for their newsletter here. A sewage cleanup program meant to assist Baltimore residents with backups in their homes has been in limbo for more than a year because of […]

Posted inAir Pollution, Environmental Justice

Biden’s $150M Cancer Pledge Clashes with Reality in Louisiana’s Cancer Alley

NEW ORLEANS — In one of President Joe Biden’s first public appearances since ending his reelection campaign, he spoke on something very personal to him — cancer. But Louisiana’s Black activists say he still missed the point.  Over the past decade, Biden has not shied from explaining how the life of his son, Beau Biden, […]

Posted inAir Pollution, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather

More Than Half of Houstonians Say They Might Move. Here’s Why.

After learning that forecasters predicted a record-breaking hurricane season this year, Marilyn Rayon and her husband, Leo, spent thousands of dollars to trim trees and shrubbery around their home so a storm wouldn’t throw them into their house.  They took a practical precaution, heeding the warnings of elected officials and weather experts. Their utility company, […]

Posted inClimate Change, Environmental Justice, Partner Content

Facing Climate Gentrification, This Historic Black Community Embraces Conservation

Flooding the Market: First in a series originally published by Inside Climate News about climate change and coastal threats in South Carolina. TEN MILE, S.C. — At high tide, the marsh alongside Seafood Road disappears under an inscrutable mirror of water. Then, as it drains, reeds resurface and begin to trace hundreds of paths through the […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Technology

Crypto-Mining Creates New Environmental Injustices for Black Texans

Bitcoin is more than just a shiny new way to lose money. It’s also fueling Texas’ energy struggles as the state prepares for another year of record-breaking heat. And Black communities are caught in the crosswires of climate change, those booming data centers, and the power plants needed to meet both demands.  Last year, during […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Politics & Policy

SCOTUS Allows ‘Big Business’ to Have Greater Say in Federal Regulations

Last week, in a monumental decision, the conservative U.S. Supreme Court made it harder for the federal government to regulate virtually everything that impact’s Americans’ daily lives.  Arguably the most damning impact of the SCOTUS decisions will be on how the country faces the mounting impacts of pollution and climate change.  While the ruling’s impacts […]

Posted inClimate Change, Criminal Justice, Environmental Justice, Incarceration

The Growing Crisis of Heatwave Deaths in America’s Prisons

Last September, at his graduation from Northwestern University, Michael Broadway reconnected with his mother, Elizabeth, for the first time in two decades. Due to her ailing health, she couldn’t visit him. As an incarcerated man, he didn’t have the option to travel to her, either.  For those two decades, Broadway was held inside Stateville Correctional […]

Gift this article