SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 115
Environmental and Climate Justice
           Region I
    The Path to Transformation for Our Communities
OVERVIEW

 What We’re Up Against


 What Are Our Assets


 How Do We Eliminate Threats and
  Optimize Our Strengths


 Re-envisioning Community
Our Current Course
Waste and Communities




Where does American’s waste really go?
Waste
Waste Being Dumped in Our Communities
Landfills in Region I

Alaska: 3
Arizona: 20
California: 112
Hawaii: 8
Idaho: 6
Nevada: 4
Oregon: 11
Utah:11
Washington:14
Landfills




 Kettleman City and Buttonwillow are two of three
low-income, Latino communities where California’s
     toxic waste dumps are located. Both have
experienced unexplained birth defect clusters, high
       cancer rates and other health effects
Incinerators
Incinerators




Stericycle, Inc. operates Utah’s only commercial medical
waste incinerator in Salt Lake City Utah.
•Last commercial medical waste incinerator in the western
region as Stericycle has replaced incineration in both
California and Arizona with safer, non-incineration
treatment technologies.
•Stericycle burns waste from all over Utah and California,
Arizona, Colorado and Texas at the facility in North Salt
Lake City.
Energy Production
Industry and our Children




 http://content.usatoday.com/news/nation/environment/smokestack/index
Deepwater Horizon Incident
Richmond Oil Refinery—
A History of Environmental Injustice
Hydraulic Fracturing (Fracking)
Effects of Fracking




   Brainbridge, Ohio: home explosion and contaminated drinking water
Granger Township, Ohio: explosive levels of natural gas in community’s
 drinking water (federal level of explosivity is 1% and inside one of the
                                    homes tested was an alarming 20%)
Fracking Accidents

Appomattox, Virginia
Natural gas pipeline
explosion
Halliburton
 Loophole
Nuclear Reactors in the US
Nuclear Waste Shipped
From California to Utah
Failing Coal Plants in Region I
Arizona
  City      Plant      3-mile   State     3-mile   Grade
            Name      Average Income      P.O.C.
                      Income Percentage Population


Tucson     H.Wilson   $10,258    50.6%    74.7%      F
            Sundt


Joseph      Cholla    $13,096    64.6%    27.3%     D
 City
 Saint     Coronado   $12,470    61.5%    33.4%     D
 Johns
 Page       Navajo    $18,294    90.2%    38.4%     D+

Springer Springerville $13,255   65.4%    31.0%     D+
  ville
H Wilson Sundt
Generating Station
   Tucson, AZ
California



City    Plant Name      3-mile  State    3-Mile   Grade
                       Average Income    P.O.C.
                       Income Percenta Population
                                 ge

Trona       ACE        $16,347   72.0%   24.1%     D+
        Cogeneration
ACE Congeneration
  Trona, California
Hawaii


 City     Plant     3-mile      State     3-Mile   Grade
          Name     Average    Income      P.O.C.
                   Income    Percentage Population



Kapolei    AES     $20,931    97.2%      87.0%      F
          Hawaii
Kahe Power Plant
  Leeward, Oahu
Nevada


 City   Plant      3-mile   State     3-Mile     Grade
        Name      Average Income      P.O.C.
                  Income Percentage Population


Moapa    Reid     $14,392   65.5%     52.8%       D-
        Gardner
Reid-Gardner Power Plant
      Moapa, Nevada
Oregon


  City    Plant    3-mile  State       3-Mile   Grade
          Name    Average Income       P.O.C.
                  Income Percentag   Population
                             e



Boardman Boardman $13,982   66.8%      48.6%     D-
Boardman Coal Plant
 Boardman, Oregon
Effects of Polluting Waste and
        Energy Facilities
Effects of Pollution
Climate Change
Climate Change
We need to take control!
We need to take control!
We need to take control! Of this climate!
<Repeat>

It’s getting hot! Yeah it’s heating up!!

The climate’s changing! How it’s
affecting us!!

You mean the floods storms, droughts,
and fires.
And heat related deaths in the US is getting
higher!

Now who at risk? You at risk? So what you doin’?

Neighborhoods affected by all this air pollution…..

It’s not amusing. It’s a problem . It’s solution!

Decreasing carbon footprint…..it’s really not hard
to do it.

I been going green since I was a little kid. In my
hood the heat is killing kids!
Get Your Green Class
http://soundcloud.com/getyourgreen123/green-team-
climate-control
I speak for the climate. Yeah, I’m the earth’s
ventriloquist!

Those heat waves, I know you feeling it.

Stop burning that coal. Use propane when you
grilling it cause it could harm your respiratory

Ask these politicians for change. They ain’t doing
nothing for me.

They pollute around my area cuz we ain’t in they
category!

We need to take control! Of this climate!
Ladder to prosperity…I’m ready to climb it!
This country’s morals, laws…..Somebody help me
find it

Our eco-death certificate. They ready to sign it!

And I ain’t having that, especially not around my
habitat! And that’s mainly where it happen at!

They acting upon us. So that’s the reason why we
acting back.

Protesting, lobbying,….. Going green is my
hobby, man.

Stop drilling for fossils. Worry ‘bout tomorrow!
Keep going at this rate, the whole earth
going be in sorrow. No resources to
borrow.

I said let’s take control of our climate and
your carbon footprint, please try to decline
it!

It’s getting hot! Yeah, it’s heating up! The
climate’s changing! How it’s affecting us….
Impacts---Extreme Weather

        Hurricanes
         Drought
          Floods
       Earthquakes
     Tropical Cyclones
        Landslides
         WildFires
    Heat or Cold Waves
     and much more….
Hurricane Sandy
Hurricane Katrina
Surge in Damaging Tornadoes
Obliteration of Communities and
       Erosion of Cultures
Who is Recovering/Returning?
Port Gibson—Grand Gulf
Relief, Recovery, Redevelopment
Employment Security
Second Wave
Criminalization
Who is able to respond?
Who’s Making the Decisions?
Who Is Delivering Assistance?
Shifts in Agricultural Yields
Shifts in Agricultural Yields
Food Insecurity in the US

Corner Store         Supermarket
Feast and Famine in Urban America

 Corner Store         Supermarket
Sea Level Rise
Sea Level Rise
Countries Disappearing of the Map?
Profits Over People
Anti-Regulatory Investments
    Company        Total Spent on Lobbying in
                                2010

  Southern Company           $13,220,000

 Edison International        $13,080,000

American Electric Power      $10,313,196

     Duke Energy              $4,800,000

      Dominion                $2,050,000

     First Energy             $1,865,000

     Xcel Energy              $1,720,000

      DTE Energy              $1,500,000
Fighting Renewable Energy


 Southern Company successfully
  opposed a plan to create a national
  electricity market in 2004 and has
  dedicated significant money and
  effort to fighting the Renewable
  Portfolio Standard (RPS), which
  would require utilities to purchase
  15% of their power from renewable
  sources by 2020.
CNN NEWSROOM-Hurricane Issac

MALVEAUX: And Senator, finally, why is it that
Plaquemines Parish did not get that support for a
levee?

