Mike Ewall

Mike's picture

Need a speak­er, train­er, or work­shop presenter?

Con­tact Mike at 215–436-9511 or by email.

Click here to jump down to Mike’s speak­ing top­ics on ener­gy, waste, envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice, com­mu­ni­ty and cam­pus orga­niz­ing and oth­er issues.

Mike’s writings/speaking:

Biography

Mike Ewall played a Key Role in the Fol­low­ing Grass­roots Vic­to­ries Against Pro­posed Pol­lut­ing Facilities/Policies:
(often con­ven­ing the com­mu­ni­ty oppo­si­tion or lead­ing the effort)

list does not include count­less oth­er grass­roots vic­to­ries across the U.S. where Mike played a small­er sup­port role

1993 — Bucks Coun­ty, PA
Munic­i­pal Waste (Trash) Com­post­ing plant

1993 — Bucks Coun­ty, PA
Petro­le­um-con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed Soil Burner

1996 — Pennsylvania
Mul­ti-state “Low-lev­el” Nuclear Waste Dump

1998 — Bucks Coun­ty, PA
Bio­mass Incinerator

2001 — Berks Coun­ty, PA
Med­ical Waste Chem-Clav

2004 — Luzerne Coun­ty, PA
Trash Incin­er­a­tor
(would have been the nation’s largest) 

2006 — Wash­ing­ton Coun­ty, PA
Waste Coal Pow­er Plant

2006 — Philadel­phia, PA
Liq­ue­fied Nat­ur­al Gas Import Terminal
(would have been most urban in U.S.)

2006 — Berks Coun­ty, PA
Cre­ma­to­ri­um

2006 & 2008 — Pennsylvania
Defeat­ed water flu­o­ri­da­tion leg­isla­tive mandate

2008 – Chester City, Delaware Coun­ty, PA
Tire Pyrol­y­sis Incinerator
(would have been world’s largest) 

2008 — Schuylkill Coun­ty, PA
Coal-to-Oil Refin­ery
(would have been 1st in the U.S.)

2008 — Clearfield Coun­ty, PA
Waste Coal-Burn­ing Ethanol Biorefinery

2008 — Lack­awan­na Coun­ty, PA
Ethanol Biore­fin­ery

2008 — Northum­ber­land Coun­ty, PA
Cre­ma­to­ri­um

2009 — Meigs Coun­ty, OH
Coal Pow­er Plant

2010 — Erie City, PA
Tire Incin­er­a­tor
(would have been world’s largest) 

2010 — VA, GA & NC
Poul­try Waste Incinerators 

2012 — Cleve­land, OH
Trash Gasi­fi­ca­tion Incinerator

2013 — Wash­ing­ton Coun­ty, PA
Cre­ma­to­ri­um

2014 — White Deer, PA
Tire incin­er­a­tor

2014 — Bloom­ing­ton-Nor­mal, IL
Trash and tire gasi­fi­ca­tion facility 

2014 — Stafford Coun­ty / Fred­er­icks­burg, Virginia
Trash and tire incinerator 

2014–2015 — Allen­town, PA
Trash and sewage sludge incinerator 

2016 — Muncy, PA
Wrote the local set-back dis­tance ordi­nance that stopped a trash and sewage sludge pel­leti­za­tion plant pro­pos­al by the same com­pa­ny we stopped in Allentown. 

Mike Ewall is the founder and direc­tor of Ener­gy Jus­tice Net­work, a nation­al sup­port net­work for grass­roots com­mu­ni­ty groups fight­ing dirty ener­gy and waste indus­try facil­i­ties such as coal pow­er plants, ethanol plants, nat­ur­al gas facil­i­ties, land­fills and incin­er­a­tors of every sort. He has been active­ly involved in stu­dent and com­mu­ni­ty envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice orga­niz­ing since high school in 1990. He’s taught hun­dreds of work­shops at col­lege cam­pus­es and activist con­fer­ences through­out the U.S. His grass­roots sup­port work has helped many com­mu­ni­ties achieve vic­to­ries against pow­er plants, land­fills, incin­er­a­tors, med­ical waste facil­i­ties and oth­er pol­lut­ing industries. 

