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Air, Water Groups Rally Ahead of U.S. Steel Merger

Environmental advocates from the Mon Valley are calling for Nippon Steel to update pollution measures

By Danielle M. Smith - Public News Service
The Tube City Almanac
April 12, 2024
Posted in: State & Region

(Photo courtesy Breathe Project via Keystone State News Connection)

People working for environmental justice are rallying today at the downtown Pittsburgh headquarters of U.S. Steel, voicing their concerns to company shareholders about creating a healthier future in the Monongahela Valley region.

Japan's Nippon Steel is buying U.S. Steel for more than $14 billion.

Former Duquesne Mayor Nickole Nesby, an environmental-justice organizer with the group 412Justice, said the asthma rate in the Mon Valley is four to five times higher than the national average. She pointed out they're being left out of important conversations about the sale and are urging better health protections.

“We are actually gathering to demand a seat at the table,” she said. "We — the communities which have been impacted by the pollutants for decades — have not had a seat at the table. Our voice needs to be heard.”

U.S. Steel has had a presence in the Mon Valley since its founding in 1901 and currently employs more than 3,000 workers. Nesby said the sale isn’t supposed to affect local employment, as U.S. Steel has said it will keep the contract as it currently exists.

U.S. Steel’s Mon Valley Works, which includes the Clairton Coke Works, is the biggest coke plant in the country.

NaTisha Washington, communications manager for the Breathe Project, said the plants have a long history of breaking air-quality rules and facing complaints. She added that the plants keep getting fined for exceeding pollution limits — and even have trouble getting new permits.

“There is no transparency with the communities about these air quality days being bad,” she said. “No protections, no resources like air filters, or anything that's supporting residents that are affected by these bad-air days.”

Washington added that money is being put into a clean-air fund and a Community Benefit Trust. But there has been no visible improvement to community health so far. She noted many Mon Valley residents are feeling the impacts of either poor air or water quality.


Danielle M. Smith is a producer for Public News Service, where this story first appeared. An award-winning radio journalist/personality with more than a decade of experience in broadcast media, she is a former audio journalist with American Urban Radio Networks and Sheridan Broadcasting Networks who also hosts a weekly community affairs show “Good News” on WGBN (1360 AM/98.9 FM).

Originally published April 12, 2024.

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