Born, raised, and continuing to live & work in the South Bronx, Majora believes you shouldn't have to move out of your neighborhood to live in a better one, and that this notion has environmental and economic implications that span the globe. In 2001, after the defeat of a noxious, Giuliani-era municipal waste handling scheme, she founded the non-profit environmental justice solutions corporation, Sustainable South Bronx (SSBx). Her first major project was writing a $1.25M Federal Transportation planning grant for the South Bronx Greenway with 11 miles of alternative transport, local economic development, low-impact storm-water management, and recreational space. This led to the first new South Bronx water front park in over 60 years.
While needed parks are highly visible manifestations of her work, the real focus is creating a robust horticultural infrastructure such as intensive urban forestation, green roofing/walls, and water permeable open spaces. These green mechanisms clean the air, reduce urban heat island effect, efficiently manage storm water run off, calm the soul, and create local jobs - reducing poverty.
...if power plants, waste handling, chemical plants and transport systems were located in wealthy areas as quickly and easily as in poor areas, we would have had a clean, green economy decades ago...
-- M. Carter, Powershift 2007
In 2003, SSBx started the Bronx Environmental Stewardship Training program (BEST): one of the nation's first urban green-collar job training and placement systems. After 4 years it boasts an 85% employment rate with 10% now in college. Many of these success stories were formerly incarcerated, and all of them were on some form of public assistance before the 10-week course.
Her solutions to local and global environmental problems rest on poverty alleviation through green economic development, because the local jobs they create can empower communities to resist bad environmental decisions by some short-sighted "leaders."
In 2007, she and Van Jones co-founded Green For All to advocate for a national green-collar job agenda. She is a MacArthur "genius,"" one of Essence Magazine's 25 most influential African-Americans for 2007, co-host of the Green on Sundance Channel, and recording a special national public radio series called "The Promised Land" for 2008 release.
Related Links:
Sustainable South Bronx
Green for All
Majora at TED
