Our Movement Starts Here
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- Cataloging
- Transcript
Learn how the rural community of Warren County, North Carolina, mobilized to fight the state's plans to place a toxic landfill in their town. This landmark action, the first to articulate the concepts of environmental racism and environmental justice, brought together civil rights activists and environmentalists to fight for a common goal. 40 years later, the activist convene to pass the torch to the next generation of environmental justice activists.
A 56 minute version of the film is available by request.
Citation
Main credits
Rash, John (filmmaker)
Rash, John (film producer)
Ho, Melanie (filmmaker)
Ho, Melanie (film producer)
Other credits
Cinematography, John Rash, Melanie Ho; editing, John Rash; music, Allison Friday.
Distributor subjects
No distributor subjects provided.Keywords
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FEMALE_1: [BACKGROUND] Let me know if you like that. It's kinda bright
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FEMALE_2: I like this one, that's nice.
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Rev. Dr. Benjamin Chavis: [APPLAUSE]
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Forty years ago,
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of the 100 counties in North Carolina,
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Warren County was the most predominantly Black.
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Warren County was a rural agricultural county.
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Those of you who are native of North Carolina
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you know that Warren County was also the place
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where Floyd McKissick wanted to establish Soul City.
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I was so inspired by Floyd McKissick's building of Soul City.
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I started a restaurant and a disco in Oxford called the Seoul Kitchen.
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The truth of the matter is, I'm certain that the
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state officials, including the governor,
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knew that it wasn't appropriate to put tons of toxins in a poor rural,
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predominantly African American community that got most of its water from wells.
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It's the last place you want to dig a hole and dump tons of toxins,
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but that's what happened.
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They announced it, and they started to bring these trucks in September of 1982.
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While I'm giving a lot of credit for what happened,
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I must give the credit first to the women, to the children,
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one of whom was only 4-year-old child get arrested by the state of
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North Carolina for laying down in the road to
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block the trucks from dumping PCB in Warren County.
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[MUSIC].
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MALE_1: I'm glad we put the tables and chairs out yesterday.
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They get in a mess this morning.
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[BACKGROUND] Thank you. [BACKGROUND]
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Vincent Jones. County manager. You don't want a picture?
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We'll photoshop you.
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[BACKGROUND]
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PROTESTERS: [SINGING] Hallelujah.
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We don't want no PCB.
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Give it to Hunt. Don't give it to me. / Give it to Hunt, don't give it to me.
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We don't want no PCB. / We don't want no PCB.
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Give it to Hunt. Don't give it to me. / Give it to Hunt, don't give it to me.
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Fire it up! / Fire it up!
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Fire it up! / Fire it up!
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Fire it up! / Fire it up!
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MALE_2: We don't take it no more.
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UNKNOWN_1: [MUSIC].
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Wayne Moseley: Buck Ward had a transformer company here in Raleigh.
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The insulation that was used in these transformers,
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that oil contained a chemical called PCB or polychlorinated biphenyls.
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Buck Ward had some of his employees dispose of
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this oil by putting it in his tankers and late hours of the night,
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drive along with the valve open and leaking out a little bit at a time.
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Deborah Ferruccio: We moved here in '77,
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and so it was just a little more than a year later in 1978,
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that polychlorinated biphenyls, PCBs,
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were dumped along the roadsides in 14 counties and also at the Fort Bragg Army base.
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All 14 counties, people kept calling in, saying,
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"What is this black, gooey,
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stinky, nasty stuff along our roadsides?"
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It took a while for the state to even begin to get involved with what to do.
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MALE_3: Three men dumped thousands of gallons of
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PCB oil along these rural North Carolina roadways.
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Two men were sentenced to prison,
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but more than 210 miles of roadways had been contaminated.
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Lawsuits preventing the immediate cleanup.
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S. Charmaine McKissick-Melton: This guy did what? He wanted to save money,
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and he just decided to open the spigot and pour
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along the side of the road in 14 counties for 200 and some miles.
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I think, initially, we're all just literally
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stunned that someone would actually do something like this.
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And then it became, okay, this is reality,
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and this stuff is toxic.
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It's just not like he poured out a milkshake or something on the side of the road.
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We said, we got to dig up all this stuff 200 and some miles.
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Where are we going to put it? We got to put it in the landfill.
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Dollie Burwell: The state of North Carolina needed to have a toxic waste facility.
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Then we learned that the state had actually purchased
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150 acres of land and had an option on another 200 acres of land.
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Then we start thinking long term that this is not just about the PCB.
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It's about Warren County probably becoming
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a permanent toxic waste facility for maybe not just North Carolina,
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but the whole Southeast region.
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Wayne Moseley: Jim Hunt and his administration chose
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Warren County because we were a poor county and we were a minority county.
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I felt that Warren County was chosen because
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it was perceived to be the path of least resistance.
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Patrick Barnes: That was low hanging fruit for them.
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Poor black rural community for a landfill, that's very expedient.
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At the time, that was quite the practice,
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quite the regular practice.
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It's quickest and easiest.
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My guess is it'd be far easier to do that
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than to truck across state lines or anything like that.
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I'm sure that is what drove their decision.
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Rev. Dr. Benjamin Chavis: What was the motive
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of the state choosing the most predominantly Black county,
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a rural poor agriculture community that had a shallow aquifer, very important.
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Most of the people in that area got their water from well water.
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Any seepage, any deposit into groundwater is going to get in people's well water,
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not just for a few yards,
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but for miles away.
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Ken Ferruccio: How do you know?
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If a given chemical like PCBs.
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How do you know where the safe level is?
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When you start looking into the research,
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you find some very interesting things going on.
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One, there's a great deal of inconsistency and disagreement
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among federal institutions and
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risk assessment communities on what constitutes a safe level.
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Rev. William Kearney: Our governor, our government that's supposed to protect
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us was exploiting us,
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and it had come right to our front doors.
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Immediately thinking, What impact will this have on the water table?
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How will it affect People who at least able to move from the area.
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Dollie Burwell: I didn't want to sell my house and leave the community.
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Other people didn't want to sell their house or sell
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their land because we knew that there were
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other people who inherited their land from
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a great grandmother or grandfather that went back generations.
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I had the means to leave,
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but I didn't want to leave anybody who didn't have the means to leave.
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Floyd Mckissick Jr.: That PCB landfill was the type of thing that would
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mobilize people who might have been a
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little bit divergent in their thoughts and beliefs sometimes,
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might not even thought about the same strategies for engagement.
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But when the landfill was announced and the landfill was becoming a reality,
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it was time to come together and fight together and puck back.
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Ken Ferruccio: Look at the epic story,
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environmental justice, environmental civil rights, environmental racism.
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Look at this story. It'll never die.
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It's already transcended into legend.
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It's not going anywhere,
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and it's not going into history.
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That will always be there.
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The precedents will be there.
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The inspirations will be there to inspire communities that really without it,
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would probably just give up hope and either make an adjustment,
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move or just get ready to adjust to horrible circumstances.
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Rev. William Kearney: Soul City was awesome idea inspired by
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Attorney Floyd McKissick about bringing opportunity to a rural community as an example,
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a city that's pretty much managed by Blacks,
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but welcoming to all.
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S. Charmaine McKissick-Melton: When they bought the land for Soul City,
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it was proposed for 50,000 people over a period of 20 to 30 years.
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We had the groundbreaking,
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I believe, September of 73.
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Rev. Dr. Benjamin Chavis: Floyd McKissick was the first to talk about developing
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a city in a predominantly African American community,
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a metropolis, amidst poverty,
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the notion of putting down infrastructure.
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Most of the people were working at that time in agriculture and tobacco.
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But Floyd saw an opportunity for people to not necessarily leave the farm,
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but do other work to generate family revenue other than farming.
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Dollie Burwell: Floyd McKissick was the founder of Soul City.
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He was just all about his people.
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I think that's what attracted a lot of people to believe in Soul City.
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Floyd Mckissick Jr.: You understand you had a county that was 68% Black,
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but they had never elected a public official that was black.
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I think what people could see was that the dollars that were coming in from
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Soul City and building those roads and building
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that infrastructure were also bringing jobs.
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It was also beginning to bring growth and development.
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A lot of the fears,
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apprehensions, and concerns were overcome by cost of that change.
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There was a sign right out there in Oxford that
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said the Ku Klux Klan Walton's you to Grandville County.
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It was my father talking to Mayor Corn Hugh Curran of the city of Oxford,
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saying it's time for that sign to go down. It needs to come down.
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Mayor Curran went, in fact,
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to the Ku Klux Klan.
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He met with him and said, Look,
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perhaps he didn't do it because it was morally the right thing to do,
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but to say, it's bad for business.
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We need to bring it down because we want jobs.
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We want growth development.
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In fact, that sign came down.
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Rep. Eva Clayton: I was engaged with Soul City as
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the director of the Soul City Foundation.
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Under the Soul City Foundation,
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I had responsibility of building Soul Tech,
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which was an incubator for businesses.
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Soul City not only was the idea of bringing services and commerce,
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but it also was the beginning of many things.
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Rural Health in the United States started in Warren County at Soul City.
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By the same man who created rural health across the United States.
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His name is Jim Bernstein.
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Started that incubator program at Soul Tech.
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Soul City brought not only attention to Warren County,
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but brought an energy and a possibility and a hope and aspiration.
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Something could be done.
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We're not lost in the wilderness.
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You had to have the will to do it.
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That's the continuation and the aspiration of Soul City.
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Rev. William Kearney: On one end, we had this hopefulness through Soul City,
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something new and bigger.
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On the other side, we've had identified as a marginalized
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community where we got dumped on.
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Floyd Mckissick Jr.: Had it not been for Jesse Helms
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and launching attacks against the project,
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that pretty much brought it to a standstill,
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I think the project would have continued far longer.
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Unfortunately, Helms made many false accusations relating to
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financial mismanagement and proprieties and basically brought development to a halt.
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Dollie Burwell: Even out of Soul City grew the Warren County Political Action Council,
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which is still active very much in the community for the purpose of electing Blacks.
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S. Charmaine McKissick-Melton: The state interpreted that Warren County,
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maybe we'll get some resistance.
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Look at the population with a small population.
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Look at the content of this population being mostly minority black.
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Where is the political resistance to that?
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Mm, little do they know.
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What I was saying, Soul City having inspired people.
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There was a residue of people who wanted to not only build,
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but there was a residue of people who would fight.
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Prof. Lameshia Whittington: All right. Good evening.
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How is everyone this afternoon?
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All right. There we go. There we go.
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I hope we are excited to be in this space
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this evening to hear a robust and historic conversation,
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not just historic in the nature of presenting and discussing history with history makers,
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but in making history tonight on
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the 40th anniversary of the birth of the Environmental Justice Movement.
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Today, we all have the esteemed privilege of being in the presence of
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the originators of the movement and allies to discuss the Warren County protests.
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The Honorable Eva Clayton,
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who served as the first African American to represent
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North Carolina in the House since 1898 Reconstruction.
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On the pathway to politics,
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how did the environmental protests at Warren County influence your political pathway?
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Did you continue to work with leaders of
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the Warren County Environmental Justice Movement following the protest as well?
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And please feel free to include Soul City in there, I do love it.
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Eva Clayton: How I got to Warren County is because my husband was recruited by
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a white attorney in Warren County who wanted to start an integrated law firm,
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which represented the very first integrate law firm in the state of North Carolina.
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It was a result of that invitation,
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I happened to be in Warren County.
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By the way, that lawyer was Moses' cousin,
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too so it's in the family.