Envi­ron­men­tal Justice

Mike’s activism began while in high school, as a trash incin­er­a­tor was planned for his home coun­ty near Philadel­phia. His work against envi­ron­men­tal racism start­ed two years lat­er when, at the age of 18, he was removed from chair­ing his home town’s Envi­ron­men­tal Advi­so­ry Board for ques­tion­ing a waste com­pa­ny. The com­pa­ny was seek­ing a long-term waste con­tract from his town­ship so they could build a waste facil­i­ty in an African-Amer­i­can com­mu­ni­ty in a neigh­bor­ing town — a facil­i­ty that was soon defeat­ed. Since this vic­to­ry, his pas­sion for envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice has led him to focus much of his work on sup­port­ing low-income com­mu­ni­ties and com­mu­ni­ties of col­or, and has led to numer­ous vic­to­ries against pro­posed pol­luters in urban and rur­al com­mu­ni­ties through­out Penn­syl­va­nia and beyond. 

Through the 1990s, his work focused on expand­ing a state-wide grass­roots envi­ron­men­tal net­work in Penn­syl­va­nia, sup­port­ing com­mu­ni­ty oppo­si­tion to land­fills, incin­er­a­tors, gas-fired pow­er plants, pris­ons, high­ways, sewage sludge dump­ing, water flu­o­ri­da­tion, nuclear waste and more. 

His accom­plish­ments in his home state of Penn­syl­va­nia include stop­ping numer­ous incin­er­a­tors, help­ing halt a mul­ti-state nuclear waste dump, stop­ping a law man­dat­ing water flu­o­ri­da­tion, stop­ping the nation’s most urban pro­pos­al for a liq­ue­fied nat­ur­al gas ter­mi­nal, stop­ping the world’s two largest tire incin­er­a­tor pro­pos­als, and stop­ping the nation’s first pro­pos­al for a coal-to-oil refin­ery. See side­bar for more. 

In 2003, he warned Har­ris­burg City Coun­cil that their incin­er­a­tor (the most diox­in-pol­lut­ing one in the nation, by far, and a major case of envi­ron­men­tal racism) would put the city into bank­rupt­cy if they bor­rowed the mon­ey need­ed to rebuild it (which they did). Eight years lat­er, the city indeed filed for bankruptcy. 

Stu­dent and Democ­ra­cy Activism

Mike’s involve­ment in the stu­dent move­ment runs deep as well, hav­ing been active since 1995 rebuild­ing and sup­port­ing the nation­al Stu­dent Envi­ron­men­tal Action Coali­tion (SEAC), a group unique for its strong demo­c­ra­t­ic, youth-led, social jus­tice-ori­ent­ed take on envi­ron­men­tal­ism. In 1996, he was a found­ing mem­ber of 180: The Move­ment for Democ­ra­cy and Edu­ca­tion, a stu­dent pro-democ­ra­cy/an­ti-cor­po­rate group active in the late 1990s. 

In 2004, he was a found­ing mem­ber of Ener­gy Action Coali­tion (EAC), a broad coali­tion of groups work­ing with stu­dents and youth on ener­gy and cli­mate issues through­out the U.S. and Cana­da. Near­ly a decade lat­er, EAC remains the face of the stu­dent cli­mate move­ment and is the host of the Pow­er­Shift con­fer­ences, the largest stu­dent envi­ron­men­tal activist con­fer­ences since SEAC’s era in the ear­ly 1990s. 

Mike’s pas­sion for sys­temic change has led him to pro­mote elec­toral reforms to pro­mote democ­ra­cy and fight cor­po­rate pow­er, includ­ing open debates and inde­pen­dent politics. 

