CEJM

Center for Climate and Environmental Justice Media

Category: Projects

  • Valdosta, Georgia: In the Eye of the Storm

    Valdosta, Georgia: In the Eye of the Storm

    In October 2024, Hurricane Helene cut a swath of devastation through parts of the Florida Big Bend on its way north through south Georgia before unleashing deadly floods in the North Carolina mountain communities.

    On its way, Helene tormented Valdosta residents. That weather system marked the third storm to hit the Azalea City in 13 months. Before that it was Hurricane Idalia in September 2023 with winds of 75 miles an hour. Tropical Storm Debby was mostly a rain event dumping 3-6 inches of precipitation on the city in a short period of time.

    Valdosta resident Hazel Edgecomb shows pictures of the damage to her Long Leaf Community home caused by flooding in November, 2024. (credit Andrew J. Skerritt)

    Strong winds and heavy rains from the tropical weather systems damaged homes and disrupted lives. Even as residents were trying to put the pieces together, some neighborhoods were inundated during what residents call a biblical flood a day after the November 2024 elections.

    Valdosta sits in southern Georgia along the I-75 corridor before the highway enters north Florida. 

    Demographically, Valdosta is majority black. African Americans make up more than 55 percent of the city’s more than 55,000 residents. The financial plight f those hit hard by extreme weather is compounded by their economic status. Valdosta has a median household income of $41,365, which is just 57 percent of the state Georgia average.

    As extreme weather events increase in frequency, Valdosta’s black residents are trying to find ways to survive and thrive.

    The voices you hear are theirs. These are their stories.

  • Selma: Growing Food, Building Community

    Selma: Growing Food, Building Community

    Residents of the iconic city of Selma rediscover vegetable gardening to build a more sustainable and resilient community.

    A stimulus for the residents is the Selma Local Farm Co-op, which is trying to build community by encouraging people – young and old – to grow their own food. The goal is to use the three-acre plot as a centerpiece for the West Village’s revival with the hope that the movement can affect the whole city.

  • Highway Robbery

    Highway Robbery

    Members of the Shiloh, Alabama, community fight for their quality of life after the state expands a nearby highway, causing disruptive flooding to their property.

  • Franklin Field: Heat Island Relief

    Franklin Field: Heat Island Relief

    Residents of the Boston Housing Authority (BHA) property Franklin Field live in a heat island. During the increasingly hot summers, residents must make do with fans, air blowers and window AC units to stay cool. Others keep windows and doors ajar so the occasional summer breeze might bring relief.

    The BHA and National Grid utility company are collaborating to install geothermal systems to keep 129 apartments cool in the summer and warm in the winter.

    These mostly Spanish-speaking residents are on the frontline of Boston’s battle for a greener, more sustainable fossil-fuel free future.