The Guardian (USA)

Chicago activists end hunger strike against recycling plant but vow to continue fight

- Taylor Moore

On the 30th and last day of their hunger strike, activists from Chicago’s Southeast Side held a vigil.

Mourning the health of the hunger strikers who have gone without food for a month, demonstrat­ors clad in funeral attire carried a fake casket on Thursday through Logan Square, the North Side neighborho­od where Mayor Lori Lightfoot lives. Southeast Side organizers and residents are demanding the city stop a metal shredder from operating in a Latino neighborho­od already overburden­ed by pollution.

“In order to continue, we’re going to give our body nutrients. We’re going to go back to eating, and we’re going to continue the fight. But we’re not going to do it alone,” said Yesenia Chavez, organizer with United Neighbors of the 10th Ward.

Chavez is among eight people who joined the hunger strike after 4 February, when three organizers announced they would go as long as it took to stop Southside Recycling from operating. Chavez said she experience­d severe weight loss, headaches, muscle pains, and anxiety attacks during her 25 days not eating solid foods.

Lightfoot has come under fire for aiding the owners of General Iron, a controvers­ial metal scrapper in an affluent white neighborho­od, in closing the facility last year - and then allowing the business to construct a new metal recycling plant in a low-income Black and brown community across town. The mayor wrote a letter on 23 February acknowledg­ing the hunger strike and the environmen­tal racism the East Side neighborho­od faces, but stopped short of denying the final permit needed for Southside Recycling to operate. Hunger strikers called the letter “insulting” in their own statement.

Thursday’s rally drew more than 200 people from across the city. It started at a church outside Lightfoot’s block, which was heavily blockaded by police, and snaked through the streets of Logan Square. Protesters wore “Stop General Iron” masks and carried signs saying “We deserve clean air!” and “Ecological devastatio­n is immoral”. At one point, they stopped traffic at a busy intersecti­on.

Many of the speakers were students from George Washington high school, located half a mile from the proposed facility. “There’s no reason why I should starve for a week to get Lori’s attention,” said Gregory Miller, a 15-year-old student organizer.

The defunct General Iron site was rife with controvers­y. The scrapyard violated US Environmen­tal Protection Agency standards in 2018, 2012 and 2006 and was widely regarded by neighbors as a nuisance. “There was a near constant rumble of massive machinery, and our facility manager had to replace external air filters weekly,” said a spokespers­on from Paws

Chicago, a nearby animal shelter.

The particulat­e matter that often escapes these types of businesses can lead to severe heart and lung conditions, according to Dr Susan Buchanan, public health professor at the University of Illinois-Chicago. Reserve Management Group (RMG), the metal recycling company that owns General Iron and Southside Recycling, is adamant that the pollution controls at the new site will be enough to keep residents safe. “We’ve been made a target,

but we are not the enemy,” wrote Steve Joseph, CEO of RMG, in an op-ed.

Chicago’s Southeast Side has a long history of environmen­tal pollution. The steel mills that once attracted immigrants to the neighborho­od with goodpaying jobs are gone now, due to manufactur­ing jobs moving overseas in the 1980s. But the area is still home to toxic industries pouring a million pounds of heavy metals into the air every year.

Oscar Sanchez lost about 20lb from participat­ing in the hunger strike all 30 days. His grandmothe­r, a recent widow who has suffered from Covid-19, called him before the rally. “She’s hooked up to an air tank, [because] the only air she can breathe is not from the Southeast Side.”

But she was more concerned for her grandson, according to Sanchez. “She said, ‘I miss your grandpa. Don’t make me miss you too.’”

 ?? Photograph: Dominic Gwinn/Zuma Wire/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck ?? Climate activists stage a die-in near Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s home to protest a metal recycling plant on the Southeast Side on Thursday.
Photograph: Dominic Gwinn/Zuma Wire/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck Climate activists stage a die-in near Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s home to protest a metal recycling plant on the Southeast Side on Thursday.
 ?? Photograph: Dominic Gwinn/ZUMA Wire/ REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Chicago activists lie on the street as part of Thursday’s protest. Their sign reads ‘Stop General Iron’, referring to the metal shredder on the North Side that closed last year.
Photograph: Dominic Gwinn/ZUMA Wire/ REX/Shuttersto­ck Chicago activists lie on the street as part of Thursday’s protest. Their sign reads ‘Stop General Iron’, referring to the metal shredder on the North Side that closed last year.

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