The Denver Post

BIDEN’S INTERIOR PICK IS FROM N. M.

Deb Haaland to be nominated as interior secretary, making her the first Native American to lead the agency.

- Hy Rllen Knickmeyer and Gary D. Robertson

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 also plans to nominate New Mexico Rep. Deb Haaland as interior secretary, making her the first Native American to head that agency.

Biden’s pick of Regan, who leads his state’s environmen­tal agency, was confirmed by two people familiar with the selection process, as was his choice of Haaland.

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 cleanup 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 low- income 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 vice president for climate and energy issues at the Environmen­tal Defense Fund advocacy group and as leader of his own environmen­tal and energy consulting firm.

Bill Holman, who led North Carolina’s environmen­tal department 20 years ago, said Regan has been successful even during challengin­g political circumstan­ces. Republican­s controllin­g the Legislatur­e during the 2010s had eliminated dozens of department regulatory jobs and pushed busi

ness- friendly laws.

Regan “restored morale in the agency,” Holman said Thursday. “He renewed the mission of the agency. ... He did the missionary work of going to the General Assembly and listening to a lot of critics of environmen­tal legislatio­n, addressing their concerns and finding common ground.”

Holman said North Carolina has struggled with how to regulate PFAS industrial compounds, but so has every other state. Part of that has to do with a lack of national leadership on the issue, Holman said, something that he believes Regan is poised to correct by returning to Washington.

If confirmed by the Senate, Regan would take over the EPA after four years that have seen the Trump administra­tion weaken or eliminate key public health and environmen­tal protection­s.

President Donald Trump had made the agency a special target for his drive to cut regulation, saying early on he would leave only “bits” of the environmen­tal agency.

Trump rollbacks and proposed rollbacks include weakening air- pollution rules for industries, slashing protection for wetlands and waterways, and eliminatin­g Obama- era efforts to fight climate change by curbing exhaust and smokestack emissions from autos and factories. Opponents say some of many other rollbacks in the agency will make it harder for regulators to adopt new limits based on threats highlighte­d in public health studies.

Holman said “Regan believes in science, and I think he will put science and public health at the forefront at EPA.”

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

At the Interior Department, Haaland, a member of the Laguna Pueblo, would be in charge of an agency that not only has tremendous sway over the nearly 600 federally recognized tribes but also over much of the nation’s vast public lands, waterways, wildlife, national parks and mineral wealth.

She would be entrusted to restore federal protection­s to vast swaths of land and water the Trump administra­tion has opened up to drilling, mining, logging and constructi­on.

In addition, she would oversee the Bureau of Indian Education and the Bureau of Trust Funds Administra­tion, which manages the financial assets of Native Americans held in trust.

“It would be an honor to move the Biden- Harris climate agenda forward, help repair the government- togovernme­nt relationsh­ip with tribes that the Trump Administra­tion has ruined, and serve as the first Native American Cabinet secretary in our nation’s history,” Haaland said.

Historians and tribal leaders said appointing a Native American to the role would be a milestone in the United States’ scarred history with its Native people.

The Interior Department has for much of the nation’s history governed federal lands and often dislodged and abused Native Americans. In 1972, about 500 Native American activists took over the department’s headquarte­rs in Washington, D. C., protesting living standards and broken treaties.

“It would be a huge moment in American history to have a Native person running our national parks, wildlife, relationsh­ips with tribes, antiquitie­s sites,” said Douglas Brinkley, a presidenti­al historian.

In 2018, Haaland and Sharice Davids of Kansas became the first two Native American women elected to Congress.

Haaland campaigned in 2018 against the Trump administra­tion’s hard- line immigratio­n policies and promoted Indigenous sovereignt­y as a “35th- generation New Mexican.”

She has said many of the issues affecting native communitie­s, such as low- wage jobs and violence against women, afflict other groups as well.

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