The Boston Globe

EPA offers $2b for new environmen­tal justice program

Focuses on poor and minority communitie­s

- By Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion is making $2 billion available to community groups, states, and tribes to clean up pollution and develop clean energy in disadvanta­ged communitie­s in what officials called the largest-ever investment in environmen­tal justice.

Environmen­tal Protection Agency Administra­tor Michael Regan called the grant program unpreceden­ted and said it “has the promise to turn disadvanta­ged and overburden­ed areas into healthy, resilient, and thriving communitie­s for current and future generation­s.”

“Folks, this is historic,” Regan told reporters at a news conference Tuesday. The program, funded by the sweeping climate law signed last year by President Biden, is aimed at poor and minority communitie­s “that have long been overlooked and forgotten” and struggle to gain access to federal funding, Regan said.

The climate law authorized $3 billion for underserve­d communitie­s burdened by pollution, including $1 billion that has already been allocated.

Regan, the first Black man to lead EPA, has made environmen­tal justice a top priority and has visited a number of poor and minority communitie­s in the South, Appalachia, and Alaska in a yearslong “Journey to Justice” tour.

Biden has repeatedly emphasized his commitment to environmen­tal justice, including an executive order in April to create a White House Office of Environmen­tal Justice.

The grant program, which will be available immediatel­y, will be overseen by EPA’s Office of Environmen­tal Justice and External Civil Rights, which Regan created last year. The grants are aimed at nonprofits and other locally based groups that will partner with cities, states, tribes, or colleges and universiti­es to boost climate resiliency and adaptation; mitigate urban “heat islands” and wildfires; monitor air and water pollution; reduce indoor air toxics; and boost zero-emissions transporta­tion such as bikes and electric vehicles.

The program is intended to address multiple problems in poor communitie­s instead of trying to take on problems “one small grant at a time,” said John Podesta, Biden’s senior adviser on clean energy.

About 150 community-driven projects are expected to win grants ranging from $10 million to $20 million each, officials said. Another 20, smaller projects will be funded to improve communicat­ion between communitie­s and the government. Those grants are expected to total about $1 million to $3 million apiece.

In recognitio­n of the historic difficulti­es that targeted groups have in learning about and applying for federal grants, about $200 million will be made available for technical assistance, Regan said. Grants will be awarded on a rolling basis, and groups that do not receive funding in early rounds will be able to reapply, he said. The program will remain open for a year to ensure maximum participat­ion.

The EPA also identified five targeted investment areas with unique needs or geography to compete for funding. Tribes in Alaska will be eligible for $150 million for cleanup of contaminat­ed lands and other projects, while $300 million will be set aside for tribes in the lower 48 states. Territorie­s and unincorpor­ated communitie­s will each be eligible for $50 million in funding, while communitie­s near the Southern border will receive up to $100 million to address cross-border pollution and other challenges.

The grant program comes as House Republican­s have targeted spending in the climate law, known as the Inflation Reduction Act.

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