Joseph Gaines was sitting on his porch in the Charlton-Pollard section of Beaumont, Texas, on a recent evening in June, sipping beer and chatting with some of his neighbors about the NBA playoffs, when a loud boom cut through the night and a stream of fire lit up the sky. A few minutes later, a strong, unpleasant odor settled over the street. As soon as they smelled it, the men stopped arguing about LeBron James and left the porch, covering their mouths and noses as they hurried into their homes.

As unsettling as it was, none of the neighbors reported what happened that night — not the fire that rose above their heads, nor the sound they heard, the sickening smell or the symptoms that followed. For Gaines, the symptoms included an intense sudden headache, tearing eyes, a runny nose, and congestion that made it difficult to sleep and lasted into the next day.

Gaines, who works in lawn care, had the day off when I met him at his home, and as he went about fixing himself something to eat and heading out to sit on his small porch, he occasionally sniffed and dabbed at his eyes.

“No point in complaining,” he said, looking out at the row of modest houses across the street. A block and a half from Gaines’s house, the street ends in an Exxon Mobil refinery that processes “sour crude,” oil that contains high amounts of sulfur. The process of removing the impurities and refining the oil into gasoline produces sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, and other gases that can cause respiratory, neurological, cardiac, and other serious health problems. Those gasses also give the neighborhood a rotten egg odor that occasionally wafted in with the warm breeze as Gaines and I sat on his porch.

In Charlton-Pollard, flare events like the one Gaines and his neighbors encountered that night — in which the flames that usually burn on top of the smokestacks erupt into smelly belches of fire — are regular occurrences. The flames burst so reliably from the refinery some local kids treat them as fireworks, gathering at the fence down the street from Gaines’s house at night to catch the show.

  • "It's not like anything any of us do or say will stop them."

The plant releases at least 135 toxic chemicals, many of which — including 1,3-butadiene, benzo[a]pyrene, and styrene — are carcinogens. And the plant is regularly in noncompliance with the Clean Air Act. Yet many of the people I met on my recent visit to Charlton-Pollard said they felt there was no point in trying to reduce the emissions.

 

Exxon Mobil refinery in the Charlton-Pollard section of Beaumont, Texas, as seen from Van Buren Avenue, on June 6, 2017.Image: Todd Spoth/The Intercept.

“Why would I bother?” asked Gaines’s neighbor Rebecca Thibeaux, who is 64 and has lived near the plant since she was 30 years old. Thibeaux was diagnosed with both endometrial cancer and serious heart problems last year; when we spoke she had just returned from chemotherapy and was resting on her couch. Thibeaux said she suspects pollution from the refinery may have caused her ailments. And it’s certainly possible. The refinery emits carcinogens, and several studies have shown an increased incidence of cancer in people living near these facilities. Exposure to several of the chemicals the plant emits has also been tied to increased risk of heart disease. But Thibeaux dismissed the idea that she might be able to convince a powerful company to change its ways. “It’s not like anything any of us do or say will stop them.”

People who can afford to live elsewhere tend to leave the neighborhood. A family who lived next door to Gaines recently left because they feared the pollution was the reason their 12-year-old daughter had begun losing her hair after they moved in. Theirs, too, was a reasonable fear. Physicians have documented a relationship between exposure to airborne contaminants, including many the plant emits, and hair loss. Research has also shown an increase in birth defects among people living near refineries, as well as in children’s asthma rates. But the family didn’t stick around to parse the science; they just took their daughter to a place that smelled and felt safer.

Meanwhile Thibeaux, Gaines, and the others who remain in the roughly square-mile neighborhood just west of the Exxon Mobil plant had good reason to doubt their concerns would be taken seriously: They already raised them in a formal complaint to the Environmental Protection Agency — 17 years ago.

On April 13, 2000, Charlton-Pollard residents asked the EPA to force the state of Texas to revoke a permit it had recently granted the refinery to increase operations. The law requires the EPA to acknowledge receipt of a complaint within five business days, conduct an investigation, and send the complainants preliminary findings within 200 days after that. After one response three years later — a promise to investigate — the federal agency devoted to protecting Americans from environmental threats did nothing to revoke the permit; for years the EPA didn’t respond at all.

Between 2000 and 2016, while the people who live next to the plant waited for an investigation, the refinery emitted more than 400 million pounds of pollution into the air. Yet in all those years, the EPA never once consulted the people who were most affected.

