Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Housing

Insurance Crisis Leaves Black Homeowners One Disaster Away From Homelessness

The insurance check to rebuild Zaire Calvin’s family properties came in at just under $300,000, a drop in the bucket compared to the roughly $2.1 million they had been worth. His family had five homes sprawled across two lots in the leafy suburb of Altadena, California, before the Eaton Fire unleashed its wrath, leveling both […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Politics & Policy

Chemical Plants Keep Exploding, but Trump’s EPA Is Rolling Back Safety Rules Anyway

In September 2023, sirens blared again across Hopewell, Virginia, after oleum, commonly known as fuming sulfuric acid, leaked from the AdvanSix chemical plant.  The plant, one of many big polluters in the predominantly Black city, had at least 66 violations of the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act at the time. And this […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Partner Content

Drone Footage Shows Musk’s AI Power Plant Flouting Clean Air Regulations in Black Community

This story is from Floodlight, a nonprofit newsroom that investigates the powers stalling climate action, and produced in partnership with The Guardian. Sign up for Floodlight’s newsletter here.  Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company is continuing to fuel its data centers with unpermitted gas turbines, according to a Floodlight visual investigation. Thermal drone footage shows xAI […]

Posted inAir Pollution, Environmental Justice, Health Equity

The U.S. Government Now Says Climate Change Doesn’t Harm Human Health

In one sweeping move, President Donald Trump on Thursday erased the scientific and legal foundation of America’s clean air protections and modern climate policies. For the first time in a generation, the U.S. government no longer officially recognizes carbon pollution as a danger to public health. Black people are exposed to more pollution, on average, […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice

Black Residents Win Key Ruling in ‘Cancer Alley’ Environmental Racism Case

In a pocket of Louisiana known as “Cancer Alley,” Black residents bear the generational toll of “plantation country” becoming “pollution country.” Now, a federal district court has given those residents something they almost never get: a chance to put the whole system on trial. On Feb. 9, a judge in New Orleans ruled that groups […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice

A Rural S.C. County Quietly Approved a $2B Data Center During the Winter Storm

As a rare winter storm bore down on South Carolina, bringing conditions that historically paralyze the state for days, local officials in a rural county quietly pushed through a massive $2.4 billion data center without most residents knowing it was even on the table. “There was a public meeting, which most were unaware of,” Jessie […]

Posted inExtreme Weather

For Rural Black Communities, Winter Storm Fern Hits Where Recovery Never Finished

The storm came, and just as Monica Coleman predicted, it hit places least equipped to handle it. On Monday morning, she was one of roughly 1 million Americans without power because of Winter Storm Fern. Officials in Lafayette County, Mississippi, where she lives, are warning residents that they could be without power for multiple days. […]

Posted inClimate Change, Extreme Weather, Public Safety

A Storm Is Coming for the South’s Most Vulnerable Black Communities

For millions in the South, an impending storm could become unforgettable.​ “I can’t stop watching the forecasts,” said Shemekia Stringer, speaking by phone Thursday afternoon as she moved through near-empty aisles at a Walmart in Southaven, Mississippi, just outside of Memphis, Tennessee. “I’m trying to make sure we’re fully prepared. In my area, the map […]

Posted inAir Pollution, Environmental Justice, Politics & Policy

Trump Rollbacks Put Children’s Health at Risk as Pollution Increases

On the morning of Jan. 10, when the federal government said it would stop prioritizing how many lives are saved by cutting air pollution, Sonya Sanders flashed back seven years to when a fossil fuel facility near her South Philadelphia home exploded. The 2019 blast rattled windows across the city and could have killed thousands […]

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 […]

Gift this article