PORT ARTHUR, TX (KTRK) -- An East Texas activist is
$150,000 richer after his work fighting Port Arthur pollution was recognized.
Hilton Kelley won the Goldman Prize, sometimes referred to as the 'Green Nobel
Prize.'
Just one person in all of North America wins each
year, so we visited Kelley in Port Arthur to find out why he won and what we
could learn from him here.
Kelley grew up in the shadow of Port Arthur's
refineries, and despite moving away as a young man, he never stopped thinking
about them. He moved back to Port Arthur nearly 11 years ago when he realized
no one was taking care of the air above his hometown.
"People have been beaten down over time to the
point where they don't believe they even have rights anymore," he said.
So many of his old neighbors, Kelley thought, had
become complacent about his growing pollution concerns.
"You can tell them, but I don't know if they'll
listen," said his mother, Thessy Harris.
Kelley, who was honored on Monday with the $150,000
Goldman Prize for environmental activism, knew there was a way to make Port
Arthur's big industries listen. At first, it was as simple as a 5-gallon bucket
and a hand pump to test potentially toxic air.
"We used it to grab ambient air that's around
us to try and identify exactly what type of chemicals ... are in the air at any
given time," he said.
Starting in 2001, Kelley took samples with his
modified bucket and hand pump, sent them to a lab and results showed air toxic
levels higher than industry and the state previously owned up to.
"The state is supposed to do it, but we've
learned we can't rely on the state," Kelley said.
And it wasn't just there. Kelley brought his bucket
and more recently more high-tech tools to the Houston area, where he says the
results were the same.
"We picked up very, very high readings of
benzene, which is a known cancer-causing chemical, a carcinogen. It was really
off the charts," he said.
In Houston, activists have long complained that
state air monitoring is almost non-existent and industry monitoring is too
secretive, but once Kelley had his own data, the industry and the state paid
attention. He's won emission reductions in Port Arthur and convinced the Motiva
Refinery to create a $3.5 million community fund.
"What are our communities? Sacrifice zones for
the nation to have clean-burning gasoline and petrochemical products,"
Kelley said.
The lesson of Kelley's success in Port Arthur is not
an easy one. It took years to get his own neighbors to listen, let alone big
companies.
"Industry is listening to the Community
In-Power Development Association now; it's been a long climb up," he said.
And he is still climbing. When Kelley started his
work, he thought it would be a two to three year job. Ten years later, he is
still working and doesn't know when it will end.
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