Ener­gy Justice

In 1999, Mike coined the term ‘ener­gy jus­tice’ and found a need for a nation­al Ener­gy Jus­tice Net­work to sup­port grass­roots activists and get them net­worked with each oth­er on a range of dirty ener­gy and waste issues, as no orga­ni­za­tion was fill­ing that need. The need was par­tic­u­lar­ly obvi­ous as he was a few years into help­ing Penn­syl­va­nia com­mu­ni­ties fight off around 60 pro­posed nat­ur­al gas-fired pow­er plants (of which only 18 were built) and most oth­er states were fac­ing huge num­bers of pro­pos­als as well, but main­stream envi­ron­men­tal groups saw nat­ur­al gas as clean ener­gy (this was years before the aware­ness around frack­ing) and would­n’t pro­vide support. 

Ener­gy Jus­tice Net­work formed slow­ly, oper­at­ing as a ful­ly vol­un­teer project until 2006. In 2006, the net­work become tru­ly nation­al when cre­at­ing the “No New Coal Plants” net­work, con­nect­ing grass­roots activists in near­ly 40 states to stop the new wave of pro­posed coal-fired pow­er plants. Since the late 1990s, Mike has been a lead­ing crit­ic of bio­mass and bio­fu­els, and was the first to start to doc­u­ment the haz­ards with the full range of bioen­er­gy tech­nolo­gies. While win­ning vic­to­ries against bio­mass incin­er­a­tors since 1998, the anti-bio­mass net­work grew exten­sive­ly after 2006 and brought togeth­er activists in most U.S. states and, on the issue of poul­try waste incin­er­a­tion, on four con­ti­nents. The grass­roots ener­gy against bio­mass led to the for­ma­tion of a strong Ener­gy Jus­tice Plat­form. Mike leads Ener­gy Jus­tice’s work against all sorts of incin­er­a­tion (par­tic­u­lar­ly the burn­ing of trash, tires, wood waste, poul­try waste and land­fill gas).

Mike’s vision for an online inter­ac­tive pol­lu­tion map­ping project began in 1995 and final­ly became a real­i­ty in 2010, now pro­vid­ing a plat­form for track­ing exist­ing, pro­posed, closed and defeat­ed dirty ener­gy and waste facil­i­ties, the cor­po­ra­tions behind them, and the peo­ple and groups fight­ing them. 

In 2008, he was one of the first to earn a “tuition-free law school for activists” schol­ar­ship to the social jus­tice activist-run law school at the Uni­ver­si­ty of the Dis­trict of Colum­bia, where he earned his J.D. in 2011, sub­se­quent­ly pass­ing the Penn­syl­va­nia bar. Pri­or to law school, he authored the nation’s strongest mer­cury and diox­in air pol­lu­tion ordi­nances and has used these local laws to stop pro­posed pol­luters in small Penn­syl­va­nia towns. Dur­ing and since law school, he has been build­ing a legal tool­box for how to stop pol­luters with local ordi­nances in dif­fer­ent states. In 2013, he got his first law jour­nal arti­cle pub­lished, on the legal his­to­ry of envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice and the strate­gic dif­fer­ence between “equi­ty” and “jus­tice” approaches. 

He now splits his time between DC and Penn­syl­va­nia and is cur­rent­ly author­ing a nation­al report on the envi­ron­men­tal racism con­se­quences of trash, sewage sludge and “bio­mass” incinerators. 


PUBLIC SPEAKING / WORKSHOP TOPICS

Con­tact Mike at 215–436-9511 or by email to inquire about rates and logistics. 

    Gen­er­al Ener­gy & Cli­mate Overviews
  1. Ener­gy Injus­tice: How Dirty Ener­gy Impacts Communities
  2. False Solu­tions to Cli­mate Change, Part 1: Dirty Tech­nolo­gies Pos­ing as Clean Solutions
  3. False Solu­tions to Cli­mate Change, Part 2: Glob­al Warm­ing Pol­i­cy Loopholes
  4. Replac­ing all Dirty Pow­er with Clean Ener­gy With­in our Lifetime
  5. Peak Every­thing and “Extreme” Ener­gy: Oil, Gas, Coal, Ura­ni­um… (Why We’re in Seri­ous Trouble)
  6. Garbage Dumps, Incin­er­a­tors and oth­er Trash Talk

