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TO OBTAIN ADDITIONAL COPIES
 Additional copies are available free of charge by contacting:

 National Center for Environmental Publications and Information
 P. O. Box 42419
 Cincinnati, OH 45242-2419

 Telephone:   513-489-8190
 FAX:       513-489-8695

 Cite the publication number:  EPA-200-R-95-002

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  THE EPA'S  ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE  STRATEGY
                                      April 3, 1995
Dear Reader:

       Twenty-five years ago, our nation created ~ virtually from scratch — the most advanced
system of environmental protection in the world. In that twenty-five years, our efforts to protect
public health and the environment have made tremendous progress. We no longer have rivers
catching on fire. Our skies are cleaner.

       But much remains to be done. Forty percent of our rivers, lakes and streams are still too
polluted for fishing and swimming. Many communities who still look to their rivers for fish to eat
were unable to do so last year, when  EPA issued some 1,000 fish advisories because the waters
were too polluted.  Two out of five Americans live in cities where the air does not meet public
health standards. One in four Americans still lives within four miles of a toxic dump site.

       On February 11, 1994, President Clinton issued Executive Order 121898 on environmental
justice.  This Order focuses Federal attention on the environmental and human health conditions
of minority communities and low-income communities and calls on agencies to make achieving
environmental justice part of their mission.  President Clinton wanted Federal agencies to
reinvent the way we approach environmental justice so that our day-to-day efforts will be more
effective in protecting the public health and environment                 :

       President Clinton and I believe that all Americans deserve to be protected from pollution  -
- not just those who can afford to live in the cleanest, safest communities.  All  Americans deserve
clean air, pure water, land that is safe to live on, and food that is safe to eat. The Clinton
Administration believes that protecting our environment means protecting our health — the health
of our families, our neighborhoods, our economy and our children.

       We know that government cannot do the job alone. Our agencies want to work with all
who can contribute to finding solutions — communities, State, Tribal, and local governments,
business, and environmental organizations.  Together, we have developed strategies such as this
one to help bring justice to Americans who are disproportionately affected by pollution: children
exposed to lead paint in old buildings, farm workers exposed to high-risk pesticides, people who
fish in polluted waters, and those who live near hazardous waste incinerators.

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       Early involvement and strong partnerships, founded on mutual respect and understanding,
make good common sense and will result in sound public health and environmental policy. By
bringing people to the table representing all sides of an issue, EPA will identify common ground,
bridge old differences, and find new solutions. There is no doubt in my mind that when a
neighborhood or community becomes informed and involved, they will do a far better job of
deciding what is right for their children, for their air, for their water, than any government agency.

       The partnership must also occur within the Federal government.  As an agency whose
primary mission involves protecting public health and the environment, we have much to offer our
sister agencies.  EPA has taken a leadership role in helping Federal agencies implement the
Executive Order. It has also been a leader in efforts to tackle the unique problems confronting
communities of color and low-income communities. Through the Interagency Working Group on
Environmental Justice (IWG), which I chair, EPA has been building on existing relationships and
forging new ones to address environmental justice problems which cross agency boundaries.  For
example, EPA has been working with the Department of Housing and Urban Development, and
other partners, to address lead in public housing.

       Through this strategy, we share our vision for giving the American people better access to
information they need about our environment, as well as significant opportunities to participate in
shaping the government policies that affect and protect our health and our environment.  I look
forward to the progress we can make, working together, in taking these important steps to
provide protection for all American communities.
                                               Sincerely,
                                               Carol M. Browm

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                  TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION			1

MISSION AREAS	,:....	.6

     PUBLIC PARTICIPATION, ACCOUNTABILITY, PARTNERSHIPS,
     OUTREACH, AND COMMUNICATION WITH STAKEHOLDERS 	6

     HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH	9

     DATA COLLECTION, ANALYSIS, AND STAKEHOLDER ACCESS
     TO PUBLIC INFORMATION	 11

     AMERICAN INDIAN, ALASKA NATIVE AND INDIGENOUS
     ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION	13

     ENFORCEMENT, COMPLIANCE ASSURANCE, AND REGULATORY
     REVIEW	,	15


ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE MODEL PROJECTS	18


EPA ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE CONTACTS	.Inside Back Cover

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                                                                         Introduction

    THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY'S
           ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
INTRODUCTION

      EPA was established in 1970 in response to growing concerns about the problems and the
difficulties in protecting public health and improving environmental conditions in our country.
These concerns included unhealthy air, polluted rivers, unsafe drinking water, and waste disposal.
EPA, and the Clinton Administration, believe that all Americans are important to the future of our
nation and deserve to be protected from pollution, regardless of race, color, national origin, or
economic circumstance.  Early in her tenure, EPA Administrator Browner accepted the challenge
to make environmental justice one of EPA's highest priorities.  As part of the National
Performance Review (NPR) efforts to reinvent government, the Administrator formed a team of
EPA employees to focus on the Agency's mission, including environmental justice, and find
solutions to problems that impede fulfillment of its mission.

