Beverly Wright: Citizen Reporter

Beverly Wright

A leading scholar on and advocate for environmental justice, Beverly Wright is honored with the Heinz Award for her work on behalf of communities, especially those in Louisiana’s “Cancer Alley.”  As head of the Deep South Center for Environmental Justice at Dillard University in New Orleans, she has been tackling issues of environmental racism and working to raise the profile of environmental issues in poor and minority communities nationwide.

Since Hurricane Katrina, much of her work at the Deep South Center has focused on research, policy and community outreach as well as assistance and education of displaced African-American residents of New Orleans.  Dr. Wright, who is a professor of sociology, lost her own home to Katrina and has been an advocate of the safe return of residents, addressing the critical issues of health and environmental restoration and monitoring fairness as it relates to standards of clean up.  

After 200 sites around the city identified elevated lead and arsenic levels, Dr. Wright forged a unique partnership with the U.S. Steelworkers to launch a proactive pilot neighborhood clean-up project. The project, called A Safe Way Back Home, trained more than 60 small businesses and contractors in hazardous waste removal, mold remediation and health and safety methods, and trained hundreds of volunteers from around the country to assist community residents in the clean-up and return to their devastated homes.  

As the founding director of one of the first university-based environmental justice organizations, Dr. Wright has been at the forefront of the movement.  She had an early leadership role in forging national policy to eliminate disparities involving environmental concerns and has remained steadfast in the movement’s leadership since day one.


Posts By This Author

  • Finding a Safe Way Back Home: My Request to EPA Administrator Jackson

    There is an emotional side of losing everything, losing your community, and then not knowing when you can go back home.

    There are so many things that New Orleans residents lost after Hurricane Katrina. In my case it wasn't just losing my house, it was losing all the pictures of my mom, who passed away in April 2005. I had a whole chronology of her life from when she was a little girl all the way till when she was 79. The whole memory is just wiped out.  These things can't be undone.

    But there are other legacies from Katrina that can be undone -- that could be fixed to make New Orleans a better and stronger place. For example, there's still time to create a safe environmental legacy for our children. That is why I will be talking with the Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today, and I will be giving her a letter signed by local and national organizations asking for ...read full post


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