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EPA Announces Progress with Environmental Justice Communities, Including the Heartland

01/15/2021
Contact Information: 
Alyssa Cole (cole.alyssa@epa.gov)
913-551-7821

Environmental News

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

EPA seal(Lenexa, Kan., Jan. 15, 2021) - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released its annual Environmental Justice (EJ) Progress Report highlighting key environmental health advances in minority, low-income, tribal and indigenous communities across the country.

“For EPA Region 7, environmental justice starts with educating and empowering some of our most vulnerable and disproportionately impacted communities. The grants, outreach, training, and regulatory actions that we have highlighted here today exemplify our efforts to keep environmental justice at the forefront of our work,” said EPA Region 7 Administrator Jim Gulliford. “We look forward to continuing our partnerships with these communities, as together we achieve tangible and sustainable results that improve the overall quality of the neighborhoods where Midwesterners live, work and play.”

The report shows how the Agency is working to address disproportionate environmental impacts, health disparities, and economic distress on communities.

EPA Region 7 continues to advance EJ priorities by building its organizational capacity, partnering with key community leaders and organizations, and increasing community and partner awareness and action to reduce negative environmental health impacts.

Notable activities in Region 7:
  • Helped communities to access federal funding by hosting an annual workshop on grant writing and management. The workshop reached 120 participants representing all four Region 7 states (Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska) and two tribal nations.
  • Worked with the city of St. Joseph, Missouri, to build the capacity of partners and the community to reduce lead poisoning in young children.
  • Partnered with the St. Joseph Health Department; Kansas City, Missouri Health Department; and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Region 7 staff, which resulted in $100,000 being committed from HUD’s Lead Abatement and Healthy Homes program.
  • Established the community-based St. Louis Interagency Interfaith Collaboration for Vulnerable Communities coalition, which developed training for houses of worship focused on cost-saving energy conservation, information regarding resources and technical assistance, and healthy church best practices.
  • Awarded two new Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem-Solving (EJCPS) Cooperative Agreements to the Heartland Conservation Alliance in Kansas City, Missouri, and Beyond Housing Inc. in St. Louis. The organizations focus on improving their air and water quality, while emphasizing partnerships and youth involvement.
Notable national highlights:
  • Provided over $160 million in grant funding to support low-income and minority communities. These grants will clean up brownfield sites in communities with Opportunity Zones; reduce emissions from diesel vehicles and equipment at ports; provide environmental job training to residents of underserved communities; and address challenges faced by communities related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Deleted all or part of 27 Superfund sites from the National Priorities List for a second consecutive year, reflecting our work in communities to reduce exposure to contaminants.
  • Announced a new $4.3 million grant program, under the Water Infrastructure Improvements of the Nation Act, to help protect children in tribal communities from lead in drinking water by boosting lead testing in schools and child care centers.
  • Finalized rules that will make a meaningful difference to communities by ensuring that more people, particularly low-income and minority populations, have greater access to newer, cleaner, more affordable cars, and by reducing lead dust-related risks to children in pre-1978 homes and child care facilities where lead removal activities take place.
  • Reclassified 20 communities across the country to reflect that they now meet health-based air quality standards.

You can read about these and many other accomplishments in the FY 2020 Environmental Justice Progress Report.

EPA is committed to assisting vulnerable communities to become cleaner, healthier, and more prosperous places to live, work, learn and play. The FY 2020 Report shows how EPA is collaborating with partners, supporting communities, and ensuring that EJ is integrated into the work of every EPA program and Regional Office. EPA is also working to align programs, policies and investments to support economically distressed communities, including those in Opportunity Zones.

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