      On February 11,  1994, President Clinton issued Executive Order 12898, "Federal Actions
to Address Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations," and an
accompanying Presidential memorandum, to focus Federal attention on the environmental and
human health conditions in minority communities and low-income communities. The Executive
Order, as amended, directs Federal agencies to develop, by March 24,  1995 an Environmental
Justice Strategy that identifies and addresses disproportionately high and adverse human health or
environmental effects of their programs, policies, and activities on minority populations and low-
income populations.
DEVELOPMENT OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY

       Our Goals:

       t     No segment of the population, regardless of race, color, national origin, or income,
             as a result of EPA's policies, programs, and activities, suffers disproportionately
             from adverse human health or environmental effects, and all people live in clean,
             healthy, and sustainable communities.

       ^     Those who live with environmental decisions — community residents, State, Tribal,
             and local governments, environmental groups, businesses -- must have every
             opportunity for public participation in the making of those decisions. An informed


                                         1

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                                                                            Introduction

              and involved community is a necessary and integral part of the process to protect
              the environment.

       The Principles: The purpose of the Strategy is to ensure the integration of environmental
justice into the Agency's programs, policies, and activities consistent with the Executive Order.
As the Administrator said when the President issued the Executive Order:

       "We will develop strategies to bring justice to Americans who are suffering
       disproportionately... We will develop strategies to ensure that  low-income and minority
       communities have access to information about their environment--and that they have an
       opportunity to participate in shaping the government policies that affect their health and
       environment."

       Our strategy and further efforts on environmental justice will be based on the following
guiding principles:
                                             ,>                 -               ,      .
        1)     Environmental justice begins and ends in our communities. EPA will work with
              communities through communication, partnership, research, and the public
              participation processes.

        2)     EPA will help affected communities have access to information which will
              enable them to meaningfully participate in activities.                  j      ,    •

        3)     EPA will take a leadership and coordination role with other Federal agencies as an
              advocate of environmental justice.

        The Process:  Since the NPR report and the issuance of the Executive Order, a number
 of steps were undertaken by the Agency:

        4     EPA established the Environmental Justice Steering Committee and Policy
              Workgroup to develop, help implement, and monitor EPA's environmental justice
              activities. The Steering Committee acts as a senior management "board of
              directors" to guide environmental justice at EPA. The Policy Workgroup, made
              up of senior-level staff, develops, implements, and reviews environmental justice
              policy.  In addition, each Office and Region has established Environmental Justice
              Coordinators.  These three groups are assisted by the Office of Environmental
              Justice.

        +     On April 11,1994, EPA formed the National Environmental Justice Advisory
              Council (NEJAC), which is comprised of 23 representatives from acadernia,
              business and industry,  State, Tribal, and local governments, environmental
              organizations, community groups, and non-governmental organizations. The
              NEJAC provides advice to the Agency on matters related to  environmental justice.

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                                                                            Introduction

              Communities and leaders of the environmental justice movement have taken
              leadership roles in this process.

       4      The EPA National Goals Project has held a series of public meetings around the
              country to identify major environmental priorities, including environmental justice
              issues.  Environmental justice concerns are integrated into EPA's process of
              identifying national environmental goals.

       The Steering Committee and Policy Workgroup have been developing an environmental
justice strategy for the last year.  The first step was the Environmental Justice Action Plan
developed in response to the recommendations of the NPR.  The Action Plan was incorporated
into the Agency's draft outline of the Environmental Justice Strategy produced pursuant to the
Executive Order. Expanding on the draft outline, Offices and Regions contributed substantially to
this Strategy.  The Strategy incorporates the Agency's work with the Federal Interagency
Working Group  on Environmental Justice, its task forces, and with other Federal agencies.  It was
produced with the hard work and expertise not only of those within the government, but, more
importantly, with the support of a broad range of individuals outside the government who care
about these issues.

