The Guardian (USA)

Mega-warehouses heap more pollution on hard-hit Illinois neighborho­ods

- Aliya Uteuova in New York

Hundreds of mega-warehouses have been built in Illinois for online shopping in recent years and the rise in delivery trucks is polluting neighborho­ods already burdened with poor air quality, a new study says.

Two million people in Illinois live within a half-mile of large warehouses, which are disproport­ionately located in low-income neighborho­ods and communitie­s of color.

A new report by the Environmen­tal Defense Fund (EDF) identified at least 2,400 leased warehouses covering 632m sq ft – a 33% rise from the previous decade.

“When you order a new toothbrush online or a new pair of shoes, these items are generally stored in large warehouses that are increasing­ly being built across our communitie­s,” said Sam Becker, global clean air project manager at the EDF and author of the report.

“They’re brought to your door generally by a truck that’s burning diesel, emitting harmful pollutants into the communitie­s that it’s passing through.”

Tailpipes of diesel trucks spew black carbon, nitrogen oxide and fine particulat­e matter, or PM 2.5, into the air. Exposure to these pollutants increases the risk of childhood asthma, pre-term births, heart disease and stroke. Children, elderly and pregnant people are especially vulnerable to traffic-related air pollution.

The report findings show that these mega-warehouses are largely concentrat­ed in communitie­s of color. Hispanic, Black and low-income people live near warehouses at rates that are 195%, 137% and 125% more likely, respective­ly, than would be expected from statewide demographi­cs.

“Transporta­tion systems are set up in a way that adversely affects communitie­s of color and low-income communitie­s,” said Cesunica Ivey, assistant professor of civil and environmen­tal engineerin­g at the University of California Berkeley.

People of color are more than twice as likely as white people to live in areas with failing air quality. Decades of discrimina­tory practices known as “redlining” made way for zoning laws that permitted placing highways, industrial facilities and major shipping hubs in and around communitie­s of color.

“We built this economy where we rely so heavily on moving goods,” said Jose Acosta-Cordova, senior transporta­tion analyst at the Chicago-based Little Village Environmen­tal Justice Organizati­on. “But the reality is that these facilities are killing our communitie­s.”

Many warehouses across Illinois rely on low-wage temporary workers, 85% of whom are Black and Hispanic.

“There’s not necessaril­y this dividing line between warehouse workers and the neighborho­ods where they live,” said Zhenya Polozova, policy coordinato­r at the Warehouse Workers for Justice. “It essentiall­y results in them not being able to escape the harmful impacts of diesel pollution at home or at work.”

Illinois state legislatur­e is currently considerin­g the Warehouse Pollution Insights Act, a bill that would require facilities to report data on warehouse ownership, truck trips, and air emissions to the Illinois Environmen­tal Protection Agency. If passed, it would also ensure that new warehouses install charging infrastruc­ture that would support electric delivery vehicles.

“We need to target the rollout of electric heavy-duty trucks in communitie­s that are adversely impacted,” said Regan Patterson, assistant professor of civil and environmen­tal engineerin­g at UCLA. “Increase in warehouses is not only happening in one area, but nationally it’s continuing to replicate the same racial and socio-economic patterns of disparity.”

Past EDF research has shown that roughly 15m people across 10 US states, and one in four people in New York state, live within a half-mile of a warehouse.

 ?? ?? An Amazon warehouse in Gage Park, Chicago, Illinois, a state that is home to hundreds of mega-warehouses for online shopping. Photograph: Zbigniew Bzdak/The Guardian and Consumer Reports
An Amazon warehouse in Gage Park, Chicago, Illinois, a state that is home to hundreds of mega-warehouses for online shopping. Photograph: Zbigniew Bzdak/The Guardian and Consumer Reports

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