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September 2020 Networker. Racism is a Public Health Crisis: Living in the East Phillips Arsenic Triangle

Volume 25 (3), August 2020


Table of Contents

1. Making the Case for East Phillips by Ted Schettler

2. I Can't Breathe: Choking in Minneapolis' "Arsenic Triangle" by Kayhla Cornell

3. In Conversation with Community: The History of the East Phillips Indoor Urban Farm Project and Living in the "Arsenic Triangle"

4. SEHN in the News:


by Ted Schettler

A few blocks south of downtown Minneapolis, the multiethnic East Phillips neighborhood comprises a mix of residential, industrial and other commercial properties, including Little Earth of United Tribes, the nation’s only Native-preference housing project. For years residents have lived alongside heavy environmental polluters including an asphalt plant and a metal foundry that emit hazardous dust, fly ash, and fumes that are poorly monitored. One section of the community, called the Arsenic Triangle , was once home to chemical companies that produced arsenic-based pesticides. Poor control over stockpiles led to widespread soil contamination necessitating Superfund cleanup of nearly 1500 acres, including residential properties.

Although E. Phillips is a low income, high pollution neighborhood with asthma hospitalizations among the highest in the state, it is not an industrial wasteland. A virtual walking tour passes trim homes, apartments, lovely old buildings, churches, parks and gardens, public art, a community center, bike trails and multiethnic restaurants. This is home to about 5,000 people.

In 2008, longtime state representative and neighborhood resident Karen Clark successfully shepherded a bill through the legislature that required consideration of cumulative impacts of adding additional sources of pollution to this overburdened community during the permitting process for any new projects. People in E. Phillips were already suffering from excessive environmental pollution and adding more would only make matters worse. Soon after, the bill provided the basis for rejecting a proposed wood fired power plant in the neighborhood that likely would have been approved if its emissions were considered in isolation rather than added to existing poor air quality.

The E. Phillips Improvement Coalition (EPIC) looked for ways to de-industrialize portions of the community while seeking new opportunities to create greener jobs and address socioeconomic needs of many residents. In 2014 EPIC developed plans to acquire and convert the Roof Depot , a sprawling vacant warehouse, into a year-round organic urban farm with a farmers market, bicycle shop, a youth-led café and affordable housing for low income families. But EPIC then learned that the city had other plans for the site called the Hiawatha Campus Expansion Project. It would enable the city to relocate and consolidate the Public Works Water Distribution Maintenance and Meter Shop to a centrally located facility, replacing the existing facilities elsewhere, which are reportedly inadequate. In 2016, the city acquired the site for $6.8 million after threatening to take it by eminent domain if the owner moved to sell the property to EPIC.

The city plans to demolish the warehouse, construct surface parking for more than 100 vehicles, a four-story parking garage, heavy equipment parking, at least six other new buildings, including a hot mix asphalt storage facility, and a training building for teaching the operation of diesel equipment. Additional diesel cars and trucks will routinely be on site or traveling neighborhood streets coming and going from service calls throughout the city

EPIC argues that demolition, construction and operations associated with the public works project will add still more pollution to the overburdened community and must be considered within the context of the cumulative impacts legislative provisions and intent. The city claims that no permitting is required for the proposed facility and the cumulative impacts legislation does not apply. The community vision of an organic urban farm, diverse jobs, shops, and housing is dead if the city prevails.

East Phillips Neighborhood Institute, Inc. (EPNI) is comprised mostly of people living in the E. Phillips community. With no other recourse available, this summer EPNI filed a lawsuit against the City of Minneapolis demanding that the city not be allowed to cause further pollution in the E. Phillips neighborhood with its proposed project and against state agencies requesting that they enforce the cumulative impact statute and transfer authority for the project’s environmental review from the city to the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. The city has asked the court to dismiss the lawsuit. EPNI filed an Amended Complaint, adding the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, and the Environmental Quality Board as defendants. Now, EPNI is awaiting answers to their Amended Complaint.

EPNI has assembled a team comprised of an air pollution expert, soil scientists, and public health professionals, including me, to describe anticipated health and environmental impacts of the proposed project during demolition, construction, and operations. We will provide testimony in court proceedings on behalf of the plaintiffs.

