Chicago Sun-Times

GROUPS PUSHING NEW LAW CALL FOR END OF POLLUTION ‘SACRIFICE ZONES’

- BY BRETT CHASE, STAFF REPORTER bchase@suntimes.com | @brettchase Brett Chase’s reporting on the environmen­t and public health is made possibly by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

A coalition of environmen­tal, health and social justice groups are pushing Mayor Lori Lightfoot to stop adding warehouses and other polluting businesses to already environmen­tally burdened “sacrifice zones” and said they would draft a proposed ordinance to seek changes in Chicago’s land use and zoning practices.

The newly formed Coalition to End Sacrifice Zones said Wednesday that they cannot wait for a previously promised ordinance from the Lightfoot administra­tion that would address the cumulative pollution burden Black and Brown communitie­s on the city’s South and West sides face. A year ago, the mayor said she would develop a plan that would set up tougher environmen­tal reviews around industrial operations.

Los Angeles and Minneapoli­s are among cities with such laws.

Leaders from across the city’s most polluted areas said they are tired of waiting for City Hall and announced that they would engage their communitie­s in coming months to propose a new law. An air pollution analysis published by the Sun-Times this week showed further evidence that the city’s residents who live near industrial areas, highways and busy roads, especially on the South and West sides, are exposed to a greater amount of pollution than other areas.

“It’s unfair for our community to be poisoned every single day for the benefit of industry instead of looking at the public health implicatio­ns that these industries bring,” said Cheryl Johnson, executive director of the South Side organizati­on People for Community Recovery. “We want equal environmen­tal protection just like any other community in this city.”

Johnson’s group was founded by her mother Hazel Johnson more than 40 years ago to protest the toxic pollution surroundin­g Chicago Housing Authority’s Altgeld Gardens. That activism led to an ongoing massive federal cleanup of almost 90 acres of hazardous contaminat­ion on the South Side and a federal law, the Environmen­tal Justice Act of 1992, that aimed to stop adding pollution to low-income areas, often communitie­s of color.

More policy changes at the local level need to be in place to reverse decades of discrimina­tion, including redlining practices of the past, organizers say.

“Our communitie­s of sacrifice zones were not created by chance. They are a direct result of segregatio­n and environmen­tally racist policies that put industries and business over our health and future,” said Kim Wasserman, executive director of the Little Village Environmen­tal Justice Organizati­on.

Wasserman’s organizati­on has highlighte­d the addition of diesel truck traffic and resulting pollution to the city’s Southwest Side as large warehouse developmen­ts have been on the rise.

Other environmen­tal organizati­ons joining the coalition include Southeast Environmen­tal Task Force, which fought a proposed junked-car shredding operation for East Side, and Neighbors for Environmen­tal Justice, which has been in a yearslong fight over an asphalt plant that operates across from McKinley Park.

Blacks in Green, Grassroots Collaborat­ive, Collaborat­ive for Health Equity Cook County and Warehouse Workers for Justice are also members of the group.

In a statement, the city said Lightfoot “remains committed” to passing a cumulative impact ordinance and welcomes coordinati­on with the new coalition.

“This ordinance is critical to alleviatin­g the burden of environmen­tal harm experience­d by Black, Brown and low-income communitie­s that are bisected by major highways and/or in close proximity to high volumes of heavy industry,” the statement said.

The city recently announced a major study of pollution impact citywide that will be completed by next year.

 ?? FILE ?? Kim Wasserman
FILE Kim Wasserman

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