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At the time of the PCB announcement,
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I happened to be writing working for the governor who put PCB in Warren County.
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I had been signed up with him for the first term.
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When I heard the announcement of the PCB,
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I thought it was time for me not to go second term
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Deborah Ferruccio: This largely democratic county was not
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about to let this Democratic governor roll over us.
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They stood up to him and in fact,
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Reverend Ramey is the one when we
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met with the governor who looked at Governor Hunt and said,
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Look, we helped put you in office, Governor Hunt.
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Now, we expected you to listen to us what we need.
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We don't need this in a poor county like Warren County,
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we'll never come out of this.
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Rev. Willie Ramey III: He assured us that everything was going to be right,
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that they started talking about the landfill,
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that it was going to be made leak-proof,
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that it was not going to contaminate the water system.
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We fought against that, also.
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We don't want you to put this dirt in our county
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because if you build a landfill to put dirt in here,
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then you're going to bring dirt in from somewhere else.
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If we start a contamination site here,
00:20:19.176 --> 00:20:24.765
then what is going to stop another company from spilling something else?
00:20:24.765 --> 00:20:28.810
Then we end up being a contamination dump county,
00:20:28.810 --> 00:20:30.646
and this is something that we don't want.
00:20:30.646 --> 00:20:35.442
Now, it even got to the point that we call it Hunt dump.
00:20:35.692 --> 00:20:38.195
Ken Ferruccio: We had four years of due process.
00:20:38.195 --> 00:20:40.405
We had three litigations, actually,
00:20:40.405 --> 00:20:42.699
and a lot of research.
00:20:42.699 --> 00:20:45.118
By that time in 1981,
00:20:45.118 --> 00:20:48.789
the state had passed the Waste Management Act,
00:20:48.789 --> 00:20:51.541
and the Waste Management Act gave the governor the right,
00:20:51.541 --> 00:20:52.876
authorized the governor to make
00:20:52.876 --> 00:20:56.755
the final decision concerning the location of these sites,
00:20:56.755 --> 00:21:01.051
and to do it even prior to public hearing or with no public hearings.
00:21:01.051 --> 00:21:04.596
Once we knew that it was inevitable
00:21:04.596 --> 00:21:08.725
that they were not going to listen to our research-based opposition,
00:21:08.725 --> 00:21:10.936
we knew it was time to organize.
00:21:10.936 --> 00:21:15.816
People came from New York and from Atlanta United Church of Christ,
00:21:15.816 --> 00:21:17.067
Commission of Racial Justice.
00:21:17.067 --> 00:21:22.698
But it was just a whole multicultural convergence,
00:21:22.698 --> 00:21:26.201
really on Warren County for these demonstrations.
00:21:26.201 --> 00:21:27.995
Floyd Mckissick Jr.: It was that special synergy.
00:21:27.995 --> 00:21:29.997
You had Ken and Deborah Ferruccio.
00:21:29.997 --> 00:21:31.915
They were white, they were progressive.
00:21:31.915 --> 00:21:37.004
They were liberal and outspoken and media savvy.
00:21:37.004 --> 00:21:39.047
You had Dollie Burwell,
00:21:39.047 --> 00:21:41.174
who was community activists,
00:21:41.174 --> 00:21:43.593
somebody who was well known and well regarded,
00:21:43.593 --> 00:21:46.179
involved with a lot of the Black churches in the area,
00:21:46.179 --> 00:21:50.350
involved with the United Church of Christ back in that point in time.
00:21:50.350 --> 00:21:53.979
Reverend Leon White was one of the great champions of Ben Chavis.
00:21:53.979 --> 00:21:59.901
He was the one out there fighting for Ben to get out of jail with The Wilmington Ten.
00:21:59.901 --> 00:22:03.739
Ben getting released and Ben being
00:22:03.739 --> 00:22:07.492
outspoken in the forefront was important and significant.
00:22:07.492 --> 00:22:13.623
You had Reverend Brown from Coley Springs church being active and engaged and involved.
00:22:13.623 --> 00:22:16.918
You had this synergy that was coming together,
00:22:16.918 --> 00:22:22.424
bringing together factions of the community in Warren County and beyond that were so
00:22:22.424 --> 00:22:25.594
deeply and passionately concerned about
00:22:25.594 --> 00:22:29.389
this injustice that was being brought to Warren County,
00:22:29.389 --> 00:22:34.436
this blight that put people's lives potentially at risk that also was going to have
00:22:34.436 --> 00:22:37.689
a devastating impact on Warren County to grow and
00:22:37.689 --> 00:22:41.651
attract development in a place where people needed those jobs,
00:22:41.651 --> 00:22:45.947
at a place where people were looking for a better quality of life.
00:22:45.947 --> 00:22:49.534
It was the convergence of all those factors that was rare,
00:22:49.534 --> 00:22:52.120
it was unique, it was different,
00:22:52.120 --> 00:22:54.289
but more importantly, it was profound.
00:22:54.289 --> 00:22:58.502
It became the very forefront of what's come to known
00:22:58.502 --> 00:23:03.673
today as the environmental justice movement.
00:23:03.715 --> 00:23:08.595
Deborah Ferruccio: For six weeks, an unprecedented multiracial coalition of hundreds of
00:23:08.595 --> 00:23:13.934
citizens and our supporters dramatized with civil disobedience and direct action,
00:23:13.934 --> 00:23:16.561
the injustice of toxic aggression.
00:23:16.561 --> 00:23:19.481
We marched in protest against the forced burial of
00:23:19.481 --> 00:23:22.359
some 10,000 truckloads containing 60,000
00:23:22.359 --> 00:23:28.657
tons of toxic PCB contaminated soil and a landfill just above our groundwater.
00:23:28.657 --> 00:23:31.827
We were unified around a common cause.
00:23:31.827 --> 00:23:33.995
Our strategy was to be informed,
00:23:33.995 --> 00:23:37.666
dignified, respectful, unyielding, and non-violent.
00:23:37.666 --> 00:23:42.587
We were strengthened by the ties that bound us and were an uncorrupted grassroots force,
00:23:42.587 --> 00:23:48.135
aware that we were effecting a significant historic rupture.
00:23:48.552 --> 00:23:52.264
Jenny Labalme: They lay in the roads not just to stop
00:23:52.264 --> 00:23:55.767
the trucks from dumping PCB-tainted soil,
00:23:55.767 --> 00:23:59.062
they fought for environmental justice,
00:23:59.062 --> 00:24:03.233
the right of all communities to a safe environment,
00:24:03.233 --> 00:24:08.738
and the right to participate in decisions that would affect their lives.
00:24:09.239 --> 00:24:13.618
Dollie Burwell: The first day of the demonstration,
00:24:13.618 --> 00:24:21.418
I got my daughter ready to go to school and she knew that because Sunday before it was
00:24:21.418 --> 00:24:25.005
Floyd McKissick a lot of us who come together and
00:24:25.005 --> 00:24:29.843
had a rally because we knew the trucks was going to start coming that Monday morning.
00:24:29.843 --> 00:24:31.928
About a quarter to eight,
00:24:31.928 --> 00:24:33.346
I'm rushing through,
00:24:33.346 --> 00:24:35.015
let me get out of here.
00:24:35.015 --> 00:24:36.975
I see her sitting on the couch,
00:24:36.975 --> 00:24:40.145
and I'm getting upset as a mom.
00:24:40.145 --> 00:24:43.690
Why'd you then get on that bus?
00:24:43.690 --> 00:24:48.778
She said, "Because I'm going to the march with you, Mama."
00:24:48.778 --> 00:24:50.864
I said, "Kim,
00:24:50.864 --> 00:24:54.784
you cannot go to the march with me."
00:24:54.784 --> 00:24:56.620
She said, "Well,
00:24:56.620 --> 00:24:59.706
if you go, why can't I go?"
00:25:00.081 --> 00:25:06.379
It just hit me that what am I going to tell her?
00:25:06.379 --> 00:25:12.219
What am I teaching her? I said I might get arrested.
00:25:12.219 --> 00:25:36.117
UNKNOWN_1: [BACKGROUND]
00:25:36.117 --> 00:25:37.536
Jenny Labalme: The first day of the protest,
00:25:37.536 --> 00:25:40.163
it made the CBS national news.
00:25:40.163 --> 00:25:43.375
I don't know whether CBS was down there,
00:25:43.375 --> 00:25:47.504
or they picked it up from a local CBS affiliate and
00:25:47.504 --> 00:25:52.259
then it made the news with Dan Rather at the time.
00:25:52.259 --> 00:25:53.552
MALE_2: In North Carolina today,
00:25:53.552 --> 00:25:58.306
a PCB cleanup operation became an object of protest and 76 arrests.
00:25:58.306 --> 00:26:01.643
Wyatt Andrews reports the demonstrators had nothing against the cleanup,
00:26:01.643 --> 00:26:06.189
but plenty of qualms about where the PCBs were being shipped.
00:26:06.481 --> 00:26:10.610
Rev. Leon White: We going to wait for the trucks.
00:26:10.610 --> 00:26:12.696
Well, we got to secure our blockade.
00:26:12.696 --> 00:26:16.825
You go secure it over there. Just show me.
00:26:16.825 --> 00:26:23.206
Back up my children [inaudible] we've got to set a blockade.
00:26:23.957 --> 00:26:27.085
We will go for the blockade.
00:26:27.085 --> 00:26:30.922
We got to set up the blockade.
00:26:31.131 --> 00:26:34.259
Trooper: Where are you wanting to go Reverend?
00:26:34.259 --> 00:26:38.513
Rev. Leon White: I want to go down there at the dump site.
00:26:40.974 --> 00:26:45.729
I see the signs, the land belonged to the people and what we going to
00:26:45.729 --> 00:26:53.278
do is put up a human blockade.
00:26:53.278 --> 00:26:56.781
I know y'all are our friends, I ain't worried about you.
00:26:56.865 --> 00:26:59.159
I know you have to obey the law,
00:26:59.159 --> 00:27:01.536
I understand that but I know where your heart is,
00:27:01.536 --> 00:27:04.164
so we all together, so we'll work that out.
00:27:04.164 --> 00:27:06.207
Trooper: Reverend we've got some trucks coming in here
00:27:06.207 --> 00:27:08.293
in a minute that's got to go in there.
00:27:08.293 --> 00:27:11.421
Rev. Leon White: That's why we're here and we say we going to stop it.
00:27:11.421 --> 00:27:13.923
Trooper: Well, we're going to ask
00:27:13.923 --> 00:27:16.968
you to move over to the side, so the trucks to can come through.
00:27:16.968 --> 00:27:18.303
Rev. Leon White: We can't do that.
00:27:18.303 --> 00:27:20.388
Trooper: Well whenever they get here,
00:27:20.388 --> 00:27:23.433
and if you don't move, you will be impeding.
00:27:23.433 --> 00:27:26.311
Rev. Leon White: Okay I understand that.
00:27:29.022 --> 00:27:34.861
Wayne Moseley: The governor sent a proclamation by way of the highway patrol,
00:27:34.861 --> 00:27:38.073
which was read to us stating that we were in violation
00:27:38.073 --> 00:27:42.661
and that we would be arrested if we do not disperse.
00:27:42.661 --> 00:27:49.626
At which time, 66 of us laid in the highway to block the trucks.
00:27:51.294 --> 00:27:54.631
Dollie Burwell: I was arrested and I think they didn't
00:27:54.631 --> 00:27:58.259
process us until late in the afternoon
00:27:58.259 --> 00:28:05.809
that day and when I got- I'm going to say I didn't get home until about six o'clock or 6:30.
