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Generation Climate Is Making The Crisis An Issue In Local Elections

In September, the Almeda fire killed three people and burned nearly 3,000 homes in a region of Oregon already grappling with an affordable housing shortage. (Photo: Nathan Howard via Getty Images)
In September, the Almeda fire killed three people and burned nearly 3,000 homes in a region of Oregon already grappling with an affordable housing shortage. (Photo: Nathan Howard via Getty Images)

Published in partnership with Drilled News.

Environmentalists and organic farmers in southwestern Oregon’s Josephine County launched a grassroots effort to ban local cultivation of genetically modified plants in 2013. They collected enough signatures to put the ban on the ballot and fought back when Big Ag corporations like Monsanto and Syngenta shoveled money into a campaign to defeat them. In May 2014, voters passed the ban in a 58% to 42% landslide.

“It was an amazing win for the community,” recalled Vanessa Ogier, a 28-year-old Josephine County climate activist who supported the ballot measure.

But the triumph was brief: In 2015, commercial sugar beet farmers sued the county, which delayed enforcing the ban. In 2017, the Oregon Court of Appeals blocked the measure entirely, ruling that a state law prohibiting county-level bans on genetically modified organisms made it impossible to enforce.

“That radicalized me,” Ogier said. “That’s when I realized that we need climate sympathizers inside the government to get any serious work done.”

According to a December 2019 national survey, conducted for the U.S. Conference of Mayors by John Zogby Strategies, 74% of voters ages 18-29 want state and local governments to do more about climate change, especially in the face of the Trump administration’s denial of the crisis and its rollbacks of Obama-era climate policies. For the past few years, tens of thousands of young people have been turning out at marches, sit-ins and demonstrations to demand that elected officials take climate action.

In 2020, many young people decided to bring the youth climate movement indoors as well. Across the country, they’re running to replace the sorts of local lawmakers who have long downplayed, denied or ignored their demands on a host of progressive reforms, including climate action.

The candidates this year include Nicole Hamm, a 27-year-old accountant and nonprofit volunteer who is running for a seat on the Jacksonville City Council in Florida, and Rayonte Bell, a 22-year-old community activist on the ballot in Michigan for the Berrien County Board of Commissioners. In Oregon, Ogier hopes to become the youngest person on the city council of Grants Pass, the Josephine County seat.

It’s different when people start to see [climate change] affecting their pockets and their well-being. They can’t avoid it anymore. Nicole Hamm, who is running for the Jacksonville City Council in Florida

Campaigning on climate change in conservative-leaning towns and counties might not seem like the best way to get elected. But each of these candidates believes that voters are ready for local action on climate-aligned issues like resilient infrastructure, clean drinking water and environmental justice.

The effects of climate change are obvious in Grants Pass. In September, the Almeda fire, which started just 30 miles south of the city, killed three people and burned nearly 3,000 homes in a region already grappling with an affordable housing shortage.

Ogier fears this is only a taste of what’s to come if the city council doesn’t start to take decisive climate action. “We will continue to be plagued by droughts, wildfires and smoke, a lack of snowpack in our mountains, and warming rivers,” she said. “We need to recognize these trends and adapt to them.”

Josephine County is a Republican stronghold where twice as many voters cast ballots for Donald Trump as for Hillary Clinton in 2016.

“Climate is not even a conversation” on the Grants Pass City Council, said Ogier.

But she is campaigning nonetheless on measures to help residents adapt to the region’s increasingly hotter summers and more destructive wildfires. Ogier advocates expanding sustainable housing, developing an “energy action plan” that would reduce the city’s carbon emissions and building a system of shelters to protect people without housing from extreme temperatures.

Across the country in Jacksonville, Hamm shares Ogier’s hope of flipping a seat in a Republican stronghold. Her district has not elected a Democrat to the city council since 2003. But voters have been responsive to her ideas for climate action, she said, which include developing urban green spaces, protecting local waterways from pollution, and investing in resilient infrastructure to defend local homes and businesses from flooding caused by rising sea levels.

“It’s different when people start to see [climate change] affecting their pockets and their well-being,” Hamm said. “They can’t avoid it anymore.”

Hamm also wants to tackle environmental racism in Jacksonville’s northwest quadrant, where communities of color have long lived with failing septic tanks that pollute their local drinking water supply. “When you drive over the bridge there, you can smell the water and sewage,” she said.

Sewage spills are becoming common across Florida, often prompted by extreme weather events. When Hurricane Matthew caused multiday power outages in Jacksonville in 2016, sewer system overflows dumped an estimated 11 million gallons of raw sewage onto neighborhood streets and into local waterways. Increasingly heavy rainfall, also the result of climate change, has at times overwhelmed the area’s sewers.

So Hamm is also calling for restoring overgrown and inoperable storm drains as part of her overall plan to create climate-resilient infrastructure.

When I talk to community members, they’re like, ‘Yeah, we’d love to see the erosion stop and our water quality better.’ Rayonte Bell, a candidate for the Berrien County Board of Commissioners in Michigan

Similar issues and disparities are present in the Berrien County area where Bell is running for a seat on the board of commissioners. The Michigan county sits on the southeastern shore of Lake Michigan, where the mean water level in July 2019 measured six feet higher than it had just six years earlier — a result of years of warmer temperatures leading to wetter-than-normal conditions, likely due to climate change. The rising lake levels have created new flooding risks for local homes and businesses.

County residents have also long contended with poor air and water quality, aggravated by decades of poor regulation of the region’s manufacturing industries. A 2017 report from the state’s Department of Environmental Quality revealed that several cities in the county had drinking water lead levels that were the same or higher than those in Flint, Michigan.

Bell advocates investing in climate-resilient infrastructure and otherwise pursuing sustainable solutions for these increasingly complex climate impacts and environmental problems.

“Using environmentally safe practices is the best approach” to these problems, he said. “Rather than trying to put a band-aid on them, we need to think long term.”

The city with the worst water quality in Berrien County according to the 2017 report was Benton Harbor, a majority Black community located just a few miles north of where Bell is campaigning in St. Joseph.

“We need to acknowledge and address that inequity,” Bell said. “If we don’t, Black people are going to continue to be the most vulnerable to climate change.”

Bell credits conversations with other young Michigan Democrats for his decision to get into electoral politics. Joey Andrews, a 2018 candidate for the Michigan House of Representatives, suggested that he run for the county board. Chokwe Pitchford, a current candidate for the Michigan House, has also helped shape his campaign.

Although conservative white men have historically dominated the board, Bell said voters are responding positively to his climate action platform. “When I talk to community members, they’re like, ‘Yeah, we’d love to see the erosion stop and our water quality better,’” he said.

Bell acknowledges that voters also tell him they’re concerned about the costs, but he said, “I think, for the most part, we’re working towards the same goals. And I think that’s what matters most.”

Ogier, Hamm and Bell are all in challenging races. But each is hopeful that voters will set aside partisan politics in this election and unite behind climate action.

As the local and regional impacts become impossible to ignore, Bell said, “people want to see someone” in local office “fighting on their behalf against climate change.”

We want to know what you’re hearing on the ground from the candidates. If you get any interesting ― or suspicious! ― campaign mailers, robocalls or hear anything else you think we should know about, email us at scoops@huffpost.com.

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This article originally appeared on HuffPost and has been updated.