    Tech­nol­o­gy-Spe­cif­ic Ener­gy & Waste Workshops
  7. Don’t Nuke the Cli­mate! (Why Nuclear Pow­er is Not a Solu­tion to Glob­al Warming)
  8. Bio­mess: How “Bio­mass” and Bio­fu­els Wreck the Envi­ron­ment and Communities
  9. Nat­ur­al Gas: Fight­ing the Demand for Frack­ing (Pow­er Plants and LNG Export)
  10. Trash Incin­er­a­tion: the Most Expen­sive and Pol­lut­ing Way to Make Ener­gy or Man­age Waste
  11. Land­fill Gas-to-Ener­gy: Solu­tion or Problem?
    [Oth­er pre­sen­ta­tions avail­able upon request, includ­ing work­shops spe­cif­ic to cer­tain ener­gy or waste tech­nolo­gies or fuels, includ­ing coal, waste coal, med­ical waste, cement kilns, sewage sludge, tire incin­er­a­tion, poul­try waste incin­er­a­tion and more.] 

    Envi­ron­men­tal Jus­tice, Legal Work­shops & Organizing/Mapping Tools
  12. Envi­ron­men­tal Jus­tice and Envi­ron­men­tal Racism
  13. Envi­ron­men­tal (In)Justice: How the Law has Failed to Com­bat Envi­ron­men­tal Racism
  14. Stop­ping Pol­luters with Local Ordi­nances
  15. Ener­gy Jus­tice Com­mu­ni­ties: Map­ping the Chain of Destruc­tion and Our Move­ment Against It

    Com­mu­ni­ty and Stu­dent Orga­niz­ing & Anti-Cor­po­rate Trainings
  16. Com­mu­ni­ty Orga­niz­ing: Address­ing Envi­ron­men­tal Threats in Your Community
  17. Cam­pus-Com­mu­ni­ty Sol­i­dar­i­ty: How Cam­pus Activists can Sup­port Com­mu­ni­ty Envi­ron­men­tal Groups
  18. Stu­dent Orga­niz­ing 101
  19. Expos­ing Cor­po­rate and Mil­i­tary Con­nec­tions to your Campus
  20. “Green­ing” Your School
  21. Democ­ra­tiz­ing Your School
  22. How to Over­throw Cor­po­rate Rule in 5 Not-so-easy Steps

    Health and Envi­ron­men­tal Issues
  23. Tox­ic Waste in Your Water: Water Flu­o­ri­da­tion, an Emerg­ing Envi­ron­men­tal Jus­tice Issue
  24. Milk Does Nobody Good


  1. Ener­gy Injus­tice: How Dirty Ener­gy Impacts Communities
  2. Nuclear pow­er, coal, oil, gas, hydro­elec­tric, bio­mass and waste incin­er­a­tion, and “alter­na­tive” fuels pro­duc­tion all dam­age the envi­ron­ment and dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly affect low-income com­mu­ni­ties and com­mu­ni­ties of col­or. Learn about the life-cycle impacts of these dirty pow­er sources and how they affect peo­ple and our environment. 

  3. False Solu­tions to Cli­mate Change, Part 1: Dirty Tech­nolo­gies Pos­ing as Clean Solutions
  4. Every pos­si­ble dirty tech­nol­o­gy is now pos­ing as a solu­tion to cli­mate change, yet sev­er­al are even worse than coal. This work­shop expos­es these false solu­tions, includ­ing nuclear pow­er, “clean coal,” nat­ur­al gas, “bio­mass” and trash incin­er­a­tion, land­fill gas burn­ing, bio­fu­els, biochar, hydro­elec­tric dams, geot­her­mal, “recy­cling” of tox­ic wastes and oth­er crazy schemes. 