00:28:05.809 --> 00:28:09.104
I saw her on the national news.
00:28:09.104 --> 00:28:12.107
MALE_2: Kimberly Burwell was arrested 10-years-old.
00:28:12.107 --> 00:28:13.441
She's in the fifth grade.
00:28:13.441 --> 00:28:15.777
Kimberly Burwell: I'm scared I might catch cancer.
00:28:15.777 --> 00:28:18.196
Dollie Burwell: They took her to Juvenile Hall,
00:28:18.196 --> 00:28:25.245
and was a couple of other kids that they took to Juvenile Hall.
00:28:25.245 --> 00:28:43.722
MALE_4: You're in violation of state law. You are all under arrest.
00:28:43.722 --> 00:29:14.419
UNKNOWN_1: [NOISE]
00:29:14.419 --> 00:29:17.464
Mary Somerville: It's just something about that sound once you
00:29:17.464 --> 00:29:21.092
lock a person up you see the look in the eyes.
00:29:21.092 --> 00:29:22.343
Once they get behind,
00:29:22.343 --> 00:29:24.345
they say it's like they're a different person,
00:29:24.345 --> 00:29:27.849
their whole demeanor will change.
00:29:33.229 --> 00:29:36.649
The way the law was written is
00:29:36.649 --> 00:29:40.487
that you could put as many in a cell as you could get in there,
00:29:40.487 --> 00:29:44.115
except you couldn't put them directly on the floor.
00:29:44.115 --> 00:29:46.576
They got away with being able to have
00:29:46.576 --> 00:29:51.831
overcrowded jails because I could actually put them on a sheet,
00:29:51.831 --> 00:29:55.710
anything that would separate them from the floor.
00:29:57.086 --> 00:30:02.801
I didn't know that the PCB or the protest was even going on.
00:30:02.801 --> 00:30:05.470
But about 10 o'clock that morning,
00:30:05.470 --> 00:30:10.350
I got a call from the sheriff and said, "Mary,
00:30:10.350 --> 00:30:14.103
you need to be aware that they're going to start to
00:30:14.103 --> 00:30:18.483
the people like they're and after laying all in the road in front of a dump truck.
00:30:18.483 --> 00:30:22.570
The highway patrol, they're going to start arresting them and bringing them down."
00:30:22.570 --> 00:30:24.280
I remember asking him,
00:30:24.280 --> 00:30:26.032
"Where am I supposed to put them?"
00:30:26.032 --> 00:30:29.035
He was telling me how many it was.
00:30:29.035 --> 00:30:31.120
I said, "Where am I supposed to put them?"
00:30:31.120 --> 00:30:32.831
He actually just hung up.
00:30:32.831 --> 00:30:36.042
Before he could literally get off the phone,
00:30:36.042 --> 00:30:38.169
I looked at the door downstairs,
00:30:38.169 --> 00:30:41.631
and it was dust all across the grounds.
00:30:41.631 --> 00:30:43.258
There were cars, highway patrol,
00:30:43.258 --> 00:30:46.719
deputies, yard was full of them.
00:30:48.763 --> 00:30:54.853
The jail has a capacity of holding 34 inmates.
00:30:54.853 --> 00:30:57.230
With PCB disturbances,
00:30:57.230 --> 00:30:59.399
I'd have them on the floor,
00:30:59.399 --> 00:31:03.069
but once we got all ourselves before the magistrate,
00:31:03.069 --> 00:31:07.949
he set up his little desk and chair out here.
00:31:07.949 --> 00:31:14.914
He said, just send them in and he would do the process at his convenience.
00:31:14.914 --> 00:31:22.255
As the highway patrol and the deputies would bring carloads of protesters in,
00:31:22.255 --> 00:31:23.965
this is where we would put them,
00:31:23.965 --> 00:31:28.803
here all around the fence.
00:31:28.803 --> 00:31:31.472
They would be at the fence.
00:31:32.390 --> 00:31:36.728
The outside would come to the fence,
00:31:36.728 --> 00:31:39.731
and they would be talking as if they were
00:31:39.731 --> 00:31:42.901
really inmates talking to others on the outside.
00:31:42.901 --> 00:31:45.278
MALE_5: You may bring your PCB.
00:31:45.278 --> 00:31:47.655
UNKNOWN_2: You may bring your PCB.
00:31:47.655 --> 00:31:48.656
MALE_5: But I am.
00:31:48.656 --> 00:31:49.866
UNKNOWN_2: But I am.
00:31:49.866 --> 00:31:51.242
MALE_5: Somebody.
00:31:51.242 --> 00:31:52.577
UNKNOWN_2: Somebody.
00:31:52.577 --> 00:31:54.287
MALE_5: I may go to jail.
00:31:54.287 --> 00:31:55.997
UNKNOWN_2: I may go to jail.
00:31:55.997 --> 00:31:56.998
MALE_5: But I am.
00:31:56.998 --> 00:31:58.041
UNKNOWN_2: But I am.
00:31:58.041 --> 00:31:59.375
MALE_5: Somebody.
00:31:59.375 --> 00:32:00.752
UNKNOWN_2: Somebody.
00:32:00.752 --> 00:32:01.753
MALE_5: Soul power.
00:32:01.753 --> 00:32:02.754
UNKNOWN_2: Soul power.
00:32:02.754 --> 00:32:04.088
MALE_5: People's power.
00:32:04.088 --> 00:32:05.423
UNKNOWN_2: People's power.
00:32:05.423 --> 00:32:06.466
MALE_5: Love power.
00:32:06.466 --> 00:32:07.175
UNKNOWN_2: Love power.
00:32:07.175 --> 00:32:07.926
MALE_5: Right on.
00:32:07.926 --> 00:32:08.718
UNKNOWN_2: Right on.
00:32:08.718 --> 00:32:10.887
MALE_5: We don't want no PCB.
00:32:10.887 --> 00:32:15.975
UNKNOWN_2: We don't want no PCB.
00:32:15.975 --> 00:32:32.200
If you want your freedom stomp your feet.
00:32:32.200 --> 00:32:41.417
If you want your freedom jump and shout.
00:32:41.417 --> 00:32:46.839
[MUSIC].
00:32:46.839 --> 00:32:58.726
FEMALE_3: You were talking about the fantastic.
00:32:58.726 --> 00:33:00.728
Jenny Labalme: That's the protest song that's in my book.
00:33:00.728 --> 00:33:03.690
That's an original. I wonder where they found that.
00:33:03.690 --> 00:33:06.442
FEMALE_3: Was that original, mother? There's your book.
00:33:06.442 --> 00:33:08.444
Jenny Labalme: There's my book.
00:33:10.196 --> 00:33:12.407
FEMALE_3: Song I did like playing that.
00:33:12.407 --> 00:33:15.368
Jenny Labalme: Yeah. That's a photo of mine.
00:33:15.368 --> 00:33:18.871
FEMALE_3: Then went out to where the protesters.
00:33:19.372 --> 00:33:21.874
Jenny Labalme: Dolly is [OVERLAPPING].
00:33:21.874 --> 00:33:23.042
FEMALE_3: Which one?
00:33:23.042 --> 00:33:30.383
Jenny Labalme: She is the second one from right. I didn't take that.
00:33:31.426 --> 00:33:36.139
You can see they're all lying there ahead of time.
00:33:36.139 --> 00:33:40.059
I saw there was a shot that needed to be taken.
00:33:41.269 --> 00:33:43.312
I don't know.
00:33:43.312 --> 00:33:47.817
I think some of these kids are in the photo.
00:33:47.817 --> 00:33:56.242
Then I'm running here and then took the photo that's over here.
00:33:58.995 --> 00:34:03.124
Right here. But I didn't know any of these kids,
00:34:03.124 --> 00:34:06.294
and this is one of those with the framing.
00:34:06.294 --> 00:34:08.921
Remember when we were talking last night?
00:34:08.921 --> 00:34:12.675
Just the the framing of it was pure luck.
00:34:12.675 --> 00:34:16.512
The first day I went up to the protest,
00:34:16.512 --> 00:34:19.807
the songs are what pulled me in.
00:34:20.266 --> 00:34:23.352
We don't want no PCBs.
00:34:23.352 --> 00:34:25.646
Give them to Hunt dump. Don't give them to me.
00:34:25.646 --> 00:34:28.608
I remember them like yesterday.
00:34:29.484 --> 00:34:34.530
After people spoke, I remember them singing,
00:34:34.530 --> 00:34:35.698
We Shall Overcome,
00:34:35.698 --> 00:34:38.159
which everyone has heard.
00:34:38.159 --> 00:34:42.413
They linked arms like this and swayed back and forth.
00:34:42.413 --> 00:34:43.915
I thought, my gosh.
00:34:43.915 --> 00:34:46.167
Not that I hadn't heard songs like that,
00:34:46.167 --> 00:34:51.672
but just being there in person reverberated in my soul.
00:34:51.672 --> 00:34:55.301
Then, when I went out to photograph them marching,
00:34:55.301 --> 00:35:00.348
I caught the emotions of the people,
00:35:00.348 --> 00:35:01.432
and the anger,
00:35:01.432 --> 00:35:02.767
and the disbelief,
00:35:02.767 --> 00:35:07.480
and the indignation at the injustice of a landfill
00:35:07.480 --> 00:35:13.486
being cited that didn't even meet EPA standards at the time.
00:35:15.780 --> 00:35:19.117
People were very welcoming to me.
00:35:19.117 --> 00:35:20.326
I had to go back,
00:35:20.326 --> 00:35:22.453
develop the film myself,
00:35:22.453 --> 00:35:26.749
and I do remember bringing up copies of some of the prints,
00:35:26.749 --> 00:35:28.918
possibly my contact sheets.
00:35:28.918 --> 00:35:31.963
I think once people saw what I was doing,
00:35:31.963 --> 00:35:34.257
not that their guard was up before,
00:35:34.257 --> 00:35:37.301
but I think they became more comfortable with me.
00:35:37.301 --> 00:35:41.556
I had the luxury when I had free time and wasn't in
00:35:41.556 --> 00:35:47.019
class to go back up to Warren County as often as I could.
00:35:48.020 --> 00:35:52.400
Wayne Moseley: We met at Coley Springs Baptist Church,
00:35:52.400 --> 00:35:57.155
a meeting place and logistically within two miles of the dump.
00:35:57.155 --> 00:36:03.703
We would march from Coley Springs Baptist Church down to the dump almost daily.
00:36:03.703 --> 00:36:06.539
Deborah Ferruccio: They were just walking down to that landfill,
00:36:06.539 --> 00:36:09.208
walking down the freedom road.
00:36:09.208 --> 00:36:10.877
That's what everybody was doing.
00:36:10.877 --> 00:36:12.920
This became known as Hunt's dump because
00:36:12.920 --> 00:36:16.841
Governor Hunt worked really hard to put this landfill in.
00:36:16.841 --> 00:36:21.929
This was a big sign that was put up that was paid for by one of the citizens.
00:36:21.929 --> 00:36:23.639
I think it was Dr. Massey.
00:36:23.639 --> 00:36:26.851
When we got down to the state highway patrol,
00:36:26.851 --> 00:36:29.103
and they started arresting Ken and Reverend White,
00:36:29.103 --> 00:36:31.022
then that's when everybody went down,
00:36:31.022 --> 00:36:34.609
and they began the arrest.
00:36:34.609 --> 00:36:36.903
Dollie Burwell: People who couldn't be arrested,
00:36:36.903 --> 00:36:41.449
they cooked, there were a lot of moral support.
