The Indianapolis Star

EPA offers $2B for poor communitie­s

Will clean up pollution, develop clean energy

- 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 Joe 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 years-long “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 locallybas­ed 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, overlappin­g 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 by a range of groups nationwide.

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.

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