       The early documents leading up to the development of this final Strategy were developed
with involvement of diverse people and groups working together. EPA recognizes that no
process would be appropriate without up-front involvement of our communities and stakeholders.
For example, the NEJAC and its four subcommittees have been actively involved in the strategy
development process by reviewing and commenting on  EPA's Environmental Justice Action Plan,
EPA's draft outline, and draft strategy. At the January  1995 NEJAC meeting in Atlanta, NEJAC
committees and  subcommittees contributed substantial comments to the Draft Environmental
Justice Strategy. EPA and other agencies held an interactive public forum to solicit comments on
the draft Strategy from communities and stakeholders throughout the  nation.

       The strategy uses the term "minority" rather than "people of color" in order to be
consistent with the Executive Order, but EPA is mindful and supportive of many communities'
desire to use "people of color." The Strategy's uses of the term indigenous refers to all people
within the boundaries and territories of the United States regardless of their affiliation with a
federally-recognized Tribe.  However, the Agency recognizes various terminology preferences
among native people and will strive to respect and utilize appropriate language on a case-by-case
basis in its interactions with native constituents.

        This Strategy is a broad, framework intended to be a "Living Document" and an initial
step in an ongoing effort to integrate environmental justice objectives  into the Agency's activities.

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                                                                             Introduction
 INTEGRATION WITH OTHER EPA PRINCIPLES AND APPROACHES

       The Environmental Justice Strategy is well-integrated into the fabric of many of the
 Agency's principles and initiatives which the Agency considers fundamental to its operation and
 mission. In fact, environmental justice is one of the seven guiding principles established in the
 Agency's strategic plan, "The New Generation of Environmental Protection."  For example, in
 EPA's community based environmental protection, the Agency works with the affected
 communities in fashioning strategies to promote a healthy environment and a sustainable
 economy.  Additionally, partnering with communities with minority low-income populations
 which may be suffering from disproportionately high and adverse human health or environmental
 effects should be a cornerstone of EPA's pollution prevention efforts.  Another important
 partnership is with the States and Tribal governments in the operation of regulatory and
 enforcement programs. EPA recognizes the crucial implementation role of these  State and Tribal
 partners, and will work with them to incorporate environmental justice into our efforts.

       Furthermore, NPR activities underway provide a foundation for addressing institutional
 environmental justice issues in  a more coordinated fashion. One example is the reorganization of
 the Agency's enforcement functions into the Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance
 (OECA). The reorganization allows the Agency to make better use of innovative compliance
 methods in cross-cutting areas  such as multi-media enforcement, geographic initiatives, and
 industrial sectors, all of which should work to the benefit of affected communities.

       The Agency has developed an overarching approach focused on establishing common
 sense principles and procedures for conducting the Agency's business. The Common Sense
 Initiative is a sweeping effort to work with industry on a sector-by-sector basis to address public
 health and environmental  issues. It brings together communities, environmentalists, industry,
 States, Tribes, and others to develop cleaner, cheaper, and smarter solutions.

       The Strategy has the following five environmental justice mission topics:  1) Public
Participation, Accountability, Partnerships, Outreach, and Communication with Stakeholders;
2) Health and Environmental Research; 3) Data Collection, Analysis, and Stakeholder Access to
Public Information; 4) American Indian and Indigenous Environmental Protection; and'
5) Enforcement, Compliance Assurance, and Regulatory Reviews.  The Strategy also contains a
final section describing a number of model projects.

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                                                                           Introduction
IMPLEMENTATION

       Accompanying this Strategy will be EPA's Environmental Justice Annual Report which
enumerates program and regional projects that are planned or underway consistent with this
strategy. EPA Offices and Regions will be expected to update their existing environmental
justice strategy or implementation plan to ensure adherence to the Agency guidance outlined in
this Strategy.  In addition, each Office and Region will be expected to develop mechanisms
for stakeholder and community input, interagency/intergovernmental coordination, pilot
projects, and real measures of progress.  An evaluation of our progress on all these activities
will be undertaken and completed by September 30, 1995.

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                                    Public Participation, Accountability, Partnerships,
                                      Outreach, and Communication with Stakeholders

      PUBLIC PARTICIPATION, ACCOUNTABILITY,
              PARTNERSHIPS, OUTREACH, AND
        COMMUNICATION WITH STAKEHOLDERS

      EPA will promote partnerships, outreach, and communication with affected
      communities, Federal, Tribal, State, and local governments, environmental
      organizations, academic institutions, non-profit organizations, and business and
      industry.
IMPORTANCE OF PUBLIC PARTICIPATION, ACCOUNTABILITY,
PARTNERSHIPS, OUTREACH, AND COMMUNICATION

