Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Science

The movement to address environmental racism is growing. This bill could provide the data it needs

Environmental racism is an issue that has long impacted BIPOC communities across Canada. Advocates say a new bill could help address the links between race, environmental hazards and the accompanying health risks.

Bill before Parliament would require Ottawa to collect data on links between race, environmental hazards

Chemical plants in the background of a sign that reads
Petrochemical plants can be seen across the road from the Aamjiwnaang First Nation Resource Centre in southwestern Ontario. The community has dealt with decades of air pollution. (Craig Chivers/CBC)

Ada Lockridge has been fighting for cleaner air in her community for20 years.

She recallstimes when she and other residents of Aamjiwnaang First Nation "would smell that awful smell, the one that's burning your nose, burning your eyes, your throat" and haveto call police to report asuspected chemical leak.

Aamjiwnaang First Nationborders on the largest concentration of petrochemical plants and refineries in the country an area around Sarnia, Ont.,known as"Chemical Valley."For years, pollutants released into the air and chemical leaks from neighbouring industry have had significant impacts onair quality, waterways and soil in Aamjiwnaang.

When energy company Suncorproposed building Canada's largest ethanol plant nearbyin 2002, Lockridge said "a bunch of us got together and wanted to do something."She and other community leadersorganized petitions, protests and blockades.

"It was all about the community and saving ourselves."

Ada Lockridge is a member of Aamjiwnaang First Nation, near Sarnia, Ont. Pictured in front of an air quality monitor, she is a long-time environmental activist on behalf of the community. (Craig Chivers/ CBC)

After pushback from the community, the companychose another location and the protestmovement inspiredthe creation of Aamjiwnaang's first environment and health committee.

The fight continues, asunsafe levels of harmful chemicals like sulfur dioxide and benzene have been detected by air monitoring stations,according to the most recent long-term dataavailable for Aamjiwnaang, published in 2017.

"Our teachings are to think and plan for seven generations ahead. It has been very challenging to fulfilthat responsibility, given the fight that we're up against,"saidJanelle Nahmabin, the current chair of Aamjiwnaang's EnvironmentCommittee.

Activists say Aamjiwnaang is one of many examples in Canada of environmental racism, which is defined as thedisproportionate exposure that Indigenous, Black and other racialized communities have to environmental hazards.

"I didn't actually hear the term environmental racism until about 15 years ago it wasn't until I was able to connect with other First Nations people across Canada to see what they wereexperiencing," said Nahmabin."Now I realize that absolutely, this applies to here."

WATCH |Janelle Nahmabin discusses life in Aamjiwnaang First Nation:

Aamjiwnaang First Nation and the fight for cleaner air

3 years ago
Duration 1:27
Janelle Nahmabin, the current chair of Aamjiwnaang's Environment Committee, shares a story about life in the First Nation.

The community believes poor air quality has contributed to asthma and cancer among its residents and is trying to get research to prove it.

"We have a health study that's in the works, but we haven't had any studies that can prove what it is that we're saying," said Nahmabin.

She hopes a new private member's bill will push the federal government to research the health impactsof toxic waste and polluting industries onaffected communities.

Private member's bill before Parliament

The issue of environmental racism is getting more attention.In the U.S., a groundbreaking environmental justice lawwas re-introduced on Capitol Hill last week.

In Ottawa, a private member's bill to address environmental racism introduced by Nova Scotia Liberal MP Lenore Zann is before Parliament and will be voted on this week.

If passed, Bill C-230 would be the first legislation in Canada to require the federal government to collect statistical information on the location of environmental hazards across Canada, as well asthe links between race, socioeconomic status and health outcomes.

A sign at Aamjiwnaang First Nation warns of toxic substances in Talfourd Creek. The community is surrounded by more than 60 petrochemical companies, more than anywhere else in the country. (Craig Chivers/ CBC)

It also asks Ottawato compensate affected communities and ensurethey are involved in future environmental policy-making. In addition, the bill would require that these communities have access to safe drinking water and clean air.

A 2019 visit from aUnited Nations special rapporteurfound that AamjiwnaangFirst Nation, as well as other Indigenous and racializedcommunitiesin Canada, are disproportionately affected by toxic waste.

"There exists a pattern in Canada where marginalized groups, and Indigenous peoples in particular, find themselves on the wrong side of a toxic divide, subject to conditions that would not be acceptable elsewhere in Canada," wrote UN Special RapporteurBaskut Tuncak.

Ingrid Waldron, an associate professor in the faculty of health at Dalhousie University in Halifax, has been saying this for years. Adriving force behindBill C-230,Waldron has aPh.D. in sociology and equity studies in education and has spent nearly a decade researching the impact of environmental racism in Nova Scotia. She previously worked with Zann on a provincial environmental racism bill.

