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Environmental justice and waste in the Denver metro area

waste distribution maps

The environmental justice movement seeks to achieve equal distribution of the environmental benefits and burdens of economic growth. This movement began in the 1980s, when Robert Bullard did research regarding race and pollution. He found 鈥渞ace to be the single most important factor (i.e., more important than income, homeownership rate听and property values) in the location of abandoned toxic waste sites鈥 and that 鈥渢hree of the five largest commercial hazardous waste landfills are located in predominately African American or Latino communities听and accounts for 40 percent of the nation's total estimated landfill capacity听(Bullard, 160)."

These findings are the result of redlining and zoning.

  • Redlining is a discriminatory practice that has denied loans and services to BIPOC (Black, Indigenous听and Persons of Color) communities for centuries. This has pushed BIPOC communities out of neighborhoods with stricter environmental regulations, allowing them to be exposed to toxic landfills that negatively affect their health.
  • Zoning laws more often than not 鈥渟hortchange鈥 communities of color by labeling their neighborhoods as 鈥渋ndustrial鈥 areas where there are fewer environmental regulations. This allows companies to place dangerous sites such as municipal landfills in close proximity to their homes (Bullard, 161).

This article explores race in relation to landfill and superfund site locations in the Denver metro area.听

What can we see?

When we compare these maps, we can see that solid municipal waste sites and superfund sites are more concentrated near neighborhoods that are predominantly Black or Hispanic.

What are the implications of living near a landfill/superfund site?

  • Air pollution
  • Water pollution
  • Soil pollution
  • Noise pollution

There are many health costs to living in close proximity to landfills, including:

  • Cancer
  • Respiratory illnesses
  • Cardiovascular illness

  • By reducing your waste, you can help keep harmful pollutants out of these areas.听
  • You can reduce your waste by refusing to use single-use plastics, composting food waste and paper products, re-using whenever you can, only buying what you need, and recycling correctly.听
  • Make sure you鈥檙e disposing of your waste properly by taking our听!

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