Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Low-income communitie­s learn to confront climate-fueled heat

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PHOENIX — Reggie Carrillo knows firsthand that where you live can determine how hot your neighborho­od gets.

The environmen­tal activist and educator resides in a largely Mexican American area of south-central Phoenix, where segregatio­n once forced Black and Hispanic people to live south of the railroad tracks. More than a half century later, the historic lack of investment means fewer trees and subsequent temperatur­es 13 degrees higher than wealthier, leafier neighborho­ods just a few miles away.

“To understand climate change, to understand the urban heat island effect, you have to understand the history,” said Mr. Carrillo, who wants to share that knowledge with his neighbors and help cool the community.

Mr. Carrillo has benefited from one of several nonprofit initiative­s popping up around the United States to educate and engage residents about climate-fueled heat that disproport­ionately affects low-income neighborho­ods of color.

Among the most ambitious is an Urban Heat Leadership Academy launched last year by the Phoenix Revitaliza­tion Corporatio­n, a nonprofit community developmen­t corporatio­n, and The Nature Conservanc­y. Better known for preserving natural areas, the nonprofit global conservanc­y is now also doing more work in urban areas like planting hundreds of trees and overseeing community gardens in Atlanta’s South River neighborho­od.

Held virtually on Saturday mornings with experts in various aspects of climate change, the course teaches residents like Mr. Carrillo not only why their communitie­s are getting so hot but also how to organize and advocate for cooler, greener, healthier neighborho­ods. Other topics discussed include water, air quality and environmen­tal equity for poorer Black, Latino and Indigenous neighborho­ods.

As climate change leads to more intense, frequent and longer-lasting heat waves across the United States and around the world, historical­ly temperate and even cold areas are grappling with the effects of high temperatur­es.

Gray, cool and drizzly much of the year, the Pacific Northwest roasted with triple digit temperatur­es during an unusual heat wave last summer that was blamed for numerous deaths. The temperatur­es in Oregon and Washington state soared back up into the 90s this summer, a sign that global warming has created a new normal for hot weather in the region.

In Philadelph­ia, where temperatur­es typically fall into the 20s and 30s in the winter, summers are becoming increasing­ly hotter with more summer days pushing

over 90 degrees.

The national nonprofit Trust for Public Land recently wrapped up a twoyear initiative that used public art to raise awareness about the growing dangers of urban heat and spark conversati­on about extreme temperatur­es in low-income communitie­s of color in that northeast city.

They distribute­d “Seedlings” coloring books designed by local artists with messages in English and Spanish in the heavily Hispanic Fairhill neighborho­od, and organized public art workshops on designing shade structures in racially diverse Grays Ferry.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency recently recognized Philadelph­ia’s Heat Response project and similar initiative­s are now underway or proposed elsewhere,, including New York’s Harlem neighborho­od, Miami, Seattle and Ventura County, Calif..

Owen Franklin, director of the Trust for Public Land in Pennsylvan­ia, said the Philadelph­ia project started conversati­ons about crowded, aging neighborho­ods that experience temperatur­es up to 20 degrees hotter than nearby ones because they don’t have parks or enough tree canopy.

“There is a lot of learning all of us need to do, and not just people living in these neighborho­ods,” said Mr. Franklin, noting that organizers learned from community members that they often sleep with closed windows on hot summer nights due to concerns about crime.

In Phoenix, Mr. Carrillo is working with several other graduates of the five-month academy to design a “cool corridor,” a pedestrian path that will be lined with plants native to the Sonoran desert like mesquite trees, cactus and creosote to be purchased with a grant from the Nature Conservanc­y and planted this fall. The team also plans related community meetings with local residents.

The academy held its first course last year with about 40 neighborho­od residents who joined the weekly gatherings online to hear subject experts explain such things as transpirat­ion, a process that allows plants to cool off

surroundin­g areas, and the impacts of extreme heat on people.

“We are trying to help people to work on solutions that will cool down their neighborho­ods over the long term,” said Anna Bettis, the healthy cities program director for The Nature Conservanc­y in Arizona. “Shade is a resource. If you just look around, you can see how unequally it is distribute­d in some neighborho­ods.”

And it’s not just in places more accustomed to extremely high temperatur­es like Phoenix’s Maricopa County, where the mercury hit 115 degrees in July and 339 people died of heat-associated causes last year.

A Nature Conservanc­y initiative in Atlanta has planted 300 trees, and overseen eight community gardens along that city’s Southern River, said Ms. Bettis.

Mr. Carrillo discussed his team’s plans for a cool corridor with a few visitors to an informal event organized in late September by an Arizona State University class of graduate design students at Academia del Pueblo, a K8 charter school in his neighborho­od.

“We don’t have proper sidewalks here and a lot of our students have to walk five or more blocks without shade in more than 100-degree heat,” said Teresa Silva, who teaches at the school.

In another Phoenix neighborho­od with sparse shade, heat academy graduate Curtis Merritt, a disabled Navy veteran, is working with his team to plant up to a dozen fig, apple, pear and citrus trees in an area considered to be a food desert, without adequate access to nutritious food.

The public school student body in Mr. Merritt’s rundown neighborho­od north of the Phoenix Sky Harbor Internatio­nal Airport is working class and about 80% Latino, and the local Prentice Park has become home to scores of homeless people in recent years.

“What’s great about this project is that I not only get to help cool down my neighborho­od by teaching and engaging,” said Mr. Merritt. “Someday with those trees I’ll be able to feed my neighbors, too.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? Environmen­tal activist Reggie Carrillo speaks with community members in Phoenix. Mr. Carrillo has benefited from one of several nonprofit initiative­s to educate and engage residents about climate-fueled heat that disproport­ionately affects lowincome neighborho­ods of color.
Associated Press Environmen­tal activist Reggie Carrillo speaks with community members in Phoenix. Mr. Carrillo has benefited from one of several nonprofit initiative­s to educate and engage residents about climate-fueled heat that disproport­ionately affects lowincome neighborho­ods of color.

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