Mount Vernon’s Dirty Secret: Toxic Smoke and Black Political Neglect

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For years, a silent environmental crime has been unfolding in Mount Vernon, New York. Residents have witnessed a continuous plume of smoke rising from an industrial site that should never have been permitted so close to homes, schools, and playgrounds. Behind that smoke lies a deeper truth — a majority-Black city, led by Black elected officials, is being poisoned by the very system claiming to protect it. The urgency of this situation cannot be overstated.

The Poison in the Air

What’s burning inside Mount Vernon’s city limits is more than waste — it’s the health of an entire community. The alleged incineration of medical waste releases a cocktail of toxins: dioxins, mercury, lead, and microscopic ash that embeds deep into human lungs. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), these pollutants are among the most dangerous substances on earth, linked to cancer, reproductive damage, and immune system failure.

These poisons don’t vanish when the smoke clears. They settle into soil, drift through open windows, and cling to the same playgrounds where our children play. Even at trace levels, they damage the human body over time — invisible, odorless, and deadly.

Racism by ZIP Code — Enforced by Black Elected Officials

Mount Vernon’s leadership has perfected a tragic political art: delivering speeches about equity while turning a blind eye to the suffering in their own backyard. This is not just an environmental issue — it’s a profound betrayal of the community’s trust and well-being.

For decades, Mount Vernon’s majority-Black residents have endured sewage backups, toxic flooding, lead contamination, and crumbling infrastructure. Now, poisonous air joins the list — and still, City Hall remains silent. Complaints have been filed, agencies have been contacted, but enforcement never comes.

Let’s call it what it is: racism by ZIP code, sustained not by white supremacy from the outside, but by political complacency from within. The silence of Black elected officials — the same ones who campaign on justice, health, and equality — is not just disappointing, it’s deadly.

If this facility were located in Scarsdale or Bronxville, it would have been shut down overnight. But because it’s Mount Vernon — where property values are lower and political accountability weaker — the community is left to choke. The problem isn’t a lack of awareness. It’s a lack of courage.

Health Disparities and the Hospital That Never Was

Mount Vernon’s health crisis didn’t start with the smoke — it’s the latest chapter in a long story of neglect. The city of over 80,000 residents does not have a full-functioning hospital. Let that sink in. A town that once had one of Westchester County’s most respected hospitals now sends its sick and elderly miles away for emergency care, a situation that deeply impacts the community.

For years, Mount Vernon Hospital has been stripped down, neglected, and dismantled while local politicians offered photo ops instead of solutions. Ambulances race to New Rochelle or the Bronx while residents in cardiac arrest, labor, or trauma lose precious minutes — sometimes their lives.

This collapse has profound racial consequences. The New York State Health Equity Report shows Mount Vernon has higher preventable hospitalization rates and elevated premature deaths before age 65 compared to other Westchester communities. Residents experience excess mortality from heart disease, stroke, and diabetes, according to the New York State Nurses Association. These are not random statistics — they are the predictable results of systemic neglect.

Meanwhile, wealthier, majority-white cities like Scarsdale and Bronxville — less than 10 minutes away — have thriving hospitals and better access to specialists. Montefiore’s own restructuring widened these disparities, quietly closing services in Mount Vernon while expanding in White Plains.

This is not just poor planning. It’s political apartheid with Black faces — a system where elected officials who look like the community still govern with the same disregard as those who once ignored us from afar. The color changed, but the conditions didn’t.

Black leadership that tolerates a city without a hospital, with poisoned air, broken sewers, and neglected housing, is not leadership — it’s betrayal. This is institutional abandonment under Black management, and it must be called what it is: political apartheid dressed in diversity.

When Representation Becomes Neglect

The painful irony is that Mount Vernon’s leadership looks like its residents, yet governs like absentee landlords. Representation without responsibility is hollow. The city’s Black leadership inherited the same broken system and chose to maintain it — favoring political alliances and contracts over clean air and safe neighborhoods.

When elected officials treat public health as a political inconvenience, they forfeit moral legitimacy. Authentic leadership means standing up to corporate polluters, demanding transparency, and protecting the people — not posing for photo ops while the community coughs.

The Law and the Liability

Under New York State environmental law, burning medical waste in residential areas requires permits, emission scrubbers, and continuous monitoring. If those conditions are not met, both the company and the city could violate state and federal law. The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) and the EPA have the power to intervene — but they must first be forced to look where local leadership refuses to act.

Environmental justice means more than slogans and hashtags. It means equal enforcement of the law, regardless of a person’s ZIP code or skin color.

A Crisis in Plain Sight

Mount Vernon has become a case study in political hypocrisy. Its residents are told to take pride in diversity while breathing the byproducts of negligence. Every day that smoke rises, it symbolizes not just environmental decay, but moral decay — a leadership class that’s forgotten who it serves.

This is not a nuisance. It’s a public-health emergency, and it needs to be treated as such.

This is not an oversight. It’s organized neglect.

The question isn’t whether Mount Vernon is being poisoned — the question is why those in power, who look like the people, are letting it happen.

Environmental Justice for Mount Vernon — Not Just a Hashtag

If Mount Vernon’s leaders won’t act, the community must. The next step is not another speech or social media campaign — it’s a community-led health audit. This is an opportunity for us, the residents, to take control of our health and our future.

A community-led health audit puts the power to investigate and expose in the hands of the people. It means organizing residents, doctors, and environmental scientists to conduct independent air, soil, and water testing — making results public and undeniable. It means tracking asthma, cancer, and respiratory illness rates by ZIP code and comparing them with those in Scarsdale, Bronxville, and White Plains. This audit has the potential to not only reveal the extent of the problem but also to hold those responsible accountable.

When the community gathers its own data, it can no longer be ignored. It becomes evidence — the kind that forces action from the DEC, the EPA, and Albany.

This is what environmental justice looks like: truth owned by the people, not managed by politicians. Mount Vernon can no longer afford silence disguised as leadership.

The air is toxic, the hospital is gone, and the people are suffering — all under the watch of those who promised change.

This is not just neglect.

This is political apartheid by Black faces in power.

And it’s time for the people to take back the right to breathe.

DAMON K JONES
DAMON K JONEShttps://damonkjones.com
A multifaceted personality, Damon is an activist, author, and the force behind Black Westchester Magazine, a notable Black-owned newspaper based in Westchester County, New York. With a wide array of expertise, he wears many hats, including that of a Spiritual Life Coach, Couples and Family Therapy Coach, and Holistic Health Practitioner. He is well-versed in Mental Health First Aid, Dietary and Nutritional Counseling, and has significant insights as a Vegan and Vegetarian Nutrition Life Coach. Not just limited to the world of holistic health and activism, Damon brings with him a rich 32-year experience as a Law Enforcement Practitioner and stands as the New York Representative of Blacks in Law Enforcement of America.

1 COMMENT

  1. Thank you so much for pointing out the obvious black centric bigotry, hypocrisy and neglect by our elected officials led by the Mayor, SHP. This Mayor initially campaigned on stopping the closure of Mt. Vernon hospital by vilifying Montefiore and preventing their plans ($15 million investment) to build a state of art emergency room and health center on Sanford Blvd that would have provided a much needed safety net for our citizens. Instead of coming to table to negotiate with Montefiore in good faith to ensure that the proposed new facility design was adequate she played politics with zero concern for the public’s safety and well-being.

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