Campaign Becomes Ground Zero for National Environmental/Citizens Groups

How green is Chicago?

Thanks to a growing ward-by-ward grassroots campaign for clean energy, the Windy City has attracted the attention of national environmental and citizens organizations to ask that very question.

On Thursday, July 15th at Dvorak Park, Alderman Joe Moore and Dorian Breuer, of the Pilsen Environmental Rights & Reform Organization, will be joined by an unusually broad coalition of fellow aldermen, clean energy and health care activists, and over 50 Chicago organizations, along the Sierra Club‘s Executive Director Michael Brune and Greenpeace National Climate Director Damon Moglen to call on Mayor Daley and the Chicago City Council to adopt the nationally acclaimed Clean Power Coalition energy platform.

Thirteen aldermen have signed onto Moore’s breakthrough Clean Power Ordinance, which calls for reducing pollution at the city’s two notorious coal-fired plants by 90 percent.

With one of the worst asthma rates in the nation, the Fisk Generation Station in Pilsen and Crawford Power Plant in Little Village–where nearly 50,000 tons of toxic pollution have led to atrocious health care rates over the past three years–were built before the invention of the Model T.

The CO emissions from the two plants are equivalent to the pollution of nearly 875,000 cars. Continue reading »

In order to spread awareness local activists groups have been going around the city hanging city signs that alert people to the proximity of the surrounding coal power plants. RAN Chicago along with a group of local artists headed this awareness campaign in order to bring attention to the hazards that come with so many people leaving near and around these two pollution contributors known as Fisk and Crawford.

Check out the full story along with video here

Warning Signs: Awareness Campaign Targets Coal Burning Power Plants in Chicago

Posted June 16, 2010 by nicolas_lampert in Environment

http://www.nbcchicago.com/blogs/ward-room/The-Dirtiest-Plant-in-Chicago-90741694.html

http://www.myfoxchicago.com/dpp/news/metro/20100413-aldermen-coal-ordinance

http://progressillinois.com/posts/content/2010/04/13/chicago-aldermen-step-coal-fight

http://www.wqad.com/news/sns-ap-il–chicago-airquality,0,3758733.story

http://www.southtownstar.com/news/2155920,chicago-air-quality-0413.article

http://chicagoist.com/2010/04/13/a_new_city_ordinance_announced.php

http://www.zikkir.com/index/199973 Continue reading »

Just off the highway in Little Village, Chicago’s most densely-populated Latino neighborhood, there’s an ever-present burning smell.

It’s the Crawford Generating Station, a coal-fired plant that pumps so much soot into the air that the children who live beneath its chimney call it “the cloud factory.”

Crawford and its sister station, the Fisk Generating Plant in nearby Pilsen — a decidedly Mexican neighborhood — date back to the 1920s, making them the “oldest, dirtiest plants located in any urban neighborhood” in America, according to the Chicago Environmental Law and Policy Center.

The plants are so toxic that the Alivio Medical Center, a non-profit clinic, practically specializes in treating children for asthma. A Harvard School of Public Health study found they cause 41 premature deaths, 550 emergency room visits and 2,800 asthma attacks every year.

The Chicago City Council is finally attempting to force Crawford and Fisk to install scrubbers or shut down. Continue reading »