EPNI, EPIC and many others are asking Minneapolis residents to “think critically about the implications of the Hiawatha Campus Expansion Project for equity, sustainability, environmental racism, and environmental justice in our city.” SEHN agrees and supports calls for a full, unbiased environmental impact analysis of the proposed project, in the context of the cumulative stresses that this community has long endured.


by Kayhla Cornell

On July 17th, the Minneapolis City Council declared racism a public health emergency. The approved resolution calls for city leadership to take real action and dedicate resources to racial equity work in Minneapolis.

“racism in all its forms causes persistent discrimination and disparate outcomes in many areas of life, including housing, education, health, employment, public safety, and criminal justice exacerbated further by the COVID-19 pandemic crisis… a multitude of studies connect racism to inequitable health outcomes for Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC), including cancer, coronary heart failure, diabetes, hypertension, high infant and maternal mortality rates demonstrating that racism is the root cause of social determinants of health.” Minnesota City Council, 2020.

This resolution comes weeks after George Floyd was murdered by Minneapolis police officers , motivating the largest civil rights movement in history. Just a few blocks away from the scene, a community of 20,000+ people have also been struggling to breathe; caught in a convergence of institutional environmental racism and public health emergency known as “The Arsenic Triangle”.

The East Phillips community has a long history of advocating for the health of people over the presence of heavy polluters- the David to every heavy polluter, Goliath battle they have encountered. The loss of the East Phillips Indoor Urban Farm would be devastating, not only because of the incredible amount of work the community has done to bring wealth and health to their neighborhood, but because it is yet another confirmation, one of thousands, that opportunity is rigged in a systemic and institutionally racist society- one where only the white and wealthy breathe freely. One in which your city council declares racism to a be a public health emergency while simultaneously choking you out.

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"I started standing out more vocally because I have a son I lost at 16 years old through a heart condition that just came out of nowhere at 14 years old, just diagnosed him at 14, saying he had this heart condition. He needed a heart transplant and the heart transplant was unsuccessful. I have a best friend who we both raised our kids on the same side of little Earth. I have a best friend who's twenty one year old daughter gave birth to her second daughter. Just didn't feel good. And then she died from a heart condition at 21. We've had a few other people, young people and youth that have passed away not from overdosing, but from diabetes or heart conditions. So I start thinking, like, what the hell is going on here? Why do we have so many of our young kids dying from these heart conditions that are these other conditions that nobody knows where they came from, how they got them?" -Cassie Holmes

Interviews from East Phillips residents Karen Clark, Brad and Carol Pass, and Cassandra Holmes.

Visit EPNIFARM.ORG for more information!


COVID-19 and antimicrobials: What hospitals need to know

by Ted Schettler

The pandemic has raised new questions for health care facilities, suppliers, and manufacturers about the efficacy of adding antimicrobials to products to combat the health crisis. Health Care Without Harm’s 2016 report on antimicrobials in hospital furnishings concluded there is little evidence antimicrobials help to reduce health care-associated infections. In a new report, we examine the latest science about the virus, review current safety protocols, highlight potential risks from using antimicrobials, and offer recommendations.

During the pandemic, hospital purchasers may feel compelled to purchase antimicrobial products. However, Health Care Without Harm’s research found that many of these products are unproven to reduce infection and could have the unintended effect of increasing risk.

Read more here!


Carolyn Raffensperger featured on Iowa Climate Stories

"We must act more responsibly to leave this earth in better shape than we got it, so that future generations of people, so that the beaver and white pelican, have a planet to thrive on.

To start, we need to reevaluate the role of our government. Growing the economy at the expense of people and the environment is unacceptable. The government has a greater responsibility to prioritize public health and protect the common wealth--the oceans, rivers, forests and national parks that we share. In doing so, we should look to long term ecological solutions such as rewilding instead of technological ones that end up hurting other members of our ecosystems. Most importantly, the government must follow the precautionary principle, which instructs us to take seriously any likelihood of harm and act before issues like climate change worsen."

Read more here!



The Science and Environmental Health Network | moreinfo@sehn.org | www.sehn.org

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