Environment & Environmental Racism

Confronting toxic legacies in Mi'kmaq and African Nova Scotian communities

⚠️ THE CRISIS:

Environmental racism remains one of Nova Scotia's most critical yet under-discussed issues. Mi'kmaq and African Nova Scotian communities continue to live with the legacy of toxic siting decisions — from landfills to industrial waste — while government action remains slow despite expert recommendations.

📝 KEY FINDINGS:

An expert panel has called on Nova Scotia to:
• Issue a formal apology to affected communities
• Address ongoing environmental harms
• Implement meaningful policy changes
• Provide compensation and remediation

Yet the provincial government has been slow to release the full recommendations and commit to swift action.

🏭 AFFECTED COMMUNITIES:

1. AFRICVILLE (Halifax)
• Historic Black community destroyed in the 1960s
• City dump deliberately sited next to community
• Residents forced out under "urban renewal"
• Legacy of environmental injustice persists

2. LINCOLNVILLE (Guysborough County)
• African Nova Scotian community
• Contaminated well water from nearby landfill
• Residents forced to boil water or buy bottled water
• Health impacts still being assessed

3. PICTOU LANDING FIRST NATION
• Boat Harbour treatment facility polluted traditional lands and waters for 50+ years
• Pulp mill effluent destroyed fishing grounds
• Community health crisis from toxic exposure
• Facility finally closed 2020, cleanup ongoing

4. SIPEKNE'KATIK FIRST NATION
• Alton Gas project threatens traditional fishing grounds
• Brine discharge into Shubenacadie River
• Impacts on fish, wildlife, and water quality
• Community-led resistance continues

🚨 CURRENT ISSUES:

• Racialized Communities Bear Disproportionate Burden: Toxic sites, industrial facilities, and waste disposal disproportionately located near Mi'kmaq and Black communities

• Lack of Consultation: Major projects approved without meaningful consultation with affected Indigenous and racialized communities

• Health Impacts Ignored: Cancer rates, respiratory illness, and other health problems in affected communities receive insufficient study and response

• Climate Justice: Communities already facing environmental racism are most vulnerable to climate change impacts

🛠️ WHAT'S NEEDED:

1. Immediate Actions:
• Formal government apology
• Emergency health assessments in affected communities
• Halt to new projects until proper consultation

2. Long-term Solutions:
• Environmental racism legislation
• Mandatory environmental justice reviews for all projects
• Community-led remediation and compensation
• Indigenous sovereignty over traditional lands and waters

3. Accountability:
• Independent oversight body
• Binding recommendations from expert panels
• Regular public reporting on progress

🔗 RESOURCES & ADVOCACY:

• Ku'ku'kwes Maw-klusuaqn Negotiation Office (Mi'kmaq Rights Initiative)
• Black Cultural Centre for Nova Scotia
• Nova Scotia Environmental Network
• Ecology Action Centre
• Indigenous environmental justice organizations

📰 LATEST DEVELOPMENTS:

• December 2024: Expert panel report on environmental racism released
• 2024-2025: Community consultations on remediation plans
• Ongoing: Pictou Landing cleanup — years behind schedule
• Ongoing: Alton Gas legal challenges continue