Environmental Justice

Point Ten: Put Young People to Work to Save the Environment and Fight for Environmental Justice

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Debra Tyler-Horton, Justice Center: North Carolina should establish an Environmental Job Corps for young people who did not graduate from high school to re-engage them in public service. Here is Margie Ellison from NC WARN and Sharelle Barber, President of the Student Body at Bennett to explain how we want to put young people to work for Environmental Justice.

Margie Ellison: DID YOU KNOW the Environmental Justice movement started in North Carolina in 1982 when Black people in Warren County protested against dumping deadly PCB’s in their community?

DID YOU KNOW that over 60% of African Americans and Latinos in the U.S. live in communities with toxic waste landfills?

DID YOU KNOW THAT hog farms in N.C. generate more raw sewage than 15 million people do—twice as many people who live in N.C.?

Did you know that Minority communities have six times as many hog farms as mostly white areas?

DID YOU KNOW that today, right now, right here in our own state, people of color are getting sicker and some are dying because of the recent devastating hurricanes caused by Global Warming?   

DID YOU KNOW that H.S. Dropouts and Kick outs make up more than half the prison population.

Did you KNOW that a recent report from the N.C. New Schools Project found that our H.S. drop-out rate increased substantially in the past school year, 2005-2006, despite more attention by the courts?

Sharelle Barber: THEREFORE, To Address both  the educational and environmental injustices, we demand the North Carolina General Assembly  Fund one Environmental Youth Job paying at least $18,000/year for every young person who drops out or is constructively discharged from school. 

We DEMAND the state set up the N.C. Environmental Justice Youth Board, with NAACP and Environmental Justice representatives on it to administer the Environmental Justice Youth program.

We DEMAND the State outlaw placing any more pollution sources near low-income and predominantly African American communities.

WE DEMAND the State require all state programs and contracts promote conservation, non-fossil fuels, and other technologies that will develop our economy while cleaning and sustaining our environment.

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Reverend Doctor William Barber II

  • President of the NC NAACP



    'We' Is the most important word in the social justice vocabulary. The issue is not what we can't do, but what we CAN do when we stand together. With an upsurge in racism/hate crimes, criminalization of young black males, insensitivity to the poor, educational genocide, and the moral/economic cost of a war, we must STAND together now like never before.'

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