Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. unveils environmen­tal justice unit

Biden official visits site of 1982 N.C. protests against hazardous waste landfill

- HANNAH SCHOENBAUM

WARRENTON, N.C. — Forty years after a predominan­tly Black community in Warren County, N.C., rallied against hosting a hazardous waste landfill, President Joe Biden’s top environmen­t official visited Saturday what is considered the birthplace of the environmen­tal justice movement to unveil a national office that will distribute $3 billion in block grants to underserve­d communitie­s burdened by pollution.

Joined by civil-rights leaders and participan­ts from the 1982 protests, Michael Regan, the first Black administra­tor of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, announced he is dedicating a new senior level of leadership to the environmen­tal justice movement those protests ignited.

The Office of Environmen­tal Justice and External Civil Rights — comprising more than 200 current staff members in 10 U.S. regions — will merge three existing EPA programs to oversee environmen­tal justice initiative­s created by the Inflation Reduction Act. The president will nominate an assistant administra­tor to lead the new office, pending Senate confirmati­on.

“In the past, many of our communitie­s have had to compete for very small grants,” Regan said in an interview. “We’re … going to be sure that this money goes to those who need it the most and those who’ve never had a seat at the table.”

North Carolina in 1978 designated Warren County as a disposal site for truckloads of soil laced with highly carcinogen­ic chemical compounds that later contaminat­ed the water supply.

Though demonstrat­ors were unable to shut down the operation after six weeks of nonviolent protests and more than 500 arrests in 1982, their efforts have been lauded by civil-rights leaders as the impetus for a global uprising against environmen­tal racism.

Officials have routinely chosen low-income communitie­s of color to host hazardous waste facilities since the early 1900s. The neglect of critical infrastruc­ture in predominan­tly Black communitie­s, ranging from Flint, Mich., to Jackson, Miss., has led to problems still seen today.

According to the Clean Air Task Force, Black Americans are 75% more likely than white Americans to live near a factory or plant and nearly four times as likely to die from exposure to pollutants.

The Rev. Dr. William Barber II, social activist and leader of the Poor People’s Campaign, said he sees Regan’s announceme­nt as “a great starting point” and will continue to demand more of the Biden administra­tion.

“Our votes are not support. Our votes are our demands,” Barber said in an interview. “This is about a lifestyle versus disability because when you poison the land and the water, you hurt people’s everyday life.”

 ?? (AP/Hannah Schoenbaum) ?? Dollie Burwell, a leader of the 1982 Warren County protests that birthed the environmen­tal justice movement, speaks Saturday about the evolution of the movement at a ceremony in Warrenton, N.C.
(AP/Hannah Schoenbaum) Dollie Burwell, a leader of the 1982 Warren County protests that birthed the environmen­tal justice movement, speaks Saturday about the evolution of the movement at a ceremony in Warrenton, N.C.

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