San Francisco Chronicle

Environmen­tal justice gaining in Sacramento

- By Laurel Rosenhall

As Gov. Jerry Brown seeks support to extend a key environmen­tal policy in California, he’s planning a trip to a gritty corner of the state: the blue-collar neighborho­ods southeast of Los Angeles, where thousands of people live alongside rail yards that spew plumes of smoke and freeways rumbling with big rigs.

Brown is better known as a global environmen­talist. His zeal for fighting climate change has taken him to Paris, Rome and Canada for meetings with world leaders, and he’s going to China next month for a clean energy forum with officials from two dozen countries.

But his Los Angeles trip reflects the rise of environmen­tal justice concerns inside the Capitol. A new generation of legislator­s and the growing clout of eco-advocates from urban

communitie­s is changing the focus of environmen­tal debates in California. Once sidelined as a fringe voice of activism, the environmen­tal justice perspectiv­e — focused on how environmen­tal decisions affect poor communitie­s and people of color — is now at the center of high-profile deliberati­ons.

It’s emerged at the California Air Resources Board, which is overseeing plans by Volkswagen to invest $800 million in the state as part of the legal settlement over its emissions cheating scandal. And it’s become pervasive at the state Capitol, where lawmakers are wrestling with proposals to extend California’s cap-and-trade program, a key piece of the state’s fight against global warming that makes industry pay for emitting too much greenhouse gas.

“The (traditiona­l) environmen­tal movement has definitely overlooked certain parts of California,” said Democratic Assemblywo­man Cristina Garcia of Bell Gardens, who invited Brown to visit her district in southeast Los Angeles County. “Things are getting better. But clearly we still have work to do.”

She wants the governor to see how close her constituen­ts live to freeways, rail yards and toxic industrial sites, and how their proximity correlates with asthma and other health problems.

Her invitation comes at an opportune time: Brown wants the Legislatur­e to approve a plan this year to extend cap and trade past 2020. To protect the program from legal challenges, he’s seeking a two-thirds vote.

The high bar gives lawmakers leverage to try to steer cap and trade in a different direction, and they’re looking at ways to put pollution that affects California­ns on par with emissions that warm the planet.

A Senate bill would eliminate cap and trade’s use of carbon offsets, which allow companies to pollute in California if they pay for environmen­tal benefits somewhere else. Garcia has introduced a bill that would expand the kinds of pollution monitored under the cap-and-trade program, so that it not only limits greenhouse gas emissions but also particulat­e pollution that can cause respirator­y problems in those who live near industrial sites.

Garcia, who heads the Assembly Natural Resources Committee, is one of several lawmakers who hail from workingcla­ss communitie­s that suffer from environmen­tal pollution and now hold influentia­l positions in the Legislatur­e. The Democratic leaders of both houses — Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon of Paramount (Los Angeles County) and Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León of Los Angeles — also represent urban, largely Latino neighborho­ods in the Los Angeles area and have prioritize­d environmen­tal issues. Assemblyma­n Eduardo Garcia of Coachella (Riverside County) — who chairs the Water, Parks and Wildlife Committee — has emerged as a new voice for environmen­tal justice.

“You have new legislator­s who are bringing in new perspectiv­es,” said Amy Vanderwark­er, co-director of the California Environmen­tal Justice Alliance, an advocacy group.

Yet the Legislatur­e approved a gas tax bill last month to fund backlogged road repairs over the objections of environmen­tal justice advocates. They opposed a lastminute amendment that eased environmen­tal requiremen­ts on the trucking industry. It’s an example of the kind of concerns lawmakers are frequently asked to balance.

Some environmen­tal justice advocates are calling for radical changes. The advisory committee that reports to Brown’s Air Resources Board proposes eliminatin­g cap and trade altogether and replacing it with a system that gives polluters less leeway. But disadvanta­ged communitie­s reap some benefits from cap and trade. Onefourth of the money generated from cap-andtrade auctions must be spent to benefit poor parts of the state, on things like solar power, electric vehicles and low-carbon transit. Brown highlighte­d these funds at a recent budget news conference in which he made the case that lawmakers should approve an extension of cap and trade this year.

Benefits to low-income communitie­s — or lack thereof — have also emerged as a point of contention in the debate over how Volkswagen will spend $800 million in California. It’s one piece of a larger legal settlement the car manufactur­er reached with the government last year after it admitted installing technology to cheat pollution limits.

Volkswagen agreed to invest $800 million in installing charging stations and other infrastruc­ture to support an expansion of electric cars. But environmen­tal justice advocates are pushing back, saying the carmaker’s plan doesn’t do enough to bring clean car technology to polluted areas where many residents are poor.

“Priority will be given to areas where VW can make the most money, places like Palo Alto, Beverly Hills and La Jolla (San Diego County). VW pays lip service to lowincome communitie­s — and the real money goes elsewhere,” Dean Florez, a member of the Air Resources Board, wrote in a recent opinion piece.

Florez, a former legislator from the Central Valley, was appointed to the board after passage of a 2015 law that required adding two environmen­tal justice representa­tives. The air board also recently hired an executive, Veronica Eady, to coordinate environmen­tal justice work throughout the agency.

Eady, a lawyer who recently moved back to California after living in New York and Massachuse­tts, said she’s awed by how much power the environmen­tal justice movement here has gained: “There is a real partnershi­p with the Legislatur­e that has really put (environmen­tal justice) issues front and center.”

“The (traditiona­l) environmen­tal movement has definitely overlooked certain parts of California.” Assemblywo­man Cristina Garcia, D-Bell Gardens (Los Angeles County)

 ?? Nick Ut / Associated Press 2009 ?? Smog covers downtown Los Angeles in 2009, three years before California passed its cap-and-trade law.
Nick Ut / Associated Press 2009 Smog covers downtown Los Angeles in 2009, three years before California passed its cap-and-trade law.
 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i / Associated Press 2016 ??
Rich Pedroncell­i / Associated Press 2016

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States