  5. False Solu­tions to Cli­mate Change, Part 2: Glob­al Warm­ing Pol­i­cy Loopholes
  6. Cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change will not be avoid­ed by the sorts of poli­cies that com­mon­ly pose as solu­tions. Many tox­ic scams, schemes and loop­holes abound in the world of green ener­gy mar­ket­ing, renew­able port­fo­lio stan­dards, car­bon trad­ing, car­bon tax­es & off­sets. Learn how these poli­cies have failed or cre­at­ed new prob­lems for the most vul­ner­a­ble — and how we must reen­vi­sion our orga­niz­ing and pol­i­cy goals to tru­ly tack­le the problem. 

  7. Replac­ing all Dirty Pow­er with Clean Ener­gy With­in our Lifetime
  8. Con­ser­va­tion, effi­cien­cy, wind, solar and ener­gy stor­age can replace near­ly all dirty ener­gy sources with­in 20 years, if our gov­ern­ment were com­mit­ted to doing so. Learn about the poten­tial for these tech­nolo­gies to rev­o­lu­tion­ize the ener­gy sec­tor and replace fos­sil fuels, nuclear pow­er, hydro­elec­tric dams, biomass/waste incin­er­a­tion and oth­er dirty fuels. 

  9. Peak Every­thing and “Extreme” Ener­gy: Oil, Gas, Coal, Ura­ni­um… (Why We’re in Seri­ous Trouble)
  10. The cheap and easy half is already out of the ground. The remain­ing half requires more extreme mea­sures, such as deep­wa­ter drilling, tar sands, frack­ing, under­ground coal gasi­fi­ca­tion and tho­ri­um reac­tors. Oth­er resources are peak­ing as well, includ­ing phos­pho­rous (crit­i­cal for use in agri­cul­ture), met­als and oth­er min­er­als… all lead­ing to peaks in food, ener­gy use and pop­u­la­tion, with dire con­se­quences for a world where pop­u­la­tion and con­sump­tion is growing. 

  11. Garbage Dumps, Incin­er­a­tors and oth­er Trash Talk
  12. Where does your waste go when you throw it “away?” Where is “away” and who lives there? What hap­pens when you let trash be sent to land­fills or incin­er­a­tors? What are the alter­na­tives? This pre­sen­ta­tion can cov­er many types of waste, includ­ing haz­ardous waste, con­struc­tion & demo­li­tion waste, sewage sludge, med­ical waste, con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed soil and ash. What you don’t know can def­i­nite­ly hurt you. 

  13. Don’t Nuke the Cli­mate! (Why Nuclear Pow­er is Not a Solu­tion to Glob­al Warming)
  14. Nuclear pow­er is being pro­mot­ed as a solu­tion to cli­mate change, yet the nuclear fuel cycle DOES con­tribute to glob­al warm­ing. Nuclear pow­er is also the most expen­sive, most racist and most envi­ron­men­tal­ly dam­ag­ing form of ener­gy we have. Learn about pol­lu­tion from nuclear reac­tors and the nuclear fuel chain, from min­ing to waste dis­pos­al, includ­ing nuclear pow­er’s con­nec­tion to nuclear weapons and militarism. 

  15. Bio­mess: How “Bio­mass” and Bio­fu­els Wreck the Envi­ron­ment and Communities
  16. So-called “bio­mass” incin­er­a­tion and bio­fu­els mas­quer­ade as clean, renew­able ener­gy sources, but are false solu­tions, harm­ing com­mu­ni­ties and the envi­ron­ment. Bio­mass means every­thing from trash to trees, from ani­mal wastes and crops to tires, sewage sludge, land­fill gas and con­struc­tion and demo­li­tion wood waste. Burn­ing these fuels harms the cli­mate (even more than coal) and pol­lutes com­mu­ni­ties, while under­min­ing envi­ron­men­tal­ly-sound meth­ods for man­ag­ing forests, agri­cul­ture and waste. Learn why there are no “green” ways to burn “bio­mass” and how you can join Ener­gy Jus­tice’s nation­al grass­roots anti-bio­mass net­work to stop this grow­ing threat. 

