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Last updated:  February 11, 2008

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History of Environmental Justice

Many name Warren County, North Carolina as the birth of the Environmental Justice movement. In 1982, this small, low-income, predominately African American community was identified by the state as the site for its hazardous waste landfill. The landfill was scheduled to accept PCB-contaminated soil from 14 counties in the state. Civil rights and environmental activists collaborated to stage numerous demonstrations against this action on the grounds that citing the landfill in this community was an unfair and prejudiced action. Although the demonstrations and subsequent arrests did not stop the landfill from being sited, it did mark the first time that focused community opposition brought national attention to racial and class biases present in government decisions to site hazardous waste facilities. As a direct result of the community opposition raised in Warren County and in other locations throughout the United States, studies were conducted demonstrating the predominance of waste facilities in minority and low-income communities. This community action and the necessary supporting evidence sparked the Environmental Justice movement.  

Supporting Evidence

Several seminal documents on Environmental Justice are summarized below. Since the early nineties a large body of literature has emerged on this topic, brief summaries of which are presented elsewhere on this Web site.

United States General Accounting Office. At the request of North Carolina Congressman Walter Fauntroy, the United States General Accounting Office conducted a study of eight southern states (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee) to determine the correlation between the location of hazardous waste landfills and the racial and economic status of the surrounding communities. The results showed a clear bias in landfill placement, with three out of every four landfills sited near predominantly minority communities.

Siting of Hazardous Waste Landfills and their Correlation with Racial and Economic Status of Surrounding Communities, United States General Accounting Office, GAO-RCED-83-168, B-211461, June 1, 1983. 

United Church of Christ, Commission on Racial Justice. In 1987, the Commission on Racial Justice published Toxic Waste and Race in the United States. This report demonstrated that race was the most significant factor in determining the siting of hazardous waste facilities, and that three out of every five African Americans and Hispanics live in a community housing toxic waste sites. The commission also noted that African Americans were heavily over-represented in areas neighboring toxic waste sites.
 

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