The Sentinel-Record

Biden team highlights environmen­tal justice

New office to focus on disadvanta­ged communitie­s affected by pollution

- MATTHEW DALY

WASHINGTON — Following through on a campaign promise, the Biden administra­tion on Thursday announced a wide-ranging enforcemen­t strategy aimed at holding industrial polluters accountabl­e for damage done to poor and minority communitie­s.

The strategy includes creation of an Office of Environmen­tal Justice within the Justice Department to focus on “fence line communitie­s” that have been exposed to air and water pollution from chemical plants, refineries and other industrial sites.

The plan also reinstates a dormant program that allowed fines paid by industry as part of a settlement to go to river cleanup, health clinics or other programs that benefit the environmen­t or public health. The program was used by presidents from both parties before being eliminated in the Trump administra­tion.

“Although violations of our environmen­tal laws can happen anywhere, communitie­s of color, indigenous communitie­s and low-income communitie­s often bear the brunt of the harm caused by environmen­tal crime, pollution and climate change,” Attorney General Merrick Garland said.

“And for far too long, these communitie­s have faced barriers to accessing the justice they deserve,” he said.

“No American should have to live, work or send their kids to school in a neighborho­od that carries an unfair share of environmen­tal hazards,” added Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta.

President Joe Biden had promised during the 2020 campaign that he would establish an environmen­tal justice division within the Justice Department and elevate environmen­tal justice issues in an all-of-government approach.

In a related developmen­t, the White House announced Thursday that advocate

Jalonne White-Newsome will lead environmen­tal justice efforts at the White House Council on Environmen­tal Quality. White-Newsome succeeds Cecilia Martinez, who stepped down in January.

White-Newsome, of Michigan, is founder and CEO of Empowering a Green Environmen­t and Economy, a consulting firm focused on climate change, public health and environmen­tal and racial equity.

CEQ Chair Brenda Mallory called White-Newsome “a strong and effective champion for communitie­s that have been overburden­ed by pollution and subjected to decades of environmen­tal injustice.”

On enforcemen­t, the strategy unveiled Thursday is intended to guide the work of employees throughout the Justice Department, including U.S. attorneys across the country who will begin a renewed focus on environmen­tal justice issues, Garland and Gupta said.

The new office “will prioritize meaningful and constructi­ve engagement with the communitie­s most affected by environmen­tal crime and injustice,” Garland said. “Whenever possible, these efforts will respond directly to community needs and concerns.”

Environmen­tal Protection Agency head Michael Regan said the “partnershi­p” between his agency and the Justice Department “has never been stronger” and will ensure that the federal government does all it can “to protect overburden­ed and underserve­d communitie­s across America.”

Biden requested $1.4 million for the environmen­tal justice office in his budget proposal. Cynthia Ferguson, an attorney in the department’s Environmen­t and Natural Resources Division, will serve as acting director. The office will support environmen­tal justice investigat­ions and litigation and work with communitie­s across the country, the Justice Department said.

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