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COMM 125: INTRO TO
MEDIA, TECH AND CULTURE
When you take a step outside of the front
door of your house, have you ever paid
 attention to the area that your home is
               surrounded?
What do you see?

Are the trees dark green and the grass
are cut and watered? Are the children
     and pets running around on the
 sidewalks and parks, breathing in and
    out clean oxygen air? Or, is water
running from the faucets in sinks as well
 as in toilets and bathtubs clean, pure
          and uncontaminated?
These are some of the things that we
 take for granted. Not everyone has
access to clean water, green healthy
 trees, breathing clean air or healthy
          produce and foods.
Can you imagine your home, a place
  where you consider safe, located
  near a factory? Can you imagine
 drinking water that is contaminated
 with harsh chemicals? Do you know
        what it is like to live in a
  neighborhood that does not have
 access to grow their own fruits and
             vegetables?
There are those close to us that are
living in devastating conditions you’d
  expect from a developing country.

    The people that live in these
   conditions are predominately
minority groups, Latinos and African
      Americans in particular.
How is this possible? There is one word that
 can describe these kinds of situations…
Environmental Racism
Environmental
Racism
By Tianamarie Smith and
Sonia Perez
What is Environmental
Racism?
   In addition to the definition in the ―About‖ section
   Environmental racism refers to environmental
    policies, practices, or directives that differentially
    affect or disadvantage (whether intentionally or
    unintentionally) individuals, groups, or communities
    based on race or colour.
   Also reinforced, by
    governmental, legal, economic, political, and
    military institutions.
   Environmental racism combines with public
    policies and industry practices to provide benefits
    for countries.
Environmental Racism as
Institutionalized Racism
 Environmental    racism is a form of
  institutionalized discrimination.
 Wait, what is institutionalized racism?
 Institutional racism is defined as ―actions
  or practices carried out by members of
  dominant (racial or ethnic) groups that
  have differential and negative impact on
  members of subordinate (racial and
  ethnic) groups‖.
How a Community Functions

   Tiana and I believe that a community
   functions with systems. Here are some
examples of systems that are core to how a
            community functions:
 foster care system, education system, jail
  system, food system>food bank, water
system, home system and the street system
 Environmental Racism has affected some
     these systems as our video presents
FACTS
   16.7 million children under 18 in the United
    States live in households where they are
    unable to consistently access enough
    nutritious food necessary for a healthy life.
   The U.S. ranks 23rd among industrial nations in
    infant mortality. African-American infants die
    at nearly twice the rate of white infants. The
    infant mortality rate is closely linked to
    inadequate nutrition among pregnant
    women.
   62% of children rely on school meals for food
    and 1 in 12 go to bed hungry.
Before we go into some of the systems, we
will be focusing on how these systems and
      minority groups are affected by
    environmental racism in the state of
                 California.
Environmental Racism in
       California

     Central Valley
Joining Forces: Prisons and ER
in California
   The young Latinos had a lot of threats to choose
    from: air quality, one of the worst rated in the
    country; undrinkable local water supplies; regular
    pesticide poisoning; downwind drift from incinerators
    and power plants; and mega-dairies with their toxic
    emissions
   In the face of the toxic load across the Valley, it
    came as a surprise to some of the adult
    environmental justice activists that the youth
    reported as the biggest threats in their communities
    the ―three Ps‖: police, pollution, and prisons. The
    environmental justice movement has struggled with
    mainstream environmentalists over the bounds of the
    term environment.
 Valley  residents remain on the front lines
 of an unprecedented prison-building
 boom. The state has built twenty-two new
 prisons since 1983 (including Delano
 II), after building twelve over more than a
 century, from 1856 to 1983. Between 1980
 and 2005, California’s prison population
 has grown 556 percent, from 25,000 to
 164,000 prisoners.
   California’s so-called prison alley has been
    the site of numerous environmental justice
    battles. The United Farm Workers fought a
    long battle against pesticides that were
    sickening and, in some cases, killing their
    members. Site fights in Buttonwillow (a toxic
    waste dump) and Kettleman City (the
    location of a toxic waste incinerator) gained
    international attention.4 The proximity of
    vigorous environmental justice activism to
    California’s prison alley has helped activists
    from both movements see the similarities in
    our fights. Foremost among them has been
    the statesanctioned imposition of toxic threats
    on the poor, people of color, and immigrants.
