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Ladies And Gentlemen,The Bronx Is Choking!

Ladies And Gentlemen,The Bronx Is Choking!

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One in four children in Hunts Point has asthma—an epidemic GABRIELE STEINHAUSER blames on environmental racism.

At first Tanya Fields thought it was just a regular cold.

For three days in November of 2004, her 5-month-old daughter, Trist-Ann, had been wheezing and coughing. It seemed like she was choking. Eventually the coughing fits became so bad that the little girl was vomiting; she couldn’t hold anything down. When her doctor failed to get Trist-Ann to breathe more easily, he told the young mother to take her to the emergency room. By the time they reached St. Luke’s Hospital in Manhattan, Trist-Ann had fluid in her lungs. The diagnosis: pneumonia.

The doctors told Fields that her daughter could have drowned from the inside. The next four days and five nights, she did not leave her Trist-Ann’s side at the hospital, while her other daughter Taylor, who was two years old at the time, stayed with her parents in Harlem. It was the first of many trips to the emergency room for Fields, a 27-year-old office worker.

A few months later, Trist-Ann was back in the hospital, again with pneumonia.

At the age of 1, she was diagnosed with asthma.

In other parts of New York City, such a diagnosis might have been a surprise, but not where Tanya Fields and her two children live. In their neighborhood of Hunts Point, a small peninsula on the southeastern tip of the Bronx, one in four elementary-school children suffers from asthma.

Three decades after President Jimmy Carter’s famous walk past the abandoned buildings on Charlotte Street, a new epidemic has taken hold of the South Bronx. Public schools have their own asthma clinics, nebulizers ready to help students breathe when they start gasping for air in class. And while urban planners and public health specialists are still struggling to find the cause for the community’s disturbingly high asthma rates, for parents like Tanya Fields there is no question that it’s the air they breathe that makes their children wheeze.

Every week, according to citizens’ groups that monitor the site, up to 60,000 trucks take a turn off Bruckner Expressway and cut through the neighborhood’s small residential section (its current population is 47,000) to reach Hunts Point’s industrial sector, an area that plays a crucial role in New York City’s metabolism. On the peninsula’s 690 acres sit the world’s biggest food market, at least four private waste-transfer stations, a wastewater treatment plant and the New York Organic Fertilizer Company: a plant that turns half of New York City’s sludge (the solid material that is extracted from wastewater before it flows back into the city’s waterways) into fertilizer pellets.

Sometimes, residents say, they can smell the odors emerging from the plant at a distance of almost two miles.
Hunts Point represents an often-ignored dilemma of urban life: Where large numbers of people live together, they produce waste—waste that needs to be collected, transported, reused, recycled or disposed of. All too often that happens in poor communities of color—that is, communities like Hunts Point, where, in 1999, 97 percent of residents were Hispanic or African American and the median household income was $17,612 (less than half that of New York City as a whole). In September 2005, the Associated Press, in an analysis of data from the Environmental Protection Agency, found that African-Americans were 79 percent more likely to live in a neighborhood where industrial pollution is suspected of posing the greatest health risk. In many places, Hispanic and Asian minorities also suffered disproportionate impacts.

For activists around the country, this unequal distribution of waste-processing facilities has a name: environmental racism.

It was to achieve a measure of environmental justice that the New York City Planning Commission passed the so-called Fair Share Criteria in 1991, which stipulated that the benefits and burdens of municipal facilities should be allocated equally across neighborhoods. Three years later, in February 1994, President Bill Clinton issued an executive order demanding that all federal agencies make environmental justice part of their mission.

And yet, 13 years later, at a time celebrities drive hybrid cars and talk of global warming and sustainability has won Oscars and Nobel Prizes, the struggle for environmental justice is far from over. Instead it continues, largely unnoticed, in places like Hunts Point, where the stage is much less glamorous. Here, the scene is set by a city that wastes, a neighborhood where people tend to mind their own business and a system of asymmetric political powers, where the theory of laws and regulations sometimes remains at a great remove from everyday practice.

It was in the summer of 2003, a few months after she had moved into her small, one-bedroom apartment on Fox Street, that Tanya Fields first noticed the smell. Heavy and inescapable, like a mix of chicken manure and rotting meat, it hung in the air, seeping through the cracks between window and air conditioner, forcing her and her little daughter to sit inside on hot summer days.

Her neighbors knew nothing about the odor’s origins. “The community had internalized the smell,” Fields recalled. “When it happened they covered their noses and their mouths and waited for it to pass.” What they did know was that the pungent smells gave them headaches and made them feel nauseous. On particularly bad days, the odor could even trigger asthma attacks.

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NYC Store Saves Home Supplies From Trash & Resells Them

NYC Store Saves Home Supplies From Trash & Resells Them 

Brand-new porcelain toilets, some still in their boxes, stood on a pallet in the warehouse. Nearby was a pile of unused ceramic tiles. And stacked against the walls of the building were about 200 doors.

This was not the inventory of a Home Depot, a Lowes or some other big home improvement store, but of ReBuilders Source, a building materials re-use store in the Bronx.

The store sells building materials donated by demolition or construction contractors, home renovators and other hardware stores with surplus inventory. The main goal project is to offer an alternative to the landfill for building supplies that normally might get thrown into the trash.

