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Thursday, August 15, 2024

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New poll: Voters remain concerned about child-care costs; Harris leads or ties with Trump in most swing states, new Cook Poll finds; EPA grants $1 million to South Bronx groups for climate justice, resiliency; Demystifying campaign-finance impacts on NM's female candidates.

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JD Vance claims VP Harris has secretly been the acting president. Polls show Harris rising in battleground states, and one survey says seniors find issues more important than partisanship deciding their votes.

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Hollywood's Twister sequel captures rural America without the stereotypes, a lack of healthcare access impacts many rural women, South Carolinians lack legal means to fight evictions, and prepping homes is important to keep out wildlife smoke.

MS Cherokee group: Industrial pollution threatens families

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Thursday, August 15, 2024   

A rural Mississippi community is fighting to protect the health of some Cherokee residents threatened by industrial pollution.

Barbara Weckesser, treasurer of the group Cherokee Concerned Citizens, and some of her neighbors formed the group in 2013 to address noise, dust and odor stemming from the Bollinger shipyard and Chevron refinery, just a few miles from the Gulf of Mexico community.

Weckesser explained about 120 families there have experienced high pollution levels, which she believes has created health issues, including elevated levels of heavy metals in children.

"We have lost 30 residents in the last six years, none from COVID," Weckesser pointed out. "They've either been heart or lung, or cancer deaths. We currently have about eight to nine active cases, most of them within the 40-60 age range."

Weckesser contended they have not received adequate responses from state agencies to their multiple complaints about the problem but noted some progress has been made. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency installed an air monitoring system and provided grant funding to the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality to follow through with the results.

Jennifer Crosslin, president of the group, said they are advocating for the local government to buy out the Cherokee Forest subdivision. She added the national organization "Buy In" has applied for federal funding on their behalf to implement relocation and restoration plans.

"We would like for anyone in Cherokee Forest Subdivision who wants to be relocated, to be relocated," Crosslin emphasized. "And for their property to be turned into a buffer zone that can protect nearby residents from industrial pollution and flooding, and improve the climate resiliency for the rest of the city."

The National Coastal Resilience Fund provided a $300,000 grant from the Inflation Reduction Act for community-led habitat restoration planning to the "Buy-In" organization for Mississippi. The grant aims to improve wetland habitat in high-risk residential neighborhoods in Pascagoula.

This story is based on original reporting by Lisa Abelar for the Mississippi Free Press.


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