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The idea for Eco-Pioneers came to Steve Lerner while he was
attending the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro. Although he was
moved by the vision of sustainable development evoked by citizens
and officials at the summit, as a reporter he felt a need to put a
human face on the rhetoric and find out what sustainable
development actually looks like in the United States. He spent the
next four years searching out what he came to call
"eco-pioneers"--the modern pathfinders who are working in the
American pragmatic tradition to reduce the pace of environmental
degradation. These practical visionaries are people who are willing
to push the limits of whatever tools they can find for dealing with
ecological problems.Lerner provides case studies of eco-pioneers
who are exploring sustainable ways to log forests, grow food, save
plant species, run cattle, build houses, clean up cities, redesign
rural communities, generate power, conserve water, protect rivers
and wildlife, treat hazardous waste, reuse materials, and reduce
both waste and consumption. Some of those profiled run businesses,
some address environmental practices within their immediate
community, and some combine their environmental concerns with
social goals such as the creation of inner-city jobs. Together they
are creating ways of living and working that many analysts believe
to be essential to an ecologically sustainable future.
The story of how a mixed-income minority community in Louisiana's
Chemical Corridor fought Shell Oil and won. For years, the
residents of Diamond, Louisiana, lived with an inescapable acrid,
metallic smell-the "toxic bouquet" of pollution-and a mysterious
chemical fog that seeped into their houses. They looked out on the
massive Norco Industrial Complex: a maze of pipelines, stacks
topped by flares burning off excess gas, and huge oil tankers
moving up the Mississippi. They experienced headaches, stinging
eyes, allergies, asthma, and other respiratory problems, skin
disorders, and cancers that they were convinced were caused by
their proximity to heavy industry. Periodic industrial explosions
damaged their houses and killed some of their neighbors. Their
small, African-American, mixed-income neighborhood was sandwiched
between two giant Shell Oil plants in Louisiana's notorious
Chemical Corridor. When the residents of Diamond demanded that
Shell relocate them, their chances of success seemed slim: a
community with little political clout was taking on the
second-largest oil company in the world. And yet, after effective
grassroots organizing, unremitting fenceline protests, seemingly
endless negotiations with Shell officials, and intense media
coverage, the people of Diamond finally got what they wanted: money
from Shell to help them relocate out of harm's way. In this book,
Steve Lerner tells their story. Around the United States, struggles
for environmental justice such as the one in Diamond are the new
front lines of both the civil rights and the environmental
movements, and Diamond is in many ways a classic
environmental-justice story: a minority neighborhood, faced with a
polluting industry in its midst, fights back. But Diamond is also
the history of a black community that goes back to the days of
slavery. In 1811, Diamond (then the Trepagnier Plantation) was the
center of the largest slave rebellion in United States history.
Descendants of these slaves were among the participants in the
modern-day Diamond relocation campaign. Steve Lerner talks to the
people of Diamond, and lets them tell their story in their own
words. He talks also to the residents of a nearby white
neighborhood-many of whom work for Shell and have fewer complaints
about the plants-and to environmental activists and Shell
officials. His account of Diamond's 30-year ordeal puts a human
face on the struggle for environmental justice in the United
States.
The stories of residents of low-income communities across the
country who took action when pollution from heavy industry
contaminated their towns. Across the United States, thousands of
people, most of them in low-income or minority communities, live
next to heavily polluting industrial sites. Many of them reach a
point at which they say "Enough is enough." After living for years
with poisoned air and water, contaminated soil, and
pollution-related health problems, they start to take
action-organizing, speaking up, documenting the effects of
pollution on their neighborhoods. In Sacrifice Zones, Steve Lerner
tells the stories of twelve communities, from Brooklyn to
Pensacola, that rose up to fight the industries and military bases
causing disproportionately high levels of chemical pollution. He
calls these low-income neighborhoods "sacrifice zones." And he
argues that residents of these sacrifice zones, tainted with
chemical pollutants, need additional regulatory protections.
Sacrifice Zones goes beyond the disheartening statistics and gives
us the voices of the residents themselves, offering compelling
portraits of accidental activists who have become grassroots
leaders in the struggle for environmental justice and details the
successful tactics they have used on the fenceline with heavy
industry.
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