It鈥檚 been more than 30 years since Peggy Shepard logged her first environmental win. She鈥檇 just been elected as West Harlem鈥檚 Democratic Assembly District Leader鈥攈er official debut in politics鈥攚hen her people came to her with a problem: A sewage-treatment plant had recently opened on the Hudson River, and the odors and fumes were making families sick.
After hearing their concerns, Shepard started asking the tough questions. Why was the plant built in West Harlem after it had been planned for a different part of Manhattan? Was it because the majority of the neighborhood was black? Was it because the median income was among New York City鈥檚 lowest?
The answers were yes and yes. In the end, the city and made $53 million worth of updates to the facility. The story also made the front page of The New York Times; 鈥渋t was above the fold,鈥 Shepard says proudly. It was a turning point in her life, too. After years of moving between suburbs and cities鈥攆rom Washington D.C. to Trenton to Indianapolis鈥攁nd jumping between professions鈥攆rom journalism to grassroots organizing for the Jesse Jackson 1984 campaign鈥擲hepard had finally found her home and calling. To mobilize against the plant, she co-founded , a nonprofit built to battle environmental racism and unequal access to natural resources. Three decades and dozens more lawsuits later, WE ACT has grown into a formidable force, and its leader has drawn admiration for her savvy. (The 探花精选 President's Award is the latest example.) She's also picked up a few lessons along the way, which she shared with us earlier this week.
No. 1: Advocacy and Activism Are Powerful, But Not the Same
Shepard stresses that WE ACT鈥檚 environmental work is rooted in advocacy more than activism. While activism is the initial spark of a movement, advocacy is all about the long game, she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 something you must maintain. It isn鈥檛 just about creating changes, but ensuring that they鈥檙e enforced.鈥 An activist, for instance, may successfully lobby for a chemical ban and focus their energies on the next pressing issue. But an advocate will follow up and monitor practices to make sure new rules have a lasting impact.
Here's a more specific example. WE ACT is currently rallying against lax lead testing in NYC public housing and schools鈥 into which led to the resignation of a city official. While WE ACT has helped pass anti-lead legislation in the past, the standards simply aren鈥檛 being upheld. So, the fight continues.
No. 2: Progress Takes Persistence and Time
Some of bigger projects WE ACT has helped push have taken upwards of a decade to yield results. In the early 2000s, when Mayor Michael Bloomberg made it a priority to create more waterfront parks, Shepard noticed that Harlem was missing from his list. 鈥淥ur piers were falling [apart],鈥 she says. She and WE ACT鈥檚 partners made a case for the neighborhood, and 10 years later, they got . 鈥淭he point we made was that it didn鈥檛 only affect our community, but the whole city,鈥 Shepard says. 鈥淭he riverfront can now be enjoyed to the tip of Manhattan.鈥
Public policy is similarly complex, Shepard says. The EPA passed in 2016, but the guidelines have yet to take shape in the real world. 鈥淲e鈥檙e still working on the implementation years later,鈥 she says. It鈥檚 the reason why environmentalists have the keep the pressure on.
No. 3: Don鈥檛 Assume That Poverty Equals Environmental Apathy
As a result, Shepard thinks poorer communities are more engaged when it comes to the environment. 鈥淧eople most affected are the ones that you can organize the easiest,鈥 she says.
The connection is obvious with WE ACT鈥檚 latest efforts to bring solar co-ops to northern Manhattan. In the past, neighborhoods in and around Harlem have experienced a string of brownouts, or short-term power outages. As a fix, the community wants to decrease their reliance on big utilities like Con Edison by bringing in renewable companies in to build independent grids. The movement has hit a snag, however, with ; the contracts that Shepard鈥檚 group was drawing up have now become a lot less affordable.
No. 4: National, Statewide, and Local Interests Often Match Up
鈥淚 can鈥檛 think of a federal law that I鈥檝e ever worked on that hasn鈥檛 had an impact of every individual [in my community],鈥 Shepard says. National standards set the stage for regional progress; once the framework is in place, it can be catered to a neighborhood鈥檚 needs.
For instance, the Farm Bill is that involves billions of dollars in agricultural grants. Currently up for a update in Congress, the bill also has major implications for birds. But how does it relate to kids in West Harlem? 鈥淭hey get school lunches, and we want them to get high-quality ones,鈥 Shepard says. The federal funds affect food production across the country, and so its weight is felt far beyond the cornfields of Iowa.
No. 5: America Leans On Its Grassroots Champions
Looking at environmental progress in other nations, Shepard is convinced that 鈥渢he United States couldn鈥檛 operate without the nonprofit community.鈥 Tight-knit, motivated groups like WE ACT keep constant pressure on governments to do better. In New York City, for example, the group is the main roadblock against buses reverting back to diesel. (Back in the 2000, WE ACT got the public-transit system .) The same can be said about recent collapses in EPA enforcement. Whatever gains environmentalists have been made since the Nixon era are slowly being lost to Administrator Scott Pruitt鈥檚 ill-aligned motives.
Troubling environmental times and all, the resistance is strong in the United States鈥攁 good thing, Shepard says, given that there鈥檚 plenty of ground left to cover. 鈥淭here鈥檚 so much legacy pollution that people are living with,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 affecting rural communities; it鈥檚 affecting birds.鈥 She鈥檚 also concerned about the growing rift in wealth and health inequality. But the smallest victories and steps forward lift her spirits. 鈥淭here鈥檚 always that ying and yang,鈥 Shepard says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 sort of how life goes.鈥
Purbita Saha is the associate editor for 探花精选. She really likes birds and people who like birds. Look for more of her writing in the Birding and Science sections, or in the front of the magazine.