00:36:41.449 --> 00:36:43.743
They organized the rallies,
00:36:43.743 --> 00:36:48.706
and they would always have someone at the church in the mornings to make coffee.
00:36:48.706 --> 00:36:51.500
The whole community, I think,
00:36:51.500 --> 00:36:54.253
especially the Afton community,
00:36:54.253 --> 00:36:58.090
found a way to lend their support,
00:36:58.090 --> 00:36:59.926
whether they got arrested or not.
00:36:59.926 --> 00:37:04.347
Deborah Ferruccio: Other people signed their property over so we could be bailed out of jail.
00:37:04.347 --> 00:37:10.186
It was people from all economic backgrounds, all educational backgrounds.
00:37:10.186 --> 00:37:12.313
Everybody got involved at some level.
00:37:12.313 --> 00:37:13.773
Rev. Willie Ramey III: When we talked about people,
00:37:13.773 --> 00:37:14.899
it wasn't just Black.
00:37:14.899 --> 00:37:18.569
It was we as a county, we must fight.
00:37:18.569 --> 00:37:21.322
We had people that came out of Hollister.
00:37:21.322 --> 00:37:24.158
This is down to where the Saponi tribe is.
00:37:24.158 --> 00:37:27.620
It's not just one group of people.
00:37:27.620 --> 00:37:29.580
It's the people of Warren County.
00:37:29.580 --> 00:37:32.833
It was an interracial mix of people.
00:37:32.833 --> 00:37:35.586
Wayne Moseley: Some of the community ladies went home
00:37:35.586 --> 00:37:38.714
and fried some chicken, cook some biscuits,
00:37:38.714 --> 00:37:45.680
and they brought it back to the jail and asked if they could feed the prisoners.
00:37:45.680 --> 00:37:51.185
They said, "No." They didn't take that answer.
00:37:51.185 --> 00:37:53.646
They stood across the street.
00:37:53.646 --> 00:37:56.941
We would say, "Throw me a wing,
00:37:56.941 --> 00:37:59.860
or chop me a breast."
00:37:59.860 --> 00:38:04.865
They would throw the biscuit or the piece of chicken over the road,
00:38:04.865 --> 00:38:06.033
over the fence,
00:38:06.033 --> 00:38:08.577
and into our waiting hands.
00:38:08.577 --> 00:38:09.829
Dollie Burwell: Ms. Moseley,
00:38:09.829 --> 00:38:11.580
that's Wayne's mother,
00:38:11.580 --> 00:38:18.337
would babysit and drive along the march route and hand people water,
00:38:18.337 --> 00:38:21.132
make sure they had a snack or something.
00:38:21.132 --> 00:38:22.508
Angela Dunston: It was about leadership,
00:38:22.508 --> 00:38:26.304
but you also had people who cared about people.
00:38:26.304 --> 00:38:28.597
We lived across the lake,
00:38:28.597 --> 00:38:33.269
but this happened 15 miles down the road in Coley Springs.
00:38:33.269 --> 00:38:35.479
Just because I lived on Lake Gaston or
00:38:35.479 --> 00:38:38.107
someone else lived in Coley Springs, it didn't matter.
00:38:38.107 --> 00:38:42.278
We were all a part of the United Warren County.
00:38:42.278 --> 00:38:44.947
What hurt one hurt the other.
00:38:44.947 --> 00:38:47.241
That was why we came together,
00:38:47.241 --> 00:38:48.617
and we worked together.
00:38:48.617 --> 00:38:51.037
There are so many people again, like my aunts,
00:38:51.037 --> 00:38:53.622
and my grandmother, my grandmother was not going to get arrested.
00:38:53.622 --> 00:38:56.125
But she was one of those women who was behind
00:38:56.125 --> 00:38:59.545
the scenes calling other women an individual saying,
00:38:59.545 --> 00:39:00.796
"You should be out there.
00:39:00.796 --> 00:39:02.214
You should be a part of this."
00:39:02.214 --> 00:39:06.093
She was one of the women that they talked about who was cooking the fried chicken,
00:39:06.093 --> 00:39:09.764
and helping to throw it across the fence for the people that were in jail.
00:39:09.764 --> 00:39:15.603
There's an opportunity for anyone who wants to be a part of civic engagement.
00:39:15.603 --> 00:39:18.272
You've just got to figure out where you fit in,
00:39:18.272 --> 00:39:20.566
and then you've just got to do it.
00:39:21.776 --> 00:39:24.904
MALE_6: State officials say the PCBs,
00:39:24.904 --> 00:39:27.198
which have caused cancer in laboratory rats,
00:39:27.198 --> 00:39:30.034
can be safely put in this landfill because the soil
00:39:30.034 --> 00:39:33.287
here is above well water, the area remote.
00:39:33.287 --> 00:39:36.832
Warren County residents know they lost this fight today,
00:39:36.832 --> 00:39:40.252
but they are encouraged that they gave the state more opposition
00:39:40.252 --> 00:39:44.006
than expected from a county with just 17,000 people.
00:39:44.006 --> 00:39:45.424
MALE_7: Worth every second.
00:39:45.424 --> 00:39:46.550
MALE_8: Would you do it again?
00:39:46.550 --> 00:39:48.969
MALE_7: Yes, sir. I'll do it again.
00:39:48.969 --> 00:39:51.222
Deborah Ferruccio: You go get arrested at 10:00 in the morning,
00:39:51.222 --> 00:39:53.015
and you're not out till 4:00.
00:39:53.015 --> 00:39:54.725
Those are long hours,
00:39:54.725 --> 00:39:57.937
or you start at 9:00 in the morning.
00:39:57.937 --> 00:40:03.317
It takes you an hour and a half to slowly march down there and sing, and lay down.
00:40:03.317 --> 00:40:05.361
All of it was very time-consuming.
00:40:05.361 --> 00:40:06.904
Every day for six weeks,
00:40:06.904 --> 00:40:08.656
people marched and got arrested.
00:40:08.656 --> 00:40:10.116
Some days, there'd be 60,
00:40:10.116 --> 00:40:12.243
some that got arrested, and 200 marched.
00:40:12.243 --> 00:40:17.706
But there were more than 550 arrests total in that six weeks.
00:40:17.706 --> 00:40:21.419
That was pretty phenomenal because when you convince people,
00:40:21.419 --> 00:40:23.963
you can't imagine until you're in a situation like this,
00:40:23.963 --> 00:40:28.175
what it takes to convince people to get involved in civil disobedience,
00:40:28.175 --> 00:40:30.136
particularly when you're doing it,
00:40:30.136 --> 00:40:31.595
and it's not stopping it.
00:40:31.595 --> 00:40:33.139
The trucks were coming in, anyway.
00:40:33.139 --> 00:40:35.599
It slowed the trucks down. It didn't stop it.
00:40:35.599 --> 00:40:38.477
That's why it took so much time,
00:40:38.477 --> 00:40:41.063
and they had to work at night [LAUGHTER]
00:40:41.063 --> 00:41:28.819
[MUSIC].
00:41:28.819 --> 00:41:33.991
Rev. Dr. Benjamin Chavis: What Warren County did do for the first time was
00:41:33.991 --> 00:41:39.413
a direct intersection of the civil rights movement and the environmental movement.
00:41:39.413 --> 00:41:43.709
These two movements prior to Warren County were separate and apart.
00:41:43.709 --> 00:41:46.670
At Warren County, they intersected.
00:41:46.670 --> 00:41:52.676
Even the state troopers that were picking up children and women and putting them in jail,
00:41:52.676 --> 00:41:54.053
I could tell on their face,
00:41:54.053 --> 00:41:56.263
they knew they didn't want to do it,
00:41:56.263 --> 00:41:58.390
but they were ordered to do it.
00:41:59.016 --> 00:42:01.268
Some of the truck drivers,
00:42:01.268 --> 00:42:03.437
I saw their facial expression.
00:42:03.437 --> 00:42:05.481
They put those trucks in park.
00:42:05.481 --> 00:42:09.151
They were not going to roll over people lying in the street.
00:42:09.151 --> 00:42:11.278
Shauna Williams: The whole six weeks,
00:42:11.278 --> 00:42:12.905
the people who marched,
00:42:12.905 --> 00:42:14.323
the people who got arrested,
00:42:14.323 --> 00:42:15.950
they were very strategic,
00:42:15.950 --> 00:42:17.409
they were very smart.
00:42:17.409 --> 00:42:19.370
They didn't just go out there willy nilly,
00:42:19.370 --> 00:42:20.579
let's just see what's going to happen.
00:42:20.579 --> 00:42:22.414
They plotted, they planned.
00:42:22.414 --> 00:42:28.212
They contacted people in civil rights movement and religious organizations.
00:42:28.212 --> 00:42:29.713
They knew what they were doing.
00:42:29.713 --> 00:42:33.008
Overall, they were very careful to say to everybody,
00:42:33.008 --> 00:42:35.261
this should be peaceful and non violent.
00:42:35.261 --> 00:42:38.806
Of course, what better way to do that also is through young people's voices.
00:42:38.806 --> 00:42:41.767
People a lot of times won't listen to adults or you may
00:42:41.767 --> 00:42:46.814
not think about the importance of something on an adult.
00:42:46.814 --> 00:42:48.148
But when you see a child,
00:42:48.148 --> 00:42:50.943
it makes you go, this is important.
00:42:50.943 --> 00:42:54.321
This is something that we need to be worried about.
00:42:54.321 --> 00:42:56.615
I think it was a brilliant move on their part
00:42:56.615 --> 00:42:59.702
to have a youth day to have kids come out there.
00:43:17.845 --> 00:43:20.848
Angella Dunston: A lot of the younger folks,
00:43:20.848 --> 00:43:22.266
as you say, Children's Day,
00:43:22.266 --> 00:43:27.354
had made a plan to go and be a part of the protest.
00:43:27.354 --> 00:43:30.399
The one direction that we got from,
00:43:30.399 --> 00:43:33.944
and I'll just say from my mom and from our pastor was,
00:43:33.944 --> 00:43:37.114
if you don't have to be arrested, don't be arrested.
00:43:37.114 --> 00:43:39.158
But if you got to do it, you got to do it.
00:43:39.158 --> 00:43:42.161
I was one of the ones who wasn't arrested but was
00:43:42.161 --> 00:43:45.623
a part of that initiative because we felt like,
00:43:45.623 --> 00:43:48.000
as the youth of that time,
00:43:48.000 --> 00:43:49.543
we had to take a stand,
00:43:49.543 --> 00:43:50.961
and we are that next generation,
00:43:50.961 --> 00:43:53.130
and we've got to be involved in this, as well.
00:43:53.130 --> 00:44:04.975
PROTESTERS: [SINGING "This Little Light of Mine"].
00:44:04.975 --> 00:44:20.407
[NOISE]
00:44:20.407 --> 00:44:23.202
Cameron Oglesby: Addressing the climate crisis, addressing environmental issues,
00:44:23.202 --> 00:44:27.373
addressing environmental hazards, and injustices is about people.
00:44:27.373 --> 00:44:28.832
It's about us as individuals,
00:44:28.832 --> 00:44:30.125
but also us as a collective,
00:44:30.125 --> 00:44:32.461
our collective well being, our collective health.
00:44:32.461 --> 00:44:37.007
If we're not willing to hear out the people who are on
00:44:37.007 --> 00:44:42.012
the ground most impacted by these issues and incorporate not only their knowledge,
00:44:42.012 --> 00:44:44.723
whether it's ancestral knowledge, experiential knowledge,
00:44:44.723 --> 00:44:49.395
but their needs into the solutions that we are developing,
00:44:49.395 --> 00:44:51.480
then we're not really addressing the issue.