Delano II
   June 1, 2005, marked an auspicious day in the
    history of what one California official labeled
    ―the largest prison building project in the
    history of the world.‖
   After the building of twenty-three new prisons
    in just twenty years, the June 2005 date
    marked the first time in two decades that
    California did not have a prison in planning or
    construction.
   This historic moment was, at least partially, the
    result of a tenacious and multifaceted
    campaign against the construction of
    California’s thirty fourth — and purportedly
    last — state prison: Delano II.
Delano II
   The Delano II story begins in
    1998, when Californians
    elected the Democrat Gray
    Davis as governor over the
    state’s Republican attorney
    general Dan Lungren
   Somewhat surprisingly, the
    powerful state prison guards
    union, the California
    Correctional Peace Officers
    Association (CCPOA),
    backed Davis. Consistently
    the number one contributor
    to state legislative races, the
    CCPOA donated over $1
    million to Davis.
Environmental Impact (for jails)
   While legal challenges carry the danger that organizers will
    lose resources and energy if the issue is defined too
    narrowly as a legal one for which the remedy is in the
    hands of lawyers and courts, the Delano campaign
    successfully undertook an environmental strategy that used
    litigation, while not relying on it.
    As the activist lawyers Luke Cole and Sheila Foster point
    out, ―while legal action brings much needed attention to
    environmental justice struggles, legal strategies rarely
    address what is, in essence, a larger political and structural
    problem.‖Recognizing the limits of litigation as a solution to
    social problems, organizers nonetheless successfully made
    litigation one strategy in a larger, multifaceted campaign.
   WILL TIE INTO GANG ACTIVITY AND ANY RELATIONS TO
    GANGS
   The value of environmental law lies largely in the fact that it
    requires a full public disclosure of the real costs society will
    pay for building, in the opportunity litigation can provide for
    public education and organization, and in the possibility it
    offers for residents to voice their concerns. Environmental
    law provides that all who might be affected by a project
    have a right to demand that the negative effects be made
    public before project approval, and, if possible, that the
    developer mitigate those negative effects.
    As we continue to investigate and compile studies about
    the negative effects of prisons, examining the wide range
    of people harmed by prisons, we have a substantive
    campaign to unify opposition to mass imprisonment. These
    opportunities melded with the Delano campaign’s central
    premise: if the public knows the damage wrought by
    prisons, people will organize to stop its realization.
Water System-Research in Nitrate Contaminated Water in the
                  San Joaquin Valley


   Background: Research on drinking water in the United States has rarely examined
    disproportionate exposures to contaminants faced by low-income and minority
    communities. This study analyzes the relationship between nitrate concentrations in
    community water systems (CWSs) and the racial/ethnic and socioeconomic
    characteristics of customers.
   Objectives: We hypothesized that CWSs in California’s San Joaquin Valley that serve
    a higher proportion of minority or residents of lower socioeconomic status have
    higher nitrate levels and that these disparities are greater among smaller drinking
    water systems.
   Methods: We used water quality monitoring data sets (1999–2001) to estimate nitrate
    levels in CWSs, and source location and census block group data to estimate
    customer demographics. Our linear regression model included 327 CWSs and
    reported robust standard errors clustered at the CWS level. Our adjusted model
    controlled for demographics and water system characteristics and stratified by CWS
    size.
   Results: Percent Latino was associated with a 0.04-mg nitrate-ion (NO3)/L increase in
    a CWS’s estimated NO3 concentration [95% confidence interval (CI), –0.08 to
    0.16], and rate of home ownership was associated with a 0.16-mg NO3/L decrease
    (95% CI, –0.32 to 0.002). Among smaller systems, the percentage of Latinos and of
    homeownership was associated with an estimated increase of 0.44 mg NO3/L (95%
    CI, 0.03–0.84) and a decrease of 0.15 mg NO3/L (95% CI, –0.64 to 0.33), respectively.
   Conclusions: Our findings suggest that in smaller water systems, CWSs serving larger
    percentages of Latinos and renters receive drinking water with higher nitrate levels.
    This suggests an environmental inequity in drinking water quality.
Environmental Justice Movt.