In May, 17 years after the initial complaint, the EPA finally issued a letter declaring the case over the refinery pollution resolved, with only small changes to be implemented. Many people I spoke with in Charlton-Pollard found the agency’s proposed fixes — two community meetings and a single air monitor to be placed more than a mile away from the plant — more insulting than having been ignored for 17 years.

Adding insult to injury, the residents of this small, mostly African-American neighborhood are now likely facing an increase in emissions as the result of the planned expansion of the refinery and an Exxon Mobil chemical plant that uses its oil. And as the Trump administration rolls back pollution protections and opens the gates for increased oil production, life in this and many other communities living near refineries is about to get much more dangerous and unpleasant.

 

Roy L. Malveaux of Shining Star Baptist Church sits on the steps of his church, June 6, 2017, in Beaumont, Texas.Image: Todd Spoth/The Intercept.

It was the mid-1990s when a local Baptist pastor named Roy Malveaux began organizing the residents of Charlton-Pollard in response to pollution from the local refinery. Back then, Exxon Mobil was just Mobil (the oil giants had yet to merge), and refineries around the country had less pollution-control equipment. Texas refineries emitted more toxic chemicals per barrel of oil than those in any other state, and the Beaumont facility emitted more pollution than any other in Texas. The pollution was so pervasive that residents had to wipe residue off their cars in the morning, according to the complaint Malveaux filed with the EPA. Some people reportedly fainted after breathing bursts of foul-smelling air.

Though air pollution from the refinery was already regularly exceeding some of the limits set in its permits — and, for hydrogen sulfide and sulfur dioxide, also exceeding state-wide safety levels — Mobil proposed expanding its plant in 1999. The company acknowledged that the move would further increase emissions of several contaminants, including sulfur dioxide, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and hydrogen sulfide (which can cause both short-term respiratory and memory problems, as well as permanent damage to the heart, brain, and lungs). The company proposed offsetting the increases in the refinery with reductions at its petrochemical plant nearby.

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Such horse-trading is common in many parts of the country, but according to Kelly Haragan, director of the environmental law clinic at the University of Texas School of Law in Austin, it’s particularly difficult to ascertain whether the companies honor the terms of these deals in Texas: “The way Texas issues air permits — with a single facility having dozens of different permits — it’s very hard to determine if companies are following the netting rules that apply when they add and subtract different emissions to determine whether they trigger permitting and pollution-control requirements.”

Malveaux and several other people strongly objected to the expansion and asked the Texas agency in charge of refineries to grant them a hearing to voice their concerns. But in 1999, the state denied their request and determined that a permit was not necessary because total emissions from both the company’s refinery and chemical plant would not be exceeded. Brian McGovern, a spokesperson for the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, wrote in an email that “the permit application was reviewed and authorized in accordance with state and federal regulations in place at the time, which included a health effects review to ensure that emissions from the Beaumont refinery were not exceeding safe levels, and that best available control technology was being implemented.”

But Malveaux was already watching members of his community suffer from pollution. He was struggling with it himself, getting headaches and nausea when the air was at its worst. His young niece had recently developed severe asthma after she was placed in daycare near the refinery, and he had watched as the condition improved just as suddenly after his sister moved her to a childcare center farther from the plant. After the state agency denied a request for a hearing, he decided to complain to the EPA, with the help of the Texas chapter of the Sierra Club.

The filing Malveaux and the environmental groups submitted on behalf of Charlton-Pollard residents described Exxon Mobil’s emissions swap scheme, the chemical pollution, and the expansion, which they predicted would only make the pollution worse. And the complaint went further, arguing that the location of the oil refinery — next to a neighborhood where 95 percent of residents were African-American — was a civil rights violation.

Named for a clause of the Civil Rights Act, such Title VI cases are meant to hold government agencies accountable for discrimination on the basis of race. The Beaumont complaint argued that by issuing the permit despite repeated complaints about pollution, the Texas agency, which is subject to the civil rights law because it receives federal money, had violated the rights of the people of Charlton-Pollard.

A compact man with piercing eyes and a well-trimmed beard, Malveaux remembers when he got the 2003 response from the EPA saying the federal agency would investigate the problems in Charlton-Pollard. Already some of residents’ fears about the expansion had become reality. Just a year after the permit was issued, in 2000, the plant greatly increased its emissions of VOCs, chemicals that can cause headaches, loss of coordination, and nausea, as well as cancer and damage to the liver, kidney, and central nervous system. In 2004, a particularly heavy year for emissions at the plant, according to data from the TCEQ, the annual average level of hydrogen sulfide near the refinery was four times what it had been in 1997.

