Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
BISCO Bayou Interfaith Shared Community Organizing 406 West Second Street Thibodaux, LA 70301 985-227-9042 [email protected] www.bisco-la.org Bayou History Center, Inc. Thibodaux, LA 70301 985-859-3214 [email protected] Presented at the HBCU Climate Change Conference Dillard University April 5, 2013 New Orleans, Louisiana Climate Change in Coastal Louisiana from a Community Perspective Patty Whitney - BISCO Coastal Louisiana is unique ! Our landscape is stunning ! Our wildlife is unusual ! Our people are diverse ! Our Celebrations are Varied ! Our houses are different ! And have been for centuries ! Our food is delicious ! Our Symbols Are Famous ! The Symbol of Louisiana The River Built the Land ! The land is sinking The Sea is Rising ! Storms are Stronger Hurricane Katrina Hurricane Rita And Occur More Often Hurricane Gustav Hurricane Ike Pollution Abounds River Flooding BP Deepwater Horizon Disaster Mississippi River Spring Flooding Our population has culturally and historically been voiceless. Ancestors who settled in this hostile environment centuries ago were people who had been kicked out, starved out, sold out or cheated out of many other places around the world. Native Americans displaced farther and farther south Africans sold into slavery and shipped to America Acadians expelled from their country by force People of multiple ethnicities populated the area: • Native Americans • French peasants and orphans • Canary Islanders “Islenos” • African slaves • German peasants • Acadian exiles “Cajuns” Wealthier, more powerful people settled on the high lands next to the waterways. Poorer, less powerful people were pushed farther away from the waterways and into the wetter, lower lands and nearer the coast. Coastal Louisiana is a “Regional Environmental Justice Community” TYPES OF E J COMMUNITIES FENCE LINE REGIONAL Environmental Justice is the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people regardless of race, color, national origin, or income with respect to the development, implementation, and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and policies. It will be achieved when everyone enjoys the same degree of protection from environmental and health hazards and equal access to the decision-making process to have a healthy environment in which to live, learn, and work. What Makes An E J Community? • A unique physical environment • Natural Resources that make the area ripe for exploitation and abuse • An unsophisticated and voiceless population via: – Minority Ethnicity Status – Lack of Wealth – Lack of Education – Government corruption and/or ineffectiveness E J Communities shoulder a bigger share of dangers and damages in the exploitation of shared natural resources than other communities. Education for these populations was either forbidden, insufficient and poorly funded, or not significantly valued by cultures or governmental leaders. Those who could read and write ended up with most of the assets, while those who could not read and write ended up with little or nothing. E J Communities usually develop laws designed to keep the general public, especially the poor and disenfranchised, from receiving a quality education. Wealth and/or Education Affects… • An individual’s or family’s ability to prepare for, respond to, or recover from a disaster; i.e., – Evacuate – Secure food, shelter, supplies, transportation… – Clean up – Rebuild or rehabilitate – Mitigate for future disasters • A community’s ability to protect themselves from environmental injustices Location affects impacts from climate changes. Poorer communities are more vulnerable to changes because in a delta they are located closer to the coast and in wetlands. Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana What Must Be Done ? • EDUCATE, EDUCATE, EDUCATE… – Learn more about what is happening around you – Learn more about how to go about changing things – Learn more about searching for “the big picture” – Attend public and governmental meetings – Read, read, read – Teach your family and friends what you’ve learned – GET INVOLVED !! It’s our grandchildren’s futures! For More Information Contact Us At Bayou History Center, Inc. Patricia Whitney, Executive Director 985-895-3214 [email protected] BISCO Bayou Interfaith Shared Community Organizing Sharon Gauthe, Executive Director 985-227-9042 [email protected] www.bisco-la.org