  17. Nat­ur­al Gas: Fight­ing the Demand for Frack­ing (Pow­er Plants and LNG Export)
  18. Nat­ur­al gas extrac­tion is wreck­ing our air, land and water. Learn some of the less­er-known details about nat­ur­al gas and frack­ing, includ­ing larg­er-pic­ture mat­ters like “peak gas” pro­duc­tion, how gas is worse than coal for glob­al warm­ing, and the relat­ed bat­tles against frack­ing waste­water treat­ment, liq­ue­fied nat­ur­al gas (LNG) ter­mi­nals, gas-fired pow­er plants, pipelines and com­pres­sor stations. 

  19. Trash Incin­er­a­tion: the Most Expen­sive and Pol­lut­ing Way to Make Ener­gy or Man­age Waste
  20. Trash incin­er­a­tion (includ­ing pyrol­y­sis, gasi­fi­ca­tion and plas­ma arc) is the most expen­sive and pol­lut­ing way to make ener­gy or man­age waste. It’s more pol­lut­ing than coal (even for the cli­mate) and pro­duces 10 times few­er jobs than reuse, recy­cling and com­post­ing. This archa­ic tech­nol­o­gy is com­ing back with a vengeance, dri­ven by mis­guid­ed renew­able ener­gy poli­cies and con­fused politi­cians. One of the world’s most unpop­u­lar tech­nolo­gies, grass­roots activists con­tin­ue to stop these plans while build­ing a new “zero waste” future. 

  21. Land­fill Gas-to-Ener­gy: Solu­tion or Problem?
  22. Man­ag­ing land­fills for ener­gy pro­duc­tion (to burn land­fill gas for ener­gy) runs counter to the prop­er man­age­ment of land­fills as waste facil­i­ties, caus­ing unnec­es­sary increas­es in pol­lu­tion. Burn­ing land­fill gas for ener­gy mis­man­ages land­fills, is worse for glob­al warm­ing than sim­ply flar­ing the gas and increas­es tox­ic expo­sures to land­fill com­mu­ni­ties. Learn how land­fill gas man­age­ment can be improved so that the tox­ic risks to the com­mu­ni­ty are minimized. 

  23. Envi­ron­men­tal Jus­tice and Envi­ron­men­tal Racism
  24. What is envi­ron­men­tal racism? Why DO the most pol­lut­ing indus­tries tend to end up in cer­tain parts of town? Isn’t it just about class? Learn about the real­i­ties of envi­ron­men­tal racism. This work­shop dis­cuss­es the prin­ci­ples of envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice and what is means to be involved in the envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice move­ment. We will explore the dif­fer­ences between NIMBY “not in my back­yard” and NIABY “not in any­one’s back­yard” pol­i­tics, the dif­fer­ence between envi­ron­men­tal “equi­ty” and jus­tice, and how cor­po­rate pro­pa­gan­da sys­tems under­mine envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice through sophis­ti­cat­ed divide and con­quer tactics. 

  25. Envi­ron­men­tal (In)Justice: How the Law has Failed to Com­bat Envi­ron­men­tal Racism
  26. Envi­ron­men­tal racism is alive and well in the U.S., but now, 30 years after the term was coined, gov­ern­ment efforts to address the prob­lem have hijacked the envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice move­ment while the Supreme Court has thrown out hopes of address­ing these injus­tices through civ­il rights laws in the courts. Learn about the his­to­ry of this effort, and why the future of envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice pol­i­cy is not through envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice legal channels. 

  27. Stop­ping Pol­luters with Local Ordinances
  28. At least half of the states allow local gov­ern­ments to pass air or waste laws stricter than state and fed­er­al law. Mak­ing use of these rights can offer grass­roots groups a cheap and effec­tive way to stop pro­posed pol­lut­ing indus­tries and to clean up or close exist­ing ones, with­out going through the cost­ly (and often unsuc­cess­ful) path of state reg­u­la­to­ry appeals. Learn what is pos­si­ble in your state and how we can col­lab­o­rate to draft ordi­nances to estab­lish strict new envi­ron­men­tal pol­i­cy from the ground up. 

