I attended a community meeting about diesel emissions in West Oakland yesterday. It was fairly well-attended; the air regulators did their best to present dry voluminous data as attractively and succinctly as they could; and good questions were raised by the audience, with environmental scientists clarifying technical issues and community advocates injecting the role of checks-and-balances into the process with their emphatic comments.
On the surface, it seemed like a typical community meeting, with people networking in whispers in the shadows, a presenter trying to connect with the audience by laughingly disparaging herself when a mistake was identified on her slide,…but then a small-framed elderly woman opened her mouth to speak.
I’ve seen Ms. P at most of the town hall meetings I’ve been to in this neighborhood. I dare say she’s one of the matriarchs of West Oakland, having lived there for almost a century. She looks in her 80s, her gentle face dusted with light powder, her wavy curls kept neatly in place with a long hair pin. On this night, her stockinged feet braced themselves in open-toed pumps as she called us out. In a frail but stern voice, she announced that this was not a “community meeting”, as there were hardly any “community folk” there. She calmly snipped at the presenters’ defenses with, “I didn’t receive any postcard” and “No, I don’t want to talk with you one-on-one at the end. Maybe that’s the problem. Explain this now, in front of everyone.”
I scanned my gaze around the room. Sure enough, I was among the 45 of 50 or so participants who would leave West Oakland that night and drive home – home, where our neighborhoods don’t have the distinctions that children are 7 times more likely to be hospitalized for asthma than the average child in the state of California; nearly 82% of the population live within 1/8 mile of an industrial area; 31% of residents are not able to afford the median rent on available housing units (Pacific Institute). Our backyards certainly don’t look much like theirs.
Salutations!
Welcome and thank you for visiting. Feel free to share your thoughts by leaving a note. Please be kind and respectful. I bruise easily.
Wednesday, August 22, 2007
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1 comment:
Wow. It's unfortunate that activism is often an activity for the "well-off" and not the "getting by". Your right, when you've got real life issues like health care and making the rent facing you everyday, sometimes coming to a meeting at night is not high on the priority list. It's too bad. Go Ms. P - REPRESENT :)
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