How do you play to the middle in a time of intense polarization? GOP senators in North Carolina and beyond are struggling to find common ground between staunch Trump supporters and those who have become disillusioned by his presidency.
For more than a century, he鈥檚 been remembered as the 鈥減atron saint of the American wilderness.鈥 But today, the legacy of John Muir faces new scrutiny, as the Sierra Club grapples with its founder鈥檚 derogatory remarks about Black and Indigenous people.
On Wednesday, the 128-year-old organization announced that it is embarking on that pledges to take both a more nuanced look at its past and a more equitable look toward its future.
Today, it is widely understood that communities of color bear a disproportionate environmental burden when it comes to .听听
鈥淕iven the nature of how our society is structured, America is still segregated and so is pollution,鈥 says Robert Bullard, professor of urban planning and environmental policy at Texas Southern University in a phone interview.
But when Professor Bullard, known as the , first drew attention to the intersection of race and the environment, he had trouble gaining traction with established organizations.
鈥淢ost environmental groups saw the issues that we were dealing with as social issues,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut breathing is not a social issue. Clean water is not a social issue.鈥
In recent years, environmental organizations have taken steps to include people of color on staff and on leadership committees, says Professor Bullard. But so far that diversification hasn鈥檛 extended to funding. 鈥淭he economic justice part is where we need to make inroads in 2020 and beyond,鈥 he says.
After 40 years of clamoring for investment in environmental justice, Professor Bullard might be forgiven for losing hope. Yet in the current moment he sees potential for real change.聽
鈥淚 see this as a great opportunity to make a great leap forward,鈥 he says. 鈥淣ot just a baby step, but a great leap.鈥