Photo: Dylan Baddour/Inside Climate News
Texas’ industrial sector is a major source of ozone, air toxics and particulate matter, and those who live close to industrial facilities are at greater risk for respiratory problems, cancer and other chronic conditions. With support from the Jacob and Terese Hershey Foundation, a growing cadre of journalists is watchdogging those charged with monitoring pollution and enforcing environmental laws, spotlighting shortcomings that impact those living near the fencelines.
For example, an investigation by Inside Climate News revealed the state’s longtime use of an unwritten rule with no basis in law to deny residents the right to challenge the permits for new or expanding industrial facilities to pollute if they lived more than a mile from the proposed facility. After the story ran, judges cancelled the state’s approval of two permits that relied on this nonexistent “one-mile rule.”
A recent Public Health Watch investigation revealed that the state knew since 2005 that residents of Channelview, a community near the Houston Ship Channel, were breathing dangerous levels of benzene, a chemical linked to leukemia and other blood cancers. The state did not inform residents about this risk yet allowed a chemical company located in the heart of the community to expand its operations four times, increasing the amount of pollution it could legally release. The investigation prompted Channelview’s State Senator to commit to introducing legislation seeking accountability.
A Texas Tribune investigation in partnership with Altavox Lab and Environmental Health News found that public data from state air quality monitors around the Houston Ship Channel is often inadequate, hard to access and interpret, and typically only available in English, leaving residents of nearby communities unaware of whether the air they breathe is safe. Reporters from the Tribune subsequently convened local residents to share information about air pollution, ways to stay safe and how to make their voices heard.
According to Dylan Baddour, Texas Correspondent for Inside Climate News, “Our state has less than a dozen dedicated environmental reporters, and all of us are struggling to keep up. The old news media business model can hardly support a bare minimum of environmental journalism, much less investigations that take months to produce. Our work pushes back against authorities who would sell out public health to boost private profits, and we depend on our donor partners to make it happen.”