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Enlighten Me: Climate-driven disasters raise environmental justice concerns in Delaware

Courtesy of Sidney Kellam's family

Poor neighborhoods are often hit harder by natural disasters — and struggle more than wealthier ones to recover.

The historic flooding from the remnants of Hurricane Ida last month devastated a low-income neighborhood of Wilmington.

As climate change drives more extreme weather — should the First State look at preparedness through an environmental justice lens?

Delaware Public Media’s Sophia Schmidt explores this question with  Victor Perez at the University of Delaware’s Disaster Research Center

Delaware Public Media's Sophia Schmidt interviews Victor Perez with UD's Disaster Research Center.
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How communities recover from disasters—and prepare for future ones—can be important for social justice, says Perez. 

In fact, Perez says some efforts to protect communities from climate-driven disasters— such as through projects that create more green space to absorb flood waters— can cause “climate gentrification.”

“Most of the examples of at least greening as an aspect of structural mitigation in urban, coastal areas, tend to suggest that the communities don’t fare as well as you would think,” he said. “Because of displacement issues.”

Perez says one way to offset this is by allowing the community to be involved early. 

“[The solution] has to be tailored in a way so that affordable housing, rent control, community land trusts and a variety of other factors come into play very early on through community involvement, to prevent the negative aspects of a creation of different types of inequalities,” he said. 

Perez says in the aftermath of a disaster, government assistance needs to be timely and easy to understand—and must include temporary housing and access to jobs.

Sophia Schmidt is a Delaware native. She comes to Delaware Public Media from NPR’s Weekend Edition in Washington, DC, where she produced arts, politics, science and culture interviews. She previously wrote about education and environment for The Berkshire Eagle in Pittsfield, MA. She graduated from Williams College, where she studied environmental policy and biology, and covered environmental events and local renewable energy for the college paper.
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