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Rail Merger Aims to Enhance Urban Quality of Life By Hazel Trice Edney

Feb. 13, 2026

Trucking pollution

Istock photo: Shaunl

(Trice Edney News Wire) - America’s freight rail network is more than an economic engine. It is a force that shapes daily life in the cities across America where people live, work, raise their families and breathe the air.

From Chicago to Kansas City, from Memphis to Houston, New Orleans, and beyond, the flow of goods across our rail lines and highways affects neighborhoods, streets and communities. A large part of that impact - whether economic, health or otherwise - lands squarely and disparately upon African-Americans and other racial minorities, the poor and underrepresented.

The price of shipping those goods also has a direct impact on affordability and our standard of living. Transportation is built into the cost of almost everything people buy, from groceries and clothing to building materials and fuel. When freight moves more efficiently, families feel the difference. It is time to see freight rail policy not just as a business or logistics issue but as a matter of community health, urban quality of life and fair opportunity for all.

Our nation’s freight rail system grew over generations largely because of geography. It connected the Gulf of Mexico to the Midwest and the Atlantic to the nation’s interior. Large inland hubs such as Chicago became vital crossroads for shipments of food, fuel, building materials and manufactured goods. Those cities built jobs and prosperity around freight activity. But they also inherited the burden of congestion and pollution.

Chicago is the most visible example, but it is not the only one. In congested freight corridors across the country, thousands of short-haul truck trips clog urban expressways and local roads each day. That is because the current rail system requires many freight shipments to hop between carriers and terminals before reaching their final destination. Analysts estimate that in the Chicago region alone roughly one million rail shipments per year are hauled by truck between intermodal facilities to speed transfers across the city. 

Those truck trips are not abstract numbers. They translate into steep costs for families in freight corridor communities. Trucks add to rush hour traffic. They wear down local roads and bridges. In neighborhoods located near intermodal yards and major freight arteries they contribute to elevated levels of diesel exhaust. This is not just inconvenience. It is an environmental injustice. Many of the neighborhoods that carry the heaviest freight burdens are working-class communities that have done little to cause the problem but experience its worst effects.

We can do better. A proposed merger between two major rail carriers presents a chance to address these long-standing structural problems in the freight network. The goal is to integrate routes so that thousands of interline handoffs become unified single-line service from one end of the country to the other. That matters because it reduces the need for rail traffic to be transferred between different companies and terminals, which in turn means fewer truck transfers between facilities.

A more unified rail network would improve service reliability. It would reduce unnecessary truck traffic. It would ease congestion on urban roadways that already strain under commuter and freight volumes. Residents would experience shorter travel times, fewer diesel emissions and cleaner air near their homes and schools.

The environmental difference between rail and truck freight is not small. Federal transportation data shows that freight rail can move a ton of goods more than three times farther on a gallon of fuel than long haul trucking. On average, rail produces roughly 70 to 75 percent fewer greenhouse gas emissions per ton mile than trucks. Each container that shifts from highway to rail reduces fuel use and lowers carbon output. For cities that sit along major freight routes, that shift can translate into measurable air quality gains over time, especially in neighborhoods already burdened by diesel traffic.

The benefits of a more efficient freight rail system extend beyond urban quality of life. Reliable freight movement supports local economies. Midwest manufacturers, agricultural producers and Gulf Coast ports depend on timely shipments to remain competitive. When freight moves smoothly by rail, local businesses can lower their transportation costs and operate with greater certainty.

Research shows that increases in trucking costs tend to result in higher consumer prices than similar increases in rail costs. Rail helps stabilize consumer prices and acts as a buffer against freight cost shocks. When more freight moves efficiently by rail, transportation costs fall across supply chains for groceries, construction materials, energy products and consumer goods. Those savings do not stay on paper. They move through the system and show up in the prices families pay. Lower freight friction supports more stable prices and helps protect household budgets from sudden shipping cost spikes.

Leadership from rail labor also matters. The nation’s largest rail labor union, SMART-TD, fully supports the merger because they see benefits for the thousands of workers at Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern. When workers who understand daily rail operations support integration, it signals that the changes may improve career opportunities and system stability rather than weaken them. This is not blind faith in corporate deals. It is recognition that efficient infrastructure supports both workers and communities.

We have seen what happens when legacy freight systems struggle under modern demand. Cities such as Chicago illustrate the consequences of a network that requires frequent handoffs and redundant transfers. Those inefficiencies push freight onto already crowded highways where trucks must fill the gaps. The result is more congestion and more pollution in urban neighborhoods that can least afford it.