LANDRIEU: Because the Corps of Engineers has a
formula that they use to determine where they are
going to build or reinforce the levees, based on
economic impact ….you get less points if there is
less of an economic impact……
CEO Compensation for 2010 at
      Companies Owning the Top EJ Offenders
               Company                                     CEO Name                                 CEO
                                                                                                Compensation
Edison International                              Theodore F. Craver Jr.                       $9,536,038

Dominion                                          Thomas F. Farrell II                         $16,924,385

DTE Energy                                        Gerald M. Anderson                           $5,601,383

Duke Energy                                       James E. Rogers                              $8,815,181

Xcel Energy                                       Richard C. Kelly                             $9,956,433

Southern Company                                  Thomas A. Fanning                            $6,019,151

First Energy                                      Anthony J. Alexander                         $11,627,657

[i]
      AFL-CIO CEO Pay Database, Accessed November 2011 http://www.aflcio.org/corporatewatch/paywatch/ceou/industry_2011.cfm
Deepening Disparity

 The average CEO compensation for
  these companies in 2010 was
  $9,782,889 while the average
  worker in these companies made
  $33,840.


 On average the CEOs at these
  companies were compensated at
  289 times the rate of compensation
  for the average worker.
African Americans and Energy


       $40 Billion

         1.1%


          .01%
Our Overall Economic Plight
 While the national rate of unemployment
  during February 2012, was 8.3% that rate
  is nearly double of African Americans at
  14.1%.


 A report by the Pew Research Center
  revealed that the wealth divide between
  whites and people of color hit a record
  high in 2009, with the median wealth of
  white households 20 times higher than
  black households
Another Way?
Diverting Waste



Achieving 75% waste
 diversion in
 2030 would:
•   Create 1.5 million new jobs
•   Lower greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions
    by 515 million tons
    (~72 coal plants or 50 million cars)
•   Significantly reduce pollution impacting
    human & ecological health
Slide courtesy Brenda Platt, ILSR
Recycling

 Recology, San Francisco’s primary
  recycling, composting and waste
  company, employs more than 1,000
  workers who are represented by the
  Teamsters.
   Over 118 new employees have been
    hired in recent years to sort recyclables
    and monitor the collection routes in order
    to meet San Francisco’s aggressive
    recycling goals.
Diversion from Landfills=JOBS

 In Seattle 2009, nearly 100,000 tons
  of organic waste was diverted from
  landfills by the city of Seattle’s
  program. The city of Seattle’s waste
  diversion efforts not only benefit the
  environment, but also sustain family-
  supporting jobs for the more than
  1,000 solid waste and recycling
  drivers and transfer station
  employees in Seattle and King County
  who are represented by the Teamsters
  Union.
Promoting Local Ownership


 Local ownership programs can
  create two to three times as
  many jobs per megawatt
  produced. And these local jobs
  keep over three times as much
  money and wealth in a community
  compared to big companies.
Promoting Energy Efficiency
    and Clean Energy
Why Progressive Energy Policies?


  ENERGY EFFICIENCY: The less energy we
   use, the less we are polluting, the less our
   communities are exposed to pollution, and the
   less we are advancing climate change, which
   also disproportionately harms our
   communities.


  CLEAN ENERGY: The more clean energy we
   use, the less harmful energy we are using
   saving our community health, property values,
   and the sustainability of our environment.
Energy Efficiency
Cooperative/Low Fuel Transportation
Wind Energy
Solar Powered Homes/Businesses/Communities
Churches Can Become Energy
       Efficient too!
Defining Progressive Energy Policies

  Renewable Portfolio Standards —States commit to a
   minimum amount of their energy mix that will come from
   renewable sources
     Should be mandatory
     Should be at least 25% by 2025


  Energy Efficiency Standards —States commit to reducing
   their energy consumption
     Should be mandatory
     Should be at least 1% annual reduction of previous year retail
      electricity sales.


  Net Metering– Utility customers who generate their
   energy through renewable sources are able to sell excess
   energy generated back to the grid for the same purchasing
   price utility companies charge for electricity.
Progressive Energy Policies in
               Region I
  STATE         ENERGY     RENEWABLE     NET
              EFFICIENCY     ENERGY    METERING
              STANDARD     STANDARD

  Alaska
District of      NO           YES        YES
                 NO           YES        YES
Columbia
  Arizona
                 YES          YES        YES
Maryland         YES          YES        YES
California
                 YES          YES        YES

  Hawaii
                 YES          YES        YES
  Idaho
                 NO           NO         NO
Progressive Energy Policies in
            Region I cont’d
  STATE         ENERGY     RENEWABLE     NET
              EFFICIENCY     ENERGY    METERING
              STANDARD     STANDARD

 Nevada
District of      NO           YES        YES
Columbia
 Oregon          NO           YES        YES

   Utah          NO           YES        YES

Washington       YES          YES        YES
Taking Action!!
Educating Ourselves
HBCU Leadership in Research
Black Leadership in
Just Energy Entrepreneurship
Taking it To the Street to
Demand Corporate Social
     Responsibility
Curtailing Financing
Local, Cooperative Communities
Local Cooperative Communities
Judicial decrees may not change
 the heart, but they can restrain
                   the heartless.
               Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Legal Action--MATS Intervention
Engaging with the EPA
Advancing Just Policy
Civic Engagement
Together We CAN!
!! JOIN US !!
 Start an Environmental and Climate Justice
  Committee
 Conduct a Community Assessment and Develop an
  Action Plan
 Start a Coal Blooded Campaign
 Start a Renewable Energy Portfolio Standard
  Campaign
 Start an Energy Efficiency Standard Campaign
 Start a Net Metering Campaign
 Initiate a Clean Energy or Energy Efficiency
  Demonstration Project
 Develop a Disaster Plan
 Start an Eco-District in Your Municipality
 Launch a Youth and College 10,000 Steps Campaign
Our Resources
 2010 Climate Justice Toolkit
 Coal Blooded: Putting Profits Before People—National
  Report
 Coal Blooded Action Toolkit
 10,000 Steps Youth and College Toolkit




                      Coming Soon
 Just Energy Policies State By State Compendium
 ECJ Comprehensive Toolkit
 Black Church ECJ Toolkit
 Beasts of the Southern Wild Discussion Guide
What Will Your Branch Do?
Thank You
                Jacqui Patterson


Director, Environmental and Climate Justice Program


                  443-465-9809


             jpatterson@naacpnet.org

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Andere mochten auch

Coursera virtualinstruction 2016
Coursera virtualinstruction 2016Coursera virtualinstruction 2016
Coursera virtualinstruction 2016Erika Boney
 
MS Transcript - Embedded and Wireless Technology
MS Transcript - Embedded and Wireless TechnologyMS Transcript - Embedded and Wireless Technology
MS Transcript - Embedded and Wireless TechnologyGanesh Kamath
 
Proyecto de Ley de Educacion para Santa Fe
Proyecto de Ley de Educacion para Santa FeProyecto de Ley de Educacion para Santa Fe
Proyecto de Ley de Educacion para Santa FeAlejandro Boscarol
 
Voorstellling VUB : new style!
Voorstellling VUB : new style!Voorstellling VUB : new style!
Voorstellling VUB : new style!Rob_Vandereycken
 
廁所對聯
廁所對聯廁所對聯
廁所對聯Jaing Lai
 
Stepwise interpretation of ECG - #03 no Dx ID659
Stepwise interpretation of ECG - #03 no Dx  ID659Stepwise interpretation of ECG - #03 no Dx  ID659
Stepwise interpretation of ECG - #03 no Dx ID659Anas Nader
 
SAVE CHILDHOOD PRESENTATION - MARCH 2015
SAVE CHILDHOOD PRESENTATION  - MARCH 2015SAVE CHILDHOOD PRESENTATION  - MARCH 2015
SAVE CHILDHOOD PRESENTATION - MARCH 2015Wendy Ellyatt
 
AWR 187-W Terrorism and WMD Awareness in the Workplace
AWR 187-W Terrorism and WMD Awareness in the WorkplaceAWR 187-W Terrorism and WMD Awareness in the Workplace
AWR 187-W Terrorism and WMD Awareness in the WorkplaceJames Howard
 
