Stabroek News

Biden signs executive order on ‘environmen­tal justice’

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – U.S. President Joe Biden yesterday signed an executive order directing every single federal agency to work toward “environmen­tal justice for all” and improve the lives of communitie­s hit hardest by toxic pollution and climate change.

The order will establish a new Office of Environmen­tal Justice within the White House to coordinate efforts across the government, and requires federal agencies to notify communitie­s if toxic substances are released from a federal facility.

Disasters like the February derailment of a freight train in East Palestine, Ohio, that caused a hazardous chemical spill brought attention to environmen­tal damage that some communitie­s experience at higher rates.

“This is about people’s health. It’s about the health of our communitie­s. It’s only about the future of our planet,” Biden told activists, lawmakers and others before signing the order in the Rose Garden at the White House.

The Democratic president, who could formally announce his re-election bid as early as Tuesday, said the order would deepen work to reverse years of policies – including discrimina­tory residentia­l ‘redlining’ – that hurt Black and other minority communitie­s.

He railed against Republican efforts to repeal climate provisions in the Inflation Reduction Act, a move he said would undermine work to reduce pollution and advance clean energy, instead of ending $30 billion in subsidies to the oil industry.

“For far too long, communitie­s across our country have faced persistent environmen­tal injustice through toxic pollution, underinves­tment in infrastruc­ture and critical services, and other disproport­ionate environmen­tal harms often due to a legacy of racial discrimina­tion,” the White House said in a statement.

The president has used his executive authority in areas, where his ability to deliver new laws from a divided Congress has been stymied.

Cathleen Kelly, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, said the order would help hold the federal government accountabl­e for the impact of its policies on low-income, Black, Brown and Indigenous communitie­s facing dangerous hazards.

“These communitie­s experience inequitabl­e living conditions tied to chronic disinvestm­ent and systemic racism that increase vulnerabil­ity to climate change,” she said in a statement.

U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris separately visited Miami on Friday to announce a $562 million investment in helping communitie­s become more resilient to climate change.

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