Malveaux was pleasantly surprised by the EPA’s 2003 response. The agency had set up its office of civil rights and had begun taking Title VI complaints only in the 1990s. And he suspected — rightly as it turned out — that most such complaints had not even received the promise of an investigation. Although the wheels of environmental justice were turning slowly, he was encouraged to see them turning at all. “I was overjoyed by the letter,” Malveaux recalled recently. “The whole community had a sense of joy because EPA was going to be investigating our complaint. They really thought that something would come out of it.”

An industrial flare at the Exxon Mobil refinery in the Charlton-Pollard section of Beaumont, Texas.Image: Todd Spoth/The Intercept.

The neighborhood next to the Beaumont refinery was named after two local educational leaders — T.T. Pollard, a teacher, and Charles Charlton, a freed slave who helped establish and run the first African-American school in Beaumont. In 1901, when that school was turning out the area’s first African-American high school graduates, the famous well at nearby Spindletop struck oil, giving rise to several of the world’s oil giants, including the company now known as Exxon Mobil.

For a time, the resulting prosperity appeared to benefit everyone in the community. But Charlton and Pollard, who were known for beautifying and improving their community, would no doubt be dismayed by what has happened to the neighborhood that bears their name. While the Exxon Mobil refinery now processes about $18 million worth of oil each day, about a third of the people living on the other side of the fence from it live in poverty.

The people of Charlton-Pollard tried to avail themselves of the civil rights law, one of the few tools for directly addressing this power imbalance. Yet years went by without any word of an EPA investigation into their complaint. During that time, the disparity increased.

They weren’t the only ones waiting for the EPA to decide whether toxic messes amounted to civil rights violations. According to a report from the Center for Public Integrity, the majority of civil rights complaints the EPA accepted for investigation between 1996 and 2013 languished for years.

In 2015, Marianne Engelman-Lado, an environmental attorney who was working for Earthjustice at the time, decided to look into some of the oldest outstanding civil rights complaints. In terms of timeliness alone, any one of the filings she reviewed might have made an open-and-shut case. Although the law requires the EPA to issue preliminary findings on complaints in less than a year, Engelman-Lado reviewed a dozen complaints in which the EPA had taken at least 10 years to respond.

“In theory, you could get a judge to order them to do what they’re supposed to do,” said Engelman-Lado, who was working with a coalition of environmental justice groups and is currently employed at Yale Law School. But the few past efforts to bring attention to individual complaints had resulted in the EPA closing each case without addressing the underlying issues.

The EPA is allowed to close civil rights cases only in certain circumstances: if the parties involved agree to a resolution, for instance, if insufficient evidence of discrimination is found, or if the agency issues a finding of discrimination and comes up with a plan for a remedy.

Yet a 2016 report on environmental justice from the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights described a pattern in which EPA closed cases in response to suits over individual complaints that had remained open for years without meeting these conditions. “EPA has been sued multiple times (sometimes in the context of processing the same Title VI complaint) for failing to meet its regulatory time frames. Once sued, EPA takes the minimal amount of action to moot the lawsuit, yet never seems to reach any substantive decisions on whether a federal recipient has violated Title VI.”

Engelman-Lado noticed the same trend. “Every time people have done this, they try to close the books,” she said. So she decided to sue the EPA over five complaints. “That way, if they closed the book on all five cases, we’d be able to show it was arbitrary and capricious,” Engelman-Lado reasoned.

Since January, the EPA has in fact moved to close all five of the civil rights complaints mentioned in the suit, as well as at least two other civil rights cases that had been pending for years — a sudden clearing of the EPA’s civil rights docket that Engelman-Lado calls “unprecedented.” She did want closure for these communities, but only if it came with a satisfying resolution to their problems, which had persisted and sometimes worsened over the years. But the proposed remedies were disappointing at best and in each case, they were far too little and too late.

Consider one case over a solid waste landfill in Tallassee, Alabama, that processes 15,000 tons of waste per day — more than any other facility in the state. Local residents complained in 2003, arguing that by allowing the landfill to be located in their neighborhood — which, depending on the block, was between 87 and 100 percent African-American — the Alabama Department of Environmental Management had violated the civil rights law. In a letter issued in May, the EPA acknowledged that an investigation of the state agency had raised questions about the sufficiency of its non-discrimination program, but nevertheless decided not to address it further and closed the case. ­­­

Another complaint over the construction of an incinerator power plant in Flint, Michigan, dated back to 1992. The four residents who had filed it originally hoped to prevent the plant, which would be partially fueled by demolition waste, from being built in a low-income, mostly African-American neighborhood. “The site selection is ruthless, insensitive, and only driven by purely economy factors,” the original complaint read. “This is environmental racism.”

