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  <description>It was lunchtime in a dusty barrio near Tijuana, Mexico, where the
  Southwest Network for Environmental and Economic Justice (SNEEJ) had come to meet in July
  1993. The schedule called for us to march to a transfer station for hazardous waste, one
  of many plants poisoning the area, and picket it. I asked how long the march would be;
  &#226;&#8364;&#339;oh, very short, it&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s only a quarter of a mile. But the quarter of a mile was
  straight up. 
  That march to the top of a
  long steep hill could symbolize the challenges facing the Network as it has worked to
  build a binational movement led by people of color for social, racial, and economic
  justice. Today SNEEJ can point to regional, national, and international accomplishments
  that deserve to be called unique. 
  The Network was formed in
  Albuquerque in April 1990 at the People of Color Regional Activist Dialogue on
  Environmental Justice initiated by the Southwest Organizing Project of New Mexico. At the
  time, observers said &#226;&#8364;&#339;it won&#226;&#8364;&#8482;t last a month, there&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s too many cultural and
  racial differences.&#226;&#8364;&#157; 
  They were wrong. By 1992 the
  Network embraced 70 grassroots organizations in 6 states, working together on such issues
  as lethal pesticides used in agriculture, dangerous chemicals in high-tech industry, lead
  poisoning, and how they affect communities of color. It brought together African American,
  Asian/Pacific Island, Latino, and Native American groups to develop a common agenda. As an
  organization of organizations, SNEEJ has always been more than a coalition. Intended to
  become multi-issue and permanent, it serves as a vehicle for sharing local strategies and
  victories as well as providing many types of training and assistance in getting funding to
  its affiliates. 
  During its early years, the
  Network focused on consolidating its elected leadership (the Coordinating Council),
  formalizing membership, and other aspects of organizational development. It held annual
  gatherings, and still does, where Network members evaluated past work and planned for the
  next year. Then came 1993, when 20 grassroots community, human rights, and youth
  organizations from Mexico&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s border states attended the first cross-border Network
  gathering. That weekend in Tijuana/San Diego, you could see the dream of a binational
  Network beginning to come true. The next few years would show just how bold the dream is,
  and why Richard Moore insists on calling the Network &#226;&#8364;&#339;a developing binational
  organization.&#226;&#8364;&#157; In short: we&#226;&#8364;&#8482;re not there yet. 
  By March 1998, when I attended
  a Coordinating Council meeting, SNEEJ had completed eight years studded with achievements.
  With a staff of six at its regional headquarters in Albuquerque, it had found ways to
  coordinate with more than 70 groups in six U.S. states plus 3 Mexican states (Baja
  California, Chihuahua, and Coahuila) plus over 15 tribes and other indigenous formations. 
  One of the most striking
  organizational accomplishments was the continuing women&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s leadership. Even in its
  second year, the Network already had a core of strong women like Rose Augustine, a Chicana
  from Arizona; Patsy Oliver, an African American woman in Texarkana, Texas; Odessa Ramirez,
  Native American from Nevada; and by the third year several exceptional Asian American
  women like Pam Tau Lee and Pamela Chiang in California. The addition of working-class
  Mexican feminists from the maquiladoras has expanded the Network tradition of powerful
  female leadership. This can be seen in its revised mission statement, which acquired a new
  emphasis on gender issues in 1997 and the proposal for a women&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s caucus at a 1998
  Network meeting. 


