An open letter circulated by GAIA and a number of environmental justice groups sums up what it takes to beat incineration and other unwelcome projects pushed on communities by powerful corporations:
To build a powerful movement, you must first figure out where you have power, and build from there. We have power in our communities where we have relationships and can hold politicians and corporations accountable. In DC, corporate power rules because they can concentrate energy and resources there—in ways we cannot. However, when confronting these same corporations in our tribes, cities, and towns, we reveal that they are not nimble or powerful enough to defeat our communities. Movements are built house-by-house, block-by-block, community-by-community, whenever people in communities rally around a common cause, acting on their own behalf with allies and networks—often against powerful interests, often building new institutions needed to win lasting change.33