Las Vegas Review-Journal

Impact would be enormous

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Nevada has received nearly $83 million in EPA grants in the last five years to protect our environmen­t and economy. Regional projects have received millions more.

The proposed cuts in the EPA’S budget would reduce decades of progress and cut not only high-paying, science-focused jobs, but funds for enforcemen­t, research and education, and toxic chemical cleanups. It also reduces flexibilit­y to respond to new issues.

Programs dealing with environmen­tal justice (primarily affecting minorities), radon in homes and schools, leaking storage tanks and runoff pollution would go away. The cuts include:

• 30 percent to water pollution control programs — lead, arsenic, pesticides, other pollutants

• 30 percent to air pollution control programs. (Note that most Nevadans live in areas that regularly fail air-quality tests.)

• 30 percent to clean up and redevelop Superfund and brownfield cleanup sites

• 37 percent to enforcemen­t, meaning polluters won’t be held accountabl­e.

All affect family and community economies, and mean more stress on our health care system. Property values and ecotourism will decline.

I could go on. We all know an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.

This decision would affect us for decades, even generation­s to come.

Tell our elected officials this is not the future we want. Christina A. Mcavoy,

Las Vegas

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