Posted inBlack Migration, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather

As Altadena’s Trees Fell, So Did the Roots of a Black LA Neighborhood

Photos by Grace Mahoney This story was published in partnership with High Country News. Altadena used to disappear under the trees. Adonis Jones’ neighborhood was once defined by thick oaks and pines, their canopy guarding winding trails where Black cowboys rode, shaping his childhood memories. Now, standing on the bare site of his future master […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Politics & Policy, Rural Issues

After a White Town Rejected a Data Center, Developers Targeted a Black Area

In December, on a two-lane road not far from the ACE Basin, a protected ecosystem and wildlife refuge in South Carolina, Paul Black drove past St. Paul AME Church and the cemetery where his wife’s grandfather, great-grandfather, and great-grandmother are buried, then slowed as the trees opened onto the piney tract. ​Black is an environmental […]

Posted inClimate Change, Housing, Politics & Policy, Rural Issues, Wealth Gap

This Mississippi Delta Home Could Collapse Before Help Arrives

SIDON, Mississippi — Malissa Whitehead is known for making tea cakes and blueberry pies during the holidays — but as Christmas approaches, she’s uneasy about baking anything in the house she’s lived in for 40 years.  The kitchen ceiling wood is peeling, revealing small holes and chipped paint. On the outside, the roof is covered […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Land Pollution, Politics & Policy

Louisiana Town Fights for Relief After a Billion-Dollar Oil Disaster

Four months have passed since a Louisiana oil facility burst apart, spewing a dense black sludge that drifted across homes, farms, and waterways as far as 50 miles away.  Since then, the U.S. Department of Justice and Louisiana environmental regulators have filed a sweeping lawsuit against Smitty’s Supply, the company that ran the facility storing […]

Posted inAgriculture, Black Farmers, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Food Access, Rural Issues

In a N.C. Town With Almost No Grocers, One Farmer Is Expanding Local Food Access

Most days, Patrick Brown kneels in the red clay of Warren County, North Carolina, running the soil through his fingers.  His roughly 300 acre farm has been in his family since 1865 and has survived crisis after crisis. Now it has another important job to do — affordably feeding families in one of the state’s […]

Posted inClimate Change, Environmental Justice, Land Pollution, Unsafe Water

How Plastics and Fossil Fuels Are Making Black Communities Unlivable

Copyright © 2025 by Beyond Plastics. This excerpt originally appeared in The Problem with Plastic: How We Can Save Ourselves and Our Planet Before It’s Too Late, published by The New Press. Reprinted here with permission. Debra Ramirez lives at a place where survival and sacrifice meet. She knows the winding back roads that crisscross […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Religion

Meta’s AI Data Center Sparks a Crisis in the Bible Belt Over the Power of Faith

Photo illustrations by Alexandra Watts/Capital B RICHLAND PARISH, Louisiana — Seen as far as 2 miles away, a white cross — the size of a 12-story building — welcomes you to this largely forgotten stretch of Delta country. While cotton no longer runs supreme here, every road, ballot measure, and industrial promise still has to […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Health, Land Pollution, Reproductive Health

Black Women in South LA Lead the Fight to End Urban Oil Drilling

LOS ANGELES — When the winds shifted last January and smoke from wildfires settled into South LA, the city’s low-lying neighborhoods, residents there didn’t need another study to tell them the air was unsafe. They could feel it.  For Iretha Warmsley, the soot raining down was another reminder of what decades of fossil fuel extraction […]

Posted inExtreme Weather

Jamaican Americans Mobilize After the Island’s Worst Hurricane in a Century

Out of many, one people.  Kimisha Simpson says she’s confident that Jamaica’s national motto will rally the diaspora and others to help rebuild the island that was battered by Hurricane Melissa earlier this week.  “We like to say, ‘We’re the heartbeat of the Caribbean,’” Simpson said. “Jamaica is an island that has given so much […]

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