Ingrid Waldron
Ingrid Waldron is the author of the book There's Something in the Water, which was made into a Netflix film of the same name. Her research into environmental racism inspired the creation of Bill C-230. (Steve Lawrence/CBC)

Waldron said industry polluters and environmental hazards typically affect low-income, BIPOC and rural communities disproportionately.

"Those are the communities that are less able to fight back against environmental racism because of their race, because of their culture, because they live in out-of-the-way places that tend to be invisibilized by policy makers and government in general," said Waldron.

Health studies needed

Her book, There's Something in the Water: Environmental Racism in Indigenous and Black Communities,highlightsthe impact of the issue in Nova Scotiaincluding Pictou Landing First Nation, whichhasdealt with the impact of pulp mill effluent dumped into Boat Harbour, and African-Nova Scotian communities,many of which have seen toxic waste and landfills moveinto their towns.

The book was made into a Netflix documentary featuring actors Elliot Page and Ian Daniel.

"There's something that all of these communities that I've looked at, and also the communities that I've met, share they all have very high rates of cancer, high rates of rare cancers and respiratory illness," said Waldron."Something is happening and I think it needs to be investigated."

Waldron, who is also the director of theEnvironmentalNoxiousness,RacialInequities andCommunityHealth Project(The ENRICH Project), has mapped Black and Mi'kmaq communities across Nova Scotia and their proximity to toxic waste sites. She said the government needs to collect statistical data on the health impacts.

"If they're not giving credibility to the stories of community members, then we need the stats in order to back up what community members are saying," Waldron said.

Bill C-230, which was introduced inDecember,has received the support of members of the Liberal Party, NDP and the Green Party. But there has been pushback from members of the Bloc Qubcoisand Conservatives, who have dismissed the role of systemic racism and instead blamed failed government policies.

Mercury poisoning inGrassy Narrows

Grassy Narrows First Nation has been dealing with the devastating health impacts of mercury poisoning for generations, after the past owners of a pulp and paper mill in Dryden, Ont.,dumped 9,000 kilograms of mercury in the English-Wabigoon River system in the 1960s and '70s.

"I grew up not knowing that the land, the water was already poisoned," said Chief Randy Fobister, who has lived in Grassy Narrows all his life.

He said many residentsincludinghimself and family members have health issues related to mercury poisoning,which can include everything from numbness in fingers and toes to seizures and cognitive delays.

"Some [people] lost all their family some even lost their bloodline," Fobistersaid.

WATCH | How mercury poisoning has affected Grassy Narrows First Nation:

How mercury poisoning has affected Grassy Narrows First Nation

3 years ago
Duration 2:30
'I grew up not knowing that the land, the water was already poisoned,' Grassy Narrows First Nation Chief Randy Fobister said.

In the absence of data, this First Nation in northern Ontario commissioned its own health report in 2018,which found that residents were six times more likely to have debilitating health issues compared to other First Nations inthe province.

After years of fighting for a care home for residents suffering from mercury poisoning, an agreement wasreached with Ottawa last year to build that home. But Fobistersaid residents who have been affected should also be compensated.

Nationalstrategy

Naolo Charles, a Toronto-based environmentalist, said a national strategy is urgently needed to address the longstanding impacts ofenvironmental racism.

"We're living in a society where your race decides whether or not you haveaccess to clean air, clean water or clean soil, or whether or not your neighborhood has access to green spaces,"he said.

Naolo Charles is co-director of the National Anti-Environmental Racism Coalition, whose petition in support of Bill C-230 has gained more than 10,000 signatures. (Martin Trainer/ CBC)

Charles is co-director of the newly formed National Anti-Environmental Racism Coalition, along with Waldron, which aims to address environmental racism and promote inclusion and BIPOC representation in the environmental sector in Canada.

The group launched a petition in support of Bill C-230, which garnered the signatures of more than 11,000 Canadians within two weeks.

Charlessaid that without government action, environmental hazards will get worse for BIPOC communities, who are already most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.

"If now, Black and Indigenous communities are not well protected, what will it mean for the future when climate change will start having more impact?" said Charles.

WATCH | Behind the push to addressenvironmental racism:

Growing push to address and track environmental racism in Canada

3 years ago
Duration 2:20
Disproportionate exposure to environmental hazards has long had a larger impact on Indigenous, Black and other racialized communities in Canada. A private members bill is calling for a national strategy to address and track instances of environmental racism.

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of.You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)

Add some good to your morning and evening.

The environment is changing. This newsletter is your weekly guide to what were doing about it.

...

The next issue of What on Earth will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.