Current:Home > FinanceChicago Mayor Unveils Reforms to Fight Environmental Racism -WealthMindset Learning
Chicago Mayor Unveils Reforms to Fight Environmental Racism
View
Date:2025-04-24 13:23:12
This article originally appeared in the Chicago Sun-Times. It is republished with permission.
Promising to end the practice of piling on more environmental burdens to the same South and West Side communities, Mayor Brandon Johnson is proposing a series of reforms aimed at changing city practices after federal investigators last year determined Chicago violates the civil rights of its residents by concentrating polluting businesses in Black and Brown communities.
The proposals include new policies for city departments that include better response times to environmental complaints, air monitoring and measures to reduce air pollution, public engagement around planning and development, and investments in so-called environmental justice communities, areas that receive a disproportionate share of pollution.
The Johnson administration also will ask the City Council to pass new laws related to planning and zoning that make it more difficult to continue placing polluting businesses in the same communities that have historically received them, all on the city’s South and West sides.
The content of a binding agreement with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development that promises to end discriminatory practices would be passed into law under the plan.
“In the greatest city in the world, no neighborhood should have to suffer the burdens of pollution more so than any other neighborhood,” Johnson said at a City Hall news conference flanked by community activists. “The time to act on environmental justice is now.”
HUD wrapped up a more than year and a half investigation of Chicago in 2022 after Southeast Side community groups complained that the planned relocation of the General Iron scrap metal business in Lincoln Park to the East Side was discriminatory. The investigators agreed that moving the business, deemed a nuisance in the white, wealthy neighborhood, to a Latino community surrounded by Black residential areas was a civil rights violation.
Though Mayor Lori Lightfoot denied the permit to allow the relocated scrap-metal operator to open on the Southeast Side at East 116th Street along the Calumet River, the business’ owner is asking a judge to overturn that decision.
Regardless, Chicago needs to change its ways, the feds said, and Lightfoot signed the binding agreement with President Joe Biden’s administration in the spring just before Johnson took office.
“This is a milestone in a much longer journey,” said Olga Bautista, who leads one of the Southeast Side community groups that brought the civil rights complaint.
After a citywide study of the cumulative impact of pollution and other social stresses that began in the spring of 2022, Chicago now defines a broader area of what it calls environmental justice communities that include Austin, East Garfield Park and West Garfield Park, Englewood, Humboldt Park, Roseland and other South and West side areas.
These communities are affected by industry and heavy traffic from busy roads, the city found, and they join other neighborhoods previously identified as suffering from too much pollution, including Little Village, McKinley Park, Pilsen, East Side and South Deering.
“Now we have a road map to combat those inequities,” Johnson said.
Kim Wasserman, who heads Little Village Environmental Justice Organization, was visibly emotional as she joined Johnson at the news conference.
“Thank you mayor for giving us a chance to breathe,” she said.
The analysis took into consideration both the amount of pollution and other social stresses common in the largely low-income communities of color.
“These are the areas with the greatest combined environmental health and social burdens,” said Megan Cunningham, the city Department of Public Health deputy director who oversaw the cumulative burden study.
Angela Tovar, the city’s top environmental officer hired by Lightfoot, began talking about a city ordinance to combat the cumulative burden of pollution in 2020.
“This is a process that took years because to think about what we’re doing requires systemic change,” Tovar said.
The plan also calls for publicly accessible data on a number of environmental factors, including pollution levels by community, historical locations of dirty industry and chronic disease rates in children.
The city’s plan was also created after collaboration with a number of environmental justice organizations, including Wasserman’s group and People for Community Recovery.
Cheryl Johnson, whose group People for Community Recovery helped bring the HUD complaint, called the collaboration with City Hall “a commitment that our lived experience will inform the changes to a racist system of zoning in Chicago.”
Brett Chase’s reporting on the environment and public health is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.
veryGood! (8664)
Related
- Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
- More than 2 million without power as Hurricane Milton slams Florida, causes deaths and flooding
- This Under Eye Mask Is Like an Energy Drink for Your Skin and It’s 46% Off on Prime Day
- When will Nick Chubb return? Latest injury updates on Browns RB
- Illinois governor calls for resignation of sheriff whose deputy fatally shot Black woman in her home
- This is FEMA’s role in preparing for Hurricane Milton
- Crane collapses into building where Tampa Bay Times is located: Watch damage from Milton
- Seven NFL coaches on hot seat: Who's on notice after Jets fired Robert Saleh?
- A New York Appellate Court Rejects a Broad Application of the State’s Green Amendment
- A New York village known for its majestic mute swans faces a difficult choice after one is killed
Ranking
- Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear ready to campaign for Harris-Walz after losing out for spot on the ticket
- Delta’s Q3 profit fell below $1 billion after global tech outage led to thousands of cancellations
- Uber, Lyft drivers fight for higher pay, better protections
- Nicky Hilton Rothschild Shares Secret to Decade-Long Marriage With Husband James Rothschild
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Jeremy Strong and Sebastian Stan on ‘The Apprentice': ‘We’re way out on a limb’
- Soccer Star George Baldock Found Dead in Swimming Pool at 31
- TikTok sued by 13 states and DC, accused of harming younger users
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Atlantic City mayor and his wife plead not guilty to beating their daughter
Hurricane Milton disrupts Yom Kippur plans for Jews in Florida
Prime Day 2024 Final Hours: Score a Rare 40% Off Waterpik Water Flosser Deal
'Meet me at the gate': Watch as widow scatters husband's ashes, BASE jumps into canyon
Save $160 on Beats x Kim Kardashian Headphones—Limited Stock for Prime Day
Jake Paul explains what led him to consider taking his own life and the plan he had
Atlantic City mayor and his wife plead not guilty to beating their daughter