California's Latino and Asian voters are significantly more concerned about core environmental issues, including global warming, air pollution and contamination of soil and water, than white voters, according to a Los Angeles Times/USC poll.
About 69 percent of Latino voters and 49 percent of Asian voters polled said they personally worry a great deal about having enough water to meet future needs, compared with 40 percent of white voters, the poll found.
Jason Padilla, 26, of Riverside said he was certain that minorities would become increasingly engaged in environmental issues.
"We're stepping up and saying, 'Hey, we live, hike, camp, fish and play here too," Padilla said. "We're getting involved to help make changes that are morally and ethically right and benefit everybody."
Latinos make up 37 percent of the state's population, Asians are 12.5 percent, whites are 41.5 percent and African Americans are 5.8 percent, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
California has one of the nation's largest concentrations of minorities living near hazardous chemical wastes and air pollution produced by refineries, port operations, freeway traffic and railroads. An analysis of census data by researchers at four universities showed that 1.2 million people in the greater Los Angeles area, 91 percent of them minorities, live less than two miles from facilities handling hazardous materials such as chrome-plating businesses and battery recycling centers.
Source: Los Angeles Times/USC, “Latinos, Asians more worried about environment than whites, poll finds”, November 20, 2010.