South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

EPA office puts race, poverty forward in environmen­t rules

- By Coral Davenport The New York Times

WASHINGTON — The Environmen­tal Protection Agency will establish a new national office of environmen­tal justice, the Biden administra­tion’s latest effort to rectify the disproport­ionate harm caused by pollution and climate change in communitie­s of color and in low-income cities, towns and counties.

EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan, the first Black man to run the agency, announced the creation of the office alongside environmen­tal justice and civil rights leaders Saturday in Warren County, North Carolina, the site of a toxic dump where protesters were arrested 40 years ago, giving rise to the environmen­tal justice movement.

“From day one, the president and EPA have been committed to not just making progress on environmen­tal justice and civil rights, but to ensure that environmen­tal justice and civil rights are at the center of everything we do, that we enshrine it in a way that outlasts any of us,” Regan said in a telephone interview Friday.

Regan said he intended to ensure that all new air, water and chemical safety regulation­s, many of which affect the profits of electric utilities as well as automakers and other major manufactur­ers, would now be inscribed with provisions that try to mitigate the impact of environmen­tal damage on poor and minority communitie­s. That could include stricter pollution controls.

The new national office will combine three smaller midlevel offices of environmen­tal justice, civil rights and conflict prevention and resolution into one high-level office with a Senate-confirmed assistant administra­tor who reports directly to Regan. It will be staffed by 200 people, in Washington and across the agency’s 10 regional offices — up from 55 people who today carry out the agency’s environmen­tal justice and civil rights work. That will put the expanded environmen­tal justice office on equal footing with the EPA’s national offices of air, water and chemical pollution, which together make up the agency’s central mission of reducing pollution and protecting public health.

“I’m excited to see the merging of the offices of environmen­tal justice and civil rights,” Burwell said. She said that she saw the structural change at the EPA as a single step among many that the administra­tion must still take in order to achieve President Joe Biden’s environmen­tal justice promises. “As a person who attended segregated schools, I expect incrementa­l achievemen­ts,” she said.

The EPA is working now on new rules to reduce pollution from auto tailpipes, factory and power plant smokestack­s, dumping into waterways and leaks from oil and gas wells. All could be shaped by the considerat­ions of environmen­tal justice, Regan said.

With an annual operating budget of $100 million, the new office will oversee implementa­tion of a $3 billion climate and environmen­tal justice block grant program created after passage last month of the nation’s first major climate law. The new law also includes a broader $60 billion investment in environmen­tal justice.

 ?? HANNAH SCHOENBAUM/AP ?? Warrenton, N.C., business owner Gabriel Cumming honors Warren County protesters of 1988 who returned for Saturday’s ceremony with a storefront display.
HANNAH SCHOENBAUM/AP Warrenton, N.C., business owner Gabriel Cumming honors Warren County protesters of 1988 who returned for Saturday’s ceremony with a storefront display.

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