  29. Ener­gy Jus­tice Com­mu­ni­ties: Map­ping the Chain of Destruc­tion and Our Move­ment Against It
  30. Ener­gy Jus­tice Net­work has been build­ing an ambi­tious online map­ping and data­base project, track­ing exist­ing, pro­posed, closed and defeat­ed dirty ener­gy and waste facil­i­ties of many types, the cor­po­ra­tions behind them, and the peo­ple and groups fight­ing them. This is an orga­niz­ing and net­work­ing tool that some grass­roots com­mu­ni­ty groups are start­ing to use to share doc­u­ments, research the indus­try and to find and con­nect with each oth­er. Learn about this tool (avail­able at http://www.energyjustice.net/map/), and our envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice map­ping and analy­sis tools (Jus­ticeMap and Jus­ticeMap API) and how you and your group can make use of it. 

  31. Com­mu­ni­ty Orga­niz­ing: Address­ing Envi­ron­men­tal Threats in Your Community
  32. Want to pro­tect your com­mu­ni­ty from some pol­lut­ing indus­try or oth­er nox­ious devel­op­ment? No mat­ter where you live, there’s a good chance that you’re not that far from a land­fill, incin­er­a­tor, tox­ic waste site, pow­er plant or oth­er pol­lut­ing indus­try (or pro­pos­als for such). Learn how to research and address these envi­ron­men­tal threats. Many com­mu­ni­ty groups have suc­ceed­ed in fight­ing off envi­ron­men­tal­ly-dam­ag­ing devel­op­ment, but it’s noth­ing like what you see in movies. Learn what works for com­mu­ni­ties and how to avoid pit­falls that cause groups to lose. Learn how to win with­out hav­ing to rely on expen­sive lawyers. We can help you with strat­e­gy devel­op­ment, group-build­ing and much more. 

  33. Cam­pus-Com­mu­ni­ty Sol­i­dar­i­ty: How Cam­pus Activists can Sup­port Com­mu­ni­ty Envi­ron­men­tal Groups
  34. Com­mu­ni­ties all over are threat­ened with exist­ing or pro­posed dirty ener­gy and waste facil­i­ties. Stu­dents can do a lot to help impact­ed com­mu­ni­ties fight off these pol­luters. Learn how to iden­ti­fy threat­ened com­mu­ni­ties in your region, how to approach them and how to work in sol­i­dar­i­ty to move their strug­gles to victory. 

  35. Stu­dent Orga­niz­ing 101
  36. Many stu­dent orga­ni­za­tions have a hard time main­tain­ing an effec­tive orga­ni­za­tion, not to men­tion long-term, strate­gi­cal­ly orga­nized cam­paigns. This work­shop will teach you how to get and keep mem­bers, break down apa­thy, win effec­tive cam­paigns, build stu­dent pow­er and more. 

    Learn about: 

    • Pick­ing an Issue: Ser­vice Projects vs. Issue Campaigns 
    • Dis­man­tling apathy 
    • Deal­ing with cliques 
    • Fix­ing lame groups 
    • Demo­c­ra­t­ic decision-making 
    • Recruit­ing and retain­ing members 
    • Effec­tive meetings 
    • Strat­e­gy charts / pow­er mapping 
    • Who REALLY runs your school? 
    • Being vis­i­ble
    • Dis-Ori­en­ta­tion Guides 
    • Tak­ing over stu­dent government 
    • Effec­tive net­work­ing and coali­tion build­ing, on- and off-campus 
    • Mak­ing sure your group sur­vives after you graduate 

    As there are many com­po­nents to this pre­sen­ta­tion, it works best as an extend­ed orga­niz­ing work­shop cov­er­ing at least 3–4 hours. Less-detailed 1–2 hour pre­sen­ta­tions can be made, but would only cov­er parts of the mate­r­i­al. Try bring­ing lead­ers of var­i­ous groups togeth­er for this workshop. 

