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May 1, 2001
Contact: Jennifer McNulty (831) 459-2495; jmcnulty@cats.ucsc.edu
WHICH CAME FIRST, MINORITIES OR TOXICS? NEW STUDY DOCUMENTS SITING OF HAZARDS IN
ESTABLISHED MINORITY NEIGHBORHOODS OF LOS ANGELES
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SANTA CRUZ, CA--Which came first, minority neighborhoods or toxic storage facilities?
A new study of metropolitan Los Angeles documents that neighborhoods that were selected
to house toxic storage and disposal facilities (TSDFs) were more minority, poorer,
and more blue-collar than census tracts that did not receive TSDFs.
The study charts the arrival of all high-capacity TSDFs in Los Angeles County against
changing neighborhood demographics over the 1970, 1980, and 1990 census surveys.
Titled "Racial/Ethnic Inequality in Environmental Hazard Exposure in Metropolitan
Los Angeles," the research was conducted by Manuel Pastor, a professor of Latin
American and Latino studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and was
sponsored by the California Policy Research Center www.ucop.edu/cprc.
Simple comparisons looked at the character of an area before a TSDF siting and the
demographic and other shifts that occurred in the years after a siting, as compared
to the rest of the county. Subsequent complex statistical exercises confirmed that
the racial/ethnic makeup of a given neighborhood mattered in the timing of a TSDF
siting, while a similar analysis of demographic changes offered no evidence that
TSDFs attract minorities.
Pastor's previous research established that TSDFs were concentrated in minority communities
in Los Angeles as of 1990. As similar research results have accumulated, some people
have suggested that perhaps the disproportionate concentration of toxic hazards in
minority neighborhoods is not the result of discrimination in siting decisions but
is rather a matter of minorities choosing to move into neighborhoods with toxic facilities,
perhaps in search of lower housing costs.
"Our study looks back over time to answer the question 'Which came first? Toxics
or minorities?' and our results are clear: Minorities don't want to live next door
to toxic facilities any more than anyone else," said Pastor, director of UCSC's
Center for Justice, Tolerance, and Community. "Our study documents that these
potentially hazardous facilities are much more likely to end up in poor and minority
neighborhoods than in well-to-do white areas. There's a clear role for policy makers
who want to do better in the future."
In addition to being more minority, poorer, and more blue-collar, the neighborhoods
that got TSDFs had lower initial home values and rents, had significantly fewer home
owners, and had a significantly lower percentage of college-educated residents, suggesting
to Pastor that educational skills and an informed populace might play a key role
in resisting the placement of hazards.
"Numerous studies have shown that minority residents in California, particularly
in southern California, are bearing a disproportionate share of the burden of living
near environmental hazards and pollution," said Pastor. "Coupled with new
evidence that these facilities 'chase' minorities and the poor, rather than the other
way around, policy makers have a clear role to play in creating a more equitable
distribution of environmental hazards in our communities."
The four policy recommendations outlined in the report are:
- Bring more community members into the environmental planning process by improving
outreach efforts and reforming representation structures, especially the local assessment
committees for toxic facilities, to include more residents from immediately affected
areas. The provision of information by state agencies about both the nature and location
of hazards should be improved. Higher levels of participation and community involvement
early on in the decision-making process will help to reduce conflicts and lawsuits
while improving business-community relationships.
- Develop rules to protect communities that are likely to be too weak to launch
effective participation efforts. For example, a simple regulation that no new facility
would be allowed that would worsen current levels of inequality by race or income
in the distribution of hazards--a conservative measure that would allow the current
disparities to persist as long as they did not grow larger--would have prevented
or changed the siting of nearly half of the TSDFs that came into Los Angeles County
between 1970 and 1990. Collecting demographics on areas targeted for siting could
trigger a higher level of review and allow government, business, and community organizations
to go beyond the current hazard-by-hazard, neighborhood-by-neighborhood approach.
- To compensate communities for the current pattern of hazard distribution, focus
efforts on cleaning up existing facilities, developing economic recovery strategies,
and ensuring that any taxes and other mitigations go directly to the localities affected.
- The state should develop a broad environmental justice mandate, as required by
SB 115, which was passed into law in late 1999, and encourage new research on the
demographic patterns and health risks of various environmental hazards. SB 115 designates
the Office of Planning and Research as the coordinating agency on environmental inequity
and directs the California Environmental Protection Agency to develop a model environmental
justice mission.
"There's a lot we can do now to help protect the state's most vulnerable
and contaminated neighborhoods," said Pastor. "California has been proud
to lead the nation in environmental protection, and this is our chance to take a
similar leadership role in environmental justice."
The California Policy Research Center, sponsor of the report, was established in
1977 as a research and public-service program charged with applying the extensive
research expertise of the University of California system to the analysis, development,
and implementation of public policy.
Note to journalists: Manuel Pastor can be reached at (831) 459-5919 or via
e-mail at mpastor@cats.ucsc.edu. For a
copy of the report, call CPRC at (510) 642-8789.
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