Washington University reports severe impact of environmental racism in black communities

ST. LOUIS — African American residents in St. Louis are exposed to far greater environmental risks than whites, contributing to stark disparities in health, wealth and quality of life, a new report from Washington University has found.

Released earlier this month, the report titled “Environmental Racism in St. Louis” piles together data and personal stories to illustrate how city residents contend with eight separate issues, stretching from lead exposure to asthma and limited access to healthy food.

Many of these challenges — and how their impacts skew along racial lines — are well documented, and have been examined individually by experts, policymakers or advocates. But the 28-page report discusses how many of them are interrelated and compound one another — something it says leaders need to take into account, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported.

“The report does a good job, in my opinion, of showing how these things come together, and how policy and divestment over time creates these outcomes,” said Kayla Reed, director of Action St. Louis, an activist group focused on racial justice. “Our goal is to get it in front of policymakers and community members to help spark dialogue around next steps.”

Those conversations figure to revolve around the hard truths described by the authors.

“It should come as no surprise that black St. Louisans are disproportionately harmed by lead poisoning, asthma, mold, and high energy costs — all of which are associated with factors such as substandard housing conditions and air pollution — due to living near industrial facilities, highways and building demolitions,” the report states. “In addition, the City’s focus on enhancing majority-white areas has left majority-black areas without adequate access to public transit or healthy food, and with high concentrations of vacant properties and illegal trash dumping.”

The report was generated by the Interdisciplinary Environmental Clinic at Washington U.’s law school — a pro bono legal practice that tracks matters tied to the environment and public health. It was done on behalf of four nonprofit organizations active in the city, with the stated goal to help those groups educate the community about environmental injustices facing minority and low-income residents, and to advocate for systemic changes to address them “and enhance public health.”

The findings show how unequal things are currently.

source: nbcnews.com