The Daily Courier

Biden picks environmen­tal chief to lead EPA

- By The Associated Press

President-elect Joe Biden on Thursday offered the leadership of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to Michael S. Regan, a North Carolina regulator who has made a name pursuing cleanups of industrial toxins and helping low-income and minority communitie­s hit hardest by pollution.

Biden’s selection of Regan, who leads his state’s environmen­tal agency, was confirmed by two people familiar with the selection process. They were not authorized the discuss the matter publicly before the official announceme­nt and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Regan became environmen­tal chief in North Carolina in 2017. North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, who hired Regan then, told The Associated Press this week that Regan was “a consensus builder and a fierce protector of the environmen­t.”

In North Carolina, Regan led the negotiatio­ns that resulted in the clean-up of the Cape Fear River, which has been dangerousl­y contaminat­ed by PFAS industrial compounds from a chemical plant. He negotiated what North Carolina says was the largest cleanup agreement for toxic coal ash, with Duke Energy.

Regan also created North Carolina’s Environmen­tal Justice and Equity Advisory Board, to help the lowincome and minority communitie­s that suffer disproport­ionate exposure to harmful pollutants from refineries, factories and freeways.

Regan previously spent almost a decade at the federal EPA, including managing a national program for air-pollution issues.

His past jobs included serving as an associate vicepresid­ent for climate and energy issues at the Environmen­tal Defence Fund advocacy group and as head of his own environmen­tal and energy consulting firm.

Regan, who is Black, has a bachelor’s degree from the North Carolina Agricultur­al and Technical State University, a historical­ly Black university, and a master’s from George Washington University.

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