      A comprehensive approach to identifying and addressing environmental justice
concerns requires the early involvement of affected communities and other stakeholders.
Additionally, approaches to effectively address environmental justice issues require
partnership, the leveraging of resources, and coordination.  Most significantly, in efforts to
pool all available knowledge, EPA will access and incorporate expertise of local, affected
community members throughout this process.
OBJECTIVES FOR PUBLIC PARTICIPATION, ACCOUNTABILITY,
PARTNERSHIPS, OUTREACH, AND COMMUNICATION

1)    Outreach and Partnerships: To ensure their active public participation and to provide
      input early in environmental decision-making, EPA will enhance partnerships and
      coordination with stakeholders, including: affected communities, Federal, Tribal, State,
      and local governments, environmental organizations, non-profit organizations, academic
      institutions (including Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), Hispanic
      Serving Institutions (HSIs), and Tribal Colleges), and business and industry.   ,
                                                                       i
      *     EPA will use the National Environmental Justice Advisory Council (NEJAC),
            along with input from other stakeholders, particularly those from affected
            communities, early in the decision-making process.

      *     EPA will utilize public participation models, such as the one created by
            NEJAC, in its partnerships, and outreach and communication activities.

      *     EPA will work to improve environmental education, training opportunities and
            partnerships with academic institutions, including HBCUs, HSIs, and Tribal

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2)
                            Public Participation, Accountability, Partnerships,
                              Outreach and Communication with Stakeholders

        Colleges. EPA will improve communication, education,, and outreach on
        environmental justice issues among all stakeholders.

 *      EPA will ensure that public documents and notices related to human health or
        the environment are concise, understandable to the community involved, and are
        made readily accessible to the public.

 «      Whenever possible and appropriate,  EPA will publish public notices for EPA
        public meetings in languages other than English, in local and minority-oriented
        newspapers, and through electronic media, including radio and television. EPA
        will identify a network of translators to assist in conducting public meetings.

 *      EPA will ensure mailing lists include Tribal governments and organizations,
        environmental justice organizations,  and  other interested stakeholders including
        schools, civic associations, local business and industry associations, and
        religious institutions as appropriate.

 *      EPA will exchange information and expertise with affected stakeholders.

 +      EPA will work to ensure that future legislation will incorporate techniques to
        improve public participation.

 Technical Assistance: EPA will examine its current technical assistance programs for
 minority communities and low-income communities.

 +      EPA will administer appropriate grant programs for and promote technical
       assistance to partners particularly small business, community-based
       organizations, and Tribal governments.

 Training:  EPA will encourage State, Tribal, and local governments to work with the
Federal government to achieve environmental justice goals through training and other
coordinated activities.

*      EPA will incorporate an ongoing orientation and training program for its
       personnel on environmental justice issues, including those related to public
       participation,  tribal relations, health research,  and data gathering.  The
       development of training programs will include input from stakeholders,
       including grassroots organizations.  The training will be tailored to the needs of
       the Office or Region.  Training kits may include: generic information on
       environmental justice, examples of model initiatives and projects, and public
       participation guidelines.

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                                        Public Participation, Accountability, Partnerships,
                                          Outreach and Communication with Stakeholders

       *     EPA will offer training assistance to other Federal agencies and Tribal, State,
             and local officials on environmental justice issues.

       +     EPA will sponsor environmental justice seminars or workshops to focus on media-
             specific environmental justice activities and case examples.

4)     Management Accountability: EPA will strengthen management accountability for
       environmental justice activities.                                          •

       +     EPA will reorganize to strengthen leadership and management of environmental
             justice activities in the Agency.

       +      EPA will develop a system for monitoring and evaluating program
              improvements resulting from the integration of environmental justice.

       4      Each Office or Region will develop a feedback mechanism for tracking
              environmental justice activities across the Office or Region, focusing on both
              major environmental justice projects and routine implementation of the policy
              by staff.

 5)     Public Participation in Facility Siting and Permitting:  A major priority for the Office
        of Solid Waste and Emergency Response (OSWER) is to address the siting and permitting
        of hazardous waste facilities that might have a disproportionately high and adverse human
        health or environmental effect on minority or low-income communities.

        +      OSWER will improve public participation in siting and permitting decisions.

        *      Resolution of these issues is expected to focus on at least two major avenues:
               1) early and ongoing public participation in permitting and siting decisions, and
               2) active participation in the Agency-wide effort to develop methodologies for
               defining cumulative risk from multiple sources.

