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Background

Founded as a Freedman’s town, surrounded on three sides by industrial polluters, and intentionally isolated from the rest of Dallas, the Joppa neighborhood is one of the most extreme examples of the racist zoning that still drives current land use in “Big D.”

 

From the late 1800’s forward, industries and people deemed “undesirable” by Dallas Power Brokers were redlined to the Trinity River floodplains that split the city in two - North and South. Black and Brown residents were forced to live side-by-side with slaughterhouses, lead smelters, tanneries, and cement plants.

 

Even as official segregation ended, the zoning and land use classifications that helped enforce it endured. Industrial tracts remain concentrated along the floodplain in Southern Dallas, next to densely-populated, predominantly Black and Brown neighborhoods.

 

Many of Joppa’s approximately 1000 residents live directly across the street from a large busy railroad switchyard, a shingle factory, an asphalt batch plant, or all three. Because they often see the fallout from these polluters on their houses, cars, and trees, residents suspect they are being exposed to more air pollution than other Dallas citizens.

 

Because many have respiratory problems that seem to be exacerbated on “bad air” days they suspect their health is being harmed. They suspect these things but have no objective “proof.” That lack of proof puts Joppa residents at a disadvantage when new polluters seek to exploit current zoning to open shop in their community.

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Research Questions

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     1. What are the community perceptions of air quality in Joppa? 

     2. Does PM exposure contribute to acute health effects in Joppa residents? 

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Significance

Knowledge production

 

Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion   

 

Culture of Health

 

Value and Action

Overview of Joppa Project

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