00:44:51.480 --> 00:44:55.734
I think that aligns with what the Warren County protest stood for.
00:44:55.734 --> 00:45:00.489
It aligns with why I see myself attempting to bring community,
00:45:00.489 --> 00:45:05.202
community voices, narratives into the storytelling,
00:45:05.202 --> 00:45:07.705
but also the solution building that I'm hoping to do.
00:45:07.705 --> 00:45:10.082
At its basis level, it's everything.
00:45:10.082 --> 00:45:12.209
Deborah Ferruccio: We were doing it for the future.
00:45:12.209 --> 00:45:15.170
We were doing it so we wouldn't be dumped on forever, and we would do it.
00:45:15.170 --> 00:45:19.508
We did it so that every community that was like us would realize,
00:45:19.508 --> 00:45:22.219
march before it's too late.
00:45:22.219 --> 00:45:25.973
We didn't know these things until the deal had been struck.
00:45:25.973 --> 00:45:27.933
All this behind the scenes.
00:45:27.933 --> 00:45:31.603
If we had known it, we would have been fighting a way earlier.
00:45:31.603 --> 00:45:35.232
But usually they don't tell you that, and to this day,
00:45:35.232 --> 00:45:37.735
they don't because they know that anybody that's
00:45:37.735 --> 00:45:44.241
intelligent, and you don't have to be educated to be intelligent, is going to fight them.
00:45:47.161 --> 00:45:49.913
Rev. Dr. Benjamin Chavis: That was Rev. Leon White who called to
00:45:49.913 --> 00:45:53.125
the New York office of the United Church of Christ.
00:45:53.125 --> 00:45:58.255
Asked if I would come down to help lead the protest movement.
00:45:58.255 --> 00:46:01.216
I said, Rev. White, I'd be glad to come down.
00:46:01.216 --> 00:46:05.220
But I said, The last thing I want to do is get arrested again in North Carolina,
00:46:05.220 --> 00:46:09.183
after spending most of the 1970s unjustly incarcerated.
00:46:09.183 --> 00:46:11.852
But I knew the dangers.
00:46:11.852 --> 00:46:14.354
To me, that was a risk worth taking.
00:46:14.354 --> 00:46:16.899
After the first people were arrested,
00:46:16.899 --> 00:46:21.695
I had arranged bail money to get them out of jail.
00:46:21.695 --> 00:46:25.699
I'm leading a caravan of cars from
00:46:25.699 --> 00:46:30.913
Coley Springs to the Warren County jail to bail everybody out.
00:46:30.913 --> 00:46:37.920
The state police come and asking me to give him the shot to pull over to pull over.
00:46:37.920 --> 00:46:39.963
I said, what's wrong, officer?
00:46:39.963 --> 00:46:43.133
He says, "You under arrest."
00:46:43.133 --> 00:46:45.803
I said, for what?
00:46:45.803 --> 00:46:47.513
He said, "Driving too slow."
00:46:47.513 --> 00:46:50.599
I said, why don't you just give me a ticket?
00:46:50.599 --> 00:46:54.311
He said, "No, we have we've been ordered to take you to jail."
00:46:54.311 --> 00:46:58.690
Obviously, it had nothing to do with me driving too slow.
00:46:58.690 --> 00:47:02.361
One, they prevented me from bailing the people out, two,
00:47:02.361 --> 00:47:05.781
it made national news that I'm arrested
00:47:05.781 --> 00:47:09.451
again in North Carolina now at the Warren County site.
00:47:09.451 --> 00:47:13.914
When other civil rights people heard that these arrests were taking place,
00:47:13.914 --> 00:47:16.041
some came that same day.
00:47:16.041 --> 00:47:18.418
For six weeks straight,
00:47:18.418 --> 00:47:21.797
over 500 people were arrested.
00:47:25.425 --> 00:47:28.303
Mary Somerville: Let me show you where the women were held,
00:47:28.303 --> 00:47:32.599
too, the famous Dollie Burwell.
00:47:37.688 --> 00:47:43.318
This is the cell where the women were held.
00:47:43.527 --> 00:47:46.738
The later it got when some of them,
00:47:46.738 --> 00:47:48.657
and especially the women,
00:47:48.657 --> 00:47:52.244
the ones that were chosen to stay,
00:47:52.244 --> 00:47:57.499
because they were, I would say uppity people, a lot of them were.
00:47:57.499 --> 00:48:05.799
I didn't know how they would take to a sheet that was torn or no pillow case on
00:48:05.799 --> 00:48:11.138
the pillow, plastic mattress and a plastic pillow.
00:48:11.138 --> 00:48:12.639
Overall, and the women,
00:48:12.639 --> 00:48:15.601
I never really did lock the cell door.
00:48:15.601 --> 00:48:20.439
I just let them roam around from cat walking in the cells.
00:48:20.439 --> 00:48:23.317
But I would go back and check on some of them,
00:48:23.317 --> 00:48:27.029
and they would just sitting talking like they were at home.
00:48:42.753 --> 00:48:48.300
Dollie Burwell: This was a day that I really hadn't planned to go to jail.
00:48:49.009 --> 00:48:54.056
Mrs. Lowry, who is right here.
00:48:54.056 --> 00:48:58.352
This is Jocelyn McKissick, Floyd McKissick's daughter.
00:48:58.352 --> 00:49:02.022
But we were all marching that morning,
00:49:02.022 --> 00:49:07.486
and the children at South Horne Elementary School had become really
00:49:07.486 --> 00:49:14.076
afraid because they were passing all these troopers with Billy Clubs.
00:49:14.076 --> 00:49:19.289
They really felt like it was something happened that would kill them right away,
00:49:19.289 --> 00:49:20.999
so they was afraid.
00:49:20.999 --> 00:49:25.379
Miss Lowry said that she was going to get arrested,
00:49:25.379 --> 00:49:31.593
and she wanted some women to go to get arrested with her and refused
00:49:31.593 --> 00:49:34.137
bond and stay in jail
00:49:34.137 --> 00:49:39.434
because she wanted to bring attention to the plight of the children.
00:49:39.434 --> 00:49:45.857
As you can see, all of us who went to jail was dressed up that day.
00:49:45.857 --> 00:49:51.113
We didn't have on our normal jeans and sweatshirts.
00:49:52.614 --> 00:49:54.950
This is me right here.
00:49:54.950 --> 00:49:58.078
That's one of the times that we went to jail,
00:49:58.078 --> 00:50:01.665
and we stayed in jail all night and till
00:50:01.665 --> 00:50:08.505
the next late afternoon before we accepted bond and got out of jail.
00:50:08.505 --> 00:50:41.872
PROTESTERS: [SINGING]
00:50:41.872 --> 00:50:45.333
Rev. Dr. Benjamin Chavis: Actually, that night I was in the Warren County jail,
00:50:45.333 --> 00:50:47.335
I began in my mind,
00:50:47.335 --> 00:50:50.255
and I wrote it out on some piece of paper.
00:50:50.255 --> 00:50:53.717
I coined the term environmental racism.
00:50:54.801 --> 00:51:01.558
Not because I was angry about what had just happened to me personally.
00:51:01.558 --> 00:51:05.103
But what I saw that day.
00:51:05.103 --> 00:51:08.148
There were other incidences of
00:51:08.148 --> 00:51:12.069
disproportionate exposure to these toxins in minority communities.
00:51:12.069 --> 00:51:18.075
The difference that Warren County made was that the protests led to a national exposure.
00:51:18.075 --> 00:51:21.912
Right after those demonstrations went on,
00:51:21.912 --> 00:51:24.164
those of us in the United Church of Christ Community Jail,
00:51:24.164 --> 00:51:25.540
we got hundreds of calls,
00:51:25.540 --> 00:51:28.293
literally from Louisiana and from Mississippi,
00:51:28.293 --> 00:51:30.253
from Alabama, all over the country,
00:51:30.253 --> 00:51:33.006
people are saying, "The same thing's going on in our community.
00:51:33.006 --> 00:51:35.383
Can we organize a similar protest?"
00:51:35.383 --> 00:51:39.930
That's what gave birth to the Environmental Justice Movement.
00:51:39.930 --> 00:51:43.934
Rep. Eva Clayton: We don't want the difficulties that come.
00:51:43.934 --> 00:51:47.562
I don't want to say we wanted the PCB.
00:51:47.562 --> 00:51:50.440
I don't want difficulties in life.
00:51:50.440 --> 00:51:58.990
I really don't. Because they come and I stand up to them in difficulties, I'm stronger.
00:51:58.990 --> 00:52:02.744
I'm a more determined person.
00:52:02.744 --> 00:52:06.206
I think as a result of
00:52:06.206 --> 00:52:16.049
being dumped upon you felt that you had to stand up as a community,
00:52:16.049 --> 00:52:19.553
and the resolve that comes from standing
00:52:19.553 --> 00:52:24.683
up makes you even more determined to do greater things.
00:52:24.683 --> 00:52:30.105
Rev. Willey Ramey III: Our fight was if you're going to put it here,
00:52:30.105 --> 00:52:33.775
just our dirt, nobody else's dirt.
00:52:33.775 --> 00:52:40.240
Then give us a promise that no other contaminant will be put in our county.
00:52:40.240 --> 00:52:41.992
The state promised that.
00:52:41.992 --> 00:52:44.911
So far, they have kept their promise.
00:52:44.911 --> 00:52:48.582
No, we don't look at it as being a defeat.
00:52:48.582 --> 00:52:53.128
We look at it as being a victory that God gave us because we didn't do it by ourselves.
00:52:53.128 --> 00:53:00.969
[MUSIC]
00:53:00.969 --> 00:54:12.123
PROTESTERS: [SINGING "We've Come This Far By Faith"]
00:54:12.123 --> 00:54:15.210
Dollie Burwell: You have a small thing that happened that other things grow
00:54:15.210 --> 00:54:18.713
out of it may not grow to be what you want,
00:54:18.713 --> 00:54:21.925
but you can see some benefits from it,
00:54:21.925 --> 00:54:25.387
and it makes all the difference in the world of how you
00:54:25.387 --> 00:54:29.391
continue to be engaged in the community.
00:54:29.391 --> 00:54:35.230
PROTESTERS: Fired up! / Ready to go!
00:54:35.230 --> 00:54:41.236
Fired up! / Ready to go!
00:54:41.236 --> 00:54:43.196
Angela Dunston: My natural inclination, of course,
00:54:43.196 --> 00:54:45.240
was to follow women like Dollie Burwell,
00:54:45.240 --> 00:54:49.119
who's now known as the mother of the Environmental Justice Movement.
00:54:49.119 --> 00:54:51.371
But my activism and
00:54:51.371 --> 00:54:58.628
my advocacy came from my beginnings or my humble beginnings with women like that,
00:54:58.628 --> 00:55:01.464
who were on the forefront of the social justice movement.
00:55:01.464 --> 00:55:02.882
Dollie Burwell: When I look out today,
00:55:02.882 --> 00:55:04.676
as I said this morning,
00:55:04.676 --> 00:55:09.014
I am looking forward to the day when they call me the grandmother.
00:55:09.014 --> 00:55:14.269
I want to be the grandmother.
00:55:14.269 --> 00:55:17.230
I want some of you young people to be the mother.
00:55:17.230 --> 00:55:21.318
I want to be the grandmother and the great grandmother.
00:55:21.318 --> 00:55:24.195
This just starts my heart so good.
