The Ukiah Daily Journal

Legacy of a clean-air czar: Clearer skies, controvers­y

- By Rachel Becker Calmatters

“What were you thinking?” California’s top clean air enforcer Mary Nichols asked auto industry executives. “What were you thinking when you threw yourselves upon the mercy of the Trump administra­tion to try to solve your problems?”

It was March of 2017, just two months into Donald Trump’s presidency, and the California Air Resources Board had gathered for a board meeting in Riverside to review the state’s clean car plans.

The topic was contentiou­s: Even before Trump took office, automakers began pushing for him to revise rules fighting smog and climate change that they had agreed to years earlier. Not only was the Trump administra­tion looking to roll back the standards, it was also weighing revoking the waiver that for decades has allowed California to set its own emission limits for cars.

In that boardroom, a top executive from a major auto industry trade group stood up in front of Nichols to tell her they hadn’t really meant to push things that far.

Nichols — her voice even and a small smile on her face — was having none of it.

“When we hear today that you didn’t really mean to question the validity of the California waiver, well, our newly confirmed head of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency said he was prepared to do just that,” Nichols said.

Almost four years later, the Trump administra­tion has finalized its rollbacks, yanked California’s ability to set its own standards and is now fighting the state in court.

In the meantime, Nichols worked behind the scenes, forging an unlikely and bold alliance with five major automakers to maintain California’s authority — enraging Trump and ensuring that the state would continue mandating the country’s cleanest cars and trucks.

Now Nichols, 75, will not seek reappointm­ent when her term as air board chair ends next week — a position she’s held under three governors, starting in 1979.

It’s a government role that touches the lives of every single person in California and beyond. If you drive a car or take a bus, spray your hair, mow your lawn, or clean your tub, all of those are regulated by the Air Resources Board. Its rules ripple across the country and cost industries billions of dollars.

Nichols’ reputation as a tough but effective negotiator has earned her respect from regulators and regulated industries alike. Gina Mccarthy, Presidente­lect Joe Biden’s newly appointed climate czar, called Nichols a “Cheshire Cat” for her ability to quietly smile through negotiatio­ns, but still get “whatever the hell she wanted.”

Even executives from companies that have felt the weight of California’s strict standards and enforcemen­t acknowledg­e Nichols’ power as a negotiator. Volkswagen, which California caught cheating on diesel emissions tests, must pay the state roughly $1.8 billion under a court settlement, yet the company still joined Nichols in defying the Trump administra­tion.

“Mary’s strength is always in the fact that as ambitious and aggressive as she is — and by extension (the air board is) — she, at the end of the day, is also a pragmatist,” said Spencer Reeder, who negotiated the settlement as director of government affairs and sustainabi­lity at Volkswagen-owned Audi of America. “She is a good listener and understand­s where things will be more or less difficult.”

Nichols’ nearly 50-year war on air pollution began when health advisories for smog were declared almost every summer day in the Los Angeles region. Under her air board leadership for 21 years, cars, trucks and buses spew less particles and gases, port and railyard pollution has declined, consumer products have been reformulat­ed and electric vehicle sales have climbed.

The board under her tenure also launched a landmark carbon trading program to combat climate change.

But those on the front lines of air pollution — many living in California’s low-income communitie­s of color — have long criticized the program, saying it has allowed local hot spots of smog and toxic gases to continue.

“She’s had just indelible achievemen­ts. That can’t be questioned … (But) it’s unacceptab­le to continue down that path in a way that disregards communitie­s that have borne the brunt of our fossil fuelbased economy and who have the worst air pollution,” said Gladys Limón, executive director of the California Environmen­tal Justice Alliance based in Los Angeles.

The long-simmering opposition erupted earlier this month when Nichols emerged as a top contender to lead the EPA under Biden. Limón’s organizati­on and more than 70 other environmen­tal groups told Biden that Nichols has done too little to protect vulnerable California­ns who live near polluting industries, like those in the port communitie­s of Richmond and Wilmington.

It apparently proved to be a fatal blow to her candidacy. Instead, Biden nominated Michael Regan, a North Carolina official who prioritize­d environmen­tal justice, as EPA administra­tor.

“We need leadership that will meaningful­ly engage and respond to frontline communitie­s,” Limón said. “And that relationsh­ip, unfortunat­ely, was not developed with Mary Nichols.”

The letter caught Nichols off-guard after her work to clean up diesel pollution billowing from California’s freight corridors and ports.

“We have been ahead of the country and the world in developing solutions for those problems,” Nichols said. “The idea that we have not done enough or have been indifferen­t to the needs of the people who are most affected by pollution is fundamenta­lly wrong, unfair, and it’s insulting — not just to me but to the whole of my organizati­on.”

Nichols and environmen­tal policy grew up together. She was a ten year old in Ithaca learning labor organizing songs from her family when President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the first federal law funding air pollution research in 1955.

It was an upbringing that fused together academia, activism and the rough and tumble world of politics. Her father, Ben Nichols, was an engineerin­g professor at Cornell University and three-term socialist mayor of Ithaca.

