CMEJ initiatives for safety, emergency preparedness, and healing
Community Safety + Policing + Healing
This work is led by CMEJ members who have been in the direct line of police violence. We actively work to imagine a new vision for community health and safety.
Stop Police use of Tear Gas Campaign
Following the murder of Dante Wright by police in 2021, CMEJ members participated in community protests and were teargassed by state and other forces, despite a local City Council ban on its use. We purchased gas masks for frontline members and started a public pressure campaign to stop the use of chemical weapons by police. The chemicals used in tear gas were banned in warfare in 1925, reaffirmed by the UN Chemical Weapons Convention in 1993. The Centers for Disease Control states that tear gas exposure can lead to permanent physical damage. The American Thoracic Society recently called for a moratorium on tear gas. Exposure to tear gas increases the risk of respiratory infections – flu, pneumonia, etc. COVID exposure may be exacerbated by tear gas use.
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Tear gas (airborne chemicals) used on community protesters that live in already over-polluted areas adds to the pollution burden of their bodies. This may result in more severe reactions or more detrimental reactions (compared to people who are not living in an Environmental Justice community). The impact of even small doses of a chemical agent such as tear gas on vulnerable populations such as children, pregnant women, and women of childbearing age (all which were present at the Brooklyn Center protests) could be even more severe.
The tear gas use in question was at protests in response to the murder of a young black man by the police. Chemicals were deployed on predominantly people of color protestors, adding to the environmental racism and health burden faced by people of color in the Twin Cities.
CMEJ emergency preparedness initiative
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In North Minneapolis emergencies happen all too often, and they hit first and worst in black, indigenous, and POC communities that have been denied opportunities and investment for generations. North Minneapolis is also in a heavy industrial corridor.
CMEJ is working to bring control and preparation to Northside residents through engaging community members in practicing emergency preparedness, developing solutions to environmental justice issues,
and connecting community members with one another.
Join us for weekly meetings to build community and prepare for natural disasters or civil unrest. Our goals include connecting Northside residents to information about energy assistance, weatherization programs, rental assistance, and other emergency preparedness/environmental justice topics.