Santa Fe New Mexican

Two New Mexicans are on White House panel

Activists Begay of Santa Fe and Moore of Albuquerqu­e named to Evironment­al Justice Advisory Council

- By Scott Wyland swyland@sfnewmexic­an.com

Growing up in Tesuque Pueblo, Jade Begay cleaned the acequias in the spring and took part in ceremonial dances to draw ample water for harvest season.

The old ways tied to this centuries-old riverfront farming village became deeply embedded in her identity and drove her to environmen­tal advocacy.

Begay, 30, is one of two New Mexicans chosen for the new White House Environmen­tal Justice Advisory Council, which has 26 members from around the country.

“I really attribute what I do and who I am right now to being a Pueblo kid, growing up in that community, really immersed in my culture, really immersed in my traditions,” said Begay, climate justice campaign director for NDN Collective, an Indigenous rights group.

Begay said she believes she can bring not only her life experience to the advisory council but centuries of wisdom from an Indigenous people connected to nature.

Richard Moore, 74, was picked to co-chair the council.

He is a co-coordinato­r for the Los Jardines Institute, an Albuquerqu­e-based activist group that works in the fields of social, economic and environmen­tal justice.

Moore said he has been an activist for 54 years and was battling for environmen­tal justice before the term was coined.

He believes the institute’s activism and the causes to which he has dedicated his life caught the attention of White House officials.

“We’ve been raising hell, and we’re going to keep raising it,” Moore said. “We’re serious about the life-and-death situation in our communitie­s.”

The council, made up of volunteers, was formed as part of President Joe Biden’s Jan. 27 executive order on tackling the climate crisis.

Tucked within the executive order are edicts to bolster environmen­tal justice — a concept that emerged in the early 1980s with the aim of stopping poorer communitie­s of color from taking the brunt of industrial developmen­t and pollution, as is often the case.

The council was created so a diverse set of voices — activists, scholars and environmen­t leaders — to advise the chairman of two other White House councils on how to correct historic environmen­tal injustices and prevent future ones.

Among the advisers is Robert D. Bullard, a Texas Southern University professor known as the father of environmen­tal justice.

Begay said she feels honored to be recruited based on the climate and community activism she has done since she was a teenager.

“It’s just a great affirmatio­n that the work I’m doing is being acknowledg­ed,” Begay said, adding a stark example of environmen­tal injustice in New Mexico is in the Navajo Nation, which has suffered from the effects of uranium mining in the area.

She said these communitie­s should receive reparation­s for the pollution and also help through the American Jobs Plan to replace the mining jobs that have disappeare­d.

“A lot of our people in Navajo Nation suffered severely from economic dislocatio­n after the collapse of the uranium industry,” Begay said.

But the investment should be in creating safe, clean jobs, so the people don’t have to depend on toxic and polluting industries, she said.

Building much-needed water infrastruc­ture on the Navajo Nation would create jobs, as would developing solar and wind energy systems to replace the coal-powered plants traditiona­lly used there, Begay said.

She plans to make these sorts of recommenda­tions through the council with the hope they reach Biden’s ears.

Moore said for the environmen­tal justice movement to really evolve and work, it’s important to have direct communicat­ion with the White House.

This new advisory council should accomplish that, he said. Although their suggestion­s first head to the White House Council on Environmen­tal Quality, he said, “they go straight to the top.”

Begay said this council has a broader scope and more direct link to the White House than the one overseen by the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

The EPA’s National Environmen­tal

Justice Advisory Council was establishe­d in 1993 and is more focused on the agency’s effects on communitie­s.

Moore said he chaired the EPA’s advisory council through five presidents, which is a big reason he was chosen.

Given the time required to co-chair the White House advisory council, he will insist on seeing substantia­l results or else he’ll resign.

“The administra­tion said, ‘We’re serious about this, we want to do something about it,’ “Moore said. “And that’s going to involve some hard work on the part of the administra­tion. And it’s going also involve hard work from us, because we’re going to ask people not only ‘What is your issue?’ but ‘What’s your solution?’ ”

Begay said she sees this council as another step in empowering Native people. Indigenous people are being invited to a table that did not exist for them before, she said, adding she wants to take advantage of this opportunit­y.

“I want my people to be able to thrive,” Begay said. “I want my people to be able to continue their life ways. We can only do that with a safe climate.”

 ?? LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN ?? Jade Begay of Santa Fe has been appointed to the White House Environmen­tal Justice Advisory Council.
LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN Jade Begay of Santa Fe has been appointed to the White House Environmen­tal Justice Advisory Council.
 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Richard Moore, 74, a longtime community activist, was chosen to co-chair the new White House Environmen­tal Justice Advisory Council.
COURTESY PHOTO Richard Moore, 74, a longtime community activist, was chosen to co-chair the new White House Environmen­tal Justice Advisory Council.

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