00:55:24.195 --> 00:55:27.907
Again, I'm reminded that I am a daughter of hope.
00:55:27.907 --> 00:55:30.368
I may be angry, but I got courage.
00:55:30.368 --> 00:55:36.166
[APPLAUSE]
00:55:36.166 --> 00:55:38.918
S. Charmaine McKissick-Melton: She's a fast talking, little gregarious person.
00:55:38.918 --> 00:55:44.507
[LAUGHTER] She used to say that about me so.
00:55:44.507 --> 00:55:47.135
Dollie Burwell: I'm an organizer.
00:55:47.135 --> 00:55:55.268
I consider myself a community organizer and someone who cares about justice,
00:55:55.268 --> 00:55:56.978
whether that's social justice,
00:55:56.978 --> 00:56:00.398
whether that's economic justice,
00:56:00.398 --> 00:56:03.068
my story, my journey,
00:56:03.068 --> 00:56:05.278
makes me a community activist.
00:56:05.278 --> 00:56:08.365
S. Charmaine McKissick-Melton: Dolly has been a political person since I can remember.
00:56:08.365 --> 00:56:13.912
I believe she actually worked at the Soul City Foundation for a brief period of time.
00:56:16.581 --> 00:56:24.089
Rep. Eva Clayton: I think the combination of Soul City and PCB works together.
00:56:24.089 --> 00:56:30.762
The inspiration and the hope and determination to make something here,
00:56:30.762 --> 00:56:33.264
to do something yourself,
00:56:33.264 --> 00:56:38.353
and having to defend on this side against something
00:56:38.353 --> 00:56:44.651
that's encroaching on your right as a citizen to be free.
00:56:47.612 --> 00:56:50.824
The voter registration was intense.
00:56:50.824 --> 00:56:53.618
People started running.
00:56:53.618 --> 00:56:56.371
At that time, I ran for County Commission and
00:56:56.371 --> 00:57:00.542
won was elected chairman of the County Commission.
00:57:00.542 --> 00:57:03.837
But you had sheriffs being elected.
00:57:03.837 --> 00:57:06.714
You had registered deeds being elected.
00:57:06.714 --> 00:57:10.718
That was the first time a Black had been elected as sheriff,
00:57:10.718 --> 00:57:13.179
at least after reconstruction.
00:57:13.179 --> 00:57:14.889
When I got elected,
00:57:14.889 --> 00:57:21.062
I was the first to be elected since 1901 since George White.
00:57:21.062 --> 00:57:26.568
Further the first Afro American woman to ever be elected there.
00:57:26.568 --> 00:57:32.699
Further, the first woman to be elected in North Carolina.
00:57:32.699 --> 00:57:37.078
It was a very jubilant time.
00:57:37.078 --> 00:57:41.916
Probably people had some reservation,
00:57:41.916 --> 00:57:43.835
whether we could serve well.
00:57:43.835 --> 00:57:47.005
We weren't just serving because we were Black.
00:57:47.005 --> 00:57:50.633
We were serving because we wanted to improve this community.
00:57:50.633 --> 00:57:52.135
In fact, being engaged,
00:57:52.135 --> 00:57:54.429
having been engaged in Soul City,
00:57:54.429 --> 00:58:00.226
having been engaged at the state put me in a position to provide that leadership.
00:58:00.310 --> 00:58:03.771
Because I brought not only the will to do,
00:58:03.771 --> 00:58:07.108
but also brought some experience in doing it.
00:58:07.233 --> 00:58:11.196
Patrick Barnes: Congresswoman Clayton took it to DC,
00:58:11.196 --> 00:58:13.072
took her efforts there,
00:58:13.072 --> 00:58:15.575
and Dolly worked a local angle.
00:58:15.575 --> 00:58:22.832
It's like the standard in terms of how you engage with true community participation,
00:58:22.832 --> 00:58:25.084
true community advocacy, having
00:58:25.084 --> 00:58:30.173
the stakeholders and the responsible parties work together.
00:58:30.173 --> 00:58:32.300
It checks all the boxes.
00:58:32.300 --> 00:58:36.763
It really does. Now where do we go from here?
00:58:36.763 --> 00:58:43.520
Floyd Mckissick Jr.: At some point,
00:58:43.520 --> 00:58:46.356
it's more than just about community organizing.
00:58:46.356 --> 00:58:50.068
At some point, it's more about just articulating policy.
00:58:50.068 --> 00:58:52.904
At some point, it becomes a matter of engagement
00:58:52.904 --> 00:58:55.865
and taking it to the next level where you put yourself there,
00:58:55.865 --> 00:58:58.910
not just complain to the decision makers and the policymakers,
00:58:58.910 --> 00:59:01.663
you become one of them so you can advance
00:59:01.663 --> 00:59:06.626
your position and advance the type of progressive policies that you think are necessary,
00:59:06.626 --> 00:59:09.837
not just for the generation that we're serving today,
00:59:09.837 --> 00:59:11.714
but for the generation that will follow us,
00:59:11.714 --> 00:59:16.094
for our children and for our grandchildren to make Warren County,
00:59:16.094 --> 00:59:18.304
the state of North Carolina a better place.
00:59:18.304 --> 00:59:50.712
[MUSIC]
00:59:50.712 --> 00:59:53.590
Ken Ferruccio: The state decided to,
00:59:53.590 --> 00:59:57.510
I guess, they're going to pump
00:59:57.510 --> 00:59:59.137
some water out of the landfill because they
00:59:59.137 --> 01:00:00.847
didn't want the head to build up in the landfill.
01:00:00.847 --> 01:00:04.350
This is 1983. The friends
01:00:04.350 --> 01:00:08.771
from Washington were visiting us and they were into environmental concerns.
01:00:08.771 --> 01:00:12.400
They said, Well, Ken, we can't let them pump.
01:00:12.400 --> 01:00:16.070
What are you going to do? We'll go to occupy the site.
01:00:16.112 --> 01:00:19.032
Deborah Ferruccio: Well, what happened afterwards was this state of
01:00:19.032 --> 01:00:24.120
the art landfill that was supposed to be a Cadillac filled up with water,
01:00:24.120 --> 01:00:26.706
and it was a disaster from the beginning.
01:00:26.706 --> 01:00:30.960
Ken decided to go down there and tell the state, No,
01:00:30.960 --> 01:00:33.087
you can't just get away,
01:00:33.087 --> 01:00:39.302
building a landfill, letting it fail and pumping the container water into the creek.
01:00:39.302 --> 01:00:43.556
He got arrested for felonious Larceny for taking the pump from them,
01:00:43.556 --> 01:00:47.644
and he became very dramatic after 19 days of fasting.
01:00:47.644 --> 01:00:49.646
They had to carry him into the jail.
01:00:49.646 --> 01:00:51.397
He wouldn't speak to the judge.
01:00:51.397 --> 01:00:54.233
The judge was a little annoyed, but, by then,
01:00:54.233 --> 01:00:58.863
he was flighty and not thinking, he didn't want to speak.
01:00:58.863 --> 01:00:59.405
Ken Ferruccio: No that's not true.
01:00:59.405 --> 01:01:01.366
Deborah Ferruccio: I'm kidding. I'm saying he hadn't
01:01:01.366 --> 01:01:03.701
eaten in 19 days. You weren't flighty. [OVERLAPPING]
01:01:03.701 --> 01:01:05.745
I wasn't going cooperate with
01:01:05.745 --> 01:01:09.582
Ken Ferruccio: the whole darn system and then they perpetuate it.
01:01:09.582 --> 01:01:13.378
Deborah Ferruccio: That's what I meant, but he was just not going to deal with him.
01:01:13.378 --> 01:01:16.923
He looks like he's almost, comatose.
01:01:16.923 --> 01:01:17.965
That's what the judge said.
01:01:17.965 --> 01:01:19.342
Is your client comatose?
01:01:19.342 --> 01:01:21.135
Ken Ferruccio: They came over and they picked up my chair,
01:01:21.135 --> 01:01:23.388
and they carried over and put it in front of the judge.
01:01:23.388 --> 01:01:26.015
I just sat there. I wouldn't do anything.
01:01:26.015 --> 01:01:28.768
The judge looked at Floyd McKissick.
01:01:28.768 --> 01:01:33.272
My two civil rights lawyers Floyd McKissick and Frank Pelins.
01:01:33.272 --> 01:01:37.402
The judge looks at Mr. McKissick and he says,
01:01:37.402 --> 01:01:41.989
Attorney McKissick is your client comatose?
01:01:43.449 --> 01:01:46.869
Floyd said, I don't want to get into this, your lawyer?
01:01:46.869 --> 01:01:48.538
I don't want to deal with this.
01:01:48.538 --> 01:01:50.748
The judge says, Take him back to jail.
01:01:50.748 --> 01:01:52.458
So back I go.
01:01:52.458 --> 01:01:54.293
About 19 days later,
01:01:54.293 --> 01:01:55.378
I was still fasting.
01:01:55.378 --> 01:02:01.008
[MUSIC]
01:02:01.008 --> 01:02:05.680
Mary Somerville: Reverend Leon White and another local activist,
01:02:05.680 --> 01:02:08.683
Ken Ferruccio, they were the last.
01:02:08.683 --> 01:02:13.563
They stayed in fast at helps after everybody else was gone.
01:02:14.313 --> 01:02:18.526
I enjoyed them because at that time,
01:02:18.526 --> 01:02:22.029
I had just got my ministry license and everything.
01:02:22.029 --> 01:02:24.490
Reverend White helped me a lot.
01:02:24.490 --> 01:02:26.659
We would have Bible study,
01:02:26.659 --> 01:02:29.203
get me a chair and pull up aside the cell,
01:02:29.203 --> 01:02:32.123
and we'd just have a good time.
01:02:32.749 --> 01:02:34.959
Rev. William Kearney: I see Anna's here,
01:02:34.959 --> 01:02:37.003
Wayne's here, Jenny's here,
01:02:37.003 --> 01:02:42.759
Sherry, Mark. What's next?
01:02:42.759 --> 01:02:46.387
We're going to have everybody from the community members
01:02:46.387 --> 01:02:50.099
who are affected by the dumping all the way up to policymakers.
01:02:50.099 --> 01:02:55.104
It'd be a great opportunity for us to begin to look moving forward.
01:03:01.861 --> 01:03:07.700
Remembering the past and revisiting our past as we move forward.
01:03:07.700 --> 01:03:13.080
This will be passed on to Cameron and
01:03:13.080 --> 01:03:15.041
all the young folk who represent
01:03:15.041 --> 01:03:19.253
the young generation of activists who will continue to work.
01:03:19.253 --> 01:03:22.173
It's going to be a real spiritual significance of it.
01:03:22.173 --> 01:03:24.759
Definitely, we want our young folk to be
01:03:24.759 --> 01:03:29.388
represented as one thing because they need to have pride in their county.
01:03:29.388 --> 01:03:34.352
A lot of them don't see what happened here and they think of us as being weak.
01:03:34.352 --> 01:03:38.356
This is, again, to keep us centered and
01:03:38.356 --> 01:03:42.944
lifting up our young folk lifting up us to really own this story.
01:03:42.944 --> 01:03:47.698
Those are the updates and now I can exhale.
01:03:47.698 --> 01:03:51.118
It's been a nice busy,
01:03:51.118 --> 01:03:53.329
but I have to attribute it all to God.
01:03:53.329 --> 01:03:56.874
I thank God for allowing me to do this work and sending me
01:03:56.874 --> 01:04:02.421
such a dynamic team of folk to be a part of this bigger work.
