I Can’t Breathe: Air Pollution Worse for Communities of Color

- by Brentin Mock, Grist

In North Car­oli­na, sci­en­tists from the Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Agency have found a “sta­ble and neg­a­tive asso­ci­a­tion” between poor birth out­comes among women and their expo­sure to air pol­lu­tion. That’s pret­ty much com­mon knowl­edge, if not com­mon sense, no mat­ter what state or coun­try you look at. But the EPA sci­en­tists also not­ed that “more social­ly dis­ad­van­taged pop­u­la­tions are at a greater risk,” even when sub­ject­ed to the same lev­els of air pollutants.

Trans­la­tion: If you have the mis­for­tune of being born poor and black in North Car­oli­na, you’re more like­ly to arrive in this world under­weight and under­nour­ished, on top of being under­priv­i­leged. Pol­lut­ed air only makes your sit­u­a­tion worse.

The study, pub­lished in the Jan­u­ary 2014 Jour­nal of Envi­ron­men­tal Health, cov­ered women who gave birth between 2002 and 2006 across the entire state. It was built upon a cat­a­log of pre­vi­ous sur­veys that have found “sig­nif­i­cant and per­sis­tent racial and socioe­co­nom­ic” dis­par­i­ties for poor birth out­comes like infant mor­tal­i­ty, low birth weight, and pre­ma­ture births. Throw air pol­lu­tion into the mix — par­tic­u­late mat­ter and ozone, which the EPA researchers mea­sured in the study — and the dis­par­i­ties deepen.

This might all be exac­er­bat­ed by a num­ber of recent envi­ron­men­tal cat­a­stro­phes in the state, includ­ing a rash of wild­fires in recent years. The wild­fires were, in fact, the impe­tus for this study. Researchers want­ed to find out how to iden­ti­fy which North Car­oli­na res­i­dents might be most vul­ner­a­ble to the smoke, and (guess what?!) they found that race and pover­ty are quite good indi­ca­tors. The high­er the edu­ca­tion and house­hold medi­an income lev­els, the bet­ter the birth out­comes for women in the state.

It doesn’t look like things will get much bet­ter for poor peo­ple of col­or in the state any­time soon. Con­ser­v­a­tive state law­mak­ers have passed poli­cies over the past year that seem bent on pre­serv­ing those inequalities.

Exam­ples include:

A law that clos­es a num­ber of women’s repro­duc­tive health cen­ters around the state, includ­ing some that pro­vide pri­ma­ry care, can­cer screen­ings, immu­niza­tions, and contraception;

A law that elim­i­nat­ed the state earned income tax cred­it, affect­ing over 900,000 people;

A deci­sion to cut fed­er­al unem­ploy­ment ben­e­fits for over 170,000 peo­ple who’d been out of work longer than a year;

A deci­sion to refuse fed­er­al fund­ing for an expan­sion of Med­ic­aid, which cuts off over 500,000 peo­ple from afford­able health care, includ­ing 200,000 women;

Cuts that reduced fund­ing for food banks by half (North Car­oli­na has sec­ond high­est rate of food inse­cu­ri­ty in the nation);

Cuts to pub­lic edu­ca­tion fund­ing that place North Car­oli­na at 48th in the nation for per-pupil spending.

Con­sid­er that all of this is in a state where there are 1.7 mil­lion peo­ple liv­ing in pover­ty, 41 per­cent of whom are chil­dren of color.

This is why tens of thou­sands turned out for the “Moral March” at the state’s capi­tol last month, demand­ing broad­er access to afford­able health­care and “envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice in every com­mu­ni­ty.” Pro­tes­tors with signs bear­ing anti-frack­ing and cli­mate jus­tice mes­sages marched in lock-step with those demand­ing rais­es in min­i­mum wage and bet­ter fund­ing for schools. All of these issues com­bined affect the future of the state: the children.

Civ­il rights activists have been try­ing to explain this to law­mak­ers for months, only to be writ­ten off as “cra­zies.” But now sci­ence is back­ing up those activists, show­ing that they’re not so crazy after all.


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