{"id":220694,"date":"2023-04-27T10:37:14","date_gmt":"2023-04-27T14:37:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/newscenter\/?p=220694"},"modified":"2023-05-03T07:44:21","modified_gmt":"2023-05-03T11:44:21","slug":"creating-sustainable-solutions-students-learn-from-environmental-activists-fighting-for-justice-in-newarks-ironbound","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/newscenter\/2023\/04\/27\/creating-sustainable-solutions-students-learn-from-environmental-activists-fighting-for-justice-in-newarks-ironbound\/","title":{"rendered":"Creating Sustainable Solutions: Students Learn from Environmental Activists Fighting for Justice in Newark’s Ironbound"},"content":{"rendered":"
Krishna Polius, a PhD student in Environmental Science and Management, knows what it means to fight for a cleaner community. A geochemist by training, her experiences include testing drinking water during the crisis in Flint, Michigan, and serving in the AmeriCorps to raise awareness about water quality issues in New Jersey.<\/p>\n
Still, she was surprised by what she saw in Newark\u2019s Ironbound and the proximity of polluters to children playing in the streets. \u201cIt was startling to me because of the health risks,\u201d she says.<\/p>\n
The industrial neighborhood \u2013 a concentration of factories and warehouses, a power plant, chemical refineries, the state\u2019s largest garbage incinerator and a Superfund site \u2013 has long been the focus of protests and activists dedicated to uplifting this overburdened community of color, continuing a fight for clean air and land.<\/p>\n
\u201cThe stories we heard of the activism \u2013 what\u2019s been, what\u2019s in the works, what\u2019s going on \u2013 that aspect gave us hope,\u201d adds Leanna Sanchez \u201922, who joined Polius and other students in a 精品成人福利在线 University Anthropology class for a tour around the Ironbound.<\/p>\n Despite all odds, change has happened. Led by the Ironbound Community Corporation, environmental justice and social service programs, including early childhood and after-school enrichment, empower the low-income community \u2013 with its garden, Down Bottom Farms, proof that transformative change is possible.<\/p>\n \u201cSeeing the garden was definitely a manifestation of the work absolutely being done,\u201d says Sanchez, a December graduate with a degree in Anthropology now working toward a master\u2019s degree in Sustainability Science.<\/p>\n \u201cChange doesn’t happen overnight, but it can happen,\u201d says Anthropology Professor Katherine McCaffrey. She teaches \u201cBuilding Sustainable Communities,\u201d a class that explores local and regional strategies being used to improve communities disrupted by climate change. She also draws on the strength of University partnerships, inviting leaders in the sustainability movement to class and collaborating with the University\u2019s PSEG Institute for Sustainability Studies on special projects.<\/p>\n \u201cWe are always talking in class about how to identify the vulnerable,\u201d says Gianna D’Aloia \u201921. \u201cWhat can we do for them? How can we bring them together so they’re involved in decisions that are being made, that impact them.\u201d<\/p>\n This semester, the three graduate students, D\u2019Aloia, Sanchez and Polius, are collaborating with the Township of Verona, identifying with mapping software heat islands and designing ways to lessen the higher temperatures found in various parts of the town. The work is being done in partnership with Verona\u2019s Green Team and Sustainable New Jersey, with findings to be presented to the township\u2019s Planning Board this spring.<\/p>\n \u201cWe\u2019ll be making suggestions for green infrastructure, plantings, rain gardens and bio soils and different kinds of infrastructure that will help reduce heat and manage stormwater,\u201d Sanchez says. \u201cWe’re trying to bring ideas that are going to mesh with the community, are inexpensive and aesthetically pleasing.\u201d<\/p>\n The students are also coming to terms that such work proceeds more slowly than hoped. \u201cThey’re learning that sometimes in order to be effective, you need a different pace. It’s not a matter of checking boxes and meeting deadlines. You need to take the time to talk and meet with people,\u201d McCaffrey says.<\/p>\n For many of the Montclair students, the Ironbound tour was an eye opener. \u201cIf you care about your kids or your grandkids, then you have to care about the resources in terms of social, environmental, political and economic matters. You have to educate yourself and find something you care about,\u201d says D\u2019Aloia, who graduated with a degree in Philosophy and will earn her master\u2019s in Sustainability Science this May.<\/p>\n \u201cStart talking about it, start making people worried about it,\u201d she says.<\/p>\n Story by Staff Writer Marilyn Joyce Lehren<\/a>. Photos by University Photographer Mike Peters<\/a> and John J. LaRosa<\/a>.<\/p>\n You May Also Like:<\/strong><\/p>\n


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