01:04:10.346 --> 01:04:16.978
Rev. Dr. Benjamin Chavis: In 1986, I convinced the United Church of Christ to put up $100,000.
01:04:16.978 --> 01:04:20.356
We hired a statistician, 'cause look,
01:04:20.356 --> 01:04:26.946
I knew doing this research was going to set off some alarms.
01:04:26.946 --> 01:04:29.866
I wanted to make sure that we got
01:04:29.866 --> 01:04:37.623
a renowned statistical research company to help us not just crunch the numbers,
01:04:37.623 --> 01:04:39.333
but it's the question.
01:04:39.333 --> 01:04:41.711
No one had ever asked a question before.
01:04:41.711 --> 01:04:44.797
Is there a correlation between
01:04:44.797 --> 01:04:50.469
the racial composition of the community and the location of these toxic waste facilities?
01:04:50.469 --> 01:04:52.722
Prior to us doing this study,
01:04:52.722 --> 01:04:53.764
most people would have told you,
01:04:53.764 --> 01:04:57.101
even sociologists would have said at least they would have asserted,
01:04:57.101 --> 01:04:59.645
even without data, that it was poverty,
01:04:59.645 --> 01:05:01.606
poor people get dumped on.
01:05:01.606 --> 01:05:05.234
That is true. But when we did the study,
01:05:05.234 --> 01:05:08.237
it showed that poverty was not
01:05:08.237 --> 01:05:15.661
the leading social indicator that determined how these places were selected.
01:05:15.661 --> 01:05:17.371
Race was the Number 1 factor.
01:05:17.371 --> 01:05:19.332
It was African American exposure.
01:05:19.332 --> 01:05:21.042
It was Latino exposure.
01:05:21.042 --> 01:05:24.462
It was Asian American, Pacific Island exposure.
01:05:24.462 --> 01:05:25.755
It was Native American exposure.
01:05:25.755 --> 01:05:28.049
It was also white exposure.
01:05:28.424 --> 01:05:32.386
It became a landmark publication.
01:05:32.553 --> 01:05:35.389
Our study was so tight.
01:05:35.389 --> 01:05:37.558
And so, from that point on,
01:05:37.558 --> 01:05:43.230
it was even used by the EPA to help develop environmental policy.
01:05:43.230 --> 01:05:47.610
Patrick Barnes: There are not that many Black environmental geologists,
01:05:47.610 --> 01:05:51.906
and a lot of
01:05:51.906 --> 01:05:59.664
the communities that have environmental problems are minority communities.
01:05:59.664 --> 01:06:07.546
I made a determination at that point in time that I would seek out these communities,
01:06:07.546 --> 01:06:11.634
and I would try to work to help bring about some solutions and enable
01:06:11.634 --> 01:06:17.974
them to see someone that looks like them working for them.
01:06:17.974 --> 01:06:21.519
I was paid by the state,
01:06:21.519 --> 01:06:23.813
but working for the community,
01:06:23.896 --> 01:06:29.110
if you could say that, because it seems almost like it's a conflict, in a way.
01:06:31.612 --> 01:06:34.865
Supposedly had a dry tomb landfill.
01:06:34.865 --> 01:06:38.077
It was lined on the bottom, lined on the top.
01:06:38.077 --> 01:06:41.747
No water was supposed to get in. Or out.
01:06:41.747 --> 01:06:43.958
Of course, we know liners fail.
01:06:43.958 --> 01:06:45.793
When you say, "Is it typical? " Yes,
01:06:45.793 --> 01:06:47.128
it's actually very typical,
01:06:47.128 --> 01:06:51.841
very predictable that it would fail eventually.
01:06:51.841 --> 01:06:55.678
There was water in the landfill,
01:06:55.678 --> 01:06:59.015
and they knew that at some point.
01:06:59.015 --> 01:07:04.353
They indicated that that was water that was entrapped with the soil when it was placed,
01:07:04.353 --> 01:07:07.231
and there's no new water in the landfill.
01:07:07.231 --> 01:07:11.193
But again, by looking at the water levels over time,
01:07:11.193 --> 01:07:15.740
you saw that it had the seasonal cyclical fluctuations
01:07:15.740 --> 01:07:19.869
which indicated that the water was coming in and going out seasonally.
01:07:19.869 --> 01:07:25.624
It was in communication with the environment outside of the landfill.
01:07:25.624 --> 01:07:29.170
It wasn't a separate pattern in the landfill that it was out.
01:07:29.170 --> 01:07:30.463
It was very similar.
01:07:30.463 --> 01:07:35.926
With that, the motivation went to,
01:07:35.926 --> 01:07:37.261
"Well, let's get this water out.
01:07:37.261 --> 01:07:38.846
We've got to pump it out,
01:07:38.846 --> 01:07:41.307
haul it off for disposal".
01:07:41.307 --> 01:07:43.517
The community said, "No,
01:07:43.517 --> 01:07:46.937
we don't want to dump on another community.
01:07:46.937 --> 01:07:51.025
The water has to stay in the landfill until it's treated and detoxified".
01:07:51.025 --> 01:07:54.945
Rev. Dr. Benjamin Chavis: One of the heroic things that the Warren County residents said,
01:07:54.945 --> 01:07:57.364
"If you take this out of Warren County,
01:07:57.364 --> 01:07:59.116
don't take it to Alabama.
01:07:59.116 --> 01:08:01.202
Don't take it to Mississippi.
01:08:01.202 --> 01:08:10.086
That's not fair". They understood profoundly all communities without regard to race,
01:08:10.086 --> 01:08:13.089
without regard to social, economic circumstances,
01:08:13.089 --> 01:08:16.884
no community should be exposed to these toxins.
01:08:16.884 --> 01:08:18.344
Deborah Ferruccio: We didn't make that choice.
01:08:18.344 --> 01:08:23.808
We made a tough choice to keep it where it was and force the governor to detoxify it,
01:08:23.808 --> 01:08:26.310
which is something he promised us.
01:08:26.310 --> 01:08:30.147
Ken Ferruccio: You cannot factor out the continuity of Jim Hunt.
01:08:30.147 --> 01:08:34.276
He's there in our research phase, '78 - '82.
01:08:34.276 --> 01:08:38.114
He's there again in our resistance phase,
01:08:38.114 --> 01:08:41.242
1982, again in 1983.
01:08:41.242 --> 01:08:46.080
Without the history, I think we would have been powerless.
01:08:46.080 --> 01:08:47.915
It probably never would have happened,
01:08:47.915 --> 01:08:51.669
'cause it all goes back to Hunt's promise in 1982,
01:08:51.669 --> 01:08:54.547
the warn record, that given technical feasibility,
01:08:54.547 --> 01:08:56.090
we will detoxify this site.
01:08:56.090 --> 01:08:57.591
Deborah Ferruccio: The other thing he did was say,
01:08:57.591 --> 01:08:59.301
"This will only be for these PCBs,
01:08:59.301 --> 01:09:02.471
it will never be open for anything else ever".
01:09:05.141 --> 01:09:08.519
Ken Ferruccio: Well, EPA came up with base catalyzed decomposition,
01:09:08.519 --> 01:09:11.564
and we went through the RP and all of that kind of stuff you had to go through.
01:09:11.564 --> 01:09:15.985
Finally, it was that EPA contribution or invention
01:09:15.985 --> 01:09:21.323
or whatever that they used to detoxify the site.
01:09:21.782 --> 01:09:24.952
Patrick Barnes: We helped pick the solution,
01:09:24.952 --> 01:09:26.871
do the evaluations of the site,
01:09:26.871 --> 01:09:32.710
which the site hadn't been fully evaluated ever since it was installed those 15 years.
01:09:32.710 --> 01:09:38.048
We installed numerous monitoring wells and collected samples, soil,
01:09:38.048 --> 01:09:44.430
groundwater, air around the facility during that phase prior to the detoxification.
01:09:48.184 --> 01:09:56.650
I have not been involved technically with the project since 2003.
01:09:56.650 --> 01:10:03.991
I'm not even sure if they're still collecting samples or anything like that.
01:10:03.991 --> 01:10:07.620
Detection levels have become better.
01:10:07.620 --> 01:10:11.790
Well, there are new contaminants of concern
01:10:11.790 --> 01:10:16.795
that we've become aware of in
01:10:16.795 --> 01:10:23.177
the environment and that we've never tested for before.
01:10:23.177 --> 01:10:31.685
Shauna Williams: One of the other great tragedies of the dumping is the fact that
01:10:31.685 --> 01:10:39.944
there's been no concerted health study on the effects of that stuff in the community.
01:10:39.944 --> 01:10:43.155
Anecdotally, we know of several.
01:10:43.155 --> 01:10:48.118
They remembered people who had all kinds of illnesses that came up after the dumping.
01:10:48.118 --> 01:10:50.204
Angela Dunston: As a result of the contaminations,
01:10:50.204 --> 01:10:51.872
the corporations, the funding,
01:10:51.872 --> 01:10:54.416
the opportunities that would have come with that,
01:10:54.416 --> 01:10:58.379
dried up and no longer existed because we did have
01:10:58.379 --> 01:11:04.843
almost that stain of the least of these or an area that you don't want to touch.
01:11:04.843 --> 01:11:09.265
If there was anything I feel like government could have done for us is,
01:11:09.265 --> 01:11:14.186
let's make sure that these people who we have dumped on are given
01:11:14.186 --> 01:11:19.358
access to at least a quality hospital,
01:11:19.358 --> 01:11:21.819
clinics, and other resources,
01:11:21.819 --> 01:11:26.240
should they ever contract disease,
01:11:26.240 --> 01:11:27.825
cancer, that sort of thing.
01:11:27.825 --> 01:11:29.243
As we well know,
01:11:29.243 --> 01:11:33.747
that is definitely what did not happen in my hometown.
01:11:34.915 --> 01:11:40.921
Prof. Lameshia Whittington: It is not taboo to fetch what is at risk of being left behind.
01:11:40.921 --> 01:11:42.923
As this forward march proceeds,
01:11:42.923 --> 01:11:45.592
the knowledge of the past must never be forgotten.
01:11:45.592 --> 01:11:49.596
Sankofa is a word that embodies what we are doing here today.
01:11:49.596 --> 01:11:52.891
The environmental justice movement will continue on.
01:11:52.891 --> 01:11:54.518
We know this to be true.
01:11:54.518 --> 01:11:57.021
We must embody the term Sankofa,
01:11:57.021 --> 01:11:59.982
remembering that in order to make positive progress,
01:11:59.982 --> 01:12:05.779
there must be continued movement forward and also new learning as time passes.
01:12:09.366 --> 01:12:12.244
Rev. William Kearney: We talked about passing the torch,
01:12:12.244 --> 01:12:15.456
but torch to me means you're running forward.
01:12:15.456 --> 01:12:18.584
You're all concerned about getting there.
01:12:18.584 --> 01:12:25.507
We find that Sankofa bird represents what we want.
01:12:25.507 --> 01:12:30.262
Sometimes the process of equity is slow,
01:12:30.262 --> 01:12:34.183
and you have to go back and visit the past.
01:12:34.183 --> 01:12:37.102
To this new generation of activists,
01:12:37.102 --> 01:12:39.938
I'd love all our students to stand up.
01:12:39.938 --> 01:12:43.734
Warren County students, college students.
01:12:43.734 --> 01:12:46.653
You pass it to the younger generation.
01:12:46.653 --> 01:12:48.655
We got to acknowledge you.
01:12:48.655 --> 01:12:50.074
We're passing work.
01:12:50.074 --> 01:12:55.454
[APPLAUSE] We're so glad you're here.
