The ways we are – and aren’t – adapting to this new reality.
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Photo courtesy of Bill Tripp
It’s fire season across the West.
Well, it’s actually always fire season here now, thanks to climate change. And as massive conflagrations spread across California and the Western United States, this week’s Reveal episode ([link removed]) digs into the ways we are – and aren’t – adapting to this new reality.
The episode features three stories:
* First, we investigate how government officials in California’s wine and dairy country have allowed agriculture businesses to bring workers back into evacuation zones, with little training or oversight. This segment is a partnership with the Food & Environment Reporting Network ([link removed]) and the podcast and radio show World Affairs. ([link removed])
* Second, we meet Bill Tripp, that fellow in the yellow jacket and white hard hat in the above photo. As a member of the Karuk Tribe, Tripp has built a career around trying to get agencies to carefully set controlled burns, like his grandmother taught him when he was 4 years old. But in the 1800s, authorities outlawed traditional burning practices. Today, the impact of that policy is clear: The land is overgrown, and there has been a major fire in the region every year for the past decade, including one that destroyed half the homes in the Karuk’s largest town, Happy Camp, and killed two people. Tripp has spent 30 years trying to restore “good fire” to the region but still faces resistance from the U.S. Forest Service and others. This story comes from our partners at public radio station KQED in San Francisco.
* Lastly, Reveal’s Elizabeth Shogren examines why the Forest Service hasn’t fully embraced using prescribed burns, even though it changed its policy to expand their use a dozen years ago.
Listen to the episode: Fighting Fire With Fire ([link removed])
The truth won’t reveal itself. Help us deliver the stories that make a difference. Donate today ([link removed]) .
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Credit: The Markup
The Secret Bias Behind Mortgages
In 2018, our groundbreaking investigation, Kept Out, showed that modern-day redlining persisted in more than 60 metropolitan areas across the country. Our data analysis was clear: People of color were being denied loans, even when we controlled for applicants’ income, loan amount and neighborhood.
Now, Emmanuel Martinez, one of the reporters on that project, is out with a new story that examines one of the central explanations that the mortgage industry gave for the disparities.
He’s now at the nonprofit newsroom The Markup, and he teamed up with reporter Lauren Kirchner. Newly available data they analyzed not only failed to eliminate racial disparities in loan denials, it highlighted new devastating ones.
Here’s what they found:
* Across the country, mortgage lenders were 40% more likely to turn down Latino applicants for loans, 50% more likely to deny Asian/Pacific Islander applicants, 70% more likely to deny Native American applicants and 80% more likely to deny Black applicants than similar White applicants.
* Lenders gave fewer loans to Black applicants than White applicants even when their incomes were high – $100,000 a year or more – and had the same debt ratios.
* The racial disparities existed across many cities. For example, Black applicants in Chicago were 150% more likely to be denied by financial institutions than similar White applicants there. Native American applicants in Minneapolis were 100% more likely to be denied by financial institutions than similar White applicants there.
Read the story: Denied: The Secret Bias Hidden in Mortgage-Approval Algorithms ([link removed])
Read the 2018 investigation: Kept Out: For People of Color, Banks Are Shutting the Door to Homeownership ([link removed])
The Impact of Texas’s Abortion Laws
As of last week, abortions beyond six weeks of pregnancy are illegal in Texas. The new law takes a vigilante approach to enforcement, with the state offering a $10,000 reward ([link removed]) to people who turn in anyone associated with providing an abortion – from doctors to Uber drivers who drive patients to clinics.
In 2020, we created a comic about a Texas woman who was forced to drive across state lines to get an abortion because of the the state’s restrictive abortion laws. The comic, illustrated by Thi Bui, is based on the court testimony of an anonymous college student who shared her story as part of a Planned Parenthood lawsuit against Gov. Greg Abbott. As Texas’ six-week ban goes into effect, many more people will likely have to drive to other states to seek abortions.
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Illustration by Thi Bui
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Illustration by Thi Bui
Read Jane Doe’s story here: ‘I was forced to drive across the country during a pandemic just to get health care.’ ([link removed])
This newsletter was written by Sarah Mirk. Drop her a line (mailto:
[email protected]?subject=weekly%20reveal%20feedback) with feedback and ideas.
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