Post-Tribune

NJ seeks to stem pollution in minority areas

- By Mike Catalini

NEWARK, N.J. — New Jersey’s Gov. Phil Murphy signed into law Friday a measure giving state regulators power to deny developmen­t permits to businesses whose operations pollute predominan­tly Black and other minority communitie­s.

Murphy, a Democrat, cast the legislatio­n in sweeping terms, calling it historic and saying it amounted to a “monumental reform” that puts New Jersey at the forefront nationally of what is known as environmen­tal justice legislatio­n. He signed the bill alongside state lawmakers and Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., who has introduced similar legislatio­n in Washington.

The new law in New Jersey, which leads the country in the number of Superfund sites, aims to address years of businesses putting incinerato­rs, refineries and other businesses that foul the air and water in cities and towns with mostly Black residents.

The measure has been pending since 2008.

“We don’t want to be canaries in the coal mine anymore,” said Maria Lopez-Nunez, a deputy director at Newark’s Ironbound Community Corporatio­n. “We don’t want to just survive in our communitie­s. We want to thrive.”

The measure arrived on Murphy’s desk after he publicly supported it June 19, known as Juneteenth, the holiday commemorat­ing word of the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on reaching African Americans in Texas in 1865.

The legislatio­n requires the Department of Environmen­tal Protection to evaluate public health and environmen­tal effects when certain businesses like power plants, incinerato­rs, sewage treatment facilities and trash-processing plants apply for permits in certain communitie­s.

They’re defined as census tracts where 35% of the population has low income, or where 40% of households are minority or have limited English proficienc­y.

There are more than 300 towns accounting for half the state’s population that fit the bill, Murphy said.

The law gives regulators the authority to deny permits in such instances for the first time.

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