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                                                  Health and Environmental Research

      HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH

       In coordination with other Federal agencies, EPA will design and conduct
       environmental and human health research needed to support its environmental
      justice programs.
IMPORTANCE OF HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH

       Human health and environmental research is a cornerstone of informed decision-making
to ensure a healthy environment.  The main environmental justice objective for EPA's health
and environmental research is to improve the scientific basis for decisions by conducting
research and related activities to identify and prioritize environmental health risks, as well as
pollution prevention opportunities for risk reduction.  EPA recognizes that environmental
justice issues are multi-disciplinary and that addressing them properly requires coordination
with other research organizations and stakeholders.
OBJECTIVES FOR HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH

1)    Research Partnerships: Working with affected stakeholders:

      +      An early EPA priority will be to explore the dimensions of community-led
             research and to better integrate this model into EPA's research strategy.

      *      EPA will explore through pilot projects the resources and strategies necessary to
             help train community people to be effective collaborators in the research
             process. This training will include such things as decision-making processes,
             research design, questionnaire construction, data collection,  and data analysis.

      *      EPA will work with minority communities and low-income communities under
             study to incorporate, to the extent practicable, their concerns and comments in
             EPA research design, data analysis, implementation, and information
             dissemination.

      *      EPA will work with the scientific community to improve health assessments and
             risk assessments and incorporate environmental justice including socioeconomic
             issues into its policies and guidance.                 •

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                                                     Health arid Environmental Research

       *      EPA will support environmental justice research through (1) competitive grants
              to researchers examining environmental justice questions and, (2) exchange
              programs between EPA and non-governmental groups with a shared research
              agenda.

       4      EPA will expand interagency and other intergovernmental partnerships to ensure
              a coordinated research strategy and the ability to target cross-disciplinary
              projects in affected communities.

2)     Sound Science: Working with affected stakeholders,  EPA will conduct research in
       areas where it can make the greatest contribution to environmental justice and in a
       manner to ensure that the Agency's environmental justice policies are based on sound
       science.                                                               ;

       *      EPA,  in coordination with other Federal agencies, will:   collect, analyze, and
              maintain information on fish and/or wildlife subsistence consumption patterns,
              conduct research, develop methodologies, collect data, and publish guidance on
              the human health risks and effects associated with the consumption of pollutant-
              bearing fish, and wildlife. EPA will communicate the risks of those consumption
              patterns and work to integrate differential consumption patterns of natural
              resources and exposure patterns into the Agency's regulations, guidance, policies,
              and other activities.

       *      EPA will continue to develop human exposure data and  will address exposure in
              at least three main areas:  methods development, model development, and
              monitoring data.

       *      EPA will assess major pollution sources of high environmental risks in
              communities and support pollution prevention with research, as needed,  to
              reduce risk from those sources.

       *      EPA will evaluate the current state of knowledge in exposure and cumulative
              risk fields, and then identify data gaps and research needs.  In particular,
              research needs to include diverse exposed populations in epidemiological and
              clinical studies, especially those population segments at high exposure.

       4      EPA's risk characterization guidance will help communicate risks by characterizing
              the most important findings and conclusions.  Risk characterization includes the
              strengths, weaknesses, and assumptions of the risk data and analysis and a
              comparison to other risks.

       4      EPA will work to ensure that future legislation will be responsive to environmental
              justice health research and data needs.
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                  Data Collection, Analysis, and Stakeholder Access to Public Information

            DATA COLLECTION, ANALYSIS, AND
STAKEHOLDER ACCESS TO PUBLIC  INFORMATION

      EPA's mission of protecting public health and the environment depends on
      individuals within and outside of the Federal government having access to good data
      for informed decision-making.
IMPORTANCE OF DATA COLLECTION, ANALYSIS, AND ACCESS

       A sound information resource management foundation is vital to the Agency in its
ability to provide objective, reliable, and understandable information for our programs and
stakeholders. By strategically managing and integrating information, the Agency will better
understand environmental justice issues and make better decisions.  EPA will work with
affected communities, State, Tribal, and local governments, and others to have the best
possible information available to identify and address disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects on minority populations and low-income populations.
OBJECTIVES FOR DATA COLLECTION, ANALYSIS, AND ACCESS

1)    Addressing Data Gaps: EPA will conduct an inventory of the Agency's major data
      systems to identify uses, limitations, and gaps.

      *      EPA will work to fill data gaps including those related to pollution prevention in
             affected communities and those identified by affected communities through
             interactive needs assessments.

      *      EPA will examine, and expand, as appropriate, its databases to identify major
             facilities or sites, including Federal and non-Federal facilities or sites (covered
             by the Executive Order), that could pose a substantial environmental, human
             health, or economic effect on the surrounding populations.