100 juegos y dinámicas para las colonias urbanas fb
100 juegos y dinámicas para las colonias urbanas  fb100 juegos y dinámicas para las colonias urbanas  fb
100 juegos y dinámicas para las colonias urbanas fbMaggie Beltran
 
DINAMICAS GRUPALES
DINAMICAS GRUPALESDINAMICAS GRUPALES
DINAMICAS GRUPALESOfelia Cruz
 
DNA of luxury brands
DNA of luxury brandsDNA of luxury brands
DNA of luxury brandsSonal Agrawal
 

Andere mochten auch (15)

Coursera virtualinstruction 2016
Coursera virtualinstruction 2016Coursera virtualinstruction 2016
Coursera virtualinstruction 2016
 
6 20
6 206 20
6 20
 
MS Transcript - Embedded and Wireless Technology
MS Transcript - Embedded and Wireless TechnologyMS Transcript - Embedded and Wireless Technology
MS Transcript - Embedded and Wireless Technology
 
Proyecto de Ley de Educacion para Santa Fe
Proyecto de Ley de Educacion para Santa FeProyecto de Ley de Educacion para Santa Fe
Proyecto de Ley de Educacion para Santa Fe
 
Voorstellling VUB : new style!
Voorstellling VUB : new style!Voorstellling VUB : new style!
Voorstellling VUB : new style!
 
Cyn Resume 2016
Cyn Resume 2016Cyn Resume 2016
Cyn Resume 2016
 
廁所對聯
廁所對聯廁所對聯
廁所對聯
 
Stepwise interpretation of ECG - #03 no Dx ID659
Stepwise interpretation of ECG - #03 no Dx  ID659Stepwise interpretation of ECG - #03 no Dx  ID659
Stepwise interpretation of ECG - #03 no Dx ID659
 
OB
OBOB
OB
 
SAVE CHILDHOOD PRESENTATION - MARCH 2015
SAVE CHILDHOOD PRESENTATION  - MARCH 2015SAVE CHILDHOOD PRESENTATION  - MARCH 2015
SAVE CHILDHOOD PRESENTATION - MARCH 2015
 
AWR 187-W Terrorism and WMD Awareness in the Workplace
AWR 187-W Terrorism and WMD Awareness in the WorkplaceAWR 187-W Terrorism and WMD Awareness in the Workplace
AWR 187-W Terrorism and WMD Awareness in the Workplace
 
LT
LTLT
LT
 
100 juegos y dinámicas para las colonias urbanas fb
100 juegos y dinámicas para las colonias urbanas  fb100 juegos y dinámicas para las colonias urbanas  fb
100 juegos y dinámicas para las colonias urbanas fb
 
DINAMICAS GRUPALES
DINAMICAS GRUPALESDINAMICAS GRUPALES
DINAMICAS GRUPALES
 
DNA of luxury brands
DNA of luxury brandsDNA of luxury brands
DNA of luxury brands
 

Ähnlich wie Environmental and Climate Justice in Region I: Taking Control of Our Future

NAACP Region IV Crati Environmental and Climate Justice Presentation
NAACP Region IV Crati Environmental and Climate Justice Presentation NAACP Region IV Crati Environmental and Climate Justice Presentation
NAACP Region IV Crati Environmental and Climate Justice Presentation cgrantnaacp
 
Omaha coal blooded training presentation
Omaha coal blooded  training presentationOmaha coal blooded  training presentation
Omaha coal blooded training presentationNAACP
 
Environmental and climate justice region iii 2013 final
Environmental and climate justice region iii 2013 finalEnvironmental and climate justice region iii 2013 final
Environmental and climate justice region iii 2013 finalNAACP
 
Show Me Solar: Clean, Local Power for Missouri's Economy
Show Me Solar: Clean, Local Power for Missouri's EconomyShow Me Solar: Clean, Local Power for Missouri's Economy
Show Me Solar: Clean, Local Power for Missouri's EconomyJohn Farrell
 
Webinar: Waste Incineration: A Dirty Secret in How States Define Renewable En...
Webinar: Waste Incineration: A Dirty Secret in How States Define Renewable En...Webinar: Waste Incineration: A Dirty Secret in How States Define Renewable En...
Webinar: Waste Incineration: A Dirty Secret in How States Define Renewable En...Marie Donahue
 
Gaia ace may_2010
Gaia ace may_2010Gaia ace may_2010
Gaia ace may_2010jrbernhardt
 
Ethics and CSR
Ethics and CSREthics and CSR
Ethics and CSRChris Kemp
 
Recommendation Report
Recommendation ReportRecommendation Report
Recommendation ReportChad Weiss
 
Cc Power Purchase Agreement 04212009
Cc Power Purchase Agreement 04212009Cc Power Purchase Agreement 04212009
Cc Power Purchase Agreement 04212009Nicole Cocco
 
The Department of Energy's FY2010 Budget Request
The Department of Energy's FY2010 Budget RequestThe Department of Energy's FY2010 Budget Request
The Department of Energy's FY2010 Budget RequestInstPolicyStudies
 
Al W & W 2008 11 05
Al W & W  2008 11 05Al W & W  2008 11 05
Al W & W 2008 11 05mjchurchman
 
I Grew Up Shoveling Coal By Tom Hayden
I Grew Up Shoveling Coal By Tom HaydenI Grew Up Shoveling Coal By Tom Hayden
I Grew Up Shoveling Coal By Tom HaydenTom Hayden
 
Energy Facts and Fiction
Energy Facts and FictionEnergy Facts and Fiction
Energy Facts and Fictiontcooper66
 
Gold Investment Symposium 2012 - Richard Karn - The Emerging Trends Report
Gold Investment Symposium 2012 - Richard Karn - The Emerging Trends ReportGold Investment Symposium 2012 - Richard Karn - The Emerging Trends Report
Gold Investment Symposium 2012 - Richard Karn - The Emerging Trends ReportSymposium
 
The World Getting Ewasted
The World Getting EwastedThe World Getting Ewasted
The World Getting EwastedLindsey Hauber
 
The Art of the Possible: Building an Energy-Efficient America
The Art of the Possible:Building an Energy-Efficient AmericaThe Art of the Possible:Building an Energy-Efficient America
The Art of the Possible: Building an Energy-Efficient AmericaAlliance To Save Energy
 
Climate Change Hope And Inspiration
Climate Change Hope And InspirationClimate Change Hope And Inspiration
Climate Change Hope And InspirationAnne McCarten-Gibbs
 

Ähnlich wie Environmental and Climate Justice in Region I: Taking Control of Our Future (20)

NAACP Region IV Crati Environmental and Climate Justice Presentation
NAACP Region IV Crati Environmental and Climate Justice Presentation NAACP Region IV Crati Environmental and Climate Justice Presentation
NAACP Region IV Crati Environmental and Climate Justice Presentation
 
Omaha coal blooded training presentation
Omaha coal blooded  training presentationOmaha coal blooded  training presentation
Omaha coal blooded training presentation
 
Environmental and climate justice region iii 2013 final
Environmental and climate justice region iii 2013 finalEnvironmental and climate justice region iii 2013 final
Environmental and climate justice region iii 2013 final
 
Show Me Solar: Clean, Local Power for Missouri's Economy
Show Me Solar: Clean, Local Power for Missouri's EconomyShow Me Solar: Clean, Local Power for Missouri's Economy
Show Me Solar: Clean, Local Power for Missouri's Economy
 
Webinar: Waste Incineration: A Dirty Secret in How States Define Renewable En...
Webinar: Waste Incineration: A Dirty Secret in How States Define Renewable En...Webinar: Waste Incineration: A Dirty Secret in How States Define Renewable En...
Webinar: Waste Incineration: A Dirty Secret in How States Define Renewable En...
 
