Main Page: Difference between revisions

From Voices in the Dust
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 26: Line 26:
=== 1970s ===
=== 1970s ===


* Jessie Rattley, the first Black mayor of Newport News, and other local leaders have discussions around coal dust mitigation.
* Jessie Rattley, the first Black mayor of Newport News, and other local leaders have discussions around [[Particulate matter and coal dust|coal dust]] mitigation.
* Linwood DeBrew and community members begin organizing around coal dust pollution issues.
* Linwood DeBrew and community members begin organizing around [[Particulate matter and coal dust|coal dust]] pollution issues.


=== 1980s ===
=== 1980s ===


* The City of Newport News overturns its air pollution ordinance.
* The City of Newport News overturns its air pollution ordinance.
* A significant increase in formal complaints about coal dust from local residents, including the first recorded complaint from Lambert's Point, Norfolk.
* A significant increase in formal complaints about [[Particulate matter and coal dust|coal dust]] from local residents, including the first recorded [[Coal dust complaints|complaint]] from Lambert's Point, Norfolk.
* Dust suppressing sprinkler systems are installed at coal terminals in response to community concerns.
* [[Chemical Dust Suppression: Sprinklers and Surfactants|Dust suppressing sprinkler systems]] are installed at [[Companies: railroads, terminals, and coal|coal terminals]] in response to community concerns.
* The [[Virginia Air Pollution Control Board]] begins monitoring airborne coal dust and takes initial steps to regulate coal dust emissions.
* The [[Virginia Air Pollution Control Board]] begins monitoring airborne [[Particulate matter and coal dust|coal dust]] and takes initial steps to regulate [[Particulate matter and coal dust|coal dust]] emissions.


=== 1990s ===
=== 1990s ===


* The [[Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (VA DEQ)]] is formally established in In 1990, with coal dust regulation becoming a priority issue.
* The [[Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (VA DEQ)]] is formally established in In 1990, with [[Particulate matter and coal dust|coal dust]] regulation becoming a priority issue.
* [https://history.house.virginia.gov/members/8916 Representative Dick Cranwell] sponsors a bill requiring Norfolk Southern to report air quality and coal dust emissions.
* [https://history.house.virginia.gov/members/8916 Representative Dick Cranwell] sponsors a bill requiring [[Companies: railroads, terminals, and coal|Norfolk Southern]] to report air quality and [[Particulate matter and coal dust|coal dust]] emissions.
* The 1993 [https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/FSupp/768/1144/2364908/ RISE, Inc. v. Kay] lawsuit challenges a landfill siting in King and Queen County citing [[Environmental justice|environmental racism]], further shaping the conversation around [[environmental justice]] in Virginia.
* The 1993 [https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/FSupp/768/1144/2364908/ RISE, Inc. v. Kay] lawsuit challenges a landfill siting in King and Queen County citing [[Environmental justice|environmental racism]], further shaping the conversation around [[environmental justice]] in Virginia.


=== 2000s ===
=== 2000s ===


* The [[Southeast CARE Coalition|Southeast Community Action for a Renewed Environment (CARE) Coalition]], then led by Dr. Erica Holloman, Linwood DeBrew, and Angela Harris, intensifies organizing efforts around coal dust pollution and [[Environmental justice|environmental racism]] in Southeast Newport News.
* The [[Southeast CARE Coalition|Southeast Community Action for a Renewed Environment (CARE) Coalition]], then led by Dr. Erica Holloman, Linwood DeBrew, and Angela Harris, intensifies organizing efforts around [[Particulate matter and coal dust|coal dust]] pollution and [[Environmental justice|environmental racism]] in Southeast Newport News.
* In 2002, the [[Southeast CARE Coalition]] formally pushes for investigations into the health impacts of coal dust, collaborating with the U.S. EPA.
* In 2002, the [[Southeast CARE Coalition]] formally pushes for investigations into the health impacts of [[Particulate matter and coal dust|coal dust]], collaborating with the U.S. EPA.


=== 2010s ===
=== 2010s ===
Line 56: Line 56:


