 |
Sprawl Education Project
Archdiocese
of Los Angeles
Los Angeles, CA
In the crowded metropolis of Los Angeles sprawling
developments and highways have contributed to
many problems including: diminished amount of
green space and undeveloped land, spiraling costs
of housing (making it unaffordable to low-income
residents and increasing the number of poor working
families), stressed natural resources, and fragmented
government structures and services such as health
care, education, and other social services. With
these and other serious environmental issues facing
Los Angeles, Cardinal Roger Mahony, spiritual
leader of more than three million Catholics in the
area, began to build a vision.
The first step in fulfilling his vision was to
initiate dialogue among major stakeholders around
particular issues of environmental and economic
equity in the area, especially the issue of sprawl.
Cardinal Mahony held meetings with many influential
members of the community, including the chairman
of SunAmerica, the executive secretary of the
LA County AFL-CIO and the co-director of The Advancement
Project (a group concerned with racial equity
in the region), to discuss regional environmental
and economic justice concerns. The archdiocese
also convened a symposium to discuss the economic
divide in the region and the many sprawl related
questions such as land use, green space preservation,
housing affordability and air pollution, in partnership
with the University of Southern California in
the University’s ongoing analysis of the
impacts of sprawl on the metropolitan area.
|
 |
In addition, the Archdiocesan Office of Peace
and Justice trained Catholic leaders around the
region on economic equity, sprawl and associated
environmental issues in light of Catholic social
teaching. The project and training events helped
build a basis for a newly developing legislative
network to engage Catholics throughout the region
in advocacy on the part of the poor, the environment,
and other key concerns of the church. Flowing
directly from the mission of the Archdiocesan
Justice and Peace Commission, a school curriculum
on environment and sprawl issues was developed
which focused on poverty, pollution, and participation.
This important effort to clearly link justice
and the environment has been made available to
over 300 public high schools in the area. Two
Catholic high schools in the Los Angeles area,
and with the inspiration of the environmental
awareness curriculum, identified concrete issues
within their own communities that link environment
and justice. As they gathered information about
which issues strike the deepest chord, they came
up with innovative, community-based solutions
to address the problem.
|