Gaia ace may_2010
Gaia ace may_2010Gaia ace may_2010
Gaia ace may_2010
 
Ethics and CSR
Ethics and CSREthics and CSR
Ethics and CSR
 
Recommendation Report
Recommendation ReportRecommendation Report
Recommendation Report
 
Cc Power Purchase Agreement 04212009
Cc Power Purchase Agreement 04212009Cc Power Purchase Agreement 04212009
Cc Power Purchase Agreement 04212009
 
The Department of Energy's FY2010 Budget Request
The Department of Energy's FY2010 Budget RequestThe Department of Energy's FY2010 Budget Request
The Department of Energy's FY2010 Budget Request
 
Khosla9.25.07
Khosla9.25.07Khosla9.25.07
Khosla9.25.07
 
Al W & W 2008 11 05
Al W & W  2008 11 05Al W & W  2008 11 05
Al W & W 2008 11 05
 
I Grew Up Shoveling Coal By Tom Hayden
I Grew Up Shoveling Coal By Tom HaydenI Grew Up Shoveling Coal By Tom Hayden
I Grew Up Shoveling Coal By Tom Hayden
 
NRDC State Emissions report
NRDC State Emissions reportNRDC State Emissions report
NRDC State Emissions report
 
Energy Facts and Fiction
Energy Facts and FictionEnergy Facts and Fiction
Energy Facts and Fiction
 
Norman Myers Convocation Lecture 2009
Norman Myers Convocation Lecture 2009Norman Myers Convocation Lecture 2009
Norman Myers Convocation Lecture 2009
 
Gold Investment Symposium 2012 - Richard Karn - The Emerging Trends Report
Gold Investment Symposium 2012 - Richard Karn - The Emerging Trends ReportGold Investment Symposium 2012 - Richard Karn - The Emerging Trends Report
Gold Investment Symposium 2012 - Richard Karn - The Emerging Trends Report
 
The World Getting Ewasted
The World Getting EwastedThe World Getting Ewasted
The World Getting Ewasted
 
The Art of the Possible: Building an Energy-Efficient America
The Art of the Possible:Building an Energy-Efficient AmericaThe Art of the Possible:Building an Energy-Efficient America
The Art of the Possible: Building an Energy-Efficient America
 
Climate Change Hope And Inspiration
Climate Change Hope And InspirationClimate Change Hope And Inspiration
Climate Change Hope And Inspiration
 

Mehr von NAACP

Facebook 101
Facebook 101Facebook 101
Facebook 101NAACP
 
Webinar twitter101
Webinar twitter101Webinar twitter101
Webinar twitter101NAACP
 
Mobile Messaging for Organizing
Mobile Messaging for OrganizingMobile Messaging for Organizing
Mobile Messaging for OrganizingNAACP
 
New York State Conference - Youth Track digital media presentation
New York State Conference - Youth Track digital media presentationNew York State Conference - Youth Track digital media presentation
New York State Conference - Youth Track digital media presentationNAACP
 
Civil and human rights impacts of climate change -uscan
Civil and human rights impacts of climate change -uscanCivil and human rights impacts of climate change -uscan
Civil and human rights impacts of climate change -uscanNAACP
 
Region4 crati april11
Region4 crati april11Region4 crati april11
Region4 crati april11NAACP
 
Communications training 2013 update
Communications training 2013 updateCommunications training 2013 update
Communications training 2013 updateNAACP
 
Jerome schoolboard
Jerome schoolboardJerome schoolboard
Jerome schoolboardNAACP
 
Wilmington 10 Evidence
Wilmington 10 EvidenceWilmington 10 Evidence
Wilmington 10 EvidenceNAACP
 
Jury notes7 x 2
Jury notes7 x 2Jury notes7 x 2
Jury notes7 x 2NAACP
 
Back of pad 1
Back of pad 1Back of pad 1
Back of pad 1NAACP
 
NAACP Opportunity and Diversity Report Card: Hotel and Resort Industry 2012
NAACP Opportunity and Diversity Report Card: Hotel and Resort Industry 2012NAACP Opportunity and Diversity Report Card: Hotel and Resort Industry 2012
NAACP Opportunity and Diversity Report Card: Hotel and Resort Industry 2012NAACP
 
NAACP 2012 Battleground Poll
NAACP 2012 Battleground PollNAACP 2012 Battleground Poll
NAACP 2012 Battleground PollNAACP
 
NAACPGotv walk list creation instructions final
NAACPGotv walk list creation instructions finalNAACPGotv walk list creation instructions final
NAACPGotv walk list creation instructions finalNAACP
 
NAACPGotv phone list creation instructions final
NAACPGotv phone list creation instructions finalNAACPGotv phone list creation instructions final
NAACPGotv phone list creation instructions finalNAACP
 
NAACPData entry for van final
NAACPData entry for van finalNAACPData entry for van final
NAACPData entry for van finalNAACP
 

Mehr von NAACP (16)

Facebook 101
Facebook 101Facebook 101
Facebook 101
 
Webinar twitter101
Webinar twitter101Webinar twitter101
Webinar twitter101
 
Mobile Messaging for Organizing
Mobile Messaging for OrganizingMobile Messaging for Organizing
Mobile Messaging for Organizing
 
New York State Conference - Youth Track digital media presentation
New York State Conference - Youth Track digital media presentationNew York State Conference - Youth Track digital media presentation
New York State Conference - Youth Track digital media presentation
 
Civil and human rights impacts of climate change -uscan
Civil and human rights impacts of climate change -uscanCivil and human rights impacts of climate change -uscan
Civil and human rights impacts of climate change -uscan
 
Region4 crati april11
Region4 crati april11Region4 crati april11
Region4 crati april11
 
Communications training 2013 update
Communications training 2013 updateCommunications training 2013 update
Communications training 2013 update
 
Jerome schoolboard
Jerome schoolboardJerome schoolboard
Jerome schoolboard
 
Wilmington 10 Evidence
Wilmington 10 EvidenceWilmington 10 Evidence
Wilmington 10 Evidence
 
Jury notes7 x 2
Jury notes7 x 2Jury notes7 x 2
Jury notes7 x 2
 
Back of pad 1
Back of pad 1Back of pad 1
Back of pad 1
 
NAACP Opportunity and Diversity Report Card: Hotel and Resort Industry 2012
NAACP Opportunity and Diversity Report Card: Hotel and Resort Industry 2012NAACP Opportunity and Diversity Report Card: Hotel and Resort Industry 2012
NAACP Opportunity and Diversity Report Card: Hotel and Resort Industry 2012
 
NAACP 2012 Battleground Poll
NAACP 2012 Battleground PollNAACP 2012 Battleground Poll
NAACP 2012 Battleground Poll
 
NAACPGotv walk list creation instructions final
NAACPGotv walk list creation instructions finalNAACPGotv walk list creation instructions final
NAACPGotv walk list creation instructions final
 
NAACPGotv phone list creation instructions final
NAACPGotv phone list creation instructions finalNAACPGotv phone list creation instructions final
NAACPGotv phone list creation instructions final
 
NAACPData entry for van final
NAACPData entry for van finalNAACPData entry for van final
NAACPData entry for van final
 