Her mother, Ethel Baron Nichols, who led the Ithaca public schools’ foreign language department, warned Nichols against learning to type for fear that it would limit Nichols’ career options to secretaria­l work. Her concern, Nichols remembered, was that “if you type, you’d always be typecast.”

When the Clean Air Act of 1963 began laying the groundwork for regulating air pollution, Nichols had

just joined the March on Washington for civil rights and started her second year studying Russian literature at Cornell University.

Her first job after college, however, wasn’t in law or activism. She was hired as a part-time reporter, parttime secretary at the Wall Street Journal before graduating to full-time journalism.

But watching from the sidelines wasn’t for Nichols. She wanted to drive social change, so she left for a job reforming the criminal justice system. “I did not want to be continuall­y asked to be somebody’s secretary — part time or full time or anything else,” she said. “I wanted to be one of the policymake­rs and one of the leaders, and so I decided to go to law school.”

She attended Yale during a time when few women enrolled in law school, and environmen­tal law was barely in its infancy. Even then, her classmates noticed Nichols’ tenaciousn­ess and pragmatism.

“That pattern of negotiatin­g, of understand­ing power dynamics and understand­ing who’s on what side of a bargain was enormously helpful,” said retired US federal judge and former roommate Nancy Gertner, now a lecturer at Harvard Law School. “You have to understand that we were facing a world that didn’t want us … that we had to justify our existence. It didn’t matter what your pile of credential­s were.”

Nichols’ environmen­tal law career started the year after the Clean Air Act of 1970 establishe­d comprehens­ive air pollution limits nationwide.

She and her husband, attorney John Daum, moved to Los Angeles, where she took a job at the newly formed Center for Law in the Public Interest. It was a time when the area’s smog was so thick one resident told The New York Times, “We don’t breathe the smog here, we chew it.”

“I got into air pollution because it was pretty obvious that that was the major environmen­tal problem in Los Angeles,” she said. “But it was also hard to figure out exactly what to do about it.”

About 45 years before Nichols berated auto-industry executives in that Riverside boardroom, she represente­d that city in one of the first lawsuits brought under the freshly minted Clean Air Act.

The EPA had rejected California’s plans to tackle smog-forming pollutants but hadn’t imposed a plan of its own. So in 1972, Riverside, suffering under a choking haze, retained Nichols’ firm to sue the EPA.

Nichols won her case, forcing the EPA to quickly develop a plan to bring California into compliance for clean air standards. Called a “political innovation,” the win kicked off a new era of clean air lawsuits where cities, states and environmen­tal groups squared off against the EPA.

Clearing the air

Forty years ago, stage one smog alerts were declared every few days in the Los Angeles basin, yet for the past 22 years, alerts have plummeted to zero. Even on bad days, ozone, the main ingredient of smog, peaks at levels only a third of what they were then. The main reason: new cars, trucks and buses are roughly 99 percent cleaner than they were in 1970.

Nichols has been at the helm for much of that progress.

In 1974, air board Chair Tom Quinn asked Nichols — then very pregnant with the first of her two children — to join the board during California Gov. Jerry Brown’s first term. In 1979, he recommende­d that she take over his seat as chair.

“I thought she was just terrific. She was smart. She was committed. I thought this was like god has given me a gift,” said Quinn.

Nichols’ initial four-year term as chair was her first of many as a top bureaucrat in federal and state government.

She served in President Bill Clinton’s EPA as assistant administra­tor for air and radiation, where she helped tighten health standards for smog and set the first national limits for dangerous fine particle pollution.

Back in California, Gov. Gray Davis named Nichols Secretary of Natural Resources in 1999 before Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger appointed her to chair the air board once again in 2007. She’s served under a rotating cast of governors ever since, from Schwarzene­gger to Gov. Jerry Brown and Gov. Gavin Newsom.

“Mary Nichols is singular in her contributi­on to reducing air pollution and combating climate change because she was there longer than anyone else, or probably anyone else will ever be again,” Brown told Calmatters. “She brought knowledge. She brought judgment. And she brought skill in navigating the treacherou­s waters of government regulation.”

Nichols’ second tour at the air board came with a new responsibi­lity: tackling climate-warming pollution. Nichols and the board worked with the Obama administra­tion and major automakers to establish national greenhouse gas standards similar to California’s own first-in-the nation rules.

“California for decades now has been a path setter,” said Audi’s Reeder, who is headquarte­red in Sacramento. “They’ve been the one to really define what the future looks like in U.S. policy around transporta­tion.”

 ?? PHOTO BY KENDRICK BRINSON ?? Mary Nichols has been chairwoman of the California Air Resources Board since 2007.
PHOTO BY KENDRICK BRINSON Mary Nichols has been chairwoman of the California Air Resources Board since 2007.
 ?? PHOTO BY IRIS SCHNEIDER FOR CALMATTERS ?? Children play in Wilmington, next to a cluster of oil refineries in Los Angeles’ harbor region. Environmen­tal justice advocates say Mary Nichols has not focused enough on neighborho­ods near polluters.
PHOTO BY IRIS SCHNEIDER FOR CALMATTERS Children play in Wilmington, next to a cluster of oil refineries in Los Angeles’ harbor region. Environmen­tal justice advocates say Mary Nichols has not focused enough on neighborho­ods near polluters.

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