Clean Air & Clean Power, Yes. Pollution, No

Submitted by Jerry Halberstadt on Wed, 09/28/2022 - 19:18
Man playing tuba sits on Danversport Bridge overlooking site of peaker plant

Remarks were prepared for delivery at a rally at the Danversport Bridge on September 27, 2022, by Jerry Halberstadt, Coordinator of CleanPowerCoalition.org and a member of Breathe Clean North Shore. Photo of Kirk Israel playing tuba while sitting on Danversport Bridge overlooking site of peaker plants during "die-in" demonstration. Courtesy photo of Halberstadt © 2022 Marilyn Humphries


Clean power for health, life, & planet

How can we stop burning fossil fuels for transportation and electricity, burning that creates pollution? We need community engagement.

If we are to stop pollution, we must inform and empower everyone to identify pollution as a source of their pain. I announce here a coordinated effort to expand our movement for clean air, health, life, and the planet that will focus on broad community engagement and empowering local leaders.

What we don’t understand can hurt us. Pollution travels through the air: invisible, harmful, deadly. Fossil-caused pollution includes tiny particles called PM2.5 that easily enter our lungs and blood. They make us sick and can kill us. Fossil-caused pollution contributes to global warming that threatens our planet.

Together with Breathe Clean, we’re going to organize a clean air revolution on the North Shore.

Judith Black, organizer of the "die-in," addresses demonstrators.
Judith Black, organizer of the "die-in," addresses demonstrators.

Peabody is a leader in pollution-caused death

Peabody stands out in excess deaths from pollution. That’s what we learned from a report by Phil Landrigan ( Environ Health 21,70 (2022)), a leader in public health, about pollution and disease in Massachusetts. 70% of our pollution comes from all transportation, 30% from stationary industrial sources including generating power.

Monty Pearson addresses demonstrators.
Monty Pearson addresses demonstrators.

In Peabody, we get one to two years of pollution every month!! The North Shore is under a cloud of pollution with up to 20 times the particulate pollution every year than the World Health Organization sets as “safe.”

Susan (Sudi) Smoller of Breathe Clean North Shore addresses demonstrators.
Susan (Sudi) Smoller of Breathe Clean North Shore addresses demonstrators.

Pollution is often highest in Environmental Justice communities. In Peabody, we have up to 25% of Black, Hispanic, immigrant, and poor residents. Mass Community Action Network and Kathryn Rodgers have begun to map the pollution-related disease in the area 1.2 miles from the new peaker plant.

And these problems affect everyone on the North Shore.

Imagine if all the people demanded clean air and clean energy!

Dr. Jack Weltner (87 years old ).  In the background: Joy Gurrie, Anne Goodwin, and Ingrid Geis
Dr. Jack Weltner (87 years old ).  In the background: Joy Gurrie, Anne Goodwin, and Ingrid Geis

 

Doug Thompson, Salem activist, addresses protesters.
Doug Thompson, Salem activist, addresses demonstrators. Songs led by Roger Rosen, holding guitar. Site of peaker plants in distance.

 

Demonstrators

 

Demonstrators display signs for passing traffic
Demonstrators display signs for passing traffic

 

Demonstrators display signs for passing traffic
Demonstrators display signs for passing traffic

 

Demonstrator displays sign for passing traffic
Demonstrator displays sign for passing traffic

 

Judith Black engages with her audience with story and passion
Judith Black engages her audience with story and passion

Pollution & Health

Dr. Adrienne Allen told us that her patients say, "I am short of breath, I can't walk."

I know that feeling. I have asthma. That’s why I carry an inhaler for asthma with me wherever I go.

Jerry Halberstadt displays his asthma rescue inhaler. Photo Copyright 2022 Marilyn Humphries
Jerry Halberstadt displays his asthma rescue inhaler. Photo © 2022 Marilyn Humphries

The elderly are at risk for respiratory diseases, lung infections, heart disease, diabetes, and premature death, all caused or made worse by pollution.

What about the children with asthma? What about the lifelong harm to their health and intelligence?

Does anyone else here have asthma, or have a child or parent with asthma, heart disease, diabetes, or COPD?? [Many hands were raised in response]

Listening to speaker
Listening to speaker

How can we protect ourselves?