Environmental and Climate Justice in Region I: Taking Control of Our Future

  • 1. Environmental and Climate Justice Region I The Path to Transformation for Our Communities
  • 2. OVERVIEW  What We’re Up Against  What Are Our Assets  How Do We Eliminate Threats and Optimize Our Strengths  Re-envisioning Community
  • 4. Waste and Communities Where does American’s waste really go?
  • 6. Waste Being Dumped in Our Communities
  • 7. Landfills in Region I Alaska: 3 Arizona: 20 California: 112 Hawaii: 8 Idaho: 6 Nevada: 4 Oregon: 11 Utah:11 Washington:14
  • 8. Landfills Kettleman City and Buttonwillow are two of three low-income, Latino communities where California’s toxic waste dumps are located. Both have experienced unexplained birth defect clusters, high cancer rates and other health effects
  • 10. Incinerators Stericycle, Inc. operates Utah’s only commercial medical waste incinerator in Salt Lake City Utah. •Last commercial medical waste incinerator in the western region as Stericycle has replaced incineration in both California and Arizona with safer, non-incineration treatment technologies. •Stericycle burns waste from all over Utah and California, Arizona, Colorado and Texas at the facility in North Salt Lake City.
  • 12. Industry and our Children http://content.usatoday.com/news/nation/environment/smokestack/index
  • 13.
  • 15.
  • 16.
  • 17. Richmond Oil Refinery— A History of Environmental Injustice
  • 19.
  • 20. Effects of Fracking Brainbridge, Ohio: home explosion and contaminated drinking water Granger Township, Ohio: explosive levels of natural gas in community’s drinking water (federal level of explosivity is 1% and inside one of the homes tested was an alarming 20%)
  • 24. Nuclear Waste Shipped From California to Utah
  • 25. Failing Coal Plants in Region I
  • 26. Arizona City Plant 3-mile State 3-mile Grade Name Average Income P.O.C. Income Percentage Population Tucson H.Wilson $10,258 50.6% 74.7% F Sundt Joseph Cholla $13,096 64.6% 27.3% D City Saint Coronado $12,470 61.5% 33.4% D Johns Page Navajo $18,294 90.2% 38.4% D+ Springer Springerville $13,255 65.4% 31.0% D+ ville
  • 27. H Wilson Sundt Generating Station Tucson, AZ
  • 28. California City Plant Name 3-mile State 3-Mile Grade Average Income P.O.C. Income Percenta Population ge Trona ACE $16,347 72.0% 24.1% D+ Cogeneration
  • 29. ACE Congeneration Trona, California
  • 30. Hawaii City Plant 3-mile State 3-Mile Grade Name Average Income P.O.C. Income Percentage Population Kapolei AES $20,931 97.2% 87.0% F Hawaii
  • 31. Kahe Power Plant Leeward, Oahu
  • 32. Nevada City Plant 3-mile State 3-Mile Grade Name Average Income P.O.C. Income Percentage Population Moapa Reid $14,392 65.5% 52.8% D- Gardner
  • 33. Reid-Gardner Power Plant Moapa, Nevada
  • 34. Oregon City Plant 3-mile State 3-Mile Grade Name Average Income P.O.C. Income Percentag Population e Boardman Boardman $13,982 66.8% 48.6% D-
  • 35. Boardman Coal Plant Boardman, Oregon
  • 36.
  • 37. Effects of Polluting Waste and Energy Facilities
  • 41.
  • 42. We need to take control! We need to take control! We need to take control! Of this climate! <Repeat> It’s getting hot! Yeah it’s heating up!! The climate’s changing! How it’s affecting us!! You mean the floods storms, droughts, and fires.
  • 43. And heat related deaths in the US is getting higher! Now who at risk? You at risk? So what you doin’? Neighborhoods affected by all this air pollution….. It’s not amusing. It’s a problem . It’s solution! Decreasing carbon footprint…..it’s really not hard to do it. I been going green since I was a little kid. In my hood the heat is killing kids!
  • 44. Get Your Green Class http://soundcloud.com/getyourgreen123/green-team- climate-control
  • 45. I speak for the climate. Yeah, I’m the earth’s ventriloquist! Those heat waves, I know you feeling it. Stop burning that coal. Use propane when you grilling it cause it could harm your respiratory Ask these politicians for change. They ain’t doing nothing for me. They pollute around my area cuz we ain’t in they category! We need to take control! Of this climate! Ladder to prosperity…I’m ready to climb it!
  • 46. This country’s morals, laws…..Somebody help me find it Our eco-death certificate. They ready to sign it! And I ain’t having that, especially not around my habitat! And that’s mainly where it happen at! They acting upon us. So that’s the reason why we acting back. Protesting, lobbying,….. Going green is my hobby, man. Stop drilling for fossils. Worry ‘bout tomorrow!
  • 47.
  • 48. Keep going at this rate, the whole earth going be in sorrow. No resources to borrow. I said let’s take control of our climate and your carbon footprint, please try to decline it! It’s getting hot! Yeah, it’s heating up! The climate’s changing! How it’s affecting us….
  • 49. Impacts---Extreme Weather Hurricanes Drought Floods Earthquakes Tropical Cyclones Landslides WildFires Heat or Cold Waves and much more….
  • 52. Surge in Damaging Tornadoes
  • 53. Obliteration of Communities and Erosion of Cultures
  • 60. Who is able to respond?
  • 61. Who’s Making the Decisions?
  • 62. Who Is Delivering Assistance?
  • 65. Food Insecurity in the US Corner Store Supermarket
  • 66. Feast and Famine in Urban America Corner Store Supermarket
  • 70.
  • 72. Anti-Regulatory Investments Company Total Spent on Lobbying in 2010 Southern Company $13,220,000 Edison International $13,080,000 American Electric Power $10,313,196 Duke Energy $4,800,000 Dominion $2,050,000 First Energy $1,865,000 Xcel Energy $1,720,000 DTE Energy $1,500,000
  • 73. Fighting Renewable Energy  Southern Company successfully opposed a plan to create a national electricity market in 2004 and has dedicated significant money and effort to fighting the Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS), which would require utilities to purchase 15% of their power from renewable sources by 2020.
