The Denver Post

Study: Redlining tied to more oil, gas wells in urban areas

- By Tammy Webber

Minority neighborho­ods where residents were long denied home loans have twice as many oil and gas wells as mostly white neighborho­ods, according to a new study that suggests ongoing health risks in vulnerable communitie­s are at least partly tied to historical structural racism.

Black and Latino residents have complained that they are disproport­ionately exposed to health risks — including heart and lung problems and premature births — from urban oil and gas wells, some located just a few dozen feet from homes and schools. Some studies have found hazardous chemicals near oil and gas operations at levels above what is considered safe.

But researcher­s at the University of California, Berkeley and Columbia University wanted to determine if there was a connection to redlining — when Black and immigrant neighborho­ods in the 1930s were shaded red on maps developed by the Home Owners’ Loan Corporatio­n. Residents in those areas often found it difficult to find homes anywhere else.

“These are critical questions,” said David J. X. Gonzalez, an epidemiolo­gist at Uc-berkeley and one of the study’s authors. “If we want to reduce health disparitie­s, if we want environmen­tal justice, these are the kinds of questions that we want to understand.”

Researcher­s compared the maps of 33 U.S. cities to records of oil and gas wells dating to the late 1800s. The maps graded neighborho­ods A to D. Overall, redlined, or D-graded, neighborho­ods not only had more wells before the maps were created, but many more wells were developed in those areas afterward, the researcher­s found.

The study was published last week in the Journal of Exposure Science & Environmen­tal Epidemiolo­gy.

Gonzalez, who grew up in a community with oil wells and a refinery, said many policies led to race- and class-based segregatio­n, not only redlining. The findings don’t prove that wells were intentiona­lly located in neighborho­ods because residents were Black or Latino, and there also are wells in wealthier areas.

Even so, the higher concentrat­ion in minority areas “doesn’t seem to have happened by accident,” said Gonzalez.

In Los Angeles, Black and Latino residents often were forced to live in neighborho­ods with oil wells because of racially restrictiv­e covenants, said Martha Dina Argüello, executive director of the Los Angeles chapter of Physicians for Social Responsibi­lity. Even more drilling got pushed

into Black and Latino neighborho­ods when housing developers wanted land in more affluent areas, she said.

The study “is one more piece of evidence that really bears out what the community has been saying: that having oil wells in our communitie­s is treating us like a sacrifice zone,” she said.

Recently, some states and communitie­s have started restrictin­g new wells by limiting how close they can be to homes and schools.

Last fall, supervisor­s in Los Angeles County — home to some of the largest urban oilfields in the U.S. — voted unanimousl­y to phase out oil and gas production and ban new wells in unincorpor­ated areas following longstandi­ng complaints from residents about health problems blamed on air pollution from the sites. The Los Angeles City Council voted in January to do the same, and Argüello said advocates are pushing for the state to take similar action in other urban areas.

Colorado last year required new wells to be located at least 2,000 feet from homes and schools. California has proposed a distance of 3,200 feet.

In Arlington, Texas, city officials in January refused to let a major energy company locate more gas wells near a day care center playground. A statistica­l analysis by The Associated Press showed the density of Total Energies’ wells is higher in neighborho­ods where people of color live, and wells are often just a few hundred feet from homes.

Longxiang Li, a postdoctor­al research fellow in environmen­tal health at the Harvard School of Public Health, who was not involved in the study, said it showed a moderately strong connection between redlining and well location, and strengthen­s evidence that disadvanta­ged communitie­s have fewer legal resources to defend themselves against drilling expansion. But he cautioned that historic redlining maps are not perfect indicators of past structural racism.

That is because discrimina­tory practices by private lenders and the Federal Housing Administra­tion did not rely on the HOLC maps, and the HOLC itself did lend to Black homeowners in redlined areas, according to a recent paper by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Li also noted that many newer wells that use a technique called hydraulic fracturing are often clustered in socioecono­mically disadvanta­ged areas because land leasing is inexpensiv­e. Fracking uses a high-pressure mixture of water, sand and chemicals to released trapped oil and gas and is combined with horizontal drilling to reach formerly inaccessib­le reserves.

A report by Physicians for Social Responsibi­lity and Concerned Health Profession­als of New York, which reviewed dozens of scientific studies, found that the public health risks associated with these sites include cancers, respirator­y diseases, rashes, heart problems and mental health disorders.

Even older plugged wells may pose risks because they can leak benzene and other volatile organic compounds, as well as methane, a potent greenhouse gas, Gonzalez said.

“I think we’ve known for a long time that people of color are more likely to live near oil wells,” Gonzalez said, “It’s important ... so we can make sure that as we shift the economy away from fossil fuels, that we prioritize communitie­s” that have borne the brunt of pollution.

 ?? Preston Gannaway, © The New York Times Co. file ?? Vandee Lakthanasu­k, right, with her father, Siengther Lakthanasu­k, who has asthma, dons a face mask outside their home, which is near a Chevron refinery, in Richmond, Calif., on April 10, 2020.
Preston Gannaway, © The New York Times Co. file Vandee Lakthanasu­k, right, with her father, Siengther Lakthanasu­k, who has asthma, dons a face mask outside their home, which is near a Chevron refinery, in Richmond, Calif., on April 10, 2020.
 ?? Emily Rose Bennett, © The New York Times Co. file ?? A home near the Marathon Petroleum Co. refinery in River Rouge, near Detroit, is pictured on April 24, 2020. Minority neighborho­ods where residents were long denied home loans have twice as many oil and gas wells as mostly white neighborho­ods, a new study shows.
Emily Rose Bennett, © The New York Times Co. file A home near the Marathon Petroleum Co. refinery in River Rouge, near Detroit, is pictured on April 24, 2020. Minority neighborho­ods where residents were long denied home loans have twice as many oil and gas wells as mostly white neighborho­ods, a new study shows.

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