A Generational Loss: Honoring Dr. Norman C. Francis and Rev. Jesse Jackson

A Generational Loss: Honoring Dr. Norman C. Francis and Rev. Jesse Jackson

As we move through March and approach the close of the first quarter, we find ourselves reflecting on profound loss and lasting legacy. We lost two of the brightest beacons of light in our generations-long struggle for equality. The legacies they built are tremendous. So is the pain of their absence. Dr. Norman C. Francis and Rev. Jesse Jackson spent their lives altering the trajectory of not only Black history, but of American democracy.

Two Legacies of Leadership

Both pulled up chairs to the table for people they said didn’t belong: one for our people in academia so they could learn to lead and understand the science; the other for everyday people to be heard in the halls of power. To say their names together is to see the full arc of our struggle: the quiet, determined builder and the bold, unafraid truth-teller. In different, yet critical ways, these two individuals helped breathe life into the very idea of environmental justice. Dr. Francis through strategic investments and unwavering dedication to education, and Rev. Jesse Jackson through his insistence that environmental justice be understood as a core part of the struggle for civil rights.

Under the brilliant leadership of Dr. Francis, Xavier University of Louisiana welcomed the Deep South Center for Environmental Justice onto its campus and allowed it to grow there for 15 years. Far from a symbolic gesture, this was a declaration that frontline Black communities deserve world-class institutions fighting with them and for them. Reverend Jesse Jackson helped carry that same moral claim onto the national stage, linking pollution, poverty, and political exclusion to the broader fight for justice. He was present at the First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit in 1991, the gathering that produced the 17 Principles of Environmental Justice and reframed the very definition of environment to include where our communities live, work, learn, and pray.

Now, It’s Up to Us

This is a generational loss; a moment in history that energizes us in our charge to continue this fight with all the dignity, grace, data, partnership, and strength we’ve got because there’s still much to do.

With determination,

Dr. Beverly L Wright
Founder and Executive Director
Deep South Center for Environmental Justic

Deep South Center for Environmental Justice Responds to EPA Repeal of Endangerment Finding

Deep South Center for Environmental Justice Responds to EPA Repeal of Endangerment Finding

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Deep South Center for Environmental Justice Responds to EPA Repeal of Endangerment Finding

NEW ORLEANS, LA – The EPA’s repeal of the 2009 Endangerment Finding removes the only federal mechanism requiring regulation of greenhouse gas pollution under the Clean Air Act. This decision eliminates legal accountability for emissions that drive climate disasters and worsen air quality in communities already overburdened by industrial pollution.

The repeal will have immediate consequences for Gulf Coast communities. Without federal oversight, facilities will operate without greenhouse gas limits, compounding existing pollution from petrochemical operations concentrated in Black and low-income neighborhoods along the Mississippi River Chemical Corridor.

“This administration has chosen to prioritize industry over evidence and legal precedent,” said Dr. Beverly Wright, Founder and Executive Director of DSCEJ. “Our communities understand what this means. More pollution. More extreme weather. More preventable illness. We have resisted environmental racism for decades, and we will continue that fight now.”

DSCEJ joins a host of organizations and members of the scientific community in mobilizing to challenge the repeal and educating communities on the dangers of not restoring this mandate to protect public health.

About DSCEJ

The Deep South Center for Environmental Justice (DSCEJ), founded in 1992, is the nation’s longest-serving environmental justice resource center, committed to advancing the health, safety, and livelihoods of communities impacted by pollution and climate change. Through research, education, and workforce training, DSCEJ collaborates with communities, scientists, and policymakers to address systemic environmental inequities. DSCEJ is dedicated to ensuring every person’s right to live free from environmental harm impacting health, housing, jobs, and overall quality of life.

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DSCEJ Communications
media@dscej.org

Data Center Moratorium Passed – The Fight for Residential Protections Continues

Data Center Moratorium Passed – The Fight for Residential Protections Continues

NEW ORLEANS, LA — The New Orleans City Council’s decision to pass a one-year moratorium on data centers represents a small victory for New Orleans East and residential communities across the city. This action proves that when communities organize and speak truth to power, decision-makers must respond. DSCEJ commends the City Council for listening to residents and recognizing the serious threats data centers pose to community health, energy infrastructure, and environmental stability when sited too close to residential areas. This moratorium creates essential time to assess the full impact these facilities would have on our neighborhoods and establish appropriate nonresidential zoning.

However, a moratorium does not equate to a solution. Over the next year, DSCEJ will work alongside community members and continue to call on local leadership to ensure this temporary protection is solidified into permanent policy. We will monitor any attempts to weaken these protections and hold decision-makers accountable to the health and safety of the people they serve. Data centers consume extraordinary amounts of energy and water while generating heat and noise pollution, posing serious risks when sited near homes where families live, children play, and communities thrive. New Orleans East has long been treated as a sacrifice zone for industrial projects that benefit corporations while burdening Black residents with health risks and environmental harm. That pattern must end.

