About Voices in the Dust

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Overview

The goal of Voices in the Dust is to break down information barriers that impede environmental justice. Voices in the Dust is a living archive that centralizes, organizes, and summarizes the broad spectrum of information and knowledge on coal dust pollution in Southeast Newport News, Lambert's Point, Norfolk, and other locations facing related issues. Voices in the Dust aims to contribute to collective memory to advance activism against coal dust pollution, center community perspectives, and provide an information infrastructure blueprint for use by environmental justice groups broadly. The goal is not just to preserve the past but also to enable a more equitable future. What does Voices in the Dust do?

  • Centralize knowledge and resources on coal dust in in Southeast Newport News and Lambert's Point.
  • Amplify voices, featuring photographs, audio recordings, and narratives that describe the material impacts of coal dust and lived experiences of impacted residents.
  • Support residents, activists, and advocates in building coalitions, sharing strategies, and affecting policy change.
  • Use an open-source platform to facilitate community editing and record-keeping.
  • Provide replicability by documenting the development process in a digital guide to enable others to create similar archives for action.

Development

Voices in the Dust began as a place to hold and share the research and resources of the Repair Lab. These resources included photographs and interviews with residents and grassroots activists with transcriptions, government documents, environmental science datasets, legal documents on coal storage and transportation, state and local and model legislation, rules, regulations and standards, maps and operational details at coal export terminals, timelines of activism, correspondences with decision-makers and other organizers, records of public hearings, and news, opinions, and other forms of media.

In the fall of 2026, students at the University of Virginia in the courses Air Pollution & Environmental Justice, Introduction to Race, Class, Politics & the Environment, and Environmental Justice in the Mid-Atlantic Region made contributions to the research shared on Voices in the Dust.

The Repair Lab named the initial version of Voices in the Dust, the "pre-release version."

A critical feature of Voices in the Dust is its dynamic and community-driven design and community-editing functionality. Following the completion of the pre-release version, the Repair Lab and African American Historical Society of Newport News will host a series of community archiving and training workshops such that Voices in the Dust becomes a living archive with a local user base. These workshops will invite current and former residents to preview, critique, and shape the archive. These workshops will serve to train attendees in the practice of oral history and to contribute to Voices in the Dust by editing the archive directly to add their own reporting and perspective. After Voices in the Dust evolves through this series of workshops, the archive will be the "public-release version."

The Repair Lab is currently fundraising in support of hosting the community training workshops, with the hope of raising $30,000. Support Voices in the Dust: Donate

At this time, the Repair Lab welcomes current and former residents to add their voices to Voices in the Dust by submitting testimonials, reporting, photographs, and other informations and/or materials: Add Your Voice

A Repair Lab team member can travel to you to digitize any physical materials that you would like preserved and shared on Voices in the Dust.

Technology

Voices in the Dust has been created using Mediawiki, a free, open-source package that many people have familiarity with via Wikipedia. Mediawiki is secure and scalable, with a dedicated user community that allows for databases to be collaboratively generated and sustained. The Repair Lab is in the process of packaging the technical aspects of Mediawiki, archiving, and indexing in a digital guide so other community organizations can replicate and/or adapt our work to serve their needs.