Workers at the store have spent months creating a donor network, making cold calls and researching on the Internet. Once they know that building materials are being tossed out, they will arrange to send a truck to pick them up. Much of what they sell, at discounts between 25 and 50 percent, has never been used.

The store, which celebrates its grand opening on Monday, is the first project of Green Worker Cooperatives, an organization with the goal of creating environmentally friendly jobs and businesses in the poor neighborhood.

“We didn’t want to wait for people outside the community to decide what kind of jobs we would have in the community,” said Omar Freilla, who leads the cooperative and helped launch the store in the Hunts Point section.

The idea of re-use is not new, but it is gaining recognition around the country as people embrace the idea of green building.

There are more than 1,000 building material re-use stores in the country, according to the Pittsburgh-based Building Materials Reuse Association.

An estimate by the BMRA in 2005 found that re-use stores sell an estimated 315,000 to 360,000 tons of building materials each year, a tiny fraction of total waste from building activities.

“There’s an awful lot more room to grow,” said BMRA President Brad Guy.

In New York, thousands of tons of construction and demolition debris are thrown away each year. But there are only a handful of stores that sell salvaged building materials.

Build It Green! NYC, a nonprofit store in Queens, sold about 350 tons of building materials in 2007, according to Justin Green, the program director. It made $900 per ton, he said.

“It’s not a massive takeout,” Green said. “But New York City could support maybe 20 more of these stores because we do create so much waste.”

In the Bronx, waste is an acute community concern: The borough handles more than 8,000 tons of the approximately 45,000 tons of waste generated daily by the city, according to the Department of Sanitation. Much of that is handled in the South Bronx.

Residents in the neighborhood have long been concerned about the effects on air quality and public health of nearly two dozen waste transfer stations in the neighborhood, especially the fume-exhaling trucks that serve them. The neighborhood has one of the highest rates of asthma in the city.

The Department of Sanitation said that the amount of trash being transported for handling in the Bronx has gone down over the past 20 years, because of increased regulation. Most garbage exported to out-of-state landfills is by rail, cutting down on truck traffic, said Thomas Milora, executive assistant to the sanitation commissioner. Read more..

 

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Bronx Residents Reminded to Recycle Old Cell Phones

Bronx Residents Reminded to Recycle Old Cell Phones at Spring Electronics Recycling Event, April 5 and 6

Sanitation Commissioner John J. Doherty is reminding Bronx residents that theNew York City Department of Sanitation’s Bureau of Waste Prevention, Reuse and Recycling is teaming up with Verizon Wireless to collect old cell phones at its annual Electronics Recycling and Clothing Donation events this spring. Doherty is urging allNew York City residents to donate their old, unused wireless phones to help survivors of domestic violence.

Bronx residents are asked to bring their old phones to the recycling event on Saturday, April 5 and/or Sunday, April 6, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., rain or shine. The event will be held at the Soundview Composting Site on Randall Avenue near Metcalf Avenue and the Bruckner Expressway.

All collected phones will be donated to the Verizon Wireless HopeLine(R) program, which will refurbish, recycle or sell the phones and donate the proceeds to domestic violence advocacy groups in the form of cash grants and prepaid wireless phones for victims. Phones that cannot be refurbished are disposed of in an environmentally sound manner.

“Joining forces with Verizon Wireless’ HopeLine program creates a win-win situation for the residents ofNew York City,” said Commissioner Doherty. “We’re always interested in programs that encourage reusing items that otherwise might end up in the waste stream. When you donate your old phone to HopeLine, you’ll not only give a product a second life — you’ll also give a family in need a second chance at life.”

The City’s first 2008 Spring Electronics Recycling and Clothing Donation Event held in Union Square on March 16 drew 3,000 people who recycled nearly 600 pounds of cell phones.

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New Recycling Sites In Bronx

New Recycling Sites In Bronx

BROOKLYN — Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and Sanitation Commissioner John J. Doherty earlier this week announced that four new heavily trafficked sites have been added to the Department of Sanitation’s (DSNY) successful Public Space Recycling Program.

Sixteen new sets of blue and green recycling receptacles have been placed at the four sites, which were selected based on pedestrian traffic volume, proximity to commercial districts and transportation facilities, and the volume of recyclable materials that were entering the waste stream in litter baskets. “Now New Yorkers who read the paper on the subway or drink a bottle of water while commuting have more places to recycle their paper and plastics,” said Mayor Bloomberg. “Increasing recycling rates is one of the ambitious goals in our Solid Waste Management Plan, and I hope to further expand public space recycling in the future.”

The new public space recycling locations are:

• Bronx — White Plains Road: Brady Avenue to Pelham Parkway;
• Brooklyn — Pennsylvania Avenue: Starrett City;
• Brooklyn — Front Street: Brooklyn Heights; and
• Staten Island — Staten Island Borough Hall: Stuyvesant Place at Hyatt Street.
The existing public space recycling locations are:
• Bronx — Poe Park;
• Brooklyn — Columbus Park;
• Manhattan — Battery Park City;
• Manhattan — Union Square Park;
• Manhattan — Whitehall Street Staten Island Ferry terminal;
• Queens — Main Street commercial district in the Flushing section;
• Queens — Hoffman Park;
• Staten Island — Clove Lake Park; and
• Staten Island — Saint George Staten Island Ferry terminal.

SOURCE: BrooklynEagle.com

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