Post-Tribune

Debra Shore to lead EPA Midwest office

- By John Flesher

President Joe Biden has appointed Debra Shore, a wastewater treatment official in Chicago, to direct the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s Midwestern office.

Shore will oversee EPA’s Region 5, which includes Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio and Wisconsin, along with 35 indigenous tribes. The office oversees efforts to clean up the Great Lakes and deals with matters including industrial and agricultur­al pollution and tainted drinking water.

EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan said Oct. 12 Shore’s “knowledge and experience on water infrastruc­ture issues, the impacts of climate change and the protection of the

Great Lakes” qualified her for the post.

Shore is an elected member of the Board of Commission­ers of the Metropolit­an Water Reclamatio­n District of Greater Chicago, an agency that handles wastewater treatment and stormwater management for more than 5 million residents.

EPA described her as a “strong advocate” for improved water quality and renewable energy.

Shore said she was eager to help carry out the Biden administra­tion’s “bold plans to address climate change, to restore the agency’s foundation­al commitment to environmen­tal justice and to ensure that decisions are made based on sound science and the law.”

Competitio­n for the high-profile appointmen­t was intense. Some members of Congress backed Micah Ragland, a former EPA official during the Obama administra­tion. He is Black and led the agency’s outreach campaign in his hometown of Flint, Michigan, as the city grappled with lead contaminat­ion in its drinking water.

American Federation of Government Employees Local 704, a union representi­ng nearly 1,000 EPA employees in the region, also endorsed Ragland.

Shore drew support from LGBTQ Victory Institute, which described her as “the latest high-level LGBTQ appointee in the Biden administra­tion.”

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