Try GOLD - Free
Tireless defender of port communities
Los Angeles Times
|November 14, 2025
When Jesse Marquez walked into the Los Angeles harbor commission hearing room in 2013, he didn’t bring a consultant or a slideshow. He brought death certificates.
Each sheet of paper, he told the commissioners, bore the name of a Wilmington resident killed by respiratory illness. Wedged between two of the country’s busiest ports, the neighborhood is dotted with oil refineries, chemical plants, rail yards and freeways. It’s one of several portside communities known by some as a “diesel death zone,” where residents are more likely to die from cancer than just about anywhere else in the L.A. Basin. For decades, Marquez refused to let anyone forget it.
He knocked on doors, installed air monitors, counted oil wells, built coalitions, staged demonstrations, fought legal battles and affected policy. He dove deep into impenetrable environmental impact documents.
“Before Jesse, there was no playbook.” Earthjustice attorney Adrian Martinez said in an interview. “What was remarkable from the beginning is that Jesse wasn’t afraid to write stuff down, to demand things, to spend lots of time scouring for evidence.”
Marquez, founder of the Coalition for a Safe Environment, or CFASE, died surrounded by family in his Orange County home Nov. 3. His death was due to complications after he was struck by a vehicle while in a crosswalk in January. He was 74.
“He was one of a kind,” Martinez said. “He had a fierce independence and really believed in speaking up for himself and his community. He played an instrumental role in centering Wilmington in the fight for environmental justice.”
In 2001, when the port planned to ramp up operations and expand a major terminal operated by Trapac Inc. further north into Wilmington, Marquez and neighborhood organizers pushed back, winning a $200-million green-space buffer between residences and port operations.
When oil refineries evaded pollution caps through what organizers called a “gaping loophole” in Environmental Protection Agency policy, Marquez and others sued, overturning the policy and successfully curtailing pollution spikes at California plants.
This story is from the November 14, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
NBCUniversal will launch sports cable network on Monday
NBCUniversal is launching a new cable network Monday that will carry live sports events, including some that are currently exclusive to its streaming service Peacock.
1 mins
November 14, 2025
Los Angeles Times
A 'Running Man' that mostly limps
Adaptation of the Stephen King 1982 novel may be too relevant to be any fun.
5 mins
November 14, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Jokic's 55 points extend the Clippers' slide to six
Nuggets pull away in second half as L.A. learns that Beal has a season-ending injury.
1 mins
November 14, 2025
Los Angeles Times
At Goodwill, there's an excess of generosity
[Goodwill, from Bt]director at Goodwill Southern California, said that the COVID-19 pandemic instilled a culture of “decluttering” that has persisted.
1 mins
November 14, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Sorrow and outrage at hearing for Palisades fire
Republicans” that was intended to bash Democrats.
4 mins
November 14, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Starbucks union launches Red Cup Day strike at some stores
The union representing Starbucks baristas launched an open-ended strike at stores in more than 40 cities on Thursday, coinciding with Red Cup Day, one of the coffee giant’s most lucrative sales days of the year.
3 mins
November 14, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Concerns over AI stocks, interest rates lead to plunge
The stock market tumbled Thursday to one of its worst days since its springtime selloff, as Nvidia and other AI superstar stocks kept dropping on worries their prices shot too high.
2 mins
November 14, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Which two politicians stood out most in 2025?
These leaders took on Trump and lived to tell about it
3 mins
November 14, 2025
Los Angeles Times
British commentator weighs legal action over U.S. detention
British political commentator Sami Hamdi said, on his arrival back in the United Kingdom on Thursday, that he was considering suing U.S. authorities after he was held in an immigration detention center over what he claims were his views on Gaza and Israel.
2 mins
November 14, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Release the Epstein files, then do away with the 'Epstein class'
We are being ruled by the “Epstein class,” and voters deserve to know the details of that particular scandal, and to be able to expect better of their leaders in the larger sense.
4 mins
November 14, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
