Houston Chronicle

Breathing air that’s safe is a right for everyone

- By Catherine Flowers

The pleas of George Floyd to Minneapoli­s police echoed the pleas of Eric Garner in New York City in 2014: “I can’t breathe.” It’s not just police brutality. Black communitie­s have been saying for decades that we can’t breathe for another reason as well — for having to live with a disproport­ionate burden of air pollution and other environmen­tal injustices that lead to higher rates of lung and heart disease, even cancer.

Now, we are the communitie­s being hit hardest by COVID-19, a respirator­y disease attacking our lungs.

Breathing air that is safe, regardless of the color of our skin or our ZIP code, is a right. And the crisis of disparity shown by the coronaviru­s pandemic after decades of systemic racism makes it painfully clear that that right just isn’t being protected. This month, as the Environmen­tal Protection Agency decides whether to adopt a stronger standard for one kind of air pollution that could save more than 10,000 lives a year, we have the chance to tell them that we can’t breathe.

We have to because the EPA isn’t working for communitie­s like Floyd’s — and like mine. In fact, President Donald Trump and his EPA’s radical environmen­tal deregulato­ry agenda is a racist agenda. The EPA is working overtime to deregulate industries in ways that increase air pollution, harming communitie­s of color and lowincome communitie­s where COVID-19 is disproport­ionately killing black people, indigenous people and other people of color.

In 2005, Hurricane Katrina hit my family’s home in New Orleans, forever changing our lives. The storm forced us — and thousands of others — to evacuate to Houston and ultimately made us recognize the dire impact climate change is having on our safety, security, health and well-being. We understand, on a deeply personal level, that the climate crisis stops for no one.

Eventually, we made the decision to remain in Houston, and I made it my mission to fight for the health and environmen­t of our adopted hometown. The trauma of that experience led me to focus my career on advocating on behalf of those whose voices need to be uplifted .

Now, as a community leader and the Texas Field Organizer for the Moms Clean Air Force, I continue that work, fighting to improve health outcomes for some of the Houstonian­s more at risk. In a city that has long struggled with air quality issues, this mission has never been more critical. In 2018 alone, Houston saw over 100 days of poor air quality, and we are among the most polluted cities in the nation, according to American Lung Associatio­n’s 2020 State of the Air Report.

That is why the current proposal, made April 14, by EPA Administra­tor Andrew Wheeler — a former coal industry lobbyist — to refuse to strengthen the current national standards for particle pollution, or deadly soot, is a danger to our community. This form of air pollution is invisible but deadly, causing heart attacks, stroke, lung disease, premature death and other health complicati­ons. In Houston alone, analysis by the Environmen­tal Defense Fund and the Harvard School of Public Health found particle pollution contribute­d to more than 5,200 premature deaths and nearly $50 billion in economic damages in 2015.

With the EPA’s refusal to update particle pollution standards, the agency is poised to harm the very people who can least afford it — namely, communitie­s of color. Preliminar­y research indicates that longterm exposure to particle pollution may increase the risk of death from coronaviru­s, and a recent study found that black Americans are succumbing to this pandemic at a rate much higher than other population­s.

On May 20, I testified at a public hearing by teleconfer­ence in opposition to the EPA’s proposal. As a woman of color and a mother of three, this work hits home for me. Compared to their white peers, black and brown children face numerous health disparitie­s, and we know that air pollution harms our children’s health.

In Houston, more than 40 percent of area children are living in poverty, according to Children at Risk, a research and advocacy nonprofit. Worse, children living in economical­ly and socially disadvanta­ged neighborho­ods tend to have higher asthma rates. Nationwide, health complicati­ons from asthma account for more than 10 million lost school days each year and is the third leading cause of hospitaliz­ation among kids. For children with allergies or asthma — like my younger son, who is asthmatic — the exposure to particulat­e pollutants can exacerbate their illnesses.

During a pandemic that harms people with respirator­y issues, the EPA should be working overtime to fulfill its mission to protect our health and the environmen­t. Instead, the Trump administra­tion has used this pandemic to continue its relentless rollbacks of public health safeguards — 100 to date — which will lead to more pollution when we can least afford it. Trump’s EPA has even ceased the enforcemen­t of some environmen­tal protection­s altogether, gutted pollution standards for cars and trucks and undermined the lifesaving Mercury and Air Toxics Standards (MATS), to name just a few of its dangerous actions.

We all deserve to breathe air that is safe regardless of the color of our skin or our ZIP code. It is time for Wheeler to do his job and protect us, not polluters.

Flowers is the Texas field organizer for the Moms Clean Air Force. She previously served as director of community and government­al affairs for then-Louisiana Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu and created the city of Houston Department of Neighborho­ods under Mayor Annise Parker.

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