      *      EPA will coordinate with public health departments and other Federal agencies
             to improve environmental health and exposure databases.

      *      EPA, in partnership with affected stakeholders, will:

             * identify methods of combining data and performing analysis for geographical
            - and exposure information, and will publish guidance on how to use these
             methods to address environmental justice.
                                       11

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                    Data Collection, Analysis, and Stakeholder Access to Public Information
              * increase the accuracy of its locational data for major facilities or sites of
              potential toxic releases and environmental quality monitoring points in affected
              communities.

2)     Improving Quality and Reducing Burdens of Data Reporting: In partnership with
       affected stakeholders:                                                   :

       *      EPA, in coordination with other Federal agencies and State, Tribal, and local
              governments, will work to create effective reporting mechanisms, including
              electronic reporting, to minimize cumbersome or duplicative reporting
              requirements and to improve accuracy.

       *      EPA will develop key identifiers, assist citizen reporting of key data elements,
              and facilitate analysis of human health and environmental data.
                                                                           c
3)     Data Integration and Analysis:  In partnership with affected communities and
       stakeholders:

       *      EPA will promote the use of Geographical Information Systems (GIS) to
              enhance identification of disproportionately affected communities.

       4      EPA will integrate the Agency's information resource management process
              linking environmental priorities, data needs, and resource investments.

       f      EPA will collect, analyze, and disseminate data that will compare environmental
              and human health risks to populations identified by race, national origin, or
              income.

4)     Improving Public Access:  In partnership with affected stakeholders:

       *      EPA will work to provide, as appropriate and practicable, direct stakeholder
              and user involvement in the design, implementation, and evaluation of its
              information systems.

       *      EPA information systems, as appropriate and practicable, will allow two-way
              communication between the Agency and community information users.

       *      EPA will produce educational materials to assist the public in their effective use
              of EPA data.                                                    !
                                                                         *
       *      EPA will make available to the public, information it collects on populations
              surrounding major facilities or sites.                               ',
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                 American Indian, Alaska Native, and Indigenous Environmental Protection

         AMERICAN INDIAN, ALASKA NATIVE, AND
      INDIGENOUS  ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION

       EPA mil work with Federally-recognized Tribal governments, Tribal and indigenous
       organizations, affected native populations, the Tribal Operations Committee, and the
       National Environmental Justice Advisory Council to integrate the provisions of the
       Executive Order into EPA's environmental policies, programs, and activities.
 IMPORTANCE OF AMERICAN INDIAN, ALASKA NATIVE,  AND INDIGENOUS
 ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION

       While other sections of this Strategy specifically include, where appropriate Federally-
 recognized Tribal governments and/or indigenous people, this section addresses environmental
 justice issues that are unique to Federally-recognized Tribal governments, their members  and
 other indigenous communities. Many initiatives aimed at achieving environmental justice are
 steps towards achieving more broad public participation and equity in environmental protection
 lor American Indians and indigenous communities. Environmental protection for American
 Indians Alaska Native, and indigenous communities is a critical part of the Agency's mission
 This is illustrated by the Agency's Indian Policy, the establishment of the Tribal Operations
 Committee, the creation of the American Indian Advisory Council and the1 American Indian
 Environmental Office, and the incorporation of indigenous issues through the National
 Environmental Justice Advisory Committee and the Office of Environmental lustice
OBJECTIVES FOR AMERICAN INDIAN, ALASKA NATIVE, AND INDIGENOUS
ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRAMS

+     EPA will continue to work with other Federal agencies and Federally-recognized' Tribes
      to effectively protect and improve Tribal health and environmental conditions  These
      activities will include: providing outreach, education, training, and technical, financial and
      legal assistance to develop, implement, and maintain comprehensive Tribal environmental
      programs, which will undertake the remediation of environmental hazards and the
      development and implementation of Tribal environmental codes and Tribal-EPA
      Agreements to address Tribal needs, program delegations, and direct Federal
      implementation.

+     EPA will implement its programs both for American Indians and indigenous communities
      recognizing the government-to-government relationship, the Federal Trust responsibility '
      Tribal sovereignty, treaty-protected rights, other tenets of Federal Indian law, and
      particular historical and cultural needs of Tribes and indigenous populations. 'TO ensure
      consistency, the Office of Environmental Justice, the Environmental Justice Coordinators,

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                                                                                            I
          American Indian, Alaska Native, and Indigenous Environmental Protection

the American Indian Environmental Office, the Office of Enforcement and Compliance
Assurance, and the Indian Coordinators will work closely to coordinate activities.