During this moratorium period, we call on city leadership to:

  • Conduct comprehensive environmental and health impact assessments
  • Engage in genuine community consultation, centering the voices of those most affected
  • Develop zoning policies that prohibit industrial facilities in residential areas
  • Prioritize investments that strengthen community infrastructure and economic opportunity without compromising health

“This moment belongs to the residents of New Orleans East who refused to accept yet another threat to their quality of life. And to everyone who spoke out, showed up, and demanded better we say: The work continues. We can’t rest until our communities are treated as precious assets to our city and our neighbors can rest peacefully and breathe easily knowing they are protected from environmental harm.” — Dr. Beverly Wright, Founder & Executive Director

About DSCEJ

The Deep South Center for Environmental Justice (DSCEJ), founded in 1992, is the nation’s longest-serving environmental justice resource center, committed to advancing the health, safety, and livelihoods of communities impacted by pollution and climate change. Through research, education, and workforce training, DSCEJ collaborates with communities, scientists, and policymakers to address systemic environmental inequities. DSCEJ is dedicated to ensuring every person’s right to live free from environmental harm impacting health, housing, jobs, and overall quality of life.

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Media Contact
DSCEJ Communications
media@dscej.org

Deep South Center for Environmental Justice Responds to EPA Repeal of Endangerment Finding

The Deep South Center for Environmental Justice Declares Firm Opposition to the Proposed New Orleans East Data Center

UPDATE: On Wednesday, January 28, 2026, the New Orleans City Council voted unanimously to pass a one-year moratorium on data centers.

Following the response from our community in firm opposition to this project, this decisive action represents a critical first step in protecting residential neighborhoods from industrial encroachment. We commend Mayor Helena Moreno for speaking out against this proposal and Councilmember Jason Hughes for standing with the community in this unanimous vote. DSCEJ will continue monitoring and advocating for permanent protections. Read our full response here.

NEW ORLEANS, LA – The Deep South Center for Environmental Justice (DSCEJ) stands in firm opposition to the proposed data center development in New Orleans East. This project at the intersection of residential I-10 and Read Blvd represents yet another environmental burden placed on a community already bearing a disproportionate load of unwanted industrial expansion.

For decades, New Orleans East has been targeted for facilities that other parts of the city would never accept. This highly educated, economically viable Black community has shouldered the impacts of industrial development for far too long. Families in the East are constantly fighting to preserve generational wealth tied to their land, their homes, and most importantly their health and safety, and enough is enough.

“This is another assault when New Orleans East communities deserve protection against businesses looking to line their pockets at the expense of human life,” says Dr. Beverly Wright, Founder & Executive Director of DSCEJ. “These communities are already experiencing the impacts of pollution; a data center threatens our electrical infrastructure, water contamination and overconsumption. Data shows that with a new data center, families who live here can expect higher water bills, higher electrical bills and greater health risks. My family established itself in New Orleans East with faith in the promise of continued economic advancement and quality of life for generations. Sixty-five years later, that reality is crumbling at the prospect of unchecked industrial siting that will destroy our health, wealth, and our environment.”

DSCEJ calls on Councilmember Jason Hughes and Mayor Helena Moreno to follow through on their election promises to New Orleans East and commit to sustainable, equitable development that centers the needs and voices of New Orleans East residents. Corporate interests threaten the quality of life we have worked to build and will assure the degradation of residential character in a thriving community that deserves investment over extraction.

About DSCEJ

The Deep South Center for Environmental Justice (DSCEJ), founded in 1992, is the nation’s longest-serving environmental justice resource center, committed to advancing the health, safety, and livelihoods of communities impacted by pollution and climate change. Through research, education, and workforce training, DSCEJ collaborates with communities, scientists, and policymakers to address systemic environmental inequities. DSCEJ is dedicated to ensuring every person’s right to live free from environmental harm impacting health, housing, jobs, and overall quality of life.

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MEDIA INQUIRIES

media@dscej.org

Passing the Torch: A message to the next generation of climate and environmental justice leaders

Passing the Torch: A message to the next generation of climate and environmental justice leaders

Passing the Torch: A message to the next generation of climate and environmental justice leaders

There is a good reason to feel discouraged, but there is also a lot to be hopeful about.

We are coming out of a federal administration that advanced the most ambitious environmental and climate justice agenda in history, yet are now transitioning into an administration that has rescinded, rolled back, eliminated or frozen every instance of EJ policy progress and investment of its predecessors.