* In 2020, the [https://law.lis.virginia.gov/vacodefull/title2.2/chapter2/article12/ Virginia Environmental Justice Act] is passed, with the state government committing to integrate [[environmental justice]] principles into decision-making.
* In 2020, the [https://law.lis.virginia.gov/vacodefull/title2.2/chapter2/article12/ Virginia Environmental Justice Act] is passed, with the state government committing to integrate [[environmental justice]] principles into decision-making.
* The [[Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (VA DEQ)|VA DEQ]] secures funding for the [[Tidewater Air Monitoring Evaluation (TAME)]] to track coal dust levels in Southeast Newport News and Lambert's Point in 2020, with data collection yet to start.
* The [[Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (VA DEQ)|VA DEQ]] secures funding for the [[Tidewater Air Monitoring Evaluation (TAME)]] to track [[Particulate matter and coal dust|coal dust]] levels in Southeast Newport News and Lambert's Point in 2020, with data collection yet to start.
* The [[Repair Lab]] [https://coaldustkills.wpcomstaging.com/ Coal Dust Kills] effort begins interviewing residents affected by coal dust pollution in Southeast Newport News and Lambert's Point, monitoring ambient dust concentrations, and sampling dust inside residents home to identify evidence of coal dust exposure.
* The [[Repair Lab]] [https://coaldustkills.wpcomstaging.com/ Coal Dust Kills] effort begins interviewing residents affected by [[Particulate matter and coal dust|coal dust]] pollution in Southeast Newport News and Lambert's Point, [[VOICES: Voices Organizing In opposition to Coal dust with Environmental Sensing Network|monitoring ambient dust concentrations]], and sampling dust inside residents home to identify evidence of [[Particulate matter and coal dust|coal dust]] exposure.
* In 2024, Adrian Wood releases [https://coaldustkills.wpcomstaging.com/?p=6400 Crosswinds], a multi-episode podcast exploring the coal dust issues through the friendship of local activists, Lathaniel Kirts and Malcolm Jones.
* In 2024, Adrian Wood releases [https://coaldustkills.wpcomstaging.com/?p=6400 Crosswinds], a multi-episode podcast exploring the [[Particulate matter and coal dust|coal dust]] issues through the friendship of local activists, Lathaniel Kirts and Malcolm Jones.
* The Repair Lab and [https://aahsnn.wildapricot.org/ African American History Society of Newport News] begin work on a digital archive documenting decades of coal dust activism and [[environmental justice]] efforts in Virginia.
* The Repair Lab and [https://aahsnn.wildapricot.org/ African American History Society of Newport News] begin work on a digital archive documenting decades of [[Particulate matter and coal dust|coal dust]] activism and [[environmental justice]] efforts in Virginia.


== Evidence ==
== Evidence ==

Revision as of 01:07, 13 June 2025

Welcome to Voices in the Dust––a living, community archive for action supporting current and future activists in the fight against coal dust pollution and for environmental justice in Southeast Newport News and Lambert's Point, Norfolk. Voices in the Dust is a work in progress.

Explore Voices in the Dust

Visual Table of ContentsGo to EvidenceGo to OrganizingGo to SolutionsGo to PolicyGo to ActorsGo to Timeline
Visual Table of Contents

Timeline of Key Events in Coal Dust Activism

1920s

  • An article in Newport News' Daily Press describes the use of sprinklers to "minimize damage and discomfort arising from large quantities of coal dust in the air."[1]

1950s

  • The Garden-Shores Civic League write a letter to the City of Newport News complaining about coal dust pollution believed to be "uncombusted coal blown from the railways' two coal dumping piers."[2]
  • The City of Newport News hires a chemical engineering firm to measure the amount of coal in airborne particles, who find that at least in one location 45% of airborne dust was coal.[3][4]
  • The air monitoring study prompts the Chesapeake and Ohio (C&O) Railroad Company to install equipment to create a water fog over the coal piers to suppress dust[4] and led Newport News City Council to pass an air pollution ordinance.[5]

1970s

  • Jessie Rattley, the first Black mayor of Newport News, and other local leaders have discussions around coal dust mitigation.
  • Linwood DeBrew and community members begin organizing around coal dust pollution issues.

1980s

1990s

2000s

2010s

  • The Southeast CARE Coalition and U.S. EPA report is released: A Collaborative Effort to Assess Environmental Health in Newport News, Virginia
  • Increased activism in Lambert's Point under the slogan Cover the Coal, led by New Virginia Majority and the Sierra Club Virginia Chapter, and supported by academic researchers like Dr. Anna Jeng from Old Dominion University, highlights the need for stronger air quality monitoring and regulatory measures.
  • Planning grants are secured to explore coal dust solutions; coal dust-related petitions are circulated.

2020s

Evidence

Testimonials

Research

Actors

Regulatory Agencies

  • U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
  • Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (VA DEQ)
  • Virginia Department of Health (VDH)
  • Virginia Air Pollution Control Board

Government Bodies

Community and Activist Organizations

  • East End Coalition
  • Empower All
  • New Virginia Majority
  • Repair Lab
  • Sierra Club Virginia Chapter
  • Southeast CARE Coalition

Industries

Solutions

Policy

Organizing

About Voices in the Dust and Getting Started

  • How do I use this wiki?
  • How is this wiki is organized?
  • How do edits get approved?

References