Sudi and Ron Smoller and Breathe Clean North Shore collaborated with Sharon Cameron, the Director of the Peabody Health Department, Mayor Ted Bettencourt, and with help from many others to install air quality monitors that will tell us how much pollution we have in each part of Peabody.

Susan "Sudi" Smoller listening to speakers.
Susan "Sudi" Smoller listening to speakers.

NASA has just celebrated a first, pushing an asteroid as preparation for saving the earth from a future asteroid threat. It cost millions.

Breathe Clean also wants to save the earth and the health of people. And today, I am glad to announce that with only the assistance of a small grant from the Department of Environmental Affairs, and the use of much patience and persistence, the first three of seven air quality monitors across Peabody, Massachusetts have come online at PurpleAir.com. Let’s all thank Sudi and Ron, Sharon Cameron, Mayor Ted Bettencourt, and all who assisted in implementing this tool to monitor air quality in Peabody. [Cheers & applause]

Together with Breathe Clean, we’re going to build a Clean Power Coalition to use medical and public health science and community organization to create and organize a clean air revolution on the North Shore.

We’re going to listen to people and empower them to organize to mitigate and protect from the present danger.

And then, the people can determine to demand clean air and clean power: clean, renewable, reliable power.

Imagine if all the people demanded clean air and clean energy!

Marshalls
Marshalls kept order

What do we want?

What do we want? To breathe clean air. 

How can we get it? With clean, renewable power.

When do we want it? Now!


Protesters march in large circle near Davensport Bridge
Protesters march in large circle near Davensport Bridge

 

Protesters march towards the Davensport Bridge
Protesters march towards the Davensport Bridge. State Police detail (behind marchers) had nothing to do during the demonstration.)
Protesters march towards scene of the "die-in."
Protesters march towards scene of the "die-in."

 

Protesters march towards scene of the "die-in."
Protesters march towards scene of the "die-in."

 

Pat Gozemba, Jim Mulloy, and Caroline Britt march towards scene of the "die-in."
Pat Gozemba, Jim Mulloy, and Caroline Britt march towards scene of the "die-in."

The die-in

Each body has a "mourner" who chalks the body outline.
Each body has a "mourner" who chalks the body outline, and a grave marker linking the death to a pollution-related cause.

 

Each body has a "mourner" who chalks the body outline.
Each body has a "mourner" who chalks the body outline.
Photographers capture images of the die-in
Photographers capture images of the die-in. This is theater and the demonstrators and the media have a symbiotic relationship.
Each "body" is outlined with chalk as if in police procedure.
Each "body" is outlined with chalk as if in police procedure, and this sign and the chalk outlines remain.


Other reports on the "die-in"

Enos, Caroline, Research shows neighborhoods near new plant face high rates of health issues, The Salem News, September 21, 2022

Enos, Caroline, 'Our line in the sand:' Protesters 'die' on the bridge to protest peaker plant, The Salem News, September 28, 2022

Lamson, Jon, "Protesters Take Aim at Fossil Fuel Infrastructure in Peabody," New England Climate Dispatch, September 29, 2022.

Sokol, David, photos of "die-in, " Wicked Local, September 29, 2022

Waters, Wendall, "Protesters hold 'die-in' at Peabody Peaker plant site, here's why they oppose the plant," Wicked Local, September 29, 2022


Related resources

Pollution & Health

Landrigan, Philip J. and David Bellinger, "Air pollution is responsible for premature deaths in every Massachusetts city and town," BostonGlobe.com, August 8, 2022

Landrigan, P.J., Fisher, S., Kenny, M.E., et al. A replicable strategy for mapping air pollution’s community-level health impacts and catalyzing prevention. Environ Health 21,70 (2022).

Mass Clean Air, Health Effect of Air Pollution in your Town (Map)

Mass Clean Air, Spreadsheet of town data

Mass Clean Air, Contacting Policy-Makers, The first step toward a Clean Air Massachusetts Provides a list of policies and actions that can reduce pollution; advocacy at the local and state levels. 

The Air Quality Sensor Grant was awarded by the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) to the Peabody Department of Health and Human Services in partnership with Breathe Clean North Shore (BCNS). Report by BCNS