Human health and environmental research and other activities involving Tribal and
indigenous environments and communities will take into account the cultural use of
natural resources. These activities will seek contributions from Tribal governments and
indigenous people in order to incorporate their traditional understandings of, and
relationships to, the environment.

EPA will work with other Federal agencies, Federally-recognized Tribal governments, and
environmental justice advocates to develop appropriate guidance for addressing
indigenous grassroots environmental justice issues and encourage public participation
processes for environmental protection activities.

EPA will work with Tribal governments and indigenous populations to protect and sustain
Tribal and indigenous health, environments, and resources.
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                           Enforcement, Compliance Assurance, and Regulatory Review

  ENFORCEMENT, COMPLIANCE ASSURANCE, AND
                      REGULATORY REVIEW

      EPA will include a focus on environmental justice issues in its enforcement initiatives
      and through compliance analysis, data analysis, and regulatory review relating to
      populations covered by the Executive Order. EPA will implement Title VI of the Civil
      Rights Act and will consider environmental justice issues through the review of and
      comments on other Federal agencies' proposals and actions under the National
      Environmental Policy Act and Section 309 of the Clean Air Act.
IMPORTANCE OF ENFORCEMENT, COMPLIANCE ASSURANCE, AND
REGULATORY REVIEW

      Strong and effective enforcement of environmental and civil rights, laws is fundamental
to virtually every mission of EPA. The Agency recognizes that conditions affecting covered
populations (populations covered in the Executive Order), whether in rural or urban areas, can
result from multiple exposures, high-level exposures from a single source, and chronic non-
compliance.  The pollution comes from diverse sources, including both private and Federal
facilities. The Presidential memorandum issued with the Executive Order emphasizes that
existing laws, including the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, provide opportunities for Federal agencies to address environmental
hazards in minority communities and low-income communities.  The Agency further
recognizes that it must, along with its Federal, Tribal, and State partners, work to identify and
respond to any regulatory gaps in the protection of covered populations.
OBJECTIVES FOR ENFORCEMENT, COMPLIANCE, AND REGULATION

1)     Strategic Enforcement of Environmental Statutes:  EPA will incorporate
       environmental justice concerns into its program for ensuring compliance with Federal
       environmental requirements at both private and Federal facilities. The Agency will
       review and revise as needed significant policy and guidance documents to address
       environmental justice issues. A major feature of this approach will be to ensure that
       EPA's enforcement and compliance assurance activities include a focus on minority
       communities and low-income communities which suffer from disproportionately high
       and adverse human health or environmental effects.  EPA will  use, as appropriate, the
       full range of tools available to it to correct noncompliance in such communities.
       EPA will ensure that Memoranda of Agreement between Headquarters and Regional
       offices reflect environmental justice activities and will include environmental justice
       as a specific component of program reviews.
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2)
                       Enforcement, Compliance Assurance, and Regulatory Review

*      EPA will include in its enforcement efforts identification of communities and
       populations, such as low-income urban and rural populations which suffer from
       disproportionately high and adverse human health or environmental effects/
       EPA will work to ensure that inspection and enforcement actions are sufficient
       to address those effects.

4      EPA's focused efforts will use the most current demographic information (using
       Geographic Information System mapping techniques), Toxics Release Inventory
       data, media specific and multi-media data, community reports, and relevant
       health statistics.

*      EPA will customize its enforcement and compliance assurance program for
       affected communities to reflect the needs of the community and the particular
       compliance problems in that community. EPA will also use technical support
       and assistance as a  supplement to traditional enforcement as appropriate.

t      EPA will actively encourage the use of creative approaches to settlement of
       enforcement actions, particularly where violations have been identified in
       communities disproportionately impacted by environmental problems
       (traditionally, many enforcement actions have been resolved by assessing cash
       penalties and imposing "end of pipe" solutions). Specifically, Regions and
       States will be encouraged to obtain Supplemental Environmental Projects
       (SEPS) which promote pollution prevention,  remedy environmental damage,
       and collect adequate monetary fines. The goal of the projects will be to reduce
       long-term exposures within the affected community.                 :

t      EPA will work with academic institutions, including HBCUs, HSIs, and Tribal
       Colleges, and other local environmental justice groups to develop an educational
       program that provides affected communities with information on environmental
       protection, such as statutory and regulatory matters; citizen rights under Federal
       and State environmental statutes;  whistle-blower protection for employees; the
       interpretation of data on performance available to the public;  and the regulator's
       role in ensuring compliance.

