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The Detroit Journalism Cooperative is an integrated community media network providing insight on the issues facing Detroit. It features two radio stations, an online magazine, five ethnic newspapers, and a public television station-- All working together to tell the story of Detroit.The DJC includes Michigan Radio, Bridge Magazine, Detroit Public Television, WDET, and New Michigan Media. To see all the stories produced for the DJC, visit The Intersection website.Scroll below to see DJC stories from Michigan Radio and other selected stories from our partners.

Toxic Town: Michigan's most polluted zip code

Bill Kobuta
A neighborhood called Boynton has the zip code 48217, also known as the most polluted place in Michigan.

Usually, with a new playground, library or community center comes a dedication ceremony with speeches by local leaders. It might even make front page news.

But an air monitoring station? Yes, an air monitoring station installed in a part of Southwest Detroit is cause for celebration.

In Boynton, a predominately African American neighborhood, now better known for its zip code, 48217, has been deemed the most toxic place in Michigan.

Professor Paul Mohai of the University of Michigan’s School of Natural Resources and Environment looked at data from the Environmental Protection Agency’s Toxic Release Inventory and charted the most polluted areas on a map.

Mohai points it out on his computer screen, “You can definitely see ground zero so to speak and where that hotspot is.” In the middle of the eight most polluted zip codes in the Detroit area sits 48217.

The air monitor installed by the state’s Department of Environmental Quality could help better understand just what, and how many different pollutants the people living there are breathing.

Combine some steel mills, an oil refinery, a wastewater treatment facility, a coal burning power plant operating for decades and a constant parade of trucks, the residents of 48217 believe they have very serious cause for concern.

Getting the air monitor in place was a struggle. It came only after an effort led by three women, environmental activists who took it upon themselves to study the law, learn the science and navigate the politics to try to make their neighborhood a better place to live.

“We have a toxic soup down here,” says Theresa Landrum, one of the activists, who’s lived in the area all her life. “What is the byproduct of all these chemicals mixing in the air? If they find out one is toxic, then they find out two is toxic, when you combine two toxic things, isn’t that a toxic monster?”

It should be noted that company operating the oil refinery says it causes only three percent of the air emissions problems in 48217. Meanwhile, the coal burning power plant is slated to close by 2023 as part of that company’s effort to reduce its carbon footprint and says it has continued reduce toxic emissions in recent years.

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