The January letter closing the Flint case is arguably the strongest of the agency’s responses to a civil rights complaint. The agency issued one of its only findings of discrimination, acknowledging that the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality had discriminated on the basis of race when it granted the permit for the incinerator. Yet there was no recourse for the discrimination. The plant stayed open, and no one was fined.

That finding came 25 years after the first of two complaints about the incinerator was filed. By that time, the plant had already been operating for 22 years — and, as the original complaints predicted, had been emitting lead and other contaminants into the air for decades. In the intervening years, three of the four complainants have died. Among them was Janice O’Neal, a community activist who died of cancer at age 53 and lived about a mile from the plant.

“Their main thing was: you stop the lawsuit and then we’ll come up with great stuff,” said Father Phil Schmitter, a Flint-based Catholic priest and the lone survivor of the original complainants, who added that some EPA staff had recently encouraged him to let the matter go but that he had no intention of dropping the case that had resulted in the EPA’s only serious effort to address concerns raised decades ago. “The only reason we’re talking is because we sued you, so why would I drop the suit?”

“The EPA is just trying to close all of the cases where the communities brought them to court for unlawfully withholding action,” said Engelman-Lado. “It’s almost like they were thumbing their noses at the communities. You said you wanted us to finish these investigations? Well then we’ll finish them.”

As the people of Charlton-Pollard and Flint — as well as Tallassee, Alabama; Pittsburg, California; and Chaves County, New Mexico — can attest, the EPA’s lack of responsiveness to civil rights complaints spans not just many years, but also several presidential administrations. The EPA closed the first of the five civil rights cases named in the suit, over the incinerator in Flint, on January 19, the day before Barack Obama left office. Some of the biggest frustrations over the handling of civil rights mounted during his presidency.

It was under Obama, for instance, that the civil rights division of the EPA stopped checking the email inbox that received civil rights complaints for about a year between 2014 and 2015. Among the messages the agency failed to open in a timely way was one received on February 25, 2015, labeled “handicapped complainant re drinking H20 in Flint,” according to records obtained by The Intercept. The Flint water crisis hit national news in the fall of that year. But in the spring of 2016, internal EPA memos show, the civil rights office was planning to answer the four emails that it deemed complaints but was still deliberating over how to respond to the rest of the pleas for help that had fallen into the black hole of its Title VI inbox.

While the Obama EPA made considerable missteps in its handling of civil rights complaints, it also made some progress, rescinding an EPA proposal that would have eliminated deadlines to address those complaints, and releasing a “toolkit” to improve its enforcement of the civil rights law. Engelman-Lado described the EPA under Obama as both moving too slowly and having an “aspiration to put environmental justice on the agenda.”

The Trump administration has sent a very different message. As Trump’s EPA was closing the remaining cases in the suit, the president proposed zeroing-out funding for the Office of Environmental Justice. There is a chance that some or all of the office’s funding may be restored in the final budget, but the proposed cut sent a clear message, according to Mustafa Ali, one of the founding members of the environmental justice office. “That tells the communities that that office was put in place to serve that they are not valued,” he said. Ali resigned from the EPA in March.

Ali acknowledged that the EPA’s previous efforts to address environmental injustice have been inadequate. “There have never been enough resources in those spaces,” he said. “What’s new is that now there’s actually a strategic plan to dismantle the basic protections that have been in place for years on both the civil rights and environmental side.”

The Exxon Mobil refinery as seen from Gulf States Road, June 6, 2017 in Beaumont, Texas.Image: Todd Spoth/The Intercept.

Although Obama’s EPA failed to clear out the backlog of outstanding environmental civil rights cases, it did make some progress in limiting emissions from refineries. In Beaumont, the biggest changes came as the result of a lawsuit the agency filed against Exxon Mobil over six of its refineries, which resulted in a 2005 consent decree that mandated serious pollution reductions. Those and other changes resulted in a 70 percent overall decrease in emissions from the plant, according to an email from Charlotte Huffaker, a communications adviser at Exxon Mobil. Huffaker emphasized that “over the last 15 years, ExxonMobil Beaumont has invested over $1 billion in environmental performance measures” and that the company continues to invest in environmental improvements.

