
For the first time in history, an
international human rights body has agreed to review a case involving
allegations of environmental racism in the United States.
The
Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) will hear a complaint filed by
the New Orleans-based
Advocates
for Environmental Human Rights (AEHR) on behalf of the people of
Mossville, La. An autonomous body of the Organization of American
States, the IACHR along with the Inter-American Court of Human Rights
comprise the inter-American system for promoting and protecting human
rights.
Scheduled to take place some time in the next three
months, the review will consider whether the U.S. government has
violated the predominantly African-American community's residents' human
rights to life, health, equality, freedom from racial discrimination,
and "privacy as it relates to the inviolability of the home" by allowing
numerous industrial facilities to locate there and emit millions of
pounds of highly toxic chemicals every year.
"I am grateful that
the Commission decided to take our human rights case,"
said
petitioner Dorothy Felix, who serves as the volunteer vice president of
Mossville Environmental Action Now. "We believe that environmental
protection should not be based on the color of our skin."
Located
near Lake Charles in southwestern Louisiana's Calcasieu Parish, the
unincorporated rural community of Mossville is surrounded by 14
industrial facilities that each year
spew
more than 4 million pounds of highly toxic chemicals to the environment.
The pollution includes known carcinogens including
dioxin,
polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons, solvents like
xylene and
toluene, and heavy
metals such as
lead
and
mercury.
Mossville
was featured in the 2002 documentary film
"Blue
Vinyl," which explores the negative health impacts of polyvinyl
chloride production. The area has the largest concentration of vinyl
plastic manufacturers in the U.S., as well as a coal-fired power plant,
oil refineries and chemical production facilities.
Serious health
impacts from the pollution have been documented among Mossville
residents by the University of Texas at Galveston Medical Branch and the
U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. A 2007 study
showed that the types of dioxin compounds found in the blood of
Mossville residents are the same types emitted by the industrial
facilities. Dioxins are among the most toxic chemicals known to science.
In
the late 1990s, Mossville area residents began collecting air samples
that revealed violations of state standards for pollutants including
vinyl chloride and
benzene. The
Environmental Protection Agency later confirmed violations, fining some
facilities. The effort spread to communities throughout Louisiana's
so-called
"Cancer
Alley" and led to the formation of the
Louisiana Bucket Brigade, a
grassroots pollution monitoring project.
The
petition
[pdf] to IACHR from Mossville residents alleges that the U.S.
government and local political subdivisions ignored their obligation to
protect human rights by allowing all of these polluting industries to
build and operate near Mossville.
In
its
response [pdf], the U.S. government asserts that the IACHR "does
not have authority to request that the United States adopt precautionary
measures" to prevent communities from being treated like Mossville
because such an action is based on commission rules that were not
formally approved by the individual countries that belong to the OAS. It
also accuses the petitioners of an "extraordinarily and erroneously
expansive interpretation" of U.S. treaty obligations -- claims the
petitioners reject.
"Our government is a member of the OAS and
has also ratified the
International
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination
and the
International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which create clear
obligations to protect our human right to freedom from racial
discrimination whether it is intentional or the result of a policy or
action," said attorney Nathalie Walker, AEHR's co-director. "However,
these obligations are rarely acknowledged by our government, much less
upheld."
Monique Harden, AEHR's other co-director, noted that
Mossville is one of a number of communities of color across the U.S.
that are disproportionately burdened with toxic pollution as a result of
government decisions.
"The good news is that a judicial review
by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights can open the door to
ending the pattern of environmental racism by introducing a human rights
framework for environmental protection," she said.
The issue of
environmental injustice in the U.S. South has been in the spotlight in
recent months. Last October, environmental justice leaders representing
more than a dozen polluted communities from six Southern states
met
with Environmental Protection Agency leaders and asked them to take
action to better protect the health of the region's low-income
communities and communities of color.
That meeting came after
environmental justice leaders
urged
the EPA to address historic problems in its Region 4 office
covering eight states in the Deep South, with its legacy of racism and
unequal environmental protection.
(Photo
of toxic pollution in Mossville, La. from Mossville Environmental
Action Now's Facebook
fan page.)