  • 74. CNN NEWSROOM-Hurricane Issac MALVEAUX: And Senator, finally, why is it that Plaquemines Parish did not get that support for a levee? LANDRIEU: Because the Corps of Engineers has a formula that they use to determine where they are going to build or reinforce the levees, based on economic impact ….you get less points if there is less of an economic impact……
  • 75. CEO Compensation for 2010 at Companies Owning the Top EJ Offenders Company CEO Name CEO Compensation Edison International Theodore F. Craver Jr. $9,536,038 Dominion Thomas F. Farrell II $16,924,385 DTE Energy Gerald M. Anderson $5,601,383 Duke Energy James E. Rogers $8,815,181 Xcel Energy Richard C. Kelly $9,956,433 Southern Company Thomas A. Fanning $6,019,151 First Energy Anthony J. Alexander $11,627,657 [i] AFL-CIO CEO Pay Database, Accessed November 2011 http://www.aflcio.org/corporatewatch/paywatch/ceou/industry_2011.cfm
  • 76. Deepening Disparity  The average CEO compensation for these companies in 2010 was $9,782,889 while the average worker in these companies made $33,840.  On average the CEOs at these companies were compensated at 289 times the rate of compensation for the average worker.
  • 77. African Americans and Energy $40 Billion 1.1% .01%
  • 78. Our Overall Economic Plight  While the national rate of unemployment during February 2012, was 8.3% that rate is nearly double of African Americans at 14.1%.  A report by the Pew Research Center revealed that the wealth divide between whites and people of color hit a record high in 2009, with the median wealth of white households 20 times higher than black households
  • 80. Diverting Waste Achieving 75% waste diversion in 2030 would: • Create 1.5 million new jobs • Lower greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 515 million tons (~72 coal plants or 50 million cars) • Significantly reduce pollution impacting human & ecological health
  • 81. Slide courtesy Brenda Platt, ILSR
  • 82. Recycling  Recology, San Francisco’s primary recycling, composting and waste company, employs more than 1,000 workers who are represented by the Teamsters.  Over 118 new employees have been hired in recent years to sort recyclables and monitor the collection routes in order to meet San Francisco’s aggressive recycling goals.
  • 83. Diversion from Landfills=JOBS  In Seattle 2009, nearly 100,000 tons of organic waste was diverted from landfills by the city of Seattle’s program. The city of Seattle’s waste diversion efforts not only benefit the environment, but also sustain family- supporting jobs for the more than 1,000 solid waste and recycling drivers and transfer station employees in Seattle and King County who are represented by the Teamsters Union.
  • 84.
  • 85. Promoting Local Ownership  Local ownership programs can create two to three times as many jobs per megawatt produced. And these local jobs keep over three times as much money and wealth in a community compared to big companies.
  • 86. Promoting Energy Efficiency and Clean Energy
  • 87. Why Progressive Energy Policies?  ENERGY EFFICIENCY: The less energy we use, the less we are polluting, the less our communities are exposed to pollution, and the less we are advancing climate change, which also disproportionately harms our communities.  CLEAN ENERGY: The more clean energy we use, the less harmful energy we are using saving our community health, property values, and the sustainability of our environment.
  • 92. Churches Can Become Energy Efficient too!
  • 93. Defining Progressive Energy Policies  Renewable Portfolio Standards —States commit to a minimum amount of their energy mix that will come from renewable sources  Should be mandatory  Should be at least 25% by 2025  Energy Efficiency Standards —States commit to reducing their energy consumption  Should be mandatory  Should be at least 1% annual reduction of previous year retail electricity sales.  Net Metering– Utility customers who generate their energy through renewable sources are able to sell excess energy generated back to the grid for the same purchasing price utility companies charge for electricity.
  • 94. Progressive Energy Policies in Region I STATE ENERGY RENEWABLE NET EFFICIENCY ENERGY METERING STANDARD STANDARD Alaska District of NO YES YES NO YES YES Columbia Arizona YES YES YES Maryland YES YES YES California YES YES YES Hawaii YES YES YES Idaho NO NO NO
  • 95. Progressive Energy Policies in Region I cont’d STATE ENERGY RENEWABLE NET EFFICIENCY ENERGY METERING STANDARD STANDARD Nevada District of NO YES YES Columbia Oregon NO YES YES Utah NO YES YES Washington YES YES YES
  • 98. HBCU Leadership in Research
  • 99. Black Leadership in Just Energy Entrepreneurship
  • 100. Taking it To the Street to Demand Corporate Social Responsibility
  • 101.
  • 103.
  • 106. Judicial decrees may not change the heart, but they can restrain the heartless. Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
  • 112. !! JOIN US !!  Start an Environmental and Climate Justice Committee  Conduct a Community Assessment and Develop an Action Plan  Start a Coal Blooded Campaign  Start a Renewable Energy Portfolio Standard Campaign  Start an Energy Efficiency Standard Campaign  Start a Net Metering Campaign  Initiate a Clean Energy or Energy Efficiency Demonstration Project  Develop a Disaster Plan  Start an Eco-District in Your Municipality  Launch a Youth and College 10,000 Steps Campaign
  • 113. Our Resources  2010 Climate Justice Toolkit  Coal Blooded: Putting Profits Before People—National Report  Coal Blooded Action Toolkit  10,000 Steps Youth and College Toolkit Coming Soon  Just Energy Policies State By State Compendium  ECJ Comprehensive Toolkit  Black Church ECJ Toolkit  Beasts of the Southern Wild Discussion Guide
  • 114. What Will Your Branch Do?
  • 115. Thank You Jacqui Patterson Director, Environmental and Climate Justice Program 443-465-9809 jpatterson@naacpnet.org