  In its daily work, SNEEJ had
  taken on county, state, and federal governments as well as industry, agribusiness, and the
  military in the course of those first three years. It won some amazing victories. At a
  time when deregulation was a global trend, SNEEJ compelled the Environmental Protection
  Agency (EPA) to take regulation more seriously. 
  The Network&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s EPA
  Accountability Campaign was originally launched on July 31, 1991 with simultaneous
  demonstrations at EPA regional offices in Dallas, Denver, and San Francisco. Each office
  received a copy of SNEEJ&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s long letter detailing many examples of EPA inaction or
  opposition in the face of environmental abuse harmful to people of color. The letter asked
  for several reports on EPA actions, a meeting between the EPA and the Network, and new
  policies to address past discrimination. I had the pleasure of seeing that letter
  delivered at an Albuquerque ceremony in which the EPA made awards for Environmental
  Excellence to two companies known for contaminating water. The Network representative
  pointed out this contradiction; the EPA representative looked uncomfortable. 
  Eventually the EPA agreed to
  negotiate, sent numerous representatives to various meetings, and visited some of the
  affected areas reported by the Network. Richard Moore&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s testimony before a
  congressional committee on a children&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s cancer cluster in California that resulted
  from pesticide spraying added to the pressure. So did the publicity about industrial
  pollutants causing children in the Brownsville, Texas border area to be born with all or
  parts of their brains missing. Throughout the negotiations, the Network stood firm on two
  principles: meeting with EPA administrators, not public relations mouthpieces, and direct
  representation of the affected communities&#226;&#8364;&#8221;no brokering. 
  
  
  Major Victories Over The
  EPA 
  Since then, Network-led
  actions have forced the EPA and other federal bodies to begin addressing environmental
  justice concerns all over the Southwest. SNEEJ has won major victories including a
  dramatic increase in the enforcement of EPA regulations in communities of color and an
  overhaul of U.S. environmental policy. On the national level, the Network played a key
  role in organizing an ongoing dialogue between EPA leadership under both Bush and Clinton
  and environmental justice organizations. It compelled EPA visits to 18 contaminated sites
  in the Southwest. With Clinton&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s election, SNEEJ was promised participation in his
  transition team; when later shut out, it managed through colleagues to help assure that
  environmental and economic justice concerns would be heard. Such efforts led to
  Clinton&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s 1994 Presidential Executive Order No. 12898 mandating all federal agencies
  to prepare plans for integrating environmental justice into their work. (The order carried
  no enforcement provisions.) 
  Also, the National
  Environmental Justice Advisory Committee to the EPA, chaired by Richard Moore, was
  established as a vehicle to ensure an official voice for Network and other grassroots
  organizations. 
  On the local and regional
  level, the EPA campaign has racked up too many accomplishments to list here. Just to
  suggest their range, the Network helped to stop the world&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s largest toxic waste
  disposal company from placing an incinerator in Kettleman City, California (95 percent
  Latino). It helped pave the way for the Isleta Indian Pueblo of New Mexico to win formal
  recognition by the EPA as a state, which allowed the Pueblo to develop precedent-setting
  regulations over water usage by cities, industries, and federal facilities. It pressed for
  the fining (and later closure) of a southern Arizona recycling facility responsible for
  dangerous levels of chemical release into nearby communities. When the EPA stepped up its
  efforts to make Chevron abate emissions from a plant in the primarily Black/Laotian
  community of Richmond, California, that was in no small way thanks to the Network; a $5
  million grant for community programs and worker training in Richmond also resulted.
  Recently the Network became involved in efforts to keep Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights
  Act a tool in fighting environmental racism (see box). 
  Among the Network&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s other
  efforts, the Sovereignty/Dumping on Native Lands Campaign stands out as a rare example of
  joint work by Native Americans with people of color (a term many indigenous people do not
  use for themselves). It began as an internal education project of the Network, but has
  become increasingly external, with such actions as supporting the Western Shoshone fight
  to stop missile testing in Nevada; helping Dine (Navajo) groups seeking to end mining by
  Peabody Coal at Black Mesa; and working with the Havasupai people, who live at the bottom
  of the Grand Canyon, in their struggle against uranium mining. 
  In 1998, Jos&#195;&#169; Matus became
  one of two Sovereignty Campaign chairs. He represents the Alianza Indilgena Sin Fronteras
  (Indigenous Alliance Without Borders) in which four border nations&#226;&#8364;&#8221;the Yaqui, Tohono
  Olodham, Kickapoo, and Cocopah&#226;&#8364;&#8221;work together on human rights abuses, border-crossing
  issues, land claims, and preservation of their heritage. Over the years SNEEJ has also
  developed working relations with the Indigenous Environmental Network, one of several
  environmental justice networks that address the needs of particular communities. 


