Posted inAir Pollution, Climate Change, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather

Pollution is Driving Climate Disasters And The Government Plans to Stop Tracking it

Homes in Jefferson County, Texas, still bear the scars of Hurricane Harvey: black and blue tarps cling to rooftops. Families in historically Black neighborhoods navigate a slow, unequal recovery from the 2017 storm, and in 2022, the federal government found that the state discriminated against Black and Hispanic residents when doling out flood mitigation funds.  […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Politics & Policy

How a $5 Billion Federal Project Could Sink the Lower Ninth Ward Forever

Willie Calhoun knows how to live with water. His home, cradled between the Mississippi River and a patchwork of canals, is split by the surging, ever-present current. But it wasn’t always that way in the Ninth Ward. Before the largest canal known as the Industrial Canal was built, the stretch of land between the river […]

Posted inAir Pollution, Environmental Justice, Politics & Policy

Soot, Sickness, and Silence: A Black Louisiana Community Is Still Struggling After an Explosion

ROSELAND, La. — For 11 days after an oil and lubricant factory blew up less than a mile from her home, Millie Simmons could not stand outside for more than 10 minutes at a time.  “I could hardly breathe,” the 58-year-old child care worker said outside her home on Sept. 4. Soot and an oily […]

Posted inClimate Change, History, Rural Issues

The Army Took Their Land. Decades Later, This Black Community Still Wants It Back.

HARRIS NECK NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE, Ga. — Over the course of what was a scorching, yet typical May day across Coastal Georgia, Willie Moran made it a point to stop and take a deep breath at every sight of water.  Looking out across the estuaries and salt marshes teeming with wildlife, he repeatedly reminded his […]

Posted inCulture, Environmental Justice

This Photographer Preserved Life in New Orleans Before Katrina — With a Polaroid Camera

This is the fifth story in our series chronicling the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. All photos by Polo Silk unless noted. NEW ORLEANS — There weren’t always a pair of security guards standing outside of Big Man’s Lounge in Uptown New Orleans. As a teenager in the early 1980s, Selwhyn Sthaddeus “Polo Silk” Terrell […]

Posted inBlack Businesses, Black Farmers, Economy, Politics & Policy

Black-Owned Businesses Confront Rising Costs Amid Trump’s Tariffs

Sweeping tariffs took effect Thursday, and while President Donald Trump has said the tariffs would lead to factories and jobs moving back to the United States, for Black Americans and small-business owners, it is not that simple.  Prices are expected to dramatically rise for clothing and shoes; electronics like cellphones and computers; cars and auto […]

Posted inClimate Change, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Housing, Mental Health

20 Years After Katrina, Louisiana Residents Are Most Vulnerable to ‘Die of Despair’

This is the fourth story in our series chronicling the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. Trigger warning: This article contains descriptions of suicide, gun violence, and child deaths that may be distressing to some readers. As the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina approached in 2015, Michelle McCullum, a 25-year-old mother of two, drove her children, […]

Posted inAir Pollution, Climate Change, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Unsafe Water

Black Neighborhoods at Risk as U.S. Pushes to Cancel Important Climate Protection

As nearly two-thirds of the U.S. population sweltered under extreme heat advisories on Tuesday, news echoed through Black neighborhoods already scorched by the effects of climate change: the Trump administration was moving to tear the heart out of America’s climate protections.  In a decision that environmental activists say is one of the most severe blows […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Housing, Land Pollution

Black Women Fight for Life in Houston’s Most Toxic — and Gentrifying — Neighborhood

When Carolyn Rivera moved to Settegast, a majority-Black neighborhood in northeast Houston, 45 years ago, horses roamed the streets and nearly every homestead had a backyard farm where chickens and speckled feather guinea hens darted between rows of corn and greens.  Rivera, who turns 83 next month, remembers those early days with a kind of […]

Gift this article