US Civil Rights Tools Are Failing the Most Polluted Black Communities

Failure in ripped paper

An abandoned EPA probe in Louisiana’s “Cancer Alley” shows why the US needs human rights principles to combat gaping pollution disparities.

February 5, 2024
Manann Donoghoe & Andre Perry - Bloomberg

In 2022, the United Nations declared that access to a safe and healthy environment, free of pollutants and toxic waste, is a universal human right. The resolution provides a legal foundation for international challenges to environmental injustice; it should also provide an impetus for nations like the US to enforce their own environmental protections.

Without more clearly defined rights, some of the greatest environmental injustices may continue to be mired in politics.

Take the case of “Cancer Alley,” an 85-mile stretch along the Mississippi River in Louisiana where Black residents have long faced higher rates of death and morbidity due to polluted and toxic environments. For people of color living in the region, fresh air is certainly not a right; it is a privilege for others to experience.

Reprinted courtesy of Manann Donoghoe, Bloomberg and Andre Perry, Bloomberg



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