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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums'Warehouses in their backyards': when Amazon expands, these communities pay the price
People of color and low-income residents are disproportionately affected by Amazons warehouses, a Consumer Reports investigation found
by Kaveh Waddell of Consumer Reports and Maanvi Singh in Fontana, California
Last year, with little warning, a new Amazon delivery station brought the rumble of semi-trailer trucks and delivery vans to Chicagos Gage Park neighborhood.
The warehouse, located within 1,500 feet of five schools, is in a residential area where more than half the people within a mile have low incomes and nearly 90% are Hispanic.
The neighborhood is one of hundreds across the US where Amazons dramatic expansion has set in motion huge commercial operations. Residents near the new warehouses say they face increased air pollution from trucks and vans, more dangerous streets for kids walking or biking and other quality-of-life issues such as clogged traffic and near-constant noise.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/dec/09/when-amazon-expands-these-communities-pay-the-price
moondust
(20,000 posts)of their small businesses, then drive them out of their homes.
Right, Jeff? Anything for more billions! Right, Jeff?
Were the zoning laws changed to allow this?
Woodswalker
(549 posts)Montgomery NY and there are hundreds of Amazon vans causing traffic jams, accidents, and holding up school busses in this once beautiful rural town. I was waiting to turn at a light and had a row of about 15 Amazon trucks in front of me. Insane