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Sierra Club's Environmental Justice Program

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Detroit EJ Project
2727 Second Ave., Ste 320
Detroit, MI 48201
Organizer: Rhonda Anderson
rhonda.anderson@ sierraclub.org

Sierra Club Environmental Justice Program

 

Regional Projects: Detroit

Detroit Skyline with Child
Photo by Melissa Damaschke

Campaign Highlights

With seven proposed new coal-fired power plants, plans for a massive expansion at the Marathon oil refinery, and persistent solid waste issues, the need for Environmental Justice in Detroit is important now more than ever. Sierra Club organizer Rhonda Anderson spends her days working with Detroit residents and local politicians to fight for the rights of communities already overburdened with polluting industries. In 2007 Rhonda was one of the activists who spurred Governor Jennifer Granholm to sign an EJ Executive Order. Rhonda's powerful voice as a community advocate was recently recognized by the Michigan Chronicle, who named her as "One of the 10 Voices of Change for 2007".


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About the Organizer

Rhonda Anderson came of age in Detroit during the '60s and remembers it all like yesterday: the assassinations, the Black Panthers, Vietnam, riots, tanks rolling through her neighborhood.

"The day Martin Luther King was killed, I saw this huge black cloud coming down the street. It was kids from one high school coming to gather the students at our school to join them in a march through the streets. The first person in the crowd was a girl. She had her fist raised and was yelling, 'Black Power! Black Power!' I will never forget that."

Since then, Anderson has worked for equal rights for blacks and women; delivered food, condoms and hygiene kits to prostitutes in her city; helped homeless girls find jobs or return to school. She was part of the effort to shut down a polluting incinerator, and then worked in a juvenile detention center where most of the inmates are black. It occurred to her that many Detroit youth show the effects of growing up in a toxic environment - a sad fact she's working to change by, for instance, getting industrial sites cleaned up.

"To me, being black has been a war," Anderson says. "I've always fought, always struggled against a power that appears bigger than I am. But I know I'm making a difference by organizing my community. People tell me so."


Get Involved

To learn more about the Detroit EJ program or to find out how you can help, email Rhonda Anderson at rhonda.anderson@sierraclub.org.



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