Policy makers should consider freight rail not only in terms of corporate strategy or industry structure but in terms of community impact. Freight policy is urban policy. Decisions about how our rail networks are organized affect daily life across the country. A pro-efficiency rail merger is not just about joining companies. It is about reducing unnecessary truck traffic in our cities, improving air quality for residents, and strengthening the reliability of a system that supports jobs and commerce nationwide.

For too long freight growth has been measured only in tons and schedules.

It must also be measured in cleaner air, safer roads and healthier communities. Our cities, our families and our neighborhoods deserve nothing less.

Black Student Loan Default Rate Five Times Higher than Whites By Charlene Crowell

January 15, 2026
 
BlackStudentLoanBill
(TriceEdneyWire.com) - On behalf of the nearly 9 million people who are now in default on their student loans, a coalition of advocates from consumer, civil rights, and education organizations are appealing to the federal Education Department to halt its plans to begin garnishing borrower wages this month. Default status connotes borrowers are 270 days or more behind on their payments.
Citing new research from Protect Borrowers, formerly the Student Borrower Protection Center, the coalition advised Education Secretary Linda McMahon in a January 7 letter that a new student loan default occurred every nine seconds in 2025. That escalating rate is unprecedented, and is  nearly three times worse than in 2019the year prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Further, according to the advocates, the Trump administration’s student loan policies are disproportionately harming Black and older borrowers. Signing the joint letter of appeal were:   Protect Borrowers, American Federation of Teachers, the Debt Collective, NAACP, National Education Association, the Student Debt Crisis Center, and Young Invincibles.
“Research shows that involuntary collections only exacerbate the economic challenges faced by defaulted borrowers, who are disproportionately seniors and Black borrowers,” wrote the coalition. “In fact, of the borrowers already in default, roughly a third of them are older borrowers. Black graduates are additionally five times more likely to default than their white peers.”
Additionally, and according to Protect Borrowers, nearly two-thirds of the borrowers who defaulted during the Trump Administration—more than 2.6 million people—live in states that President Trump won in the 2024 election. Among the states most severely affected were Florida, Georgia, Ohio, and Texas, each of which saw 100,000 or more borrowers default last year. 
“The decision to resume wage garnishment against millions of borrowers amidst a growing affordability crisis crushing working families is calloused and unnecessary,” continued the coalition. “The decision also comes at a time when struggling borrowers have been forced to wait amidst a nearly 1 million application backlog to enroll in an Income-Driven Repayment (IDR) plan, and as mass layoffs at the Department have made it even harder for borrowers to get help with their student loans or if they are experiencing issues with their student loan servicer.”
For Derrick Johnson, President and CEO of the NAACP, the nation’s oldest civil rights organization, the Trump administration policies are about financial rights.
“By garnishing wages for defaulted student loan borrowers, the Trump Administration will only deepen financial hardship for working families and disproportionately harm Black borrowers,” said Johnson. “Millions are already struggling with rising costs and economic uncertainty, and stripping wages will only push families further into financial crisis.”
Randi Weingarten, President of the American Federation of Teachers, agreed with Johnson: “This is not about borrowers’ responsibility; it’s outright hostility to the young people trying to get ahead. The Trump Administration is choosing to squeeze teachers, nurses and others while prices are increasing and families are struggling to stay afloat, ripping away wages and tax refunds when people need them most.”
fact sheet developed by the Center for Responsible Lending tracks key 2025 policy decisions that summarize the Education Department’s actions taken against student loan borrowers. These include:
  • In March 2025, the Department cut nearly half its workforce, with the Federal Student Aid office and Office for Civil Rights among the hardest hit. With Federal Student Aid’s servicing and community outreach infrastructures dismantled, systemic servicing errors are less likely to be caught or corrected, leaving borrowers with fewer avenues for help just as major loan policy changes are being rolled out.
  • In May 2025, the Department reinstated the Treasury Offset Program, allowing the government to seize tax refunds from borrowers in default.
  • On August 1, 2025, the Department of Education restarted interest accrual for borrowers with Department of Education loans in the SAVE forbearance. Since 2023, SAVE’s unpaid interest shielded borrowers from balance growth. With that protection gone, borrowers’ balances will now grow during this forbearance and may keep rising if monthly payments do not fully cover accrued interest. This shift makes repayment harder and adds long-term uncertainty for more than 7 million borrowers.
Beginning July 1, 2026, parents who take out new Parent PLUS loans will no longer be eligible for any income-driven repayment plan. That means no access to income-contingent repayment (ICR) or repayment assistance plan (RAP)  leaving the standard repayment plan as their only choice. Borrowers with existing Parent PLUS loans can preserve access to ICR if they consolidate their loans before the July 1, 2026, deadline.
“As safeguards are rolled back and oversight weakens, borrowers face growing balances and greater financial strain, making it urgent to press for stronger policies that preserve the promise of higher education as a pathway to opportunity,” concluded CRL.
Charlene Crowell is a senior fellow with the Center for Responsible Lending. She can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it." data-linkindex="3">This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Dr. Benjamin Chavis Celebrated as ‘Father of the Environmental Justice Movement’ By Siena Gleason

