Wilson Sacoby M, Wilson Omega R, Heaney Christopher D, Cooper John
University of Michigan School of Public Health, USA.
Prog Community Health Partnersh. 2007 Winter;1(4):327-37. doi: 10.1353/cpr.2007.0036.
The West End Revitalization Association (WERA), a community-based organization (CBO) in Mebane, North Carolina, was awarded a Collaborative Problem-Solving (CPS) grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Office of Environmental Justice (EPA OEJ).
The purpose of this paper is to highlight WERA's efforts to bring stakeholders in three low-income African-American communities where environmental hazards created public health risks together for collaboration rather than litigation.
WERA's board and staff organized nine working groups with specific areas of expertise that would facilitate research, identify lack of basic amenities, and encourage funding for corrective action and participation in progress reporting workshops. WERA used consensus building, dispute resolution, and resource mobilization as part of the CPS model to address noncompliance with environmental laws, including the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Safe Drinking Water Act, Toxic Substances Control Act, and Solid Waste Disposal Act.
WERA's CPS "Right to Basic Amenities" project produced a framework for (1) grassroots management and ownership of a collaborative problem-solving process; (2) bringing stakeholders together with diverse and conflicting viewpoints; (3) implementation of an innovative community-owned and managed (COMR) research model; and (4) leveraging millions of dollars to fund installation of first-time municipal water/sewer services, street paving, and relocation of the 119-bypass to advance environmental health solutions.
The structure and successes of WERA's Right to Basic Amenities project have been discussed at demonstration and training sessions to help others replicate the model in comparable low-income communities of color in North Carolina and across the United States.
位于北卡罗来纳州梅班的社区组织西区振兴协会(WERA)获得了美国环境保护局环境正义办公室(EPA OEJ)的协作解决问题(CPS)拨款。
本文旨在突出WERA为促使三个低收入非裔美国人社区的利益相关者合作而非诉讼所做的努力,这些社区存在环境危害,对公众健康构成风险。
WERA的董事会和工作人员组织了九个具有特定专业领域的工作组,这些工作组将促进研究、查明基本便利设施的缺乏情况,并鼓励为纠正行动提供资金以及参与进度报告研讨会。WERA将建立共识、解决争端和资源调动作为CPS模式的一部分,以解决违反环境法律的问题,包括《清洁空气法》《清洁水法》《安全饮用水法》《有毒物质控制法》和《固体废物处置法》。
WERA的CPS“基本便利设施权”项目产生了一个框架,用于(1)基层管理和拥有协作解决问题的过程;(2)将具有不同和冲突观点的利益相关者聚集在一起;(3)实施创新的社区拥有和管理(COMR)研究模式;(4)筹集数百万美元资金,用于首次安装市政供水/污水处理服务、铺设街道以及迁移119号旁路,以推进环境卫生解决方案。
WERA的基本便利设施权项目的结构和成功经验已在示范和培训会议上进行了讨论,以帮助其他人在北卡罗来纳州及美国其他类似的低收入有色人种社区复制该模式。