Skip to content

Community Health Overlay

Health Burden in Port-Adjacent Communities

Port emissions don't affect all communities equally. The health impact of the Port of Mobile's operations falls disproportionately on Africatown, Prichard, and Chickasaw — communities that have borne cumulative environmental burden from paper mills, chemical plants, and sequential port expansions for over a century.

← Back to Port of Mobile Overview

Community-Led Engagement

Africatown residents — direct descendants of the last Africans forcibly brought to America aboard the Clotilda (1860) — have documented the environmental burden of this port since long before the emergence of academic environmental justice frameworks. Any site-specific assessment is conducted through community-led engagement coordinated with Africatown Heritage House and the Clotilda Descendants Association.


Data Sources

Source Publisher Data Provided Access
CDC PLACES CDC Census-tract-level health estimates cdc.gov/places
EJScreen EPA Environmental justice screening indicators by census tract ejscreen.epa.gov
Alabama Department of Public Health ADPH Community health assessments, disease surveillance alabamapublichealth.gov
American Community Survey U.S. Census Bureau Demographics, income, poverty, housing by census tract census.gov
Toxics Release Inventory EPA Facility-level chemical releases — 35+ facilities in Mobile County epa.gov/toxics-release-inventory-tri-program

Full Assessment Available

The complete analysis for this section — including census-tract-level health quantification, monetized health damages, environmental justice scoring, and scenario modeling — is available through our research services.

See the full methodology in action: Our Duluth-Superior assessment and New York/New Jersey assessment demonstrate the complete analytical depth available for every port on this site.

Contact us to discuss a site-specific assessment for this port community: research@porthealthwatch.org

View Services & Investment →