At the same time, uncontrolled climate change brings significant risks to both the natural world and human societies, as it causes not only loss of essential natural resources but meaningful harm to the fabric of communities and the disruption of ecologies and economies. If no major action is taken to address the rapid warming of our atmosphere, our land, and the overheating of our oceans, we can expect significantly more frequent and intense extreme weather events like heat waves, heavy rainfall, floods, wildfires, and powerful storms. We also know that coastal regions face the most immediate threats from rising sea levels.

The cost of climate inaction is expensive. A November 2024 report, commissioned by the International Chamber of Commerce, estimates that climate-related extreme weather events have cost the global economy more than $2 trillion over the past decade.

For me the saddest thing is that we lost momentum, and that we must now accept that we can’t continue on that same path pursuing those same solutions in the same way. But we are still moving forward.

We recently hosted our 10th Anniversary HBCU Climate Change conference, designed to bring together Black and Brown students who attend historically Black colleges and universities to discuss the enormity of the threat that Climate Change poses to them and their communities and seek solutions. Students get to hear from climate scientists, researchers, policy advocates, and local leaders who look like them from across the globe. Alongside learning and education, we encourage these young scholars to pursue careers as climate scientists, researchers, policy advocates and leaders in the climate space themselves.

Being with this group of vibrant, hopeful, energetic and brilliant young people for 4 days was absolutely invigorating. The next generation of young people not only believe in climate change, but are overwhelmingly determined to take action. Their determination and belief in what is possible gives me hope for the future.

This year over three hundred students, mostly from HBCUs, attended the conference held in New Orleans. They came from across the country, and even included several international students. We kicked off the conference with a ceremonial passing of the torch from longtime EJ pioneers to a new generation of young EJ leaders with the placing of a Torchbearers medallion around the necks of the young, emerging Environmental and Climate Justice leaders.

One of the highlights of the conference is our poster presentation and competition where students can present their ongoing research. The students prepared and presented more than 100 research poster presentations covering a wide-range of topics including: Assessing the Performance of Soil Profile Rehabilitation for Pluvial Flood Mitigation in Baltimore City; Atlanta’s Growing Invasive Plant Populations Impact on the Soil Health and Microbiome; Black Faces and Green Spaces: How Black Students Navigate Identity, Behavior, and Community in the Environmental Movement; and Re-defining Traditional Environmental Advocacy via Environmental Education and Community-based Partnerships. Several of our students also participated in student panel discussions.

We have been here before.

Being in the presence of so many dynamic students inspired me, and reaffirmed that though we are facing an incredibly antagonistic federal government we are not going to languish in despair. I personally have been at this work for 40 years, and our Center has been at this for 33 years. We’ve been around through several previous administrations, both Republican and Democratic. Most of whom did not understand, appreciate or prioritize the need to undo the vestiges of inequality that show up as environmental, climate and health disparities. Yet we’re still standing. We will not be intimidated. We are not afraid of adversity and we will most certainly not back down from doing this vital work.

DSCEJ’s commitment to environmental justice has remained constant across seven previous presidential administrations and we’ve experienced countless environmental regulatory, statutory and policy shifts over the past three-plus decades. We will remain steadfast in our mission to advance environmental justice and environmental protection for all.

One of my favorite John Lewis quotes reminds me: “Ours is not the struggle of one day, one week, or one year. Ours is not the struggle of one judicial appointment or presidential term. Ours is the struggle of a lifetime, or maybe even many lifetimes, and each one of us in every generation must do our part.”

I take the long view, and if the young people attending the HBCU Climate Change conference are any indication of the vision and vigor of the next generation, I am encouraged by what the future holds. I believe that every generation is here to push the envelope a bit further. Sometimes the envelope is closed and we have to wait until we can open it again.

My advice to Generation Next

This is a moment for deliberate action. Use the knowledge you have acquired and turn it into something good and powerful. Here is what you can do now:

  1. Practice your trade.
  2. Conduct research that sheds light on the impact of climate change on underserved and overburdened communities and present it at conferences like the HBCU Climate Change Conference.
  3. Connect with real community heroes who are fighting the good fight but need better data and analysis in order to drive deeper impact from their actions.
  4. Know that your experience is highly valued.
    – You can see things coming full circle.
    – You can see the impact that your work can make.
  5. Seek knowledge and enlightenment through focused education on climate and related issues.
  6. Seek awareness, connection and impassioned action.

We have known the hope of promises made, the joy of promises kept and the bitterness of promises broken. We will keep on doing the work. We will stand together with our communities as we always have. But now is the time for us to link intergenerational arms. Now is the time for your torch to burn bright, Generation Next.

Together, we must press on!