Will Pleasantville be able to breathe clean air one day?

Matthew Tresaugue
Oct 25, 2018 · 5 min read
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Downtown Houston, Texas

Bridgette Murray, a retired nurse, lives in a predominantly black neighborhood on Houston’s east side, where small houses grace tree-shaded streets, all built around two schools and a city park.

Its name is Pleasantville, a postwar version of the American dream. But the reality is something different.

Warehouses, metal recyclers, salvage yards, Anheuser-Busch’s Houston brewery and an interstate push hard against the neighborhood, proof and product of the city’s light-on-regulations approach to land use. Trains and trucks rumble through the area day and night. It can be difficult to breathe.

“Playing victim has never been one of my personality traits,” said Murray, whose family moved to Pleasantville in 1957, years before industry’s arrival. “I am here to work with the residents for solutions.”

As founder of the nonprofit Achieving Community Tasks Successfully, or ACTS, Murray is working with Environmental Defense Fund to fully understand Pleasantville’s air pollution and its associated harmful health effects and map a fair, just and sustainable path forward for her community.

The effort began in December 2017 with the placement of a BEACO2N sensor in Pleasantville to measure concentrations of several pollutants, including fine particulate matter, which can get deep inside lungs and cause cancer and cardiovascular disease.

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Sensors detect pollution hotspots

That matters because we know that air pollution can vary by as much as eight times within one city block.

In Pleasantville, preliminary data shows the highest concentrations of particulate matter occur at 8 a.m. and 7 p.m., high times for traffic. The later peak typically extends through midnight, suggesting industrial sources also may play a role.

“Our goal is to reduce the health risks from exposure to air pollution, eliminate the health disparities and improve the health and prosperity of those who have suffered the burdens of air pollution for way too long,” said Elena Craft, EDF’s senior director for climate and health.

14 projects in Houston so far

With 14 projects underway, this work comes at a crucial time for Houston, where air pollution remains a public health problem despite hard-won improvements over the past 20 years. In 2018 alone, there have been 30 days with unhealthy levels of ground-level ozone, or smog. On many days, its air also contains other harmful pollutants, like benzene, a gasoline byproduct.

Our projects include:

Identifying hotspots for air pollution using Google Street View cars outfitted with high-resolution sensors, building on previous work done in Oakland, Calif., in a larger geographic area.

Deploying Entanglement Technologies’ mobile sensors and laboratory-grade analyzer to measure air pollution, including cancer-causing benzene, in Houston neighborhoods in the days after Hurricane Harvey.

“If somebody asked me how many fixed site monitors we need, I would say there are never enough,” said Loren Raun, chief environmental officer for the Houston Health Department, which has received funding to purchase similar instruments from Entanglement Technologies. “Real-time mobile monitoring will change the playing field.”

Community champions drive change

Participation requires an existing community-based organization, such as Murray’s ACTS, because data cannot drive change without champions.

Murray’s community work initially focused on replacing aging infrastructure, rebuilding roads and improving storm drainage in Pleasantville. She later integrated environmental justice and public health as major parts of her platform.

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A residential street in Houston’s Fifth Ward which faces similar issues as Pleasantville.

Decades of injustice, finally in focus

A recent Environmental Protection Agency analysis shows that people of color face higher exposure to particulate pollution than the population at large, regardless of wealth. These tiny particles been associated with lung disease, heart disease and premature death. Health and exposure data, however, has been hard to find for Pleasantville, Murray said.

“We know our cancer rates are high, but it is hard to prove our points when the system does not collect the data,” she said.

More and better information can empower the community, Murray said.

“In black and brown communities, sometimes we know about something, but we are talking only to each other,” she said. “We need to take the conversation from the front porch to a place of action.”

WATCH: video on Houston air quality work here.

Read more on innovation in measuring air quality here, here and here.

We are entering a new era of environmental innovationthat is driving better alignment between technology and environmental goals — and results. #FourthWave

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The Fourth Wave

Environmental progress doesn't just happen.

Matthew Tresaugue

Written by

Houston-based communications manager at Environmental Defense Fund.

The Fourth Wave

Environmental progress doesn't just happen. It's been propelled by successive waves of innovation, each unleashing powerful new tools: Land conservation. Force of Law. Power of Market-Based Solutions. Today we are seeing the emergence of a Fourth Wave of environmental innovation.

Matthew Tresaugue

Written by

Houston-based communications manager at Environmental Defense Fund.

The Fourth Wave

Environmental progress doesn't just happen. It's been propelled by successive waves of innovation, each unleashing powerful new tools: Land conservation. Force of Law. Power of Market-Based Solutions. Today we are seeing the emergence of a Fourth Wave of environmental innovation.

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