The long-term object of this project is to improve environmental health conditions in the rural South by supporting grassroots leadership and community empowerment. Isolated rural areas of the south have high levels of poverty and unemployment. Low land prices, wage levels and lack of political influence have made them susceptible locations for polluting industries and toxic wastes. This project seeks to make a long-term impact on environmental racism by facilitating technical and political capacities of rural African-Americans to be partners in research, to engage in community education, and to organize around environmental health issues. This will be accomplished through partnerships with university scientists and local health professionals. The project is centered around a strong community organization, the Concerned Citizens of Tillery (CCT), located in Halifax County, North Carolina. The population of Halifax is 50% African-American, 40% of whom live in poverty; the Tillery area is 98% Black. Southeast Halifax Environmental Reawakening brings together CCT, the Halifax County Health Department, and environmental health scientists from the University of North Carolina School of Public Health. This coalition will work to expand participation in prevention and remediation of environmental health problems, develop educational and organizing material for use in other areas, provide outreach to communities in other eastern North Carolina counties, and offer training in rural environmental health and environmental justice issues to public health students. Southeast Halifax Environmental Reawakening will reconnect isolated, rural communities with fundamental environmental values that have become dormant as rural residents have lost intimate connections with the land.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
Type
Education Projects (R25)
Project #
5R25ES008206-03
Application #
2770783
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZES1-DPB-A)
Project Start
1996-09-01
Project End
2000-08-31
Budget Start
1998-09-01
Budget End
1999-08-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
1998
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
078861598
City
Chapel Hill
State
NC
Country
United States
Zip Code
27599
Heaney, Christopher D; Wing, Steve; Campbell, Robert L et al. (2011) Relation between malodor, ambient hydrogen sulfide, and health in a community bordering a landfill. Environ Res 111:847-52
Resnik, David B; Wing, Steven (2007) Lessons learned from the Children's Environmental Exposure Research Study. Am J Public Health 97:414-8
Norton, Jennifer M; Wing, Steve; Lipscomb, Hester J et al. (2007) Race, wealth, and solid waste facilities in North Carolina. Environ Health Perspect 115:1344-50
Mirabelli, Maria C; Wing, Steve; Marshall, Stephen W et al. (2006) Race, poverty, and potential exposure of middle-school students to air emissions from confined swine feeding operations. Environ Health Perspect 114:591-6
Mirabelli, Maria C; Wing, Steve; Marshall, Stephen W et al. (2006) Asthma symptoms among adolescents who attend public schools that are located near confined swine feeding operations. Pediatrics 118:e66-75
Morland, Kimberly; Diez Roux, Ana V; Wing, Steve (2006) Supermarkets, other food stores, and obesity: the atherosclerosis risk in communities study. Am J Prev Med 30:333-9
Mirabelli, Maria C; Wing, Steve (2006) Proximity to pulp and paper mills and wheezing symptoms among adolescents in North Carolina. Environ Res 102:96-100
Avery, Rachel C; Wing, Steve; Marshall, Stephen W et al. (2004) Odor from industrial hog farming operations and mucosal immune function in neighbors. Arch Environ Health 59:101-8
Massing, Mark W; Rosamond, Wayne D; Wing, Steven B et al. (2004) Income, income inequality, and cardiovascular disease mortality: relations among county populations of the United States, 1985 to 1994. South Med J 97:475-84
Wing, Steve (2003) Objectivity and ethics in environmental health science. Environ Health Perspect 111:1809-18

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