MEJAC Demands Equity and Inclusion in the Municipal Planning Process

MEJAC’s statement excised from the full “No Petrochemical Storage Tanks on Our West Bank, A Compendium of Citizen Concerns“:

Mobile Environmental Justice Action Coalition
Demands Equity and Inclusion
in the Municipal Planning Process

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 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. EPA has this goal for all communities and persons across the nation. This 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. In this sense, community leadership must exercise what can be described as “planning justice”.

Despite Mobile, Alabama being an apparent destination for much of the continent’s tar sands oil transport, ensuring environmental justice does not appear to be a priority. Here in our very ecologically diverse Mobile-Tensaw Delta, we are still reeling from the devastation wrought by the BP deep water drilling disaster. Yet in 2012, close on the heels of that unresolved catastrophe, we learned that there were plans to put the local drinking water reservoir in jeopardy by running an oil pipeline through its watershed. That pipeline corporation, Plains Southcap, threatened and coerced Mobile County residents out of their property with zero public participation in that planning process by using highly controversial criteria set by the Army Corp of Engineers allowing them to sidestep the Clean Water Act’s public hearing provisions. Continue reading

Oberlin College Students and Faculty Take Environmental Samples in Africatown

Oberlin College Students and Faculty Take Environmental Samples in Africatown
Continuing Oberlin’s Tradition of ‘Community-Based Learning’ and Social Justice

FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015, AFRICATOWN, MOBILE, AL – Oberlin College has a long tradition of social justice, and the nearly 1,000 miles traveled for their Africatown ‘Community-Based Learning’ experience is no exception. 5 students and 2 faculty members will disembark Saturday on the 14 hour drive arriving in time for rest ahead of a busy schedule.

Sunday will see the students visit Africatown’s Union, Yorktown, and First Hopewell Baptist churches followed by a luncheon and tour of Africatown’s historic sites and the industrial incursion it is currently experiencing. Monday through Wednesday the students will be taking a variety of samples of different media testing for toxic environmental contamination long-suspected of contributing to the raft of chronic health problems from which Africatown’s residents suffer. Continue reading

Africatown Hosts 60 Environmental Justice Leaders from Across North America

Africatown Hosts 60 Environmental Justice Leaders from Across North America
Environmental Injustices in Coastal Alabama Come Into Focus


JANUARY 30, 2015, AFRICATOWN, MOBILE, AL – As part of this weekend’s Extreme Energy Extraction Summit (E3S) in Biloxi, Mississippi, a busload of 60 frontline environmental justice organizers from across North America ventured to Africatown’s Whippet’s Den for a hearing of environmental justice concerns from the Coastal Alabama region. Africatown’s unique historical heritage was shared by local historians and storytellers while the out of town guests dined on a locally-prepared vegetarian lunch as part of a regional environmental bus tour organized by the E3S.

The speakers included Africatown historian Lorna Woods, City of Prichard Spokesperson Melanie Baldwin, Mobile Environmental Justice Action Coalition organizer Joe Womack, South Bay Community Alliance organizer Lori Bosarge, Church St. East organizer Marie Dyson, and Eight Mile concerned resident Jeremiah Hollins Continue reading

Proposed Re-Zoning in Historic Africatown Outrages Residents

***UPDATE: The community meeting went exceedingly well. You can read an account and see video from New American Journal here. The Mobile Planning Commission eventually voted to deny the re-zoning request.


Proposed Re-Zoning from Residential to Heavy Industrial in Historic Africatown Outrages Residents
Yorktown Missionary Baptist Church Hosts Community Meeting with Developer, Councilman Manzie

On Tuesday, December 16 at 6:00 PM at Yorktown Missionary Baptist Church, residents of the Historic Africatown/Plateau neighborhood will meet to discuss their concerns about Bean Properties, LLC’s proposed re-zoning of a Residential (R-1) property to Heavy Industry (I-2). Bob Collins, the sole proprietor of Bean Properties, LLC, has indicated in permit applications intentions to clear and pave most of the currently wooded fields of the 17.7 acre pair of lots immediately across the Papermill Road from the old IP site, which many residents suspect is contaminated and in need of remediation. These plans would ostensibly allow for the construction of two warehouses totaling over 125,000 square feet with offices, though once re-zoned I-2 the property could then become any number of even less desirable industrial activities. Continue reading

Proposed Re-Zoning from Residential to Heavy Industrial in Historic Africatown Concerns Residents

12/19/14 UPDATE: After considerable outrage, the Mobile Planning Commission voted 8-1 to deny the re-zoning permit. Given that the Mobile Planning Commission’s Subcommittee on Above Ground Storage Tanks is considering proximity to Residential-zoned property a zoning barrier, preventing this piece of Residential property from eroding a potential buffer around the Africatown community by being re-zoned is a victory for Africatown.

— MEDIA ADVISORY—

Press Contact:
Joél Lewis, President, Africatown Community Development Corporation, 251-648-3441
Teresa Fox-Bettis, Executive Director, Center for Fair Housing, 251-479-1532

Proposed Re-Zoning from Residential to Heavy Industrial in Historic Africatown Concerns Residents
Yorktown Missionary Baptist Church Hosts Community Meeting with Developer, Councilman Manzie

On Tuesday, December 16 at 6:00 PM at Yorktown Missionary Baptist Church, residents of the Historic Africatown/Plateau neighborhood will meet to discuss their concerns about Bean Properties, LLC’s proposed re-zoning of a Residential (R-1) property to Heavy Industry (I-2). Bob Collins, the sole proprietor of Bean Properties, LLC, has indicated in permit applications intentions to clear and pave most of the currently wooded fields of the 17.7 acre pair of lots immediately across the Papermill Road from the old IP site, which many residents suspect is contaminated and in need of remediation. These plans would ostensibly allow for the construction of two warehouses totaling over 125,000 square feet with offices, though once re-zoned I-2 the property could then become any number of even less desirable industrial activities. Continue reading