It was just a few months after moving from Louisville to Middletown, Ohio, four years ago that Vivian Adams’s six-year-old daughter’s asthma problem worsened. “My daughter was born prematurely so she already had lung issues,” she says, “[but] it’s gotten worse. She stays sick and coughing and can’t breathe. She’s had to go on everyday medication for her asthma, plus she has a rescue inhaler.” All the while, pollution from the coal-burning Cleveland-Cliffs steel plant several hundred yards behind her home has been ever-present. It’s the same plant that James Vance, the grandfather of the US vice-president, JD Vance, worked
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