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Our natural resources are being sold at top dollar with no regard for impact on people or the environment
  2. In the US we generate over 356 billion pounds of waste every single year. What do we do with the majority of our waste? The two b’s---We either bury it or burn it.
  3. Just bit of grim humor…We have over 3000 active landfills and over 10,000 old municipal landfills (that are at capacity) According to the EPA, “ Even the best liner and waste water collection system will ultimately fail due to natural deterioration” What does US consumerism and our failure to institute safe ways of processing waste mean for people like the Holt Family in Dickson, TN? In 2008, after noticing that there were an excessive number of cancer cases and birth defects in their family, the Holt Family found out they had been drinking water contaminated by the neighboring landfill, with TCE, trichloroethylene for years. Every single household that depended on that water supply had cases of birth defects or premature death due to sometimes rare forms of cancer.
  4. Every community that received waste from the BP oil spill had a POC population that was higher than the national average. The one white county that was going to receive the waste put up such a protest that they ended up not sending the waste there.
  5. A landfill: burying trash through a structure built into or on top of the ground A bottom liner and daily covering of soil protects the contaminants from the trash leaking into the groundwater and air.   In 2008, proposal and application for a permit by a landfill company to dump thousands of tons of Polychlorinated Bipheyls (PCBS) contaminated soil in the Clinton Landfill which is already located above the Mahomet Aquifer which supplies water to about 750, 000 central Illinois residents. The town fought back and as of 2011, EPA decided to suspend the permit application until more research could be done Tie into Warren County protests – with PCB contaminated landfill A  sanitary landfill  uses a clay liner to isolate the trash from the environment.   A municipal solid waste (MSW) landfill  uses a plastic liner to isolate the trash from the environment’.
  6. There are over 100 waste burning biomass facilities in the US. Biomass incinerators emit toxins like cadmium, arsenic, and lead into the atmosphere as well as greenhouse gases like methane and carbon dioxide. 85 of 107 large scale biomass plants operating in the U.S. had been cited by federal or state regulators for violating clean air or water laws over the past five years. Picture of biomass facility, also disproportionately located in our communities and emitting toxins such as benzene, cadmium, lead, tricholorethylene, mercury, etc. toxins tied to respiratory illnesses, cancers, birth defects, etc.
  7. a waste treatment technology that involves burning commercial, residential and hazardous waste. Incineration converts discarded materials, including paper, plastics, metals and food scraps into ash, combustion gases, wastewater treatment sludge and heat. The surrounding community has suffered increased asthma attacks, cardiovascular disease, cancer, hypertension and diabetes.
  8. Cesar Chavez High School in Houston Texas. African American and Latino school. That oil refinery is one of 5 within a 10 mile radius of that school which concentrates the level of pollution to which these kids are being exposed. There are no zoning laws in Houston, which is why facilities like these can be on top of our communities .
  9. Cesar Chavez High School in Houston Texas. African American and Latino school. That oil refinery is one of 5 within a 10 mile radius of that school which concentrates the level of pollution to which these kids are being exposed. There are no zoning laws in Houston, which is why facilities like these can be on top of our communities.
  10. BP Oil Drilling Disaster which impacted the culture, livelihood, and health of communities across the gulf
  11. For some their only voice was through expressing their frustration through lawn signs
  12. Or wall murals
  13. The 3,000-acre refinery, visible from the hills of San Francisco, has polluted the city of Richmond and the Bay Area for decades, despite being located in one of the centers of environmental activism.[1] Since 2006, Chevron has been in “high priority violation” of Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) air compliance standards,[2] and in 2007, the EPA reported over 900,000 pounds of toxic waste from the refinery.[3] And yet, Chevron has proposed a project to expand the Richmond refinery to process heavier, dirtier crude oil. Last summer, Communities for a Better Environment (CBE) conducted a health survey of 440 adults and 282 children from Richmond and found that 46 percent of the adults and 17 percent of the children surveyed suffer from asthma.[6] The longer a person lived in Richmond, the greater the likelihood that they would suffer from asthma.[7] Residents in the surrounding areas were warned to stay inside and block any cracks in doorways and windows from the unknown smoke that darkened skies. The advice came too late for many as it was reported that at least 900 locals flocked to hospitals with health complaints related to the fire. 
  14. become a major environmental justice issue within rural communities in recent years. Fracking is a means of retrieving natural gas through drilling deep into the ground One of the world&apos;s richest areas of natural gas is known as the Marcellus Shale formation,the Marcellus shale: A black shale formation extending deep underground from Ohio and West Virginia northeast into Pennsylvania and southern New York. the entire Marcellus Shale formation may contain up to 489 trillion cubic feet of natural gas throughout its entire extent
  15. Once a well is drilled, millions of gallons of water, sand and other chemicals often called fracking fluid are injected into the ground under high pressure into the well. The pressure fractures the shale (sedimentary rock that can be easily split) and creates a narrow opening through which the natural gas flows through to the top of the well and is then transported away via trucks. Areas with heavy drilling are expecting 1. 5million heavy truck trips annually to come through their communities. A memo by the New York Department of Transportation revealed that “pavement structural damage done by the passage of a single large truck is equivalent to that done by about 9, 000 cars.” These heavy trucks and equipment entering these small rural towns have caused extensive damage to the roads as well as lead to increased air pollution caused by the truck emissions, as well as increased traffic.   After the natural gas is extracted, there is about 20% to 40% leftover fracking fluid to be discarded. Common disposal options include: recycling for additional fracking, treatment and discharge to surface waters, underground injection and storage in open air pits. All of these means of disposal have possible ways of contamination. In addition, many waste treatment facilities are not capable of treating the highly toxic chemicals involved in fracking, and therefore the contaminated water is placed right back into the bodies of water surrounding the community. Furthermore, fracking companies have a history of improper disposal of waste and dumping into nearby bodies of water.   3.5 Even more recently, there have been an increase in “fracking pipelines” proposals to be built or are currently under construction. Companies like the William Transco, or Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corporation delivers gas to customers through its 10, 200 mile pipeline system extending from South Texas to New York City. These pipelines have a history of negative impacts due to the transportation of possible contaminated and often toxic chemicals into pipes 3.6: In September 2008, a natural gas pipeline exploded along Route 26 in Appomattox, Virginia and destroyed two homes, damaged dozens others and caused multiple injuries. Williams Transco was named responsible for the incident by the U.S. Department of Transportation Source: Pipeline Safety Trust to consumer’s homes. Another source of risk is pipeline explosion that can cause massive damage to already stressed communities, as shown in Figure 3.6.
  16. Brainbridge, Ohio - a home exploded in the small town of Bainbridge, Ohio, a suburb of Cleveland. Methane entered nearby water wells and the basement of Richard and Thelma Payne&apos;s home where it was ignited by a spark. It was found that fracking of a nearby well had pushed methane into a the groundwater. In the area are contaminated by methane gas that leaked from an Ohio Valley Gas Company well into the aquifer. In total, 46 water wells. Many homes now use bottled water. Granger Township, Ohio: January, 2012: Two homes in Granger County have been deemed a public health threat by a federal health agency because of potentially explosive levels of natural gas in their drinking water. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry stated that the problems with the wells originated from the nearby drilling of two gas wells. Levels of “explosivity” are considered hazardous when they exceed 10%: the wells of the two homes were at 34.7% and 47.4%. The high gas levels inside and nearby the house led Columbia Gas to shut off services for a period of time because of the likelihood of an explosion. The federal level of explosivity is 1%, and inside one of the houses measured an alarming 20%.
  17. In September 2008, a natural gas pipeline exploded along Route 26 in Appomattox, Virginia and destroyed two homes, damaged dozens others and caused multiple injuries. Williams Transco was named responsible for the incident by the U.S. Department of Transportation
  18. Fracking companies have gotten away with using these unknown chemicals due to President George Bush passing an Energy Bill in 1995 that exempted natural gas drilling from the Safe Drinking Water Act (explained in section VII). It also exempted companies from disclosing the chemicals used during hydraulic fracturing. It essentially allowed fracking companies to operate without any provisions forced upon then by the EPA. This is now commonly referred to as the Halliburton Loophole. Other effects of fracking include groundwater contamination, which effects to the drinking water of the surrounding community, toxic air emissions like methane, volatile organic compounds and other greenhouse gasses stress on the existing water supply, large scale withdrawal of freshwater has negative impacts on the ecosystems within the surrounding bodies of water mis-management of wastewater, which contains fracturing fluid additives, metals and radon which are then often times inappropriately disposed of.
  19. Nuclear facilities are disproportionately located in our communities. Nuclear energy is converted into electricity at a nuclear power plant from uranium that is mined and extracted from the earth The Palisades Power Plant is a nuclear power plant located on Lake Michigan, in Van Buren County’s Covert Township, Michigan, on a site of 432 acres (2 km²) 5 miles south of South Haven, Michigan, USA. Palisades is owned and operated by Entergy. It was operated by the Nuclear Management Company and owned by CMS Energy Corporation prior to the sale completed on April 11, 2007. It was built at a cost of $149 million. It has been cited for numerous violations over the years, and even with local efforts to shut down the plant they won a 20 year extension from the state.