  37. Expos­ing Cor­po­rate and Mil­i­tary Con­nec­tions to your Campus
  38. The work­shop explains the details on how to research the fol­low­ing types of corporate/military con­nec­tions to schools: 

    • Invest­ments
    • Con­tracts for ser­vices and prod­ucts the school buys 
    • Waste Con­tracts
    • Research Grants
    • Stu­dents as Products 
    • Cam­pus Gov­er­nance (cor­po­rate ties to trustees…) 

    Learn how to “green” and de-cor­po­ra­tize your school! This work­shop can also include a hands-on research trip to offices on cam­pus where files on these cor­po­rate ties exist, help­ing you obtain some of this hard-to-get infor­ma­tion on your school. 

  39. “Green­ing” Your School
  40. Schools are insti­tu­tions which cre­ate major envi­ron­men­tal and social impacts when they buy every­thing from food and paper to light bulbs and cloth­ing. This pur­chas­ing pow­er can be redi­rect­ed to sup­port­ing prod­ucts which are more social­ly responsible. 

  41. Democ­ra­tiz­ing Your School
  42. Most col­leges and uni­ver­si­ties are run by cor­po­rate busi­ness­peo­ple and polit­i­cal appointees rather than those who have the most inter­est in the edu­ca­tion­al sys­tem. Learn how to fight for fun­da­men­tal changes to democ­ra­tize schools, giv­ing more pow­er to stu­dents, fac­ul­ty and staff. 

  43. How to Over­throw Cor­po­rate Rule in 5 Not-so-easy Steps
  44. Cor­po­ra­tions run our gov­ern­ment, our media, our schools and our­selves. Cor­po­ra­tions have more rights than cit­i­zens, but it has­n’t always been this way. This work­shop out­lines spe­cif­ic meth­ods to democ­ra­tize and de-cor­po­ra­tize our society. 

  45. Tox­ic Waste in Your Water: Water Flu­o­ri­da­tion, an Emerg­ing Envi­ron­men­tal Jus­tice Issue
  46. Haz­ardous waste from the phos­phate min­ing indus­try has long been dumped in drink­ing water sup­plies under the guise of help­ing peo­ple’s teeth with water flu­o­ri­da­tion. In fact, flu­o­ri­da­tion does not reduce tooth decay, but does con­tribute to a wide range of health prob­lems, from dis­col­ored teeth to bone can­cer to brit­tle bones and learn­ing dis­abil­i­ties. Fed­er­al agen­cies now admit that peo­ple have been over­dosed with it for the past 60 years that the prac­tice has gone on. Learn about flu­o­ride’s effects on the brain, bones and oth­er parts of the body and what we can do to reverse the use of peo­ple as an indus­tri­al dump­ing ground. 

  47. Milk Does Nobody Good
  48. Milk does­n’t pre­vent osteo­poro­sis, it caus­es it. Milk also caus­es can­cers and oth­er health prob­lems. Along with meat, it is the vehi­cle for expo­sure to over 90% of your expo­sure to some of the most tox­ic chem­i­cals known: diox­ins and furans. Dairy prod­ucts pro­vide increased expo­sure to tox­ic pes­ti­cides, can­cer-caus­ing growth hor­mones and antibi­otics residues. Learn the truth about milk and dairy prod­ucts and how to live with­out them. Learn about: 

    • Health prob­lems linked with milk 
    • Milk, pro­tein and osteoporosis 
    • Chem­i­cal and radioac­tive pollutants 
    • Bovine Growth Hor­mone, IGF‑1 & Cancer 
    • Ani­mal cru­el­ty issues & the veal connection 
    • How to live with­out cow secretions 
    • VEG­e­tar­i­AN­ism, meat pro­duc­tion, food safety 


EJ Communities Map

Map of Coal and Gas Facilities

We are mapping all of the existing, proposed, closed and defeated dirty energy and waste facilities in the US. We are building a network of community groups to fight the facilities and the corporations behind them.

Our Network

Watch Us on YouTube