"Across America, Five Communities in Search of Environmental Justice"

"From New York to Los Angeles, Minneapolis to the Gulf Coast, people of color suffer disproportionately from pollution, callous government and climate change. "

"In many ways, Maleta Kimmons defines her neighborhood by what it lacks.

Several houses near her home remain vacant. Last week, she had to drive seven miles just to buy groceries. And two weeks ago, at the height of the Minneapolis protests sparked by the killing of George Floyd by a police officer on May 25, looters broke into the only pharmacy in the area, forcing the store to close and leaving many in the neighborhood without easy access to life-saving medication like insulin or inhalers for asthma.

Kimmons, who prefers to go by the name Queen, said what her neighborhood doesn't lack is pollution. Near North, where Queen lives, is one of several neighborhoods that make up north Minneapolis, an area that is predominately Black and is surrounded by a large number of polluting facilities and infrastructure, including roofing manufacturers, a trash incinerator, a metal recycling plant and several major interstate highways."

Kristoffer Tigue, Nicholas Kusnetz, Judy Fahys, Ilana Cohen, and David Hasemyer report for InsideClimate News June 17, 2020.

SEE ALSO:

"The Coronavirus Pandemic and Police Violence Have Reignited the Fight Against Toxic Racism" (The Intercept)

Source: InsideClimate News, 06/19/2020