   The environmental justice movement fights racial
    and class discrimination in environmental policy
    making, the selective enforcement of
    environmental laws, and the targeting of
    communities of color and poor communities for
    environmentally disastrous land uses, such as toxic
    waste disposal sites. Communities of color and
    poor communities bear an unequal and unfair
    number of environmentally destructive land
    uses, land uses that take from the community but
    do not give back to it. The environmental justice
    movement seeks to end environmental and
    economic injustices by eliminating the location of
    environmentally toxic facilities anywhere.
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
ORGANIZATIONS
Asian Pacific Environmental Network (Oakland)
Bayview Hunters Point Health and Environmental Resource Center (San Francisco)
Borneo Project, The (Berkeley)
Californians for Pesticide Reform (San Francisco)
Center for Agroecology & Sustainable Food Systems (Santa Cruz)
Center for Creative Land Recyling (San Francisco)
Center for Environmental Health (Oakland)
Center for Health, Environment and Justice
Communities for a Better Environment (Oakland)
CorpWatch (San Francisco)
Crissy Field Center (San Francisco)
DataCenter (Oakland)
Energy Justice Network
Environment and Human Health, Inc.
Environmental Health News
Environmental Justice Coalition for Water (Oakland)
Environmental Justice Resource Center
Environmental Law Foundation (Oakland)
Environmental Research Foundation
Filipino American Coalition for Environmental Solidarity (San Francisco)
Friends of Alemany Farm
Generating Renewable Ideas for Development Alternatives (Oakland)
Global Community Monitor (El Cerrito)
Global Justice Ecology Project (West Coast Desk) (Berkeley)
Greenaction (San Francisco)
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
ORGANIZATIONS
HOMEY (San Francisco)
Impact Fund, The (Berkeley)
In These Times
Indigenous Environmental Network
International Indian Treaty Council (San Francisco)
Literacy for Environmental Justice (San Francisco)
National Religious Partnership for the Environment
Pacific Institute (Oakland)
People Organized to Demand Environmental and Economic Rights (San Francisco)
People United for a Better Life in Oakland (Oakland)
Pesticide Action Network North America (San Francisco)
Prometheus: A Social Justice Law Firm
San Francisco Department of the Environment (San Francisco)
Susan Ives Communications
Sustainable Energy and Economy Network
Urban Habitat (Oakland)
Video Activist Network, The (San Francisco)
Western States Legal Foundation (Oakland)
Youth United for Community Action (East Palo Alto)
The world is not fair. We, and you, are
  not that naïve to fail to see that.
Home is next door, next city, next
state, and all the states together as
              one USA.
We’re only as strong as our weakest
  link, so we must work together.
“There is some good in
this world worth fighting
for.” J.R.R. Tolkien

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Environmental racism final project powerpoint

  • 1. COMM 125: INTRO TO MEDIA, TECH AND CULTURE
  • 2. When you take a step outside of the front door of your house, have you ever paid attention to the area that your home is surrounded?
  • 3. What do you see? Are the trees dark green and the grass are cut and watered? Are the children and pets running around on the sidewalks and parks, breathing in and out clean oxygen air? Or, is water running from the faucets in sinks as well as in toilets and bathtubs clean, pure and uncontaminated?
  • 4. These are some of the things that we take for granted. Not everyone has access to clean water, green healthy trees, breathing clean air or healthy produce and foods.
  • 5. Can you imagine your home, a place where you consider safe, located near a factory? Can you imagine drinking water that is contaminated with harsh chemicals? Do you know what it is like to live in a neighborhood that does not have access to grow their own fruits and vegetables?
  • 6. There are those close to us that are living in devastating conditions you’d expect from a developing country. The people that live in these conditions are predominately minority groups, Latinos and African Americans in particular.
  • 7. How is this possible? There is one word that can describe these kinds of situations…
  • 10. What is Environmental Racism?  In addition to the definition in the ―About‖ section  Environmental racism refers to environmental policies, practices, or directives that differentially affect or disadvantage (whether intentionally or unintentionally) individuals, groups, or communities based on race or colour.  Also reinforced, by governmental, legal, economic, political, and military institutions.  Environmental racism combines with public policies and industry practices to provide benefits for countries.
  • 11. Environmental Racism as Institutionalized Racism  Environmental racism is a form of institutionalized discrimination.  Wait, what is institutionalized racism?  Institutional racism is defined as ―actions or practices carried out by members of dominant (racial or ethnic) groups that have differential and negative impact on members of subordinate (racial and ethnic) groups‖.