benchavis pbs

Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis Jr.

Chavis Honored

Dr. Ben Chavis, center, honored during the Mississippi Statewide Environmental Justice Climate Change Summit 2025

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Dr. Benjamin Chavis, president/CEO of the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA), was celebrated as the father of the environmental justice movement at the Mississippi Statewide Environmental Climate Justice Summit organized by Jesus People Against Pollution (JPAP) October 24-26, 2025, headquartered at Tougaloo College. 

Aaron Mair, the first African American president of the Sierra Club and an early environmental justice leader from Albany, NY, celebrated Chavis for his contribution to the movement, specifically citing his 1987 study, Toxic Waste and Race in the United States of America.

“What really gave [the environmental justice movement] force was the Toxic Waste and Race study providing a foundational, as they say, evidence-based approach which could then be replicated by frontline communities,” said Mair.

Mair described how Chavis bravely demanded that the environmental poisoning of Black and poor communities must be looked at through the lens of civil rights, creating the movement that is now known as the environmental justice movement.

“During the 1980s, you couldn’t make just an allegation of discrimination; you had to prove it. You had to statistically show that it existed,” said Chavis. “Nobody ever asked, was there a correlation between the proximity of toxic waste facilities, toxic emissions, and climate emissions to public health?”

Karenna Gore of the Center for Earth Ethics at Union Theological Seminary traced back Chavis’ founding of the environmental justice movement even further.

Gore praised Chavis for catalyzing the environmental justice movement when he organized and led a nonviolent sit-in protest in 1982 against the planned dumping of toxic polychlorinated biphenyls in Warren County, North Carolina. This sit-in is widely understood to be the launchpad for the modern-day environmental justice movement, said Gore.

During the protest, Chavis was arrested and put into the Warren County Jail. While he was in his cell, he came up with the term “environmental racism”. It quickly became widely used by activists and later was replaced with the phrase “environmental justice” which also includes the way in which poor people of all colors are systematically poisoned by corporate and government polluters.

Gore reminded people of the courage it took Chavis to get arrested that day given he had been a political prisoner in North Carolina just a few years before as part of a group of persecuted civil rights activists known as the Wilmington Ten.

The Wilmington Ten were arrested in February 1972 during racial unrest over school desegregation in Wilmington, North Carolina. The group – Chavis, eight Black students, and one white female – were charged with arson and conspiracy after firebombs were set downtown and firefighters received sniper fire. All ten were convicted in October 1972 and sentenced to a combined 282 years in prison, with Chavis receiving 34 years. Amnesty International designated them as political prisoners in 1978. After key witnesses recanted their testimony in 1977, admitting police pressure and bribery, their convictions were overturned in December 1980 due to prosecutorial misconduct. In 2012, they received full Pardons of Innocence.

However, his time in prison has never discouraged him from continuing his activism. Chavis has been arrested over 30 times and continues to fight for environmental justice.

The summit took place at Tougaloo College in Jackson, Mississippi, and was organized by Dr. Charlotte Keys, founder of Jesus People Against Pollution. Dr. Keys is one of Mississippi’s earliest leaders in the environmental justice movement. Like Chavis, she has never stopped. She is still fighting for change in Columbia, Mississippi, and throughout the state. Her community in Colombia became a notorious cancer cluster after a Reichold chemical plant explosion.

On Oct. 25, Chavis added meaning to a panel hosted by Gore, a discussion intended to generate recommendations for the 30th United Nations Conference of the Parties (COP30) in Brazil, focusing on the Global Ethical Stock Take initiative. He was joined on the panel by his fellow, former national president and CEO of the NAACP Ben Jealous.

