PORT ARTHUR: EPA Announces Environmental Justice Showcase Communities
Contact Information: Deb Berlin, berlin.deb@epa.gov,
202-564-4914, 202-564-4355
WASHINGTON – U.S Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator
Lisa P. Jackson announced a national initiative to address environmental
justice challenges in 10 communities. EPA has committed $1 million to this
effort over the next two years.
“These 10 communities will serve as models for the EPA’s committed
environmental justice efforts, and help highlight the disproportionate
environmental burdens placed on low-income and minority communities all across
the nation,” said EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson. “By expanding the
conversation on environmentalism, we can give a voice to vulnerable groups that
haven’t always had a voice on these issues. Our 10 Showcase Communities will
provide lessons for how we make every community a better place for people to
live, for business to invest and bring jobs, and for opportunities to
grow.”
The selected Environmental Justice Showcase Communities will use collaborative,
community-based approaches to improve public health and the environment. EPA
will provide $100,000 per project to help address concerns in communities
disproportionately exposed to environmental risks. These demonstration projects
will test and share information on different approaches to increase EPA’s
ability to achieve environmental results in communities.
The following locations will serve as Environmental Justice Showcase
Communities:
Bridgeport, Connecticut: EPA will build on work that has already taken place to
develop community capacity and engagement, identify a broad network of
partnerships, and connect with the goals of the city government. Using this
past work as a foundation, EPA plans to work collaboratively with a wide-range of
stakeholders to develop projects focused on improving indoor air quality,
increasing community capacity for green jobs, increasing recycling rates, and
reducing asthma and toxics exposure.
Staten Island, New York: EPA will work with the North Shore of Staten Island, a
former industrial community that now contains many abandoned, contaminated, and
regulated properties along the waterfront. This neighborhood has seen an
increase in the number of kids with elevated lead levels in their blood. EPA,
in consultation with key community members and state and local health agencies
will develop a community-based health strategy for the area.
Washington, D.C.: EPA is building on its environmental justice work with a
variety of partners, such as: the District Department of Environment; the
District Department of Health; and, local recipients of Environmental Justice
Collaborative Problem Solving and Environmental Justice Small Grant
awards.
Jacksonville, Florida: EPA will focus on improving environmental
and public health outcomes in an area that consists of a predominantly low
income and minority population. This area has a number of Superfund sites,
brownfields, vacant and abandoned lots or other properties where contamination
is suspected, and impacted waterways. EPA will work with its partners,
including environmental justice community representatives, to address sites of
concern and turn them into an opportunity for residents to collaborate with
developers and revitalize their neighborhoods. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: EPA will work to further the redevelopment of the 30th Street
Industrial Corridor. The corridor, a former rail line in the north-central part
of the city, is home to low income communities of color. This project seeks to
improve the human, environmental and economic health of these neighborhoods by
redeveloping brownfields along the corridor, implementing environmentally
preferable stormwater management practices, and developing urban
agriculture.
Port Arthur, Texas: EPA proposes a comprehensive, cross-media pilot project in
Port Arthur, Texas, a racially and ethnically diverse population along the Gulf
Coast of southeast Texas. This community was severely impacted as a result of
hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Ike. Through the EJ Showcase Project, EPA will
work with partners to strategically target additional work and supplement
ongoing efforts. Kansas City, Missouri and Kansas City, Kansas: EPA has identified 11
neighborhoods in the metropolitan area that have many risk factors including
poor housing conditions and increased exposure to environmental hazards. EPA
will conduct an assessment to identify specific sources of pollution and will
work with neighborhood leaders to prioritize community concerns. Strategies to
address these concerns will be developed through these partnerships.
Salt Lake City, Utah: EPA has chosen six neighborhoods in central and west Salt
Lake City as the focus of a Children’s Environmental Health and Environmental
Justice initiative. The areas include Glendale, Jordan Meadows, Poplar Grove,
Rose Park, State Fairpark and Westpointe. EPA selected the areas based on the
presence of several environmental risk factors and the community’s support and
past participation in addressing environmental issues. The multi-agency
initiative will seek to identify and reduce children’s exposure to contaminants
from multiple pathways. EPA will work closely with the community and other
federal, state and local agencies to identify issues of concern and develop and
apply tools to address those issues. The state of Utah has developed a tracking
system that will provide baseline health and environmental data and help the
partnership achieve results. Los Angeles Area Environmental Enforcement Collaborative, California: The
densely populated communities closest to the I-710 freeway in Los Angeles
County are severely impacted by pollution from goods movement and industrial
activity. In a multi-year effort, a unique collaboration of federal, state and
local governments and community organizations will work together to improve the
environmental and public health conditions for residents along this corridor.
Partners will identify pollution sources of concern to the community, review
agency data sources and develop action plans. One goal is to improve compliance
with environmental laws by targeting inspections and enforcement at the state,
federal, and local levels to address community concerns. Yakima, Washington: EPA will address multiple environmental home health
stressors in the Latino and tribal communities in the Yakima Valley. A
coordinated effort between state, local, and non-profit partners will be used
to address the range of exposures found in the community, with a primary focus
on reducing exposure through contaminated private well drinking water. This
will be accomplished by assessing homes with contaminated wells, providing
“treatment at the tap” mitigation, and reducing pollution sources through
available regulatory tools and best management practices.
Since 1994, EPA has provided more than $32 million in general funding to more
than 1,100 community-based organizations.
More information on environmental justice and the
Environmental Justice Showcase Communities: http://www.epa.gov/compliance/environmentaljustice/grants/ej-showcase.html |