  20. The NAACP with help of the Indigenous Environmental Network and the Little Village Environmental Justice Organization released a report titled Coal Blooded: Putting Profits Before People – hich documents the health, economic and environmental impacts of coal pollution on those who can least afford it – low income communities and communities of color. Coal Blooded ranks 378 coal-fired power plants in the nation based on their Environmental Justice Performance”. The score is based on both toxic emissions and demographic factors – including race, income, and population density. The six million Americans living near coal plants have an average income of $18,400, compared with $21,857 nationwide, and 39% are people of color. Found here http://www.naacp.org/pages/coal-blooded1
  21. Is it possible to shut down these plants – have achieved victories Important to do analysis on jobs affected, contributed by tax base, community affected by electricity given to the community Even tho people working in the plants, many workers there were not workers who didn’t live in the local area Getting all of the negative benefits – but getting not getting jobs, revenues, Illnois – gets majority of power from nuclear
  22. What makes coal fired power plants in our communities all the scarier is that these facilities are built next to water ways because they use the water to generate steam which is part of the electricity generation process. What’s unfortunate, is that while it takes from the water, it also pollutes the water. Our communities are disproportionately subsistence fisherfolks. So we fish to put food on the table, just like this fellow fishing out of the greenish-brown muck that is polluted by a neighboring plant. One NAACP executive tells the story of fishing out of the Hudson river when rent time was coming up and money was low. He said he stopped when he pulled a fish out of the water and all of the scales fell off.
  23. What makes coal fired power plants in our communities all the scarier is that these facilities are built next to water ways because they use the water to generate steam which is part of the electricity generation process. What’s unfortunate, is that while it takes from the water, it also pollutes the water. Our communities are disproportionately subsistence fisherfolks. So we fish to put food on the table, just like this fellow fishing out of the greenish-brown muck that is polluted by a neighboring plant. One NAACP executive tells the story of fishing out of the Hudson river when rent time was coming up and money was low. He said he stopped when he pulled a fish out of the water and all of the scales fell off.
  24. You can point out that this is a picture of a mother feeding her three headed bird, a grim reference to the birth defects that result from exposure to toxic waste. After – say animals are not the only organisms affected, there are also human health effects of pollution
  25. As we know, there are three impacts of climate change. Superstorms like Katrina and Sandy are going to become commonplace. Aerial view of 101 burned to the foundation homes in the Breezy Point section of Queens, NY after a fire erupted and the winds during Hurricane Sandy swept through the neighborhood Aerial view of 101 burned to the foundation homes in the Breezy Point section of Queens, NY after a fire erupted and the winds during Hurricane Sandy swept through the neighborhood.
  26. Devastation wrought by katrina Submerged New Orleans and massive damage to several other states including Mississippi and Alambama
  27. We’ve also seen a surge in damaging torndados Like most recently in January with tornadoes going through Mississippi and and in Solsberry, Indiana
  28. A community that no longer exists in Pratt City Alabama after the tornados of 2011…
  29. A dream home destroyed…now the Clark Family has to move back to the city because the insurance and FEMA money was insufficient to cover the damage
  30. A flooded home in Mississippi in Port Gibson, a majority black community, in frightening proximity to the Grand Gulf Nuclear station. With only one escape route for the town, disasters are a double-threat. Mississippi State Conference and Jacqui went there – in front of city hall there were two red cross volunteers During flooding – instead of having a full on recovery center – only has two volunteers Werent paying for shelters for them Red Cross cant have operations within 7 miles of a nuclear facility They cant even get help? Lack of zoning and infrastructure planning – residents are living in places where even the Red Cross wont establish operations in.
  31. This is what once fertile ground looks like now…..
  32. Our communities are disproportionately food deserts which means we are less likely to have a supermarkets offering nutritious foods within 3 miles of our homes. So the picture on the left is more our reality than the one on the right.
  33. The result is that, coupled with the fact that we are also less mobile so not even as able to drive to a supermarket, we have more access to life sapping foods than life lengthening foods. Our supply includes foods high in additives, preservatives, sugar, and sodium rather than the rich anti-oxidant, immune boosting fresh fruits and vegetables.
  34. Cabinet Meeting held underwater in the Maldives Islands because the President wanted to send a clear message, both to his own country and the world that the Maldives is facing imminent displacement within 20 years, due to rising sea level.
  35. The imminent displacement isn’t limited to the Maldives. Kivalina Island in Alaska and Thibodaux in Louisiana are also preparing to have to move whole communities as they are losing large degrees of land mass daily!
  36. The companies that run the industries that are polluting our communities and advancing climate change are fighting hard to hold on to their profits. They are investing millions of dollars in lobbying against regulations that protect public health and the environment. They are also investing heavily in keeping officials in office that support their industries while fighting against the re-election of President Obama and others who want to preserve communities and the environment.
  37. They fight against regulations that safeguard public health AND they fight against any attempt to shift to policies supporting clean energy and energy efficiency that don’t harm people.
  38. I was in Louisiana following Hurricane Isaac and saw a CNN commercial which featured the above dialogue which demonstrates the policy making that prioritize preserving investments over protecting people.
  39. Companies are driven by protecting profits and they pay top dollar to their executives for decision making that protects the bottom line
  40. Self explanatory….
  41. 40b---amount African Americans spent on energy in 2009 1.1%--percentage of energy jobs held by African Americans (compared to our 12% proportion of the population) .01%--revenue African Americans reaped from the multibillion dollar energy sector which takes so much of our spending….
  42. While we continue to suffer from double-digit unemployment and extreme wealth disaparity
  43. It doesn’t have to be this way…..there are many things we can do to seize the new energy economy and build financial stability while protecting the health and wellbeing of our communities and our environment!!
  44. We don’t have to have communities wallowing in waste. We can recycle almost all waste while creating millions of jobs through waste diversion projects.
  45. Two Waste Management Inc. facilities in Maryland: cost of a proposed mass burn incinerator (photo of an existing mass burn incinerator in MD) vs. cost of a recently constructed recycling sorting facility
  46. Case study--Self explanatory
  47. Another Self explanatory case study
  48. We can do the same thing in Region VI!!!
  49. Zero waste initiatives, by definition, are local which keeps jobs in the community and cuts down on monopolies that concentrate wealth at “the top” with CEOs and other executives.
  50. Wind is a form of solar energy. Winds are caused by the uneven heating of the atmosphere by the sun, the irregularities of the earth’s surface and rotation of the earth. Through wind turbines, wind is used to generate electricity and thus is called wind energy. From there the electricity generated can be used to power homes, schools, and businesses. There are two types of wind turbines that are used, horizontal and vertical axis turbines. Most commonly, the horizontal axis wind turbines are used; these turbines resemble old- fashioned wind mills. Typically, wind turbines are often grouped together into a single wind power plant, often called a wind farm, which generates bulk electrical power.
  51. A friend who is completely self-sustaining on clean energy. He gets all of his electricity through solar energy and he generates so much that he can sell the excess back to the grid for the same rate that he would have purchased it. He also heats his house through geothermal system…. Solar energy is a renewable energy source that is continuously supplied to the Earth by the sun. There are two main ways that we can change solar energy into electricity. The first and most commonly known is Solar PV or Photovoltaic (photovoltaic cells) systems that are placed on existing structures like a roof of a house or building. This solar technology uses PV to convert sunlight directly into electricity &quot;Non-Hydroelectric Renewable Energy  
  52. A church in Alabama gets its energy from solar panels and stores the energy when they aren’t using it, in these batteries in the church utility closet!
  53. Self Explanatory
  54. Which states have which policies in Region III
  55. Which states have which policies in Region VII
  56. We are hosting education sessions in local communities
  57. We are hosting strategy sessions like this one with HBCUs and government agencies in Louisiana to connect our institutions with the resources we need to advance justice for our communities.
  58. We are uplifting African American entrepreneurs like Robert Wallace who owns BithEnergy, a clean energy company that operates throughout the US and globally!
  59. We are joining with allies like this group in South Africa who is taking it to the streets to call for corporate social responsibility!
  60. In South Africa, calling out the ending profits over people.
  61. We are linking with partners who are targeting cutting off financing of industries that are harming our communities.
  62. Youth leadership is key to mobilization and to bring new ideas and new energy to the movement.
  63. In Berkeley, this community grows its own food including a garden and chicken coop. They also have a tool library and transportation collective.
  64. It’s not just the hippy Californians.  In Pittsburgh, the Landslide community grows their own food, has a chicken coop and feeds indigent persons on Wednesdays from the bounty of their community garden.
  65. The NAACP has entered into a legal intervention against the coal industry which is suing EPA as they fight for their “right” to continue polluting communities with mercury, arsenic, lead and other toxins as they fight for the repeal of the Mercury and Air Toxics Regulation that limits the amount of toxins coal plants can spew into the air.
  66. We are organizing NAACP member delegations to testify at EPA
  67. In Chicago, community activism was successful in shutting down two polluting coal plants that were in the ids of African American and Latino communities, providing no jobs to those communities but providing pollution at the expense to especially the children and aging populations of those communities.
  68. Civic engagement is critical to make sure we have folks in office who represent our interests.
  69. Linking with partners like the Little Village Environmental Justice Organization has been the key to success. Pictured here is Reverend Theresa Dear, NAACP National Board Member, who led a prayer vigil in front of the now-closed Crawford Coal Plant in Chicago.
  70. What do you want to do? Will you commit today to launching a campaign/project in your community? If you commit, we will commit to support you!!!