Posted inHealth Equity, Partner Content, Transportation, Voices of Change

How Rosa Parks’ Legacy Inspired a New Fight Over Who Could Ride the Bus

Originally published by The 19th Decades after her act of defiance, Rosa Parks galvanized a cadre of activists to protest their own conditions and, though the scope of her legacy for them is still coming into focus, it remains just as powerful. They were fighting for disability access, and, like Parks, they used public transportation […]

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 inEducation, Health, Partner Content

Parents Fear Losing Disability Protections as Trump Slashes Civil Rights Office

Devon Price, a 15-year-old boy with autism, has attended the largest school district in North Carolina for 10 years, but he cannot read or write. His twin sister, Danielle, who is also autistic, was bullied by classmates and became suicidal. Under federal law, public schools must provide children with disabilities a “free appropriate public education,” […]

Posted inGun Violence, Health, Health Equity, Partner Content

A Surgical Team Was About To Harvest This Man’s Organs — Until His Doctor Intervened

ST. LOUIS — Lying on top of an operating room table with his chest exposed, Larry Black Jr. was moments away from having his organs harvested when a doctor ran breathlessly into the room. “Get him off the table,” the doctor recalled telling the surgical team at SSM Health Saint Louis University Hospital as the […]

Posted inCOVID-19, Health

COVID Hits Black Americans Harder. New Vaccine Limits Increase the Risk

Upheaval at the country’s top public health agency has left millions of Americans uncertain about access to the updated COVID-19 vaccines at a moment when rising case numbers threaten to disproportionately harm Black Americans. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the new shots in August. But it narrowed eligibility to people who are 65 […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Mental Health, Partner Content

What Was Lost: Stories From Hurricane Katrina

As part of Capital B’s coverage of the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina later this month, we’re proud to present “What Was Lost,” a series of reflections by Louisianans who survived the storm, produced by our collaborators at Verite News. NEW ORLEANS — Growing up, holidays were a lot of fun because we had really huge family […]

Posted inHealth, Politics & Policy, Rural Issues

Medicaid Cuts Endanger Life-Saving Care for Black Families in Rural America

Over the past few months, Marcia Dinkins’ eldest child has been hospitalized frequently. A serious infection swept through her daughter’s body, affecting her pancreas, spleen, and gallbladder. Fortunately, Dinkins’ daughter, Marshale Malone, was able to afford and receive life-saving surgery, thanks to Medicaid. But without it, Dinkins said, the health emergency could have meant either […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Mental Health, Partner Content

What Was Lost: Stories From Hurricane Katrina

As part of Capital B’s coverage of the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina later this month, we’re proud to present “What Was Lost,” a series of reflections by Louisianans who survived the storm, produced by our collaborators at Verite News. New Orleans — Ten years before Katrina, my wife, Phyllis, and I were house shopping. […]

Gift this article