“Our work and controls, coupled [with] regulatory actions, have been effective in reducing overall emissions,” Huffaker wrote in response to questions from The Intercept. She also pointed out that the company has “installed new clean technologies that were not available back in 2000 which have resulted in great environmental gains” and that Beaumont is not currently on the “watch list,” which TCEQ uses to designate cities with particularly high levels of certain chemicals.

The Charlton-Pollard neighborhood was on the watch list for high levels of benzene from 2004 to 2010, for hydrogen sulfide from 2002 to 2009, and for sulfur dioxide from 2003 to 2016 — making it one of only two Texas neighborhoods the state environmental agency has ever noted as having unsafe levels of all three chemicals.

And while total emissions from the plant have decreased levels of some of the most dangerous chemicals have not — and, in some cases, they have increased. The refinery released almost four times as much of the neurotoxin hydrogen sulfide in 2016 as it did in 2000.

The overall downward trend also masks the fact that emissions have vacillated considerably since the complaint was first filed, sometimes decreasing for several years only to spike later. And the decrease of annual totals doesn’t reflect short-term, high-impact releases, such as the emission of more than 92,000 pounds of sulfur dioxide in just a few hours in February 2016 or 866,000 pounds of VOCs that escaped from the refinery over four days in the fall of 2015.

Permits are supposed to limit emissions and let the public know the level of pollution to which it is exposed. But such unpermitted “upset events,” the result of unplanned releases from faulty equipment, fires, accidents, and flare blasts, significantly add to the pollution in Beaumont and elsewhere. The amount of VOCs emitted by the Exxon Mobil refinery has exceeded its permit limit every year between 2000 and 2016, the last year for which data is available. That year, according to preliminary data, the plant released more than 468,000 pounds of VOCs in unpermitted emissions. In 2012, the Beaumont plant emitted more than three times the amount of hydrogen sulfide and sulfur dioxide than was permitted.

Texas oil companies do pay penalties for permit violations and breaking environmental laws, but only rarely. According to a recent report by the Environmental Integrity Project, between 2010 and 2015, the TCEQ, which is responsible for enforcing the Clean Air Act in Texas, took no action against companies in the vast number of illegal releases of sulfur dioxide, benzene, and other pollutants from upset events. The state imposed penalties for fewer than 3 percent of almost 25,000 events, which together released more than 500 million pounds of air pollution. And enforcement efforts have steadily decreased over the past five years, according to the report. In 2016, the state punished fewer than 1 percent of illegal pollution releases.

Exxon Mobil is not the only company that gets away with violating its permits. And though it emitted 675,000 pounds of pollutants during unpermitted events last year, it’s not the worst offender. The Beaumont refinery ranks second among Texas industrial facilities in terms of how much benzene it emitted above the limit, and fourth in terms of VOCs. But Exxon Mobil’s vast size and wealth compared to the relatively piddling size of the penalties make the company particularly insensitive to the fines.

Consider an enforcement action the state issued in May over Exxon Mobil’s unpermitted release in April 2016 of nearly 2,125 pounds of carbon monoxide, sulfur oxide, nitrogen dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, and VOCs. The plant not only emitted the chemicals, it failed to report the emissions within 24 hours, as the law requires. The fine for both violations was $7,001, an amount unlikely to deter a company valued at $343 billion.

According to an email from TCEQ spokesperson Brian McGovern, “penalties are calculated in accordance with the TCEQ’s Penalty Policy,” which is based on several factors, including the documented impact the violation has on human health or environmental receptors, the duration of the event, and “economic benefit gained.”

The other problem with both permits and tracking violations is that the reported emissions are based on the company’s own estimates, which according to Neil Carman “are totally bogus.” Carman is a chemist and the clean air director for the Lone Star chapter of the Sierra Club. Before that, he worked for the Texas environmental agency for 12 years, inspecting refineries around the state. Carman says that emissions are often reported as averages over time, which means that pollution spikes go unpunished.

Reporting on VOCs is particularly misleading, according to Carman. Regulators require testing for only a few of the hundreds of chemicals in this class. And the few air monitors for them are too far from the plant to pick up emissions. The nearest monitor “is so limited in what it’s measuring as an ambient air monitor that it paints a fraudulent picture for all the emissions from the refinery and chemical plants at Beaumont,” Carman wrote in an email. This means that the official upset reports filed with the state significantly underrepresent the amount of toxins the plant releases.

