Journal-Advocate (Sterling)

Bill would expand board seats

- By Noelle Phillips nphillips@denverpost.com

A bill filed this week in the Colorado legislatur­e would change the makeup of the state’s Air Quality Control Commission as the legislatio­n’s sponsors try to increase protection­s for low-income neighborho­ods and communitie­s of color, which bear the brunt of pollution.

The commission, which sets the rules and regulation­s for polluters, would increase to 11 seats from nine if the bill passes. The two additional seats would be filled by a climate scientist and a person representi­ng a disproport­ionately impacted community, which typically are heavily polluted neighborho­ods with a majority of residents who are Black, Latino, Indigenous or low-income.

“Honestly, the AQCC feels like we are lacking the voices of the people most impacted. We certainly need scientists on it,” said Ean Tafoya, executive director of Greenlatin­os Colorado. “Industry just has such a powerful voice and we need to find a way to make sure our voices are part of the conversati­on, too.”

Neither of the new appointees would be permitted to work for any company or organizati­on impacted by the commission’s decisions, and that provision would not apply to the other nine seats, said Rep. Mike Weissman, D-adams County. The commission’s members are appointed by the governor.

The bill, HB24-1339, also would reverse a rule created in September by the air quality commission that allows the state’s 18 largest manufactur­ers to pay into a fund rather than investing in technology that would help them cut their greenhouse gas emissions. The commission had been instructed by the legislatur­e to create a policy that would force those companies to reduce emissions.

That rule angered environmen­talists, who said it created a payto-pollute loophole that would exempt businesses from making actual reductions.

“There was some disappoint­ment with it,” Weissman said. “I’ve heard from a lot of folks in the environmen­tal justice community about how things went and that the outcome didn’t follow the legislativ­e intent.”

The bill, sponsored by three Democrats, is not attempting a complete do-over of the commission’s work, but Weissman said he and the other co-sponsors want to bring it more in line with the legislatur­e’s original intent.

The bill focuses on improving

air quality in disproport­ionately impacted communitie­s, and its sponsors hope it improves upon the legislatur­e’s 2021 Environmen­tal Justice Act because they believe the state will miss its target for reducing greenhouse gas emissions in communitie­s such as Commerce City and north Denver, Pueblo and the San Luis Valley.

The bill would require the commission to establish greenhouse gas reductions for specific polluters that are located in disproport­ionately impacted communitie­s. For example, the commission could tell the

Suncor Energy refinery in Commerce City that it needs to cut more tons of emissions than other businesses because it is considered a major polluter, records repeated violations and sits next to neighborho­ods that are majority Latino, Indigenous and Black.

“We can’t change the past but we can be a lot more aware and intentiona­l going forward with how our environmen­tal policy addresses this,” Weissman said. “We don’t want certain communitie­s to bear more burden than they ought to.”

Last week, Democrats introduced a slate of bills that tackle the state’s poor air quality. Most of those target the oil and gas industry, which has pledged to fight the measures.

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