Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

With ‘no time to waste,’ Biden unveils climate team

- Kevin Freking

WILMINGTON, Del. – Just as the United States has needed a unified, national response to COVID-19, it needs one for dealing with climate change, President-elect Joe Biden said Saturday as he unveiled key members of his environmen­tal team.

“We literally have no time to waste,” Biden said.

The approach is a shift from Donald Trump’s presidency, which has been marked by efforts to boost oil and gas production while rolling back government efforts intended to safeguard the environmen­t.

The incoming Biden team will try to undo or block many of the current administra­tion’s initiative­s. There also will be an emphasis on setting protection­s for the low-income, working class and minority communitie­s hit hardest by fossil fuel pollution and climate change.

Biden stressed the diversity of an emerging team that he described as “brilliant, qualified, tested and they are barrier-busting.”

The nominees Biden introduced Saturday had compelling personal stories that they cited as guiding them if confirmed by the Senate.

New Mexico Rep. Deb Haaland would be the first Native American to lead the Interior Department, which has wielded influence over the nation’s tribes for generation­s. She said her life has not been easy. She struggled with homelessne­ss and once relied on food stamps.

“This moment is profound when we consider the fact that a former secretary of the Interior once proclaimed his goal, was to quote, ‘civilize or exterminat­e’ us,” Haaland said. “I’m a living testament to the failure of that horrific ideology.”

Haaland was referring to Alexander H.H. Stuart, who said that in 1851.

Former two-term Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm is in line to be energy secretary. She described arriving in the U.S. at age 4, brought from Canada by a family “seeking opportunit­y.”

She said her father found work as a bank teller and retired as head of the bank.

“It’s because of my family’s journey and my experience in fighting for hardworkin­g Michigan families that I have become obsessed, obsessed with gaining good-paying jobs in America in a global economy,” Granholm said.

North Carolina official Michael Regan would be the first African American man to run the Environmen­tal Protection Agency. Regan, the state environmen­tal head since 2017, has made a name for himself by pursuing cleanups of industrial toxins and helping the low-income and minority communitie­s significantly affected by pollution.

Regan said he grew up in North Carolina hunting and fishing with his father and grandfathe­r and that he has great respect for the outdoors and the country’s natural resources, but he also had a respirator­y condition that required him to use an inhaler.

Biden’s nominee to oversee the Council on Environmen­tal Quality is Brenda Mallory. The office oversees environmen­tal reviews for virtually all major infrastruc­ture projects and advises the president on major environmen­tal issues. If confirmed, she would be the first African American to hold the position since it was created more than half a century ago.

Two other members of the team introduced Saturday do not need Senate confirmation. They are Gina McCarthy, to serve as national climate adviser, and Ali Zaidi, to serve as her deputy. McCarthy was EPA administra­tor from 2013 to 2017 during President Barack Obama’s second term.

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Granholm
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Haaland
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Regan

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