The state requires companies “to use the best available method to determine and report emissions,” according to the email from TCEQ’s McGovern, which also noted that “the TCEQ network of monitors in the Beaumont area is sited with the intention of measuring ambient air quality over populated regions rather than emissions from specific sources.” According to McGovern, the “Beaumont Downtown monitor, which is located south of the Exxon Mobil Refinery, measures volatile organic compounds, nitrogen oxides, ozone, and sulfur dioxide, in addition to meteorological parameters such as temperature and wind.”

While the mechanisms for measuring pollution call each record of an upset event into question, the total number of events that refineries report is wildly off, according to Josh Kratka, a senior attorney at the National Environmental Law Center. Refineries are required to report relatively large upset events, and the only official way to obtain records of unpermitted releases below a certain level, which presumably pose less risk to the public, is through legal discovery. When Kratka obtained these records over the course of suing Exxon Mobil over its Baytown plant, about an hour west of Beaumont, he found that during an eight-year period, the company reported 350 larger upset events at that plant, but also had almost 4,000 smaller occurences that hadn’t been publicly disclosed. “Even though each individual event might seem insignificant, they can be symptomatic of much bigger underlying problems,” said Kratka, who added that these smaller releases can add up to a significant amount of pollution. Kratka won his suit in April, when a federal court hit Exxon Mobil with a $19.95 million penalty for 16,386 violations of the Clean Air Act. In response to questions from The Intercept, Exxon Mobil’s Huffaker wrote that “the court recognized that none of the events in question actually or potentially harmed public health or the environment,” and that the company was considering an appeal.

  • The new administration has delayed implementing several regulations that would have made life safer in Beaumont.

As CEO of Exxon Mobil, Rex Tillerson already had an outsized influence on government. But not even his appointment as secretary of state signaled how quickly and effectively the Trump administration would retool federal rules and regulations to the benefit of the oil and gas industry — to the detriment of communities like Charlton-Pollard.

In 2015, the Obama administration introduced the Clean Power Plan, which, according to EPA estimates, would have prevented more than 140,000 asthma attacks among children and between 2,700 to 6,600 premature deaths by reducing air pollution. Trump issued an executive order killing the plan in March.

The new administration has also delayed implementing several regulations that would have made life safer in Beaumont. Among them are new chemical safety standards, which EPA administrator Scott Pruitt recently announced would be delayed until 2019. The Obama administration had overhauled the rules in an effort to make plants safer after 15 people died and 180 were injured at another Texas oil refinery.

In June, Pruitt, who had joined oil companies to sue the EPA over lower ozone standards when he was attorney general of Oklahoma, announced that the agency would also delay by a year the reduction of ozone limits. (On August 2, after being sued by 15 states, he backed down.) Pruitt also tried to delay a rule limiting methane emissions, another air pollutant from oil and gas production, but a federal appeals court recently found the move illegal.

Trump’s revival of the Keystone pipeline via executive order in his first week in office will also change Charlton-Pollard. The pipeline is expected to deliver more than 800,000 barrels of oil a day from Canada to Exxon Mobil’s Beaumont plant and other oil refineries on the Gulf Coast.

“A lot of the stuff flowing down the Keystone is really dirty, and air quality in Beaumont will get a lot worse,” said attorney Kelly Haragan. And while greater production also increases the likelihood of flare events, fires, leaks, and other incidents, Haragan, who has helped represent the Charlton-Pollard community on its EPA civil rights case, said she is also bracing for “even less enforcement, less federal attention to the refineries.”

In fact, during the first six months of the Trump administration, there was a 60 percent drop in civil penalties against polluters, according to a report from the Environmental Integrity Project.

Trump’s proposed budget has cut funding for the EPA enforcement office by 40 percent and reduced grants to state enforcement offices by 45 percent. His appointment of a former industry lobbyist to head the federal office, along with several other recent hires at the EPA — including Erik Baptist, a former lobbyist from the American Petroleum Institute, and Dennis Lee Forsgren, both of whom have deep ties to the Keystone pipeline — reinforces the sense that the oil industry has now utterly captured the agency responsible for regulating its activities.

The recent nomination of Michael Dourson to head the EPA’s Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention also bodes ill for the people of Charlton-Pollard. Dourson helped TCEQ set significantly weaker emissions standards for several chemicals emitted by the refinery, including the carcinogens benzene and 1,3 butadiene, according to a 2014 report from Inside Climate News and the Center for Public Integrity. In his new role, Dourson will be in a position to affect a range of policies relating to toxic chemicals, including those emitted from the refinery.

