A Texas Town Takes onĀ Fracking as a Racial Justice Issue
Just after passing resolutions to elevate the needs of Black and Hispanic residents, the Arlington City Council took an unusual stand on drilling.
The Barnett Shale Gas field in Fort Worth, Texas. The shale extends under Arlington, where the city council just took a controversial vote to reject a fracking permit.
Photographer: J. G. DomkeArlington, Texas, became one of a number of U.S. cities to pass racial equity resolutions in recent months after the police killing of George Floyd, acknowledging the ādevastating impactā of Covid-19 on the African-American and Hispanic communities. The resolutions also committed to lifting up āthe medical and social needsā of the marginalized.
With racial justice now prominently elevated to the top of Arlingtonās agenda, it didnāt take long to test the resolutionsā political gravity. Just after the city council adopted them, what would normally be a standard fracking approval vote turned into a forum for residentsā concerns about the environmental and health risks of gas extraction near Black and Latino neighborhoods.