  • 12. How a Community Functions Tiana and I believe that a community functions with systems. Here are some examples of systems that are core to how a community functions: foster care system, education system, jail system, food system>food bank, water system, home system and the street system Environmental Racism has affected some these systems as our video presents
  • 13. FACTS  16.7 million children under 18 in the United States live in households where they are unable to consistently access enough nutritious food necessary for a healthy life.  The U.S. ranks 23rd among industrial nations in infant mortality. African-American infants die at nearly twice the rate of white infants. The infant mortality rate is closely linked to inadequate nutrition among pregnant women.  62% of children rely on school meals for food and 1 in 12 go to bed hungry.
  • 14. Before we go into some of the systems, we will be focusing on how these systems and minority groups are affected by environmental racism in the state of California.
  • 15. Environmental Racism in California Central Valley
  • 16. Joining Forces: Prisons and ER in California  The young Latinos had a lot of threats to choose from: air quality, one of the worst rated in the country; undrinkable local water supplies; regular pesticide poisoning; downwind drift from incinerators and power plants; and mega-dairies with their toxic emissions  In the face of the toxic load across the Valley, it came as a surprise to some of the adult environmental justice activists that the youth reported as the biggest threats in their communities the ―three Ps‖: police, pollution, and prisons. The environmental justice movement has struggled with mainstream environmentalists over the bounds of the term environment.
  • 17.  Valley residents remain on the front lines of an unprecedented prison-building boom. The state has built twenty-two new prisons since 1983 (including Delano II), after building twelve over more than a century, from 1856 to 1983. Between 1980 and 2005, California’s prison population has grown 556 percent, from 25,000 to 164,000 prisoners.
  • 18. California’s so-called prison alley has been the site of numerous environmental justice battles. The United Farm Workers fought a long battle against pesticides that were sickening and, in some cases, killing their members. Site fights in Buttonwillow (a toxic waste dump) and Kettleman City (the location of a toxic waste incinerator) gained international attention.4 The proximity of vigorous environmental justice activism to California’s prison alley has helped activists from both movements see the similarities in our fights. Foremost among them has been the statesanctioned imposition of toxic threats on the poor, people of color, and immigrants.
  • 19. Delano II  June 1, 2005, marked an auspicious day in the history of what one California official labeled ―the largest prison building project in the history of the world.‖  After the building of twenty-three new prisons in just twenty years, the June 2005 date marked the first time in two decades that California did not have a prison in planning or construction.  This historic moment was, at least partially, the result of a tenacious and multifaceted campaign against the construction of California’s thirty fourth — and purportedly last — state prison: Delano II.
  • 20. Delano II  The Delano II story begins in 1998, when Californians elected the Democrat Gray Davis as governor over the state’s Republican attorney general Dan Lungren  Somewhat surprisingly, the powerful state prison guards union, the California Correctional Peace Officers Association (CCPOA), backed Davis. Consistently the number one contributor to state legislative races, the CCPOA donated over $1 million to Davis.
  • 21. Environmental Impact (for jails)  While legal challenges carry the danger that organizers will lose resources and energy if the issue is defined too narrowly as a legal one for which the remedy is in the hands of lawyers and courts, the Delano campaign successfully undertook an environmental strategy that used litigation, while not relying on it.  As the activist lawyers Luke Cole and Sheila Foster point out, ―while legal action brings much needed attention to environmental justice struggles, legal strategies rarely address what is, in essence, a larger political and structural problem.‖Recognizing the limits of litigation as a solution to social problems, organizers nonetheless successfully made litigation one strategy in a larger, multifaceted campaign.  WILL TIE INTO GANG ACTIVITY AND ANY RELATIONS TO GANGS
  • 22. The value of environmental law lies largely in the fact that it requires a full public disclosure of the real costs society will pay for building, in the opportunity litigation can provide for public education and organization, and in the possibility it offers for residents to voice their concerns. Environmental law provides that all who might be affected by a project have a right to demand that the negative effects be made public before project approval, and, if possible, that the developer mitigate those negative effects.  As we continue to investigate and compile studies about the negative effects of prisons, examining the wide range of people harmed by prisons, we have a substantive campaign to unify opposition to mass imprisonment. These opportunities melded with the Delano campaign’s central premise: if the public knows the damage wrought by prisons, people will organize to stop its realization.