  The Network&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s Youth
  Leadership Development Campaign, which is internal to the Network, has established an
  internship program; held several trainings that focused on organizing and leadership
  skills; and ensured the participation of hundreds of youth from affiliate and guest
  organizations. For all the talk in progressive movements about involving youth, SNEEJ
  seems to be one place where this really happens. Young people have been integrated in its
  decision-making and leadership. The Network&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s ongoing commitment to strengthen youth
  involvement is reflected in the 1997 addition to its mission statement of
  &#226;&#8364;&#339;generational injustices&#226;&#8364;&#157; as another target. At the March 1998 Coordinating
  Council meeting, 21-year- old &#226;&#8364;&#339;Che&#226;&#8364;&#157; Lopez was heard as an equal; at the end of
  that meeting he announced his plans to run for City Council back home in Hondo, Texas. 
  
  
  Border Justice is Worker
  Justice 
  The Border Justice Campaign
  has been growing steadily in its efforts to pressure government and private industry to
  provide safe working conditions and living conditions in areas around the twin plant
  industries located in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands. Since 1993, it has convened meetings of
  representatives from many grassroots organizations on both sides of the border to discuss
  strategies and collaboration. It has been working closely with the Mexican Action Network
  Against NAFTA. 
  The campaign for justice on
  border issues often coincides with the Worker Justice Campaign. Worker justice involves a
  broad spread of U.S.-based groups such as Asian Immigrant Women Advocates (AIWA) in the
  Bay Area and Fuerza Unida in San Antonio. With the Network expanding into Mexico, the
  maquiladoras on the border have become increasingly central to both campaigns. Again and
  again, SNEEJ&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s work has underscored the close connection between environmental issues
  and labor struggles, for example, in the pesticide spraying of farmworkers. Network
  members often say that all worker issues are environmental issues, especially if we see
  environment as meaning life-style or, more precisely, the cycle of life. 
  In this spirit of linkage,
  SNEEJ began meeting with the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union (OCAW) at the
  union&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s invitation. Traditional environmentalist groups have often found themselves
  at serious odds with labor, hounded by the image of middle-class, privileged
  &#226;&#8364;&#339;tree-huggers&#226;&#8364;&#157; whose goals threaten the livelihood of hardworking
  loggers&#226;&#8364;&#8221;or whatever the industry might be. &#226;&#8364;&#339;Green&#226;&#8364;&#157; picket lines outside a
  factory&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s doors have come to symbolize the clash. Conflict is seen as inevitable,
  with no possibility of compromise, and the notion that workers and environmentalists might
  form alliances against common enemies has rarely been articulated. 
  In 1997, OCAW adopted a
  resolution recognizing that it often has the same corporate opponents as the environmental
  justice movement, and is often working for the same goals. Therefore, said the resolution,
  OCAW would make every effort to form partnerships and coalitions with environmental
  justice groups around common goals. In February 1998, OCAW and SNEEJ signed an historic
  agreement, based on &#226;&#8364;&#339;our collective desire to move a progressive agenda.&#226;&#8364;&#157; It
  said, in essence: let&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s talk before declaring war on each other. OCAW would try
  &#226;&#8364;&#339;to avert divisiveness between communities and workers at facilities represented by
  OCAW by agreeing to facilitate meetings at the point of controversy to permit
  representatives to develop a common agenda and to agree, where that can&#226;&#8364;&#8482;t be done, to
  mutually respect the mandates of each organization.&#226;&#8364;&#157; 
  In negotiating the agreement,
  the Network stood fast on certain principles. It insisted that not only SNEEJ but all the
  environmental justice networks be present, including the Indigenous Environmental Network,
  Asian Pacific Environmental Network, Southern Organizing Committee, and North East
  Environmental Justice. OCAW accepted this, but then asked that they agree not to picket
  factories whose workers belonged to OCAW when dialogue was taking place between the union
  and any of those groups. This SNEEJ had to refuse; it would be like a union giving up the
  right to strike. Also, SNEEJ couldn&#226;&#8364;&#8482;t commit its affiliates to such an accord. But
  the agreement to negotiate in cases of conflict was finally adopted. 
  In the same meetings, OCAW and
  the Network discussed the Just Transition, a strategy to cushion the job loss that often
  occurs when a corporation must phase out environmentally harmful production. OCAW had
  resolved in August 1997 that it would support policy initiatives to eliminate extremely
  harmful substances so long as dislocated workers and their communities were helped during
  the transition to sustainable production. This set the stage for joint efforts by SNEW and
  OCAW stretching from Alabama to California. In Oklahoma, for example, an indigenous tribe
  reported problems with the products of a facility where the workers belonged to OCAW; the
  Network and the union went there in April 1998. The strategy of demanding a Just
  Transition could be applied in many situations, as Ruben Soli told the Network&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s
  Coordinating Council. It could be applied to Levi Strauss, to Intel, and to fight the
  effects of NAFTA. Any Just Transition should have its terms defined by the people
  affected. 


