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Environmental Justice
Indoor human exposure to toxins is a significant environmental problem and a pressing environmental justice issue. Indoor environmental hazards typically pose far greater risks to human health than outdoor exposures— this is a function both of the higher levels of toxics associated with confined spaces and the significant amount of time people spend indoors. The problem of housing-related environmental health hazards constitutes one of the most clear, onerous, and critical cases of environmental injustice. Health hazards in homes tend to be highly concentrated in lower-income communities and communities of color, and they disproportionately harm poor and minority families. Nevertheless, researchers, regulators, policy makers, advocates, and the media often fail to appreciate the significance of housing-related environmental hazards, and even many environmental groups overlook indoor exposure to toxins.

The burden of housing-related health risks falls unfairly on communities of color because exposure to hazards is directly related to substandard housing conditions that are most prevalent in lower-income communities and communities of color.

These housing-related environmental problems are compounded by many other factors often associated with low-income minority communities: inadequate access to health care and health information, higher proportion of recent immigrants (who may have had some harmful environmental exposures before arriving in the US), language barriers, housing discrimination that limits choices, credit redlining, a weak tax base, inadequate public and social services, higher concentrations of renters (who have less control than homeowners over their housing conditions), higher rates of unemployment and underemployment, and relative lack of political power. Residents of such communities are also more likely to live near other pollution sources, compounding their risk of harmful toxic exposure.

On the other hand, effective programs to identify and address hazards in housing can have substantial spillover benefits that directly promote environmental justice. Improvement of the housing stock, an enhanced tax base, gains in skills and employment, better schools, a safer and healthier environment, political empowerment, increased community pride, and healthier people are all likely outcomes of a successful community effort to address this problem. Protecting residents from environmental hazards in their homes is an integral goal in an environmental justice agenda.

More Information

Center for Health, Environment, and Justice - CHEJ is a national grassroots environmental organization founded to address threats faced by individuals nationwide to their right to a clean and healthy environment regardless of their race or economic standing. Its website contains details on both national and local environmental justice campaigns, opportunities for local community involvement, educational and informational resources, and technical assistance.

Deep South Center for Environmental Justice - Housed at the Xavier University of Louisiana, DSCEJ was developed in conjunction with various community groups and universities to address the environmental justice needs of the region. On their website, DSCEJ provides an assortment of community, worker, and teacher trainings, as well as community profiles to outline some of their projects and activities.

Environmental Justice and Health Union - EJHU is an environmental nonprofit organization focused on bringing together environmental health professionals and environmental justice activists to eliminate environmental disease in poor minority communities.

Environmental Justice Research Center - Based at Clark Atlanta University in Atlanta, Georgia, EJRC provides research, technical, scientific, legal, and other support to community-based organizations (CBOs) and environmentally impacted communities in social justice areas related to environmental and economic justice, environmental racism, community health, and many more.

National Black Environmental Justice Network - NBEJN is a nonprofit organization that was formed during an emergency gathering of black community activists, labor groups, farmers, educators, youth, lawyers, and health professionals. People from more than 30 states came together in New Orleans, Louisiana, to map out strategies to defeat a pro-environmental racism campaign led by industrial associations and business lobbying groups and to strengthen the environmental justice movement. NBEJN has undertaken a four-point strategy to combat environmental racism that focuses on (1) safe and healthy communities; (2) sustainable development, climate justice, and clean production; (3) civil rights and equal protection laws and policies; and (4) international human rights protection.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Environmental Justice - The Office of Environmental Justice serves as a focal point for ensuring that communities comprised predominately of people of color or low-income populations receive protection under environmental laws.