01:12:55.454 --> 01:13:00.334
Cameron Oglesby: I've gotten a lot of questions lately about why environmental justice.
01:13:00.334 --> 01:13:01.668
Why am I doing this?
01:13:01.668 --> 01:13:04.338
I'm like, "Why is that a question?"
01:13:04.338 --> 01:13:06.131
This is necessary.
01:13:06.131 --> 01:13:07.633
This isn't optional.
01:13:07.633 --> 01:13:10.636
That's one thing I want to make sure is conveyed in this.
01:13:10.636 --> 01:13:12.471
I'm doing this work,
01:13:12.471 --> 01:13:17.184
not because of some sort of sense of self, necessarily.
01:13:17.184 --> 01:13:21.230
I obviously have my own personal connections to the movement, to nature.
01:13:21.230 --> 01:13:25.359
The reason that I am here and that I am trying hard and that I'm putting
01:13:25.359 --> 01:13:31.490
everything I have into this is because it's mandatory.
01:13:32.408 --> 01:13:35.619
William Kearney: I think there's a lot more work to be done.
01:13:35.619 --> 01:13:38.872
That's something else. I say that we're all environmentalists.
01:13:38.872 --> 01:13:41.750
Our choices, or lack of,
01:13:41.750 --> 01:13:43.752
has an impact on our environment.
01:13:43.752 --> 01:13:48.257
What we purchase and what we use has an impact on our environment.
01:13:48.257 --> 01:13:50.634
We might look at big oil industry and what
01:13:50.634 --> 01:13:53.011
they might do as far as polluting the environment,
01:13:53.011 --> 01:13:56.390
but we also look at our own individual behaviors.
01:13:56.390 --> 01:14:02.396
Definitely, education, giving people from the faith perspective,
01:14:02.396 --> 01:14:08.861
permission to be able to engage in environment for things and policies.
01:14:08.861 --> 01:14:11.029
William Barber III: Even within the belly,
01:14:11.029 --> 01:14:12.906
the ethos of the civil rights movement,
01:14:12.906 --> 01:14:17.536
there was this emerging analysis that connected what was going on,
01:14:17.536 --> 01:14:21.999
the fight for communities and disadvantaged and impacted communities on the ground,
01:14:21.999 --> 01:14:26.587
the fight for civil rights to also this growing awareness and
01:14:26.587 --> 01:14:31.133
the seeds in many ways that were planted for this fight for environmental justice.
01:14:31.133 --> 01:14:36.722
That's important to articulate that Warren County cannot be overstated,
01:14:36.722 --> 01:14:38.432
but there were other moments.
01:14:38.432 --> 01:14:39.725
James Farmer Jr.,
01:14:39.725 --> 01:14:42.478
who was the founder of the Congress on Racial Equality,
01:14:42.478 --> 01:14:45.230
said at the height of the civil rights movement that
01:14:45.230 --> 01:14:49.485
whatever we hope to accomplish in the fight for civil rights,
01:14:49.485 --> 01:14:52.029
if we do not save the environment,
01:14:52.029 --> 01:14:56.450
would be for nothing because we would all know the brotherhood of extinction.
01:14:56.450 --> 01:14:58.577
Benjamin F. Chavis Jr.: I'm encouraged, because I believe that
01:14:58.577 --> 01:15:02.372
the young activists of today are learning from the past.
01:15:02.372 --> 01:15:05.209
They're not necessarily inclined to repeat the past.
01:15:05.209 --> 01:15:09.171
I think we have a generation of social scientists,
01:15:09.171 --> 01:15:12.382
environmental scientists, climate justice scientists.
01:15:12.382 --> 01:15:16.637
We have a generation of thinkers, public policymakers.
01:15:16.637 --> 01:15:21.183
I want some of these young people to run for office, get elected.
01:15:21.183 --> 01:15:24.102
A lot of the climate judgment is led by young people.
01:15:24.102 --> 01:15:28.190
I believe that there's going to be a convergence between
01:15:28.190 --> 01:15:30.317
the climate justice movement and
01:15:30.317 --> 01:15:33.820
the environmental justice movement into one justice movement.
01:15:33.820 --> 01:15:38.075
Patrick Barnes: So much attention is being paid on environmental justice issues,
01:15:38.075 --> 01:15:39.660
and that's great and funded.
01:15:39.660 --> 01:15:43.997
Dollars are there. But what are the dollars for exactly?
01:15:43.997 --> 01:15:46.291
Does the community control the dollars?
01:15:46.291 --> 01:15:48.627
Those are the questions.
01:15:49.920 --> 01:15:53.173
Are the dollars there for
01:15:53.173 --> 01:15:57.803
multinational corporations to come in and clean up these communities,
01:15:57.803 --> 01:16:00.556
or are the dollars there for communities to
01:16:00.556 --> 01:16:04.268
engage with corporations and help clean up their own communities?
01:16:04.268 --> 01:16:05.394
William Barber III: When you think about
01:16:05.394 --> 01:16:08.564
the environmental justice movement in the United States,
01:16:08.564 --> 01:16:12.401
it serves as the foundational framework
01:16:12.401 --> 01:16:16.697
from where we get concepts now of climate justice that looks
01:16:16.697 --> 01:16:20.117
at disproportionate impacts and the legacy of
01:16:20.117 --> 01:16:26.498
our society's dependence on the fossil fuel infrastructure and why that multiplies on,
01:16:26.498 --> 01:16:29.084
in many cases, communities that would be the
01:16:29.084 --> 01:16:33.755
same that have fought environmental justice issues like legacy pollution,
01:16:33.755 --> 01:16:36.258
like the fight for clean air,
01:16:36.258 --> 01:16:38.218
clean water, just access to that.
01:16:38.218 --> 01:16:45.517
It is the foundational framework on which we build concepts like energy justice,
01:16:45.517 --> 01:16:49.187
where we see some of the most egregious energy burdens,
01:16:49.187 --> 01:16:54.651
with people spending up to one third of their disposable income in many cases,
01:16:54.651 --> 01:16:56.445
just trying to heat or cool their homes.
01:16:56.445 --> 01:16:58.864
Catherine Flowers: Their power bills are very high.
01:16:58.864 --> 01:17:01.617
They only have a certain amount of money,
01:17:01.617 --> 01:17:05.829
and they're living in a trailer because that's all they can get.
01:17:05.829 --> 01:17:09.625
That's part of that structural inequity that exists,
01:17:09.625 --> 01:17:11.668
and they are dealing with climate issues.
01:17:11.668 --> 01:17:14.004
Or if you're in Jackson, Mississippi,
01:17:14.004 --> 01:17:17.257
and you can't drink your water or take a bath in it,
01:17:17.257 --> 01:17:18.800
that's a climate issue.
01:17:18.800 --> 01:17:23.305
It's also a structural racism issue because I'm sure we will look at
01:17:23.305 --> 01:17:25.974
the investments that have gone into Jackson since
01:17:25.974 --> 01:17:29.561
Jackson's demographics have changed; you got browner.
01:17:29.561 --> 01:17:33.565
I think that we'll see a correlation between that and the failure of that system.
01:17:33.565 --> 01:17:38.236
Benjamin F. Chavis Jr.: The climate justice movement evolves a lot
01:17:38.236 --> 01:17:43.200
of earning and yearning for social justice internationally.
01:17:43.200 --> 01:17:47.454
I refer to Cameron Ogles as a young G. I'm an old G,
01:17:47.454 --> 01:17:53.919
and I have a responsibility to make sure that she has all the tools that she needs,
01:17:53.919 --> 01:17:55.796
not only to make a difference,
01:17:55.796 --> 01:17:58.882
but to open wider this journey of
01:17:58.882 --> 01:18:03.220
the movement for freedom and justice and equality for all of humanity.
01:18:03.220 --> 01:18:04.971
Cameron Oglesby: We, the young people,
01:18:04.971 --> 01:18:09.226
are honored to accept the work and the present and future labor of
01:18:09.226 --> 01:18:11.895
this movement in leading it forward but also
01:18:11.895 --> 01:18:15.065
never forgetting the people and the actions that got us here,
01:18:15.065 --> 01:18:17.734
but we accept this work with the hope that
01:18:17.734 --> 01:18:21.905
the movement elders will continue to hold space with us will educate us,
01:18:21.905 --> 01:18:24.199
those too young to have witnessed some of
01:18:24.199 --> 01:18:27.369
the fundamental moments in the movement's history.
01:18:27.369 --> 01:18:30.247
Let's keep each other accountable and continue
01:18:30.247 --> 01:18:32.582
to build great things together. Thank you.
01:18:32.582 --> 01:18:37.546
[APPLAUSE]
01:18:37.546 --> 01:18:39.423
Rev. William Kearney: [inaudible] To God be the glory.
01:18:39.423 --> 01:18:43.552
Cameron Oglesby: I think what most resonates with me about
01:18:43.552 --> 01:18:47.013
the PCB protests in 1982 was that community element.
01:18:47.013 --> 01:18:51.351
I know it's very basic, but my work,
01:18:51.351 --> 01:18:53.812
my intention as an environmental justice advocate,
01:18:53.812 --> 01:18:56.648
as a journalist, and now as a consultant,
01:18:56.648 --> 01:18:58.817
is to ensure that this sense of
01:18:58.817 --> 01:19:02.529
community that comes out of environmental justice communities,
01:19:02.529 --> 01:19:08.493
that comes out of people coming together in solidarity to fight environmental hazards,
01:19:08.493 --> 01:19:11.037
injustices, pollution, what have you,
01:19:11.037 --> 01:19:15.041
that that is coming through in the storytelling,
01:19:15.041 --> 01:19:17.002
that it's coming through in the policy making,
01:19:17.002 --> 01:19:20.464
that it is a central through line, I suppose,
01:19:20.464 --> 01:19:25.385
in the work that's taking place to make our world a better place.
01:19:25.385 --> 01:19:39.441
[BACKGROUND]
01:19:39.441 --> 01:19:42.068
Consherto Williams: I live less than a mile and a half.
01:19:42.068 --> 01:19:45.447
Not down this road, but the fork, the road forks off,
01:19:45.447 --> 01:19:48.283
the PCB dump is on the fork if you keep straight.
01:19:48.283 --> 01:19:50.452
I'm like a mile and a half down that road.
01:19:50.452 --> 01:19:53.413
This was personal to me.
01:19:53.413 --> 01:19:55.832
Cameron Oglesby: Knowing that they were my age,
01:19:55.832 --> 01:19:59.085
that they were young people doing this work,
01:19:59.085 --> 01:20:03.715
starting things from the ground up and have been
01:20:03.715 --> 01:20:08.428
able to reach this point in their lives as icons and as legends, it's inspiring.
01:20:08.428 --> 01:20:10.222
It makes me want to work with them further.
01:20:10.222 --> 01:20:12.557
I don't know that I'm ever going to see that in myself.
01:20:12.557 --> 01:20:15.936
I don't know that they saw that in themselves when they were young and doing this work.
01:20:15.936 --> 01:20:17.479
They were just doing the best they could.
01:20:17.479 --> 01:20:18.980
That's all that I can do.
01:20:18.980 --> 01:20:24.277
I can do the best that I can and know that there are people before me that have laid
01:20:24.277 --> 01:20:26.822
a foundation for me to do the work
01:20:26.822 --> 01:20:30.617
intentionally and with perhaps greater impact moving forward.
01:20:30.617 --> 01:22:02.959
[MUSIC]
01:22:02.959 --> 01:22:06.963
FEMALE_4: None whatsoever. No PCB.