  The concept of Just Transition
  gives us an example of why making the Network truly binational requires constant, two-way
  translation that will explain many realities such as: U.S. and Mexican environmental laws
  and policies, the structure of indigenous nations and tribes in the U.S., the fact that
  Mexico lacks that whole U.S. world of nonprofits and grant-making foundations, and the
  more massive presence of the labor movement in Mexican politics. On another level, there
  are differences in decision-making styles and methods to be understood, or assumptions of
  political and theoretical knowledge. The list goes on, down to translating unfamiliar
  acronyms. 
  In daily practice, there is
  the need to translate into at least English and Spanish the discussion at meetings, the
  minutes of meetings, conference calls (crucial to Network functioning) while in progress,
  letters and memos, faxes, &#226;&#8364;&#339;Action Alerts,&#226;&#8364;&#157; proposals, and other documents. This
  is work whose necessity is not questioned but whose cost can be great. To sit through a
  totally bilingual, 2-day meeting of 20-plus people discussing complex subjects is to feel
  a great respect for the Network in undertaking to create genuine binationalism. Many U.S.
  organizations working on environmental problems at the border do not integrate Mexicans;
  paternalism defines the relationship. As Teresa Leal of Nogales, Mexico pointed out,
  &#226;&#8364;&#339;They may organize tours to show the impact of the maquiladoras but often the agenda
  has been imposed from the U.S. side.&#226;&#8364;&#157; Other Mexicans say, &#226;&#8364;&#339;We are never part of
  their decision-making process.&#226;&#8364;&#157; 
  