During the panel, Chavis said he believes that acknowledging the struggle against climate change is essential for uniting and creating global solutions.

“To COP30: don’t cop out, cop in,” said Chavis. “Cop in to lay the groundwork and the reaffirmation of a global struggle to prevent climate crisis, climate injustice, and to respond to the environmental injustices that are growing all over the world.”

Chavis also said that COP30 offers an opportunity for younger generations to get involved and continue fighting for environmental justice.

“It’s very important for each generation to rise to the occasion,” said Chavis. “Quite frankly, the first voices that came out against climate change and the climate injustice were young people because young people realized that they may not live to be old if we don’t solve this situation.”

The Quiet Tsunami: AI's Unseen Impact on Our Most Vulnerable Communities by Dr. Denise Turley

August 13, 2025

Denise Turley

Dr. Denise Turley

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - A quiet but powerful change is happening all around us, and it's being driven by artificial intelligence. While we often hear about all the exciting new possibilities AI brings, we need to focus on a far more serious issue: the serious threat it poses to communities that are already struggling. This isn't a problem for the future; it's a reality we’re living in right now, and it’s a shift we can't afford to ignore.

The signs of this shift often begin subtly, appearing as small changes at work. Yet, these seemingly minor adjustments can quickly escalate, leading to significant disruption for individuals and families. Just think about Debbie, a single mother in her late 40s. For years, her administrative assistant job provided a steady income, enough to cover rent and put food on the table for her two kids. Then, a few months ago, her company introduced new AI software. Suddenly, her workload shrank. Her hours were cut, and before she knew it, her position was eliminated. Now, she stares at grocery receipts, the numbers climbing higher each week, and the stack of bills on the counter feels like a mountain. The fear isn't just about losing her job; it's about not being able to provide in an economy where every dollar is stretched thin. Debbie’s story is becoming increasingly common, a stark reminder of the quiet tsunami of job displacement already hitting our homes.

Discussions about AI have largely been dominated by tech giants and futurists. The voices of those most vulnerable to its disruptive power have been largely absent. We're talking about individuals in jobs that form the backbone of our local economies: administrative assistants, customer service representatives, data entry clerks, and even those in transportation facing the advent of autonomous vehicles. These are roles that often employ women and people of color, communities already grappling with systemic inequalities.

A seemingly helpful chatbot on a website might seem convenient, but it's also a powerful sign that a human job is on the line. The truth is, AI is a powerful tool, and companies are using it to automate routine tasks, boost efficiency, and cut costs. While we don't know the full extent of the coming job losses, the direction is clear: our workforce is changing in a big way.

This isn't just about a few jobs disappearing; it's about a fundamental shift in the very structure of our economy. People who don't have the skills to adapt will be left behind. This shift isn't just a threat to entry-level jobs. Even traditionally secure careers like engineering and coding are at risk, as AI can now automate parts of their work. AI's reach is far wider than many of us ever imagined, and its impact is something we can no longer ignore.

This is not a call for despair, however. Within this disruption lies immense opportunity. AI, while a force for change, is also a tool—a powerful one that can be used for progress. New jobs are being created in fields related to AI development, data analysis, and the ethical oversight of these very systems. The demand for individuals with AI-related skills is already soaring. The key is proactive engagement, and it starts with learning. We cannot afford to be passive bystanders in this technological revolution. Our communities must equip themselves with the knowledge to understand AI, to work alongside it, and even to build with it.

The good news is that access to AI education is becoming increasingly available. Organizations like Microsoft, Google and DET Impact Academy offer a wealth of free introductory courses and resources on AI fundamentals. Organizations like DET Impact Academy and Black Women For Positive Change are also stepping up to provide accessible training and pathways into AI  careers for underserved communities. Readers are welcome to join a 90-minute “Understanding Artificial Intelligence” class I am teaching, in coordination with Black Women for Positive Change. The class is for youth and adults, on Wednesday, September 17, 2025, at 6 pm/EST; 5 pm/CT; 4 pm/MT and 3 pm/PST. You can sign up at www.blackwomenforpositivechange.org

The Call to Action: Start Learning Now

This is a critical moment, and taking action today is essential. We must begin to build the bridges that connect our communities to the knowledge and skills they need to feel empowered by technology, not intimidated by it.

  • Explore free resources: Visit the AI learning platforms offered by Microsoft (Microsoft Learn), Google (Google AI), and DET Impact Academy to find introductory courses.
  • Focus on “human” skills: While learning AI is crucial, remember that skills like critical thinking, creativity, and empathy will be even more valuable in an AI-driven world.
  • Advocate for responsible AI: Engage in conversations about the ethical implications of AI. We must show up and be present to ensure these new systems are built with guardrails to prevent harm, especially in critical areas like resume scoring or loan processing.

How we handle this new technology will decide the future of our communities. We need to make sure we and our neighbors have the skills to not just cope with these changes, but to build a strong future. This is how we can safeguard our incomes, protect our family's lifestyle, and create a secure foundation for ourselves and the next generation. The time to act is now.

Dr. Denise Turley is a globally recognized AI advisor and educator, helping leaders implement AI with clarity, impact, and a people-first approach. She is an AI Executive Consultant with Black Women for Positive Change.

What Else Could Possibly Go Wrong for Women? By Dr. E. Faye Williams

May 2, 2025

drefayewilliamsnew

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - For years, I have been saying "It is through our struggles that we gain our victories", but I am beginning to wonder where the struggles end for women. The same is true for Black women, but I am on women in general today! 

A short time back, people pretended to excuse everything the orange man said, Senator John Thune said when he was saying crazy things, "He's having some fun with it. He was just joking." His tongue must be tied lately"--especially when he talked about being a dictator only on day one. We are now in the second 100 days--long past Day 1, and he hasn't stopped being a dictator. 

He's not stopped praising the communist dictator of Russia Well, he gets credit for pausing while at the Pope's funeral-- but not for long! I think he was greatly outnumbered there, and at least one person, jokingly or not--said, "The Pope had survived a lot--35 days in the hospital with pneumonia to be exact- until the Vice-President went near him and shook his hand while leaning over to him. The Pope died just hours thereafter! Don't you have to just wonder what happened during that encounter? I am told it wasn't positive!

Well, let's get caught up with the orange man's recent activities.  You'll remember how he told his friends during the 2024 campaign that he could end the war of Russia against Ukraine immediately once he was back in office. He's back and he began praising his good friend Putin to give him some help.  Since being back, he decided to run over to the Vatican to attend the Pope's funeral where he was surrounded by a lot of other powerful world leaders and he changed his tune!  While there he actually said,  he didn't think his friend Putin was serious about ending the war! You think some of that religious stuff got through to him?

Let's move to another area. I pray that our white sisters are listening to what they voted for in 2024.  Lately, the MAGA group's leader has been urging women to have more babies--even talking about putting that in the budget! Even though we know the orange man didn't mean that women with melanin should have more babies, but it was a tragedy no matter who the woman was who suffered a miscarriage recently, and in the midst of it all, she was arrested and taken to jail!

That's right.  A 24-year-old woman in Georgia is currently being put through an unimaginable situation. After a tragic miscarriage at 19 weeks into her pregnancy that she needed, she was arrested!

Georgia authorities are claiming that the woman who lost her pregnancy naturally is a criminal because of how she dealt with the aftermath of the fetus. You see the Georgia state lawmakers have a law that allows that to be done. Citizens are protesting it and calling for the law to be repealed. It's a law that police are using to arrest women who are already grieving the loss of their child. Georgia is using this law since the overturning of Roe v. Wade. The law has been in effect banning abortions after six weeks, before most people even know they are pregnant. Part of that law includes language that could be interpreted as granting fetal personhood -- and that is the part of the law that authorities are using to charge this woman.   

After she suffered the miscarriage, she disposed of the fetal tissue before she passed out. There is absolutely no law in Georgia that dictates how a person must handle a non-viable fetus after a natural miscarriage, and yet authorities are claiming that she broke the law by throwing the remains away. Georgia has no law for the disposal, but Georgia finds that she broke the law!  Amazing! The coroner confirmed that there was absolutely no injury or trauma to the fetus. At 19 weeks, the fetus would not have been able to survive outside the womb, defining it as non-viable. The arrest of this woman is downright evil and unjust. So, in addition to all the other crazy and insensitive behavior of people who aren't even doctors, we must work to have the Georgia Legislature to overturn this brutal law for women in Georgia or it's just around the corner for women in other states. What else could possibly go wrong for women who are continuously losing the right to control their own bodies!

(Dr. E. Faye Williams is President of the Dick Gregory Society.)

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