Miami Herald (Sunday)

A Black community in Florida is under assault from business interests

- BY JAMES MANIGAULT-BRYANT AND MAFOUDIA KEITA James Manigault-Bryant, Ph.D., is chair and professor of Africana Studies and faculty affiliate in anthropolo­gy and sociology and religion at Williams College. Mafoudia Keita is a Mellon Mays Fellow, majoring i

The impacts industrial pollution on the natural resources of Black and Brown communitie­s have been well documented in scholarshi­p and the media, but what is transpirin­g in the unincorpor­ated, Gulf Coast community of Tallevast is particular­ly remarkable.

A historical­ly Black community that sits just north of the Sarasota/Bradenton Airport, Tallevast is enduring a coordinate­d onslaught of environmen­tal assaults. Manatee County government has rendered the community as an inevitable sacrifice for generating commercial revenue.

First, and most publicized, was the contaminat­ion of the community’s groundwate­r by the Loral Corporatio­n’s American Beryllium Co. (ABC). For more than 50 years, ABC machined toxic beryllium at a facility in the center of Tallevast.

Although monitored by local and state agencies, ABC’s production process emitted toxic dust to the air and its cleaning process seeped trichloret­hylene

(TCE) into the groundwate­r. While Lockheed Martin, which acquired ABC when it purchased Loral Corporatio­n in 1997, has directed remediatio­n efforts in Tallevast for close to a decade, residents remain distrustfu­l of their safety, a belief that is increasing­ly justified as rates of cancers and other illnesses exceed that of other Black communitie­s in Florida.

Tallevast residents would have been better protected against direct exposure to the contaminat­ion had the county fulfilled the terms of its 1980s Community Developmen­t Block Grant. Called the “Tallevast Comprehens­ive Improvemen­t Grant,” the funds were supposed to bring all of Tallevast’s properties onto Manatee County water and sewer lines. The county claims the funds were exhausted before homes in the eastern half of the community were connected.

After the contaminat­ion, Manatee County finally brought all residents onto water lines, but homes that were not connected to sewer during the 1980s renovation­s remain on septic tanks. In the past few months, the county, dismissing its obligation­s to its 40-year old improvemen­t plan, has shamelessl­y proposed to Tallevast residents a gravity sewer project. If it progresses, they will be required to connect to the Manatee County sewer service at a cost nearly totaling $20,000 per home.

Despite Tallevast’s vulnerabil­ity to poisons left by a now-vanished industrial plant, a new wave of industries has encircled the community and threatens its already vulnerable environmen­t.

Manatee County commission­ers, in another act of dismissal, authorized the constructi­on of bus depot that opened in 2016. Across Tallevast Road from the depot lies a 55-acre Amazon distributi­on facility. The commission­ers rezoned the land for the warehouse Amazon now occupies, despite protests from Tallevast residents who were concerned about environmen­tal impacts. Manatee County officials refuse to collaborat­e with Tallevast residents to support a road infrastruc­ture that will accommodat­e the increased traffic on Tallevast Road, which inconvenie­nces residents and diminishes air quality.

These dismissals affirm that Manatee County has already relegated Tallevast to the status of industrial site. The community’s land carries tremendous commercial value as a gateway for air and train transporta­tion, despite the environmen­tal hazards posed to residents.

As the Sarasota-Bradenton Airport continues its expansion efforts, Tallevast residents must endure air, noise and light pollution as well as the dangers of living adjacent to a busy airport. Earlier this year, two planes nearly collided while in airport space when one was cleared for takeoff from a runway on which another was authorized to land.

The Seminole Gulf Railway, nearly as old as Tallevast itself, also continues to endanger the community. Last March, a train derailed on tracks just steps away from Tallevast homes. The cargo aboard included 30,000 gallons of liquid propane gas intended to be used by Manatee County. The airport expansion, the proliferat­ion of warehouses and the still unfinished remediatio­n form a coordinate­d environmen­tal attack on Tallevast.

Still, the dismissals continue. In November, the Governor Ron DeSantis Park opened less than two miles from Tallevast. That the park, with its green fitness trail, pickleball courts and playground is named after DeSantis belies a sweeping, statewide movement of commercial real estate developmen­t that now encircles Tallevast.

This movement is buttressed by directing public education toward seemingly benign, apolitical civic knowledge. However, these initiative­s gloss over the business interests that dismiss the histories and experience­s of those whose lives are needlessly sacrificed in the name of economic progress.

Put another way, Tallevast’s story needs to be elevated, not only for Florida’s historical memory, but also because when we remember it in years to come, we will realize that it told us Florida’s future.

 ?? RHON MANIGAULT-BRYANT ?? In March 2023, a train carrying 30,000 gallons of liquid propane gas derailed on tracks just steps away from Tallevast homes.
RHON MANIGAULT-BRYANT In March 2023, a train carrying 30,000 gallons of liquid propane gas derailed on tracks just steps away from Tallevast homes.
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