National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and Clean Air Act (CAA) Section 309
Responsibilities: Under the authority of NEPA and Sec. 309 of the CAA, EPA will,
consistent with  regulations and guidelines issued by the President's Council on
Environmental Quality, routinely review the environmental effects of major Federal
actions significantly affecting the quality of the human environment. For such actions,
EPA reviewers  will focus on the spatial distribution of human health, social, and
economic effects to ensure that agency decisionmakers are aware of the extent to which
those impacts fall disproportionately on covered communities.
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                              Enforcement, Compliance Assurance, and Regulatory Review

       *     EPA will aid Federal officials in their review of Federal actions as it relates to
             carrying out its responsibilities under NEPA and CAA Sec. 309.

       +     EPA will consider holding workshops and seminars with Sec. 309 reviewers and
             NEPA coordinators to further explore environmental justice impact analysis
             methods.

3)     Non-discrimination: EPA will work to ensure non-discrimination in the development
       and implementation of environmental protection programs.

       *     EPA will improve its implementation of requirements of Title VI of the Civil
             Rights Act of 1964 (Title VI) by issuing guidance, and conducting oversight for
             State and local recipients of EPA funding.

       +     EPA will develop guidance on the requirements of Title VI for carrying out
             Federally-authorized State permitting programs under the Clean Air Act, Clean
             Water Act, and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act.

       *     EPA will work to develop case referral guidance, training materials on
             environmental justice and Title VI, and materials on Title VI compliance
             reviews.

       *   .  EPA will develop guidance on non-discrimination responsibilities of the Agency
             under the Executive Order.

4)     Regulatory Review: EPA will work to ensure that environmental justice is incorporated
       into the Agency's regulatory process.

       4     EPA will complete its Regulatory Impact Analysis Guidarice. This will provide the
             Agency guidance on ways to incorporate environmental justice into its regulatory
             development process.

       t     A cross-Agency work group on grants and environmental justice will examine
             options for incorporating environmental justice into EPA's grant programs to
             adequately reach minority populations and low-income populations and make
             recommendations to the Steering Committee on implementation.

       +     EPA will work with other Federal agencies and State, Tribal, and local
             governments to address environmental problems involving jurisdictional disputes
             or gaps in environmental laws.

       4     EPA will work to address cross-border pollution.
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                                                    Environmental Justice Model Projects

      ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE MODEL PROJECTS
 INTRODUCTION

        In its recommendations to EPA, the NEJAC strongly supported the use of model or
 pilot projects to generate opportunities and examples for grassroots communities, government
 agencies, and business to address environmental justice concerns.  Many EPA Offices and
 Regions have distinguished themselves in this area by creating model projects that reflect a
 "re-invented" way of doing business. The following are samples of these projects. For a
 complete list of projects, please contact the Office of Environmental Justice.
 BROWNFIELDS ECONOMIC REDEVELOPMENT PILOTS

       EPA, in partnership with the Departments of Housing and Urban Development, Labor,
 Energy and Commerce's Energy Development Agency, are working to leverage and coordinate
 federal resources promoting job training, economic development and community empowerment at
 local Brownfields sites. EPA has launched a major initiative to encourage cleanup and
 revitalization of idled,  abandoned or underused industrial or commercial facilities where
 opportunities for expansion or redevelopment are complicated by existing or potential
 environmental contamination.  OSWER will establish approximately 50 demonstration projects
 that will lead to the assessment and cleanup of these "Brownfields,"  and is also making several
 administrative changes which can be made to facilitate cleanup and redevelopment without
 lowering cleanup standards (e.g., endorsing State voluntary cleanup programs, deleting 25,000
 sites from the Superfund Inventory that are of no current Federal interest, clarifying liability
 concerns, and developing soil screening levels).

       The Brownfields Pilots will encourage community groups, investors, lenders, developers,
 and other affected parties to address how these lands can be redeveloped and bring jobs and
 vitality back to our nation's older industrial and commercial communities.  The Brownfields
 Projects will explore ways in which cleanup for redevelopment might work, providing a series of
 models for States and localities struggling with such efforts. Findings and experience from these
 pilots will serve as a foundation for a national EPA strategy to stimulate economic redevelopment
 through environmental  cleanup. The strategy will provide guidance on successful processes for
 cleaning up and returning contaminated, abandoned industrial Brownfields to productive use.

       In all of these economic redevelopment activities, OSWER is seeking ways to improve
communications, develop trust and involve the affected communities. For example, the NEJAC