op U.S. environmental regulator to visit Houston neighborhoods
Top U.S. environmental regulator to visit Houston neighborhoods where residents bear heavy pollution
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan on Friday will meet with community leaders and social advocates in Houston neighborhoods where pollution has effected people’s health.
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan will visit Houston on Friday as part of a weeklong tour of neighborhoods across the South where pollution has impacted people’s health.
In Jackson, Mississippi, on Monday, Regan said he would discuss what people deserve from the federal environmental agency and the disproportionate impact pollution has had in marginalized communities.
“I don’t believe that all of the solutions are academic,” Regan said Monday, the Mississippi Free Press reported. “I believe you all have been on the ground for years, determining what real solutions are for your communities.”
Regan will visit New Orleans and three Louisiana parishes between Tuesday and Thursday and end the tour in Houston on Friday with visits to the Fifth Ward which is historically Black neighborhood.
According to a report neighborhoods in Deer Park, one marginalized community, have a combined cancer risk from industrial air pollution that’s 1.4 times higher than the EPA’s acceptable level.
This appointment was largely seen as a decision by the Biden administration to prioritize environmental cleanups in historically marginalized communities.
The tour is centered on racial justice — the idea that a central aim of protecting the environment is to prioritize and protect human health, not simply preserve wild areas.
“There’s no requirement to figure out if there’s three metal recyclers in a 1-mile radius, for example, so you end up in situations where you concentrate pollution with people,” said Denae King, a toxicologist and research program manager at Texas Southern University. “We have to acknowledge what’s already in a community before we add more facilities.”
Neighborhoods near industrial facilities are majority Black and Latino in Texas due to wealth inequality. A higher concentration of polluting plants in communities of color has resulted in disproportionate health impacts from air pollution for Black and Latino residents.
One study by University of Washington and University of Minnesota researchers found that Black and Hispanic populations in the U.S. experience over 50% more pollution than they generate, while white populations experience 17% less pollution than they generate. The American Lung Association found in a 2021 report that people of color were 61% more likely to live in a county with unhealthy air than white people.
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan speaks to loop reporters at the White House on June 30, 2021. Regan will visit Houston as part of a tour of Southern states this week.
Biden’s executive order on the climate crisis included the creation of an interagency council on environmental justice. And in October, the EPA accepted a civil rights complaint against Texas over its permitting of a Port Arthur petroleum coke plant.
“You have the makings of what could be a very supportive period for these communities,” said Scott Badenoch, an environmental law professor at the University of California Irvine School of Law
Still, Barry Hill, an expert on environmental justice issues and visiting scholar at the Environmental Law Institute commented in a November article that “executive orders can only go so far.” He pointed out that during the Obama administration, lofty and ambitious goals to incorporate environmental justice in EPA planning yielded little and didn’t last under the Trump administration without the teeth) of environmental justice legislation.
“The pattern continues for environmental justice bills to be introduced and referred to committee, where the bills most likely will die, except for congressional resolutions, because of the lack of Republican support and the narrow lead of the Democrats in the Senate,” said Hill, who is also an adjunct professor at Vermont Law School.
U.S. Rep. John Lewis, a Georgia Democrat who died last year, first introduced an Environmental Justice Act in 1992, seeking to address racial discrimination in the EPA’s administration and enforcement of environmental laws; Congress never passed it. In August, U.S. Sen. Cory Booker, D-New Jersey, reintroduced a version of the bill that would require federal agencies to implement and update a strategy to address negative environmental and health impacts on communities of color and low-income communities.