In 1988, the mayor of Chester,
Willie Mae James Leake, and her administration developed plans to build a large trash incinerator able to handle 4,000 tons of trash a day. Meanwhile,
Delaware County officials contracted with the
Westinghouse Corporation to develop a more modestly sized incinerator in Chester. While Chester officials argued that their plans for a trash incinerator were safer for residents than the one planned by Delaware County, there was also a major difference in finances where the Chester developed plant would have meant $34 million in profit for the city, while the Delaware County developed plant would only provide $2 million annually. The subsequent mayor of Chester,
Barbara Bohannan-Sheppard, led efforts seeking
environmental justice for the residents of Chester. She coordinated a town meeting of Chester residents, government officials, industry representatives,
Environmental Protection Agency representatives and
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection representatives to raise concerns about pollution, noise and trucks associated with the placement of the Westinghouse Corporation trash incinerator in Chester. Bohannan-Sheppard argued that the addition of a contaminated soil remediation facility along with the Westinghouse trash incinerator, the DELCORA sewage waste treatment center and the Abbonizio Recycling facility resulted in "environmental apartheid" for the residents of majority African-American Chester. ==Pollution==