  
  Making A Commitment To
  Respect 
  If the Network has succeeded
  where others failed, this must be partly because from the beginning it sought to establish
  a tradition of mutual respect and cooperativeness. In December 1996 this goal was
  formalized as the &#226;&#8364;&#339;Jemez Principles for Democratic Organizing&#226;&#8364;&#157; during a meeting
  held by SNEEJ at Jemez, New Mexico, to discuss international issues. The six principles
  included doing &#226;&#8364;&#339;bottom-up&#226;&#8364;&#157; organizing, letting people speak for themselves,
  inclusiveness, and having a commitment to self-transformation&#226;&#8364;&#8221;changing from operating
  in an individualistic mode to one of community-centeredness. &#226;&#8364;&#339;We must be the values
  that we say we&#226;&#8364;&#8482;re struggling for.&#226;&#8364;&#157; 
  It is natural, then, that
  Network meetings have always included a strong spirituality. They usually begin and end
  with a circle&#226;&#8364;&#8221;often to hear a prayer, given by an indigenous representative, or a
  remembrance, a thought. The spiritual presence is one reason why an annual Network
  gathering often feels like a vibrant multi-colored family in action. 
  In this spirit of sustenance,
  SNEEJ maintains several training projects for affiliates on a wide range of issues, for
  example, environmental law and how to use it. Again, the demands of communication can be
  intense; for example, the annual workshop on worker health and safety is conducted in five
  languages: English, Spanish, Korean, Chinese, and Laotian. The Network also engages in
  &#226;&#8364;&#339;partnerships,&#226;&#8364;&#157; by which SNEEJ raises funds to help a particular organization in
  the Network meet a specific need for training, equipment, or other needs. Today the
  Network has become increasingly consolidated, without losing its grassroots essence and
  style of work. As the Network&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s coordinator, Richard Moore, said in the early days,
  &#226;&#8364;&#339;We may be poor people, but we&#226;&#8364;&#8482;re professional poor people.&#226;&#8364;&#157; 
  The need for resources,
  including people, has always been a basic issue for the Network. Sometimes a project has
  had to be put on hold for lack of resources or other limitations. This happened to the
  Hi-Tech Campaign, which worked on making the Intel Corporation accountable to the
  communities where it operates in New Mexico and helped expose Intel&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s water usage.
  The Campaign also teamed up with the Labor Occupational Health and Safety Program at UC
  Berkeley, to train people in occupational health and safety related to the electronics
  industry; that program continues today. 
  On the scenic West Side of
  Albuquerque more than 17,000 documented works of indigenous rock art known as petroglyphs
  can be found. Native Americans hold the area sacred, as a place where items are placed for
  the deceased to begin their journey into the next world, and it is still in use by Pueblo
  Indians. In recognition of its significance, the Petroglyph National Monument was
  established in 1990. 
  In April 1997, Republican
  Senator Pete Domenici announced intentions to push through federal legislation (Senate
  Bill 633) that would hand over land so that a 6-lane highway could be built through this
  area. The goal: to facilitate access by real estate developers. They include people like
  John Black, whose 6,700-acre Black Ranch is slated for development. 
  Protest against such
  desecration has been led by the Petroglyph Monument Protection Coalition. Last March
  Native American, Chicana/o, Mexican, African American, Asian/Pacific Island and Anglo
  demonstrators picketed the Albuquerque office of Senator Jeff Bingaman, who supports the
  highway. The Network&#226;&#8364;&#8482;s Coordinating Council all turned out for the &#226;&#8364;&#339;Youth
  Speak-Out and Prayer,&#226;&#8364;&#157; which featured drumming, native prayers, and speakers. I
  couldn&#226;&#8364;&#8482;t help counting: of the half-dozen Native American, Chicano, Asian/Pacific and
  African American speakers, five were in their 20s. The bad guys just might lose this
  fight. 


  It is clear today that we need
  global movements to answer the globalized assault on people and the planet. The Southwest
  Network stands as a model for how that answer might be constructed. One thing for sure:
  the answer must express interdependence, like a circle, like the earth. Like life itself,
  as our native sisters and brothers tell us. 
  In the face of the threat to
  undermine the use of Title VI in combating environmental racism, SNEEJ and two other
  networks have been supporting the Chester, PA plaintiffs. They are brining pressure within
  the Title VI Federal Advisory Committee to the EPA, which includes representatives of
  industry, state government, and grassroots environmental justice organizations, and some
  academics. They have, for example, pressured this committee to hold meetings not just in
  Washington, DC but in the communities directly concerned so the impact of racist
  discrimination can be better understood. Also, they have struggled to have the committee
  see racism in more than strictly Black/white terms, so as to understand the scope of the
  problem. 
  The grassroots organizations
  in this fight, facing a huge and historic challenge, know they have a responsibility to
  defend millions of human beings &#194;&#160;&#194;&#160;&#194;&#160;&#194;&#160;Z 
  
    This article was adapted
    from De Colores Means All of Us: Latina Views for a Multi-Colored Century, by Elizabeth
    Martinez, to be published by South End Press. 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

  
    
      &#194;&#160;&#194;&#160;&#194;&#160;&#194;&#160;&#194;&#160;&#194;&#160;&#194;&#160;&#194;&#160;Z
      MAGAZINE JUNE 1998 &#194;&#160;25</description>
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  <short-title>Latino/a Politics</short-title>
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