In response to inquiries from The Intercept, the EPA provided a statement that it had issued on May 23, the same day it put out the letter resolving the complaint over the Beaumont refinery, which stated that the agency was “resolving this complaint based on an Informal Resolution Agreement” between TCEQ and the EPA’s External Civil Rights Compliance Office. The statement also said that “ECRCO will now monitor TCEQ’s implementation of this Informal Resolution Agreement to ensure its full implementation. ECRCO will not close this case until this agreement is fully implemented.” The EPA declined to answer specific questions or comment on the issues raised in this article.

The Exxon Mobil refinery as seen from Gulf States Road, June 6, 2017 in Beaumont, Texas. In Charlton-Pollard, flare events in which the flames that usually burn on top of the smoke stacks erupt into smelly belches of fire are regular occurrences.Image: Todd Spoth/The Intercept.

While pollution protections are moving backward, Exxon Mobil is planning to expand its Beaumont operations yet again, increasing the output from its refinery by 40,000 barrels a day and the capacity of its petrochemical plant by 65 percent. According to Exxon Mobil’s Huffaker, the chemical plant expansion “is estimated to generate $20 billion in economic activity in the first 13 years of operation, and it will use best available control technology to minimize emissions. At the peak of construction later this year, the project is expected to employ 1,400 workers in the Beaumont area.”

Huffaker said the company was still “considering” the refinery expansion. If Exxon Mobil does decide to move forward with the plan, the boosted production will result in more than 1 million pounds of air pollution on top of current emissions, according to preliminary paperwork the company filed in order to obtain permits necessary for expansion.

Although Exxon Mobil announced it would expand its operations before the election, in March, Trump tried to take credit for the move. In a video posted on the White House website, Trump announced the expansion as if it were new: “This was something that was done to a large extent because of our policies and the policies of this new administration.”

In the video, Trump pointed to Exxon Mobil’s growth as evidence that “we’re really doing well.” From the perspective of the energy company, that’s an accurate statement. Already the largest oil and gas company in the world, Exxon Mobil’s earnings have surged 122 percent since Trump took office.

It’s hard to argue that the people in Charlton-Pollard are doing really well. Almost everyone I spoke with there had ailments they attributed to the refinery, though it’s all but impossible to prove that the poor air quality caused all these individual illnesses. For Malveaux, who has spent the past two decades working to curb the refinery’s pollution, the prevalence of health problems linked to high levels of air pollution in his community requires no further explanation.

When the children Malveaux teaches in Sunday school have memory problems, which, along with IQ deficits, have been tied to air pollution (especially hydrogen sulfide), he assumes that is the likely cause. “My kids at the church, you can tell them something and, five or six minutes later, they done forgot it,” said Malveaux. “It used to irritate me because I thought they were messing with me, but I’ve come to understand that they really don’t remember.”

Many Charlton-Pollard residents who have seen the lives of friends and family members cut short by cancer, heart disease, and respiratory ailments can’t know for sure what role air pollution played, but they live with the obvious possibility that it was a factor. Charles Trahn, who is 67 and lives down the street from Joseph Gaines, said the air he breathes sometimes has an immediate effect. When there are major emissions events, “it feels like you’re swimming in your own head,” Trahn said. He recently lost his wife to lung cancer.

E.J. Johnson, a good friend of Gaines, is unable to say for sure why health problems have plagued his family. Johnson lost his mother to cancer in her 30s and his grandfather to heart disease in his early 50s. His sister-in-law, who is in her early 40s, recently developed kidney cancer. And Johnson himself, who is 51 and has lived in the neighborhood since he was 10, had a stroke when he was in his 30s and had to use a wheelchair for several years. These days, he can walk unsteadily, but his brain hasn’t fully recovered. “I lost words I would normally know,” Johnson told me. “I lost my education.”

But Johnson said he was fairly sure that his respiratory troubles are a result of the local air quality. “Within a day of leaving here, I breathe and cough up and my sinuses clear out,” he said. “By the time we get back to Beaumont, I can feel my head tightening up.”

According to the EPA’s data, people in the neighborhood have a risk of cancer from air pollution of 54 in a million, which is significantly higher than the national average of between zero and one in a million. But even that considerable number is based on Exxon Mobil’s own estimate of its emissions. Jefferson County, where the refinery is located, has a cancer death rate for African-Americans that is significantly higher than both the state and national rates. But it’s impossible to know Charlton-Pollard’s exact cancer rates, since the neighborhood accounts for less than 1 percent of the county, and the state doesn’t make available cancer statistics for that smaller area.

