Youth Perspective on Environmental Justice and Racism

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imagine growing up and on your way to

school it smelled like rotten eggs

where gray hay filled the sky and that

was the norm

where your dad would remind you

referring to the river down the street

imagine that your dad worked for 45

years for a company

where five of his black co-workers died

before the age of 50 due to cancer

imagine that river that your dad told

you to not get in

was receiving federal funding not

because it poses a risk

to the communities of color that’s

around it but rather because it poses a

risk

to lake michigan’s wildlife

imagine that same company that’s

polluting that water

is also responsible for releasing

eighteen

thousand pounds of lead a year a hundred

and seventy three

thousand pounds of benzene a year

coronium pcbs

and other harmful toxic substances to

the communities of color

that surround it can you imagine that

because i have to remember that and when

i go back home to visit my folks

i relive that you think as someone

who has been a victim of environmental

racism

their entire childhood that’s the reason

i’m an environmentalist

today but i really have to thank my

parents

and the way that they raised me you see

my dad he had a quarter acre of a plot

of land

behind his friend’s house and i’m not a

hundred percent sure if he owned it or

if he just kind of

made it his own but we would spend so

many summer days

planting a garden we were a family of

twelve i have nine other siblings

so for us planting our garden

was a way to nourish ourselves

that garden was so special that garden

was the reason

that i learned the life cycles of a frog

when my brother john and my sister

trocio

happy birthday john would we we would

catch tadpoles

in the little ditch next door

that garden is where i learned the

foundation of science education

it was where i learned photosynthesis

and that plants need

not only water but fertilizer and

protection against the substances

like cold weather and light

that garden is the reason that i decided

to go

study biology for my undergrad where my

dad would always joke with me and say

what are you gonna do learn to watch

birds

the garden is the reason why i came to

colorado a couple years ago

after witnessing the beautiful mountains

and all the short grass prairies that

garden is the reason that i’m here today

it’s also the reason i became a science

educator you see

as a science educator and working for

school district i noticed that

science education lacks concepts of

environmental justice and environmental

racism

so as i’m studying

for my dissertation i started to look up

how children and how youth are

experiencing nature

the way that i did knowing that they’re

victims

of environmental racism so as i was

researching

i came across an article that article

told me that 11 denver schools

that make up about 8 000 students

that are predominantly students of color

are situated in a red zone

and a red zone is that they are 500 or

less

feet away from a major highway that sees

on average

30 000 cars a day

not only did i find out about those

schools i also found out that one of

those schools in particular

is it is a in a community that is

low-income and predominantly latinx

that community is the most polluted zip

code in the united states

that school has asbestos and students

are

still required to go and learn

that school used to be situated on a

superfund site

and there are still 144 properties

in that community that have not been

tested for

lead or arsenic in the soil

so when we think about closing this

achievement gap for our youth of color

i ask how are we closing this real

environmental gap knowing that our

children

are playing in the dirt that could be

harmful

that could have lead that could have

arsenic in it

so this summer i partnered with an

incredible organization called

environmental learning for kids

elk and we decided to

develop a curriculum an environmental

justice curriculum for their youth of

color

because what i wanted to know was how

are these youth

engaging in nature knowing that they’re

in

polluted zip codes knowing that they are

close to

highways knowing that there are

super fun sites nearby

so as i was

going through the summer i was excited

to learn like oh i’m

they’re going to tell me what they did

this summer or how they’re engaging with

nature

and as many of you know when you have

something in mind it might not always

work out that way

and that’s what happened this summer i

didn’t

really learn what positive experiences

they were

having in nature rather i learned four

key

concepts that have changed the

foundation

of my environmental movement

and i’ll share those with you and the

acronym that i use is i see

i see because as they were talking i’m

like oh yeah i see

i see so the first i

stands for inclusion youth want to be

included we cannot have conversations

of environmental justice climate change

climate action sustainability without

the voices of youth

they might not be able to vote for

policies to hold big corporations

responsible for what they’re doing

but they want to be at the table last

week we had a meeting with our

councilwoman

and year sure enough youth showed up

and expressed to her what they feel

about climate change

the first c comunidad

this one was probably the biggest eye

opener

as we were talking about these

experiences in nature

one student told me you know

my community doesn’t even have trees

but i can go across i-25

into a predominantly white affluent

community and you

better bet that there are trees that

line the street

this student advocated for trees

in his community he wanted his siblings

to have access

to beautiful greenery he wanted his

playgrounds

to be to have grass and to be

up to date he wanted his community

to have positive experiences in nature

not only did he do that but when we

asked

who’s going to take care of those trees

you know what he said

he said what about our community members

who don’t have jobs

or the elderly these students

care about their community i asked in my

post interview

if you had the opportunity to move would

you majority of them said

no they love their community why do they

have to leave their community

why aren’t we advocating to make their

communities better and holding

big corporations responsible for the

environmental justices

that they face and that leads me to the

second eye

innovation youth are

brilliant they are creating tick-tock

challenges

that they’re doing you know talking to

their peers about climate change in fun

ways

they’re utilizing youth friendly

platforms like instagram and i say youth

friendly because

my 10 year old niece told me yeah

crystal you are

too old to be on tick tock

i’m still on tick tock but

black millennials for flint they have an

instagram

and they’re hosting webinars to engage

with their peers

because they’re not learning about it in

school

the last c is change

youth want change this is their planet

the future of this planet

is theirs they want change

we have to take drastic action we have

to

start caring we have to include youth

there are so many more youth activists

like marny copenh

or known as little miss flint or greta

toomberg

they’re in our schools they’re in our

communities

they’re in our families

so the next time

you’re at a meeting about climate change

ask

we’re the youth the next time you’re lo

you’re electing your local school board

member

or policy maker ask

how are youth going to learn about

climate change and environmental justice

in school the next time

someone talks about sustainability and

innovation ask

do you know about zorchie who is an

eight-year-old mexican girl in rural

mexico

who because of lack of electricity

she developed solar-powered water heater

out of recycled materials

the next time someone says

oh climate change is just a one-sided

issue ask them

do you know that republicans young

republicans now

are starting to call on their senior

republicans to take action about climate

change

youth are serious

the next time someone says oh 2020 has

been such a crazy year

ask them do you know that it’s going to

get worse

do you know that our youth this planet

we are leaving to them

and so wildfires hurricanes are going to

be the norm

the next time you’re invited to speak

at an amazing event like ted cherry

creek

ask can i bring my youth

you