ATLANTA—In and near Atlanta, a person who does not speak English well, has a low income, or lives in a majority-minority area, is more likely to live with pollution, according to a new report. GreenLaw, a nonprofit organization, studied patterns of pollution and demographics in the 14-county Atlanta metropolitan area. The authors identified 52 areas they called environmental justice hot spots, where the worst pollution and the highest proportion of minority people and/or linguistically isolated households existed together.
David Deganian is one of two principal authors of “The Patterns of Pollution: A Report on Demographics and Pollution in Metro Atlanta.” He said, “As pollution points rise, percent non-white rises. Areas where a lot of people don’t speak English well also have a lot of pollution.”
The researchers used census data and public information about points of pollution, such as documented chemical releases, Clean Water Act and Clean Air Act violations, Superfund sites, landfills, and hazardous waste storage sites. They divided the area into equal blocks and compared census data with pollution sources.
Many states have a policy to study whether placing a potential source of pollution in a neighborhood will disproportionately affect certain types of people—not Georgia. “This state has no policy on environmental justice,” said Deganian. Only Fulton County, which includes most of Atlanta, has such a policy. Deganian presented his report to a group of community leaders on March 29 at an event organized by Helen Ho, executive director of the Asian American Legal Advocacy Center Inc. (AALAC).