What’s clear, however, is that air pollution kills. One recent study showed that people who die prematurely from air pollution lose about a decade from their lives, on average. Another study, led by a Harvard professor of biostatistics and published in the New England Journal of Medicine, found that increases in levels of particulate matter and ozone, both of which are elevated in Charlton-Pollard, were associated with increases in all causes of death. The study found that African-Americans are about three times more likely to die from tiny particles in air pollution.

Even small improvements in air quality can make a huge difference; tightening the current limits for particulate emissions by just a single microgram per cubic meter of air (one-twelfth of the current limit) would prevent some 12,000 premature deaths, according to the authors of the Harvard study. Conversely, small increases can cost thousands of lives. By freezing and delaying rules limiting pollution, the Trump administration is quite literally killing thousands of people.

Many residents remain hopeful that the company might purchase their homes, but property records show houses in the area nearest the refinery to be practically worthless.Image: Todd Spoth/The Intercept.

Trump has framed his regulatory rollback as improving the economy. Yet in Charlton-Pollard, the costs of pollution can be measured in both dollars and lives. Health and environmental problems depress property values, making it harder for homeowners to sell without sacrificing their life savings, which in turn means that the people most likely to remain there are those with the least resources. And these beleaguered residents are the least able to combat the siting or expansion of industrial projects.

The dynamic helps explain why the poor and people of color experience more exposure to pollution. Both African-Americans and Latinos are more likely than whites to live near the country’s 149 refineries. One 2012 studyfrom Yale looked at 14 toxins in air pollution and found that African-Americans had higher exposure levels than whites for 13 of those compounds, while Latinos had the highest levels of pollution overall.

Ivan Frederick, whose two-bedroom house is a couple hundred feet from the refinery fence line, has had a front-row seat to his neighborhood’s environmental and economic decline. “All this property has become cheaper and cheaper,” he said, gesturing to the vacant houses and empty lots on his block. Frederick, 64, understands what might have driven his neighbors to leave. At least once a day, intense smells make it impossible to sit on his porch. While the “funky air,” as he calls it, lingers, he can’t run his air conditioner or window fan, which would bring it into the house. So sometimes he’s stuck inside with no way to beat the heat.

As soon as he moved in 18 years ago, Frederick began feeling nauseous and getting headaches when the smells descended. Although these acute symptoms have subsided over the past few years, he has since developed chronic health problems. By 57, he had experienced three heart attacks and developed serious respiratory problems.

Frederick owns his home and could theoretically sell it. But it’s hard to find anyone who wants to buy a house inundated daily with air pollution. Several years ago, Exxon Mobil extended the boundary of its property and bought all the houses in the two blocks nearest the refinery. Many residents remain hopeful that the company might purchase their homes, too. Frederick said he hasn’t received an offer, but in any case he’s heard the company doesn’t pay much for houses. One person I spoke with said his neighbors had sold their house to Exxon Mobil for $11,000. Property records show houses in the area nearest the refinery to be practically worthless.

Back when they first filed their civil rights complaint with the EPA, Frederick was one of hundreds of Charlton-Pollard residents who used to show up at community meetings to talk about how to limit pollution from the refinery. But as time passed and there was no response from the EPA, the excitement began to wane.

In an email, spokesperson Huffaker emphasized Exxon Mobil’s history of community involvement — citing its contributions to the United Way of Beaumont and its participation in local business groups — but Malveaux experienced the company’s philanthropy differently, believing that its largesse focused on community members who supported it.

Malveaux believes some community members stopped coming to meetings because they feared getting on the wrong side of the powerful company. Others, he said, were too consumed with the demands of everyday life. “We’re talking about people making $8, $9 an hour just to keep the lights on and food on the table.” But he admits that time may be what really dampened the fight in Charlton-Pollard.

“It was a drip, drip,” said Malveaux, “People stopped getting interested because nothing got better. They didn’t see any tangible results after complaining about the same things year after year. Eventually, over time, they just decided it wasn’t worth it.”

And so perhaps it wasn’t surprising that only three people showed up when Malveaux and a Lone Star Legal Aid attorney named Colin Cox held a community meeting last spring about Exxon Mobil’s latest effort to amend its permit to allow for greater production at its Beaumont plant. Nor was it surprising that Joseph Gaines, Rebecca Thibeaux, and Ivan Frederick were among the many people who skipped it.

“No matter how much you protest, you’re spinning your wheels. They got the power. It’s called money,” said Frederick. “At the end of the day, they’re going to do what they want to do.”

This article was reported in partnership with The Investigative Fund at the Nation Institute.