  • 23. Water System-Research in Nitrate Contaminated Water in the San Joaquin Valley  Background: Research on drinking water in the United States has rarely examined disproportionate exposures to contaminants faced by low-income and minority communities. This study analyzes the relationship between nitrate concentrations in community water systems (CWSs) and the racial/ethnic and socioeconomic characteristics of customers.  Objectives: We hypothesized that CWSs in California’s San Joaquin Valley that serve a higher proportion of minority or residents of lower socioeconomic status have higher nitrate levels and that these disparities are greater among smaller drinking water systems.  Methods: We used water quality monitoring data sets (1999–2001) to estimate nitrate levels in CWSs, and source location and census block group data to estimate customer demographics. Our linear regression model included 327 CWSs and reported robust standard errors clustered at the CWS level. Our adjusted model controlled for demographics and water system characteristics and stratified by CWS size.  Results: Percent Latino was associated with a 0.04-mg nitrate-ion (NO3)/L increase in a CWS’s estimated NO3 concentration [95% confidence interval (CI), –0.08 to 0.16], and rate of home ownership was associated with a 0.16-mg NO3/L decrease (95% CI, –0.32 to 0.002). Among smaller systems, the percentage of Latinos and of homeownership was associated with an estimated increase of 0.44 mg NO3/L (95% CI, 0.03–0.84) and a decrease of 0.15 mg NO3/L (95% CI, –0.64 to 0.33), respectively.  Conclusions: Our findings suggest that in smaller water systems, CWSs serving larger percentages of Latinos and renters receive drinking water with higher nitrate levels. This suggests an environmental inequity in drinking water quality.
  • 24.
  • 25. Environmental Justice Movt.  The environmental justice movement fights racial and class discrimination in environmental policy making, the selective enforcement of environmental laws, and the targeting of communities of color and poor communities for environmentally disastrous land uses, such as toxic waste disposal sites. Communities of color and poor communities bear an unequal and unfair number of environmentally destructive land uses, land uses that take from the community but do not give back to it. The environmental justice movement seeks to end environmental and economic injustices by eliminating the location of environmentally toxic facilities anywhere.
  • 26. ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE ORGANIZATIONS Asian Pacific Environmental Network (Oakland) Bayview Hunters Point Health and Environmental Resource Center (San Francisco) Borneo Project, The (Berkeley) Californians for Pesticide Reform (San Francisco) Center for Agroecology & Sustainable Food Systems (Santa Cruz) Center for Creative Land Recyling (San Francisco) Center for Environmental Health (Oakland) Center for Health, Environment and Justice Communities for a Better Environment (Oakland) CorpWatch (San Francisco) Crissy Field Center (San Francisco) DataCenter (Oakland) Energy Justice Network Environment and Human Health, Inc. Environmental Health News Environmental Justice Coalition for Water (Oakland) Environmental Justice Resource Center Environmental Law Foundation (Oakland) Environmental Research Foundation Filipino American Coalition for Environmental Solidarity (San Francisco) Friends of Alemany Farm Generating Renewable Ideas for Development Alternatives (Oakland) Global Community Monitor (El Cerrito) Global Justice Ecology Project (West Coast Desk) (Berkeley) Greenaction (San Francisco)
  • 27. ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE ORGANIZATIONS HOMEY (San Francisco) Impact Fund, The (Berkeley) In These Times Indigenous Environmental Network International Indian Treaty Council (San Francisco) Literacy for Environmental Justice (San Francisco) National Religious Partnership for the Environment Pacific Institute (Oakland) People Organized to Demand Environmental and Economic Rights (San Francisco) People United for a Better Life in Oakland (Oakland) Pesticide Action Network North America (San Francisco) Prometheus: A Social Justice Law Firm San Francisco Department of the Environment (San Francisco) Susan Ives Communications Sustainable Energy and Economy Network Urban Habitat (Oakland) Video Activist Network, The (San Francisco) Western States Legal Foundation (Oakland) Youth United for Community Action (East Palo Alto)
  • 28. The world is not fair. We, and you, are not that naïve to fail to see that.
  • 29. Home is next door, next city, next state, and all the states together as one USA.
  • 30. We’re only as strong as our weakest link, so we must work together.
  • 31. “There is some good in this world worth fighting for.” J.R.R. Tolkien