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The Rev. Mariama White-Hammond, who began her first day as the city’s chief of Environment, Energy, and Open Space on Monday, wants to infuse her new position with equity and joy. “It has been a rough year, so I’m excited about sitting at the intersections of racial justice and energy policy and gardening intergenerational connections,” she said in an interview with the
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What Solar Energy Policies Can Do for Low-Income Households
Apr 23, 2021
Jose Velasquez, left, is instructed by GRID Alternatives roof supervisor, Frank Ross, as they install solar panels on the roof of a home in Richmond, California, on May 22, 2015. GRID Alternatives is a nonprofit that specializes in installing no-cost rooftop solar systems to low-income families.
Photo by Michael Macor / San Francisco Chronicle / Getty Images
The Rev. Mariama White-Hammond is an outspoken activist for climate justice and the founding pastor of New Roots AME Church, a multiracial congregation in Boston’s Dorchester neighborhood. She wants to give low-income households and diverse populations a genuine stake in the state’s race to build a clean-energy future. Massachusetts solar policy, she told me, “should be targeting the people for whom there is a double benef
An array of solar panels stands on the Dearborn STEM Academy roof. The roof is white to reflect heat on sunny days. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)
Rev. Mariama White-Hammond is an outspoken activist for climate justice and the founding pastor of New Roots AME Church, a multi-racial congregation in Boston’s Dorchester neighborhood. She wants to give low-income households and diverse populations a genuine stake in the state’s race to build a clean-energy future. Massachusetts solar policy, she told me, “should be targeting the people for whom there is a double benefit of not just having solar, but maybe having two or three more meals a week because of the money they are saving.”