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 […]

Posted inEconomic Development, Environmental Justice, Politics & Policy

From Mississippi to Maryland, Black Communities Are Taking On Big Tech

When word spread through Bessemer, Alabama, earlier this year that a tech giant was eyeing hundreds of pine-covered acres at the city’s edge, Benard Simelton’s phone wouldn’t stop ringing. The longtime NAACP leader had fielded calls about toxic air and shuttered steel mills before, but this, he said, was new to him. At first, the […]

Posted inExtreme Weather, Money, Wealth Gap

Climate Disasters Are Destroying Black Retirements and the American Dream

Standing in front of the Pasadena, California, City Council in June, Totress Beasley begged for support. After being displaced twice — after previous landlords sold the rental properties she called home — she explained how she thought she should put her life in her own hands and buy her own house. For five years, through the Great Recession, the […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Politics & Policy, Technology

In Houston, A Program Turns Sunlight into Second Chances for Incarcerated Texans

HOUSTON — Leon Dillard gripped the solar panel tight, sweat stinging his eyes as he scaled the sun-baked roof for the first time. His adrenaline racing, he remembered making sure his harness was clipped not once, but twice. He’d never climbed up onto a roof before, let alone with a 50-pound panel of metal and […]

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.  […]

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