Educate. Uplift. Empower.
"Love God, the people, and the land: Empowering communities to help themselves and others."
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Our mission is to educate, uplift, and empower individuals and communities through programs and resources that promote personal growth, collective engagement, and positive change in underserved and disadvantaged communities for a more equitable world.
Welcome! Refined Community Empowerment is a 501c3 nonprofit organization. We address International Social Injustices: Environmental Injustice, Health Disparities, Educational Inequity, and Housing Inequality. Refined Community Empowerment, Inc. was established on July 31, 2023, to help protect the people suffering from the disproportionate impacts of legacy pollution and chemicals in St. Rose (St. Charles Parish), Louisiana, a part of "Cancer Alley."
Refined Community Empowerment is helping to educate, uplift, and empower residents to advocate for themselves, their families, and their communities.
Similarly, we are unwavering in our pursuit of improving the quality of life in underserved communities. We are committed to supporting the people of villages in Ghana, Africa, who need clean water for daily survival, updated public toilets, safe school building with technology lab and library and much needed medical supplies.
Helping to Improve the quality of life in communities on the fence line of petrochemical industries by advocating for clean air, water, and soil in "Cancer Alley," Louisiana, USA.
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Uplift
Empower
We can make a meaningful difference in the lives of Cancer Alley residents who have been generationally overburdened by toxic fumes.
Helping to improve the quality of life in farming villages by providing clean, safe, and accessible water, and improved public bathroom facilities in Ghana, Africa.
Educate
Uplift
Empower
Access to clean water and updated restroom facilities are not mere luxuries, but urgent necessities. By taking action now, we can swiftly and significantly improve the daily lives of villagers in Ghana.
The overburdened environmental justice communities in St. Rose are fence line neighbors to the major polluter, the International Matex Tank Terminal (IMTT), and still recovering from the devastating effects of Hurricane Ida (August 2021), now face a new threat from the St. Charles Clean Fuels "Blue" Ammonia plant seeking permits to also operate on the fence line of the vulnerable communities. Shockingly, no community air monitoring is in place.
IMTT (St. Rose) has had multiple fires, was fined by the EPA, and are known polluters of scientifically-identified toxins like benzene, toluene, hexane, ethanol, acetone, dichlorodifluoromethane, m&p-Xylene, n-Heptane, n-hexane, chloromethane, trichlorofluoromethane, cyclohexane, and 2-proponal. These chemicals were detected in the community by a summa canister air sampling monitor.
Tulane Environmental Law Clinic shared that IMTT emits over 30 different toxic air pollutants and provided the health risks of the top five chemicals that are known to cause cancers and other adverse health affects. The top five pollutants are benzene, naphthalene, formaldehyde, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and ethylbenzene. (The health risks flyer is below.) This urgent situation underscores the immediate need for our work and the crucial role of funders and volunteers in addressing the environmental, health, educational, and housing needs of these underserved communities in Cancer Alley in Southern Louisiana.
1. Toxic Chemicals in the Air
2. No Real Time Chemical Monitoring of Known Emissions
3. Chemical Tanks Too Close to Homes
4. Decades of Toxic Exposure
5. Surrounded by Pollution
6. New Threat: Ammonia Plant and CO2 Pipelines
A range of dangerous chemicals, including benzene, toluene, hexane, ethanol, acetone, chloromethane, and cyclohexane have been detected in the air in the St. Rose community. These are not just technical names on a list, they are toxic compounds with well-documented health risks. According to the Tulane Environmental Law Clinic, the top five pollutants emitted by IMTT are benzene, naphthalene, formaldehyde, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and ethylbenzene, all of which are known carcinogens. These chemicals are linked to cancer, neurological damage, respiratory illness, and other life-altering health conditions. The presence of these toxins in a residential community is not just a public health concern; it’s a crisis. It confirms what residents have been saying for years: they are being poisoned in their own homes. This scientific evidence demands immediate action, accountability, and justice.
Harmful chemicals are not monitored. The Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ) removed the monitor they once provided. IMTT, the major environmental offending industry in St. Rose, introduced to residents (2023) a high-quality, gold standard, 24-hour, real-time air monitoring system used in Richmond, California that tracks many of the specific harmful chemicals it (IMTT Richmond, CA) emits, providing meaningful protection and transparency for nearby residents in Richmond, California. (https://richmondairmonitoring.org/) However, in stark contrast, IMTT is failing to provide the same level of protection for residents in St. Rose, Louisiana. Instead of deploying the same advanced technology, IMTT is partnering with the Louisiana Environmental Action Network (LEAN) to install a substandard, lower-quality system that only monitors total volatile organic compounds (VOCs) (not the specific toxic chemicals known to be emitted from their facility). This approach leaves St. Rose residents vulnerable, misinformed, and falsely reassured, while denying them the right to know what they’re breathing and to protect their health and families. Why are residents in a historically Black, fence line community given less protection than those in California? This is not just a technological downgrade—it’s an environmental injustice.
Chemical storage tanks are much too close to homes in the Elkinsville-Freetown community. Massive tanks holding dangerous and potentially explosive chemicals sit just feet away from where families live, sleep, and raise their children. This isn’t just poor planning, it's a clear violation of community safety and human dignity. These tanks tower over homes, schools, and churches, creating an ever-present threat of exposure, explosion, or disaster. The residents of Elkinsville-Freetown are being treated as disposable and sacrificed for industrial convenience. This community, rooted in strength and history, deserves the same protection and respect given to wealthier, whiter neighborhoods. The proximity of these tanks is not only unacceptable, it’s unconscionable. Every day that this continues is another day of heightened risk, stress, and injustice for families who have lived in this community for generations.
For decades, residents have been forced to breathe toxic air and live with chemicals seeping into their (our) homes, and communities. The overwhelming fumes and exposure to industrial pollution have left a trail of sickness, suffering, and loss. Generations of families in this community have experienced high rates of cancer, respiratory illness, and unexplained health issues. Many of them (us) attribute these devastating outcomes to the constant presence of chemical emissions. This isn’t new. It’s been happening for years with little accountability and no justice. Loved ones are gone. Families are grieving. The community is still exposed. This is not just pollution. It’s environmental violence.
St. Charles Parish is overwhelmed by an excessive concentration of industrial facilities, including a bulk chemical storage tanks (IMTT), grain elevators, oil refineries, and even a nuclear plant. This overburdened community is being suffocated by pollution from every direction. In St. Rose, residents are once again reporting toxic, noxious fumes invading their homes, with IMTT identified as a primary source of these ongoing chemical intrusions. No one should have to live surrounded by hazardous facilities, breathing in poisons while simply trying to exist in their own home. This is not an isolated incident. It is a pattern of environmental neglect and systemic disregard for the health and safety of this community.
No Ammonia Plant in St. Rose! The proposed ammonia facility, paired with dangerous carbon capture and storage (CCS) infrastructure and the old, faulty, compromised, infrastructure of IMTT, poses a grave threat to the health and safety of St. Rose residents. What is CCS (Carbon Capture and Storage)? It’s when companies capture carbon pollution from factories, move it through big underground pipelines, and bury it deep in the ground to try to keep it out of the air. CCS is not a clean solution; it introduces new dangers, including the risk of pipeline leaks, ruptures, and catastrophic accidents. In 2020, a carbon dioxide pipeline exploded in Satartia, Mississippi, releasing a toxic plume that hospitalized dozens and forced an entire town to evacuate. Victims collapsed in their homes and cars, unable to breathe. Emergency responders had no training or equipment to handle the crisis. The carbon dioxide caused vehicles to stop operating because the catalytic converters were deprived of oxygen. We cannot allow the same risk to be imposed on the people of St. Rose. This community is already overburdened by polluting industries. Adding a high-risk ammonia plant and carbon pipeline is reckless, irresponsible, and unacceptable. St. Rose deserves protection, not more danger. Say NO to the ammonia plant. Say YES to life, health, and environmental justice.
Kimbrelle is a passionate educator, advocate, and community leader with a heart for uplifting underserved communities. As the Founder and Executive Director of Refined Community Empowerment (RCE), Kimbrelle is dedicated to creating programs and providing resources that inspire personal growth, collective engagement, and positive change.
With a strong background as an award-winning certified teacher, behavior interventionist, and
a John Maxwell certified speaker, trainer, and coach, Kimbrelle has over thirty years of experience developing strategies to support students, families, educators, and leaders. Her expertise in behavior management, educational equity, and community empowerment drives RCE's mission to educate, uplift, and empower individuals for a more equitable and sustainable future.
Kimbrelle's leadership extends beyond the classroom. Through RCE, she has spearheaded initiatives focused on environmental justice, youth leadership programs, and community resilience. From hosting meetings, workshops, and a health fair in Cancer Alley to sharing her moving experiences living on the fence line of a bulk chemical storage facility, implementing air monitoring, and providing resources in Africa, Kimbrelle works tirelessly to address the needs of underserved communities in the United States and abroad. A firm believer in the power of collaboration, Kimbrelle partners with local and international organizations, educators, and advocates to ensure RCE's programs are accessible and impactful.
Kimbrelle Eugene Kyereh's vision for Refined Community Empowerment is rooted in her faith, resilience, and belief that communities thrive when people come together to advocate for themselves, their families, and their communities.
Dr. Andrea P. Lowe is the President/CEO of A & amp; E Enterprise Management, LLC. Dr. Lowe is a
public health and health care professional with a cross-functional background in the for-profit,
non-profit, government, and academic sector. She has a Doctorate in Management, Master in
Public Health, Bachelor in Social Science, Associate in Gene
Dr. Andrea P. Lowe is the President/CEO of A & amp; E Enterprise Management, LLC. Dr. Lowe is a
public health and health care professional with a cross-functional background in the for-profit,
non-profit, government, and academic sector. She has a Doctorate in Management, Master in
Public Health, Bachelor in Social Science, Associate in General Studies, and a graduate of the
Harvard Kennedy School of Business executive program.
Dr. Lowe is a small business owner; social entrepreneur; disaster management consultant;
social/behavioral researcher; academic coach; subject matter expert; peer reviewer for the federal
government; Americans with Disability Act (ADA) consultant for the local government and state
board; American Psychological Association (APA) health equity ambassador; and adjunct
faculty in public health and healthcare. She is a member of the American College of Healthcare
Executives, American Public Health Association, Consulting Women, National Association of
Government Contractors, National Association of Women Business Owners, and American
Psychological Association Ambassadors.
Mr. Larry Sorapuru is a native and lifelong resident of Edgard where he retired from
Monsanto after 36 years. He is a commissioner on the Lafourche Basin Levee District,
where he has served since 2020 with oversight on the Coastal Protection and
Restoration Authority (CPRA) and Corps of Engineers. As commissioner, he raised 18
miles of levee
Mr. Larry Sorapuru is a native and lifelong resident of Edgard where he retired from
Monsanto after 36 years. He is a commissioner on the Lafourche Basin Levee District,
where he has served since 2020 with oversight on the Coastal Protection and
Restoration Authority (CPRA) and Corps of Engineers. As commissioner, he raised 18
miles of levee on the West Bank of St. Charles, and secured funding for a $100 million
floodgate to stop major tidal surges from flooding communities in the River Parishes.
Mr. Sorapuru represents St. John the Baptist Parish as a board member on South
Central Planning and Development Commission. He is also a member of the St. John
the Baptist Parish Farmers Market Advisory Board, Utility Board, and Youth Planning
Board. He is also a member of the West St. John Civic Association, West St. John
Stakeholders, Second Ward High Cultural Community, Wallace Indian Organization,
Solidarity Project Advocacy Network, St. John the Baptist Parish Sheriff’s Citizen
Academy, and the Secretary of the Black Caucus for the Louisiana State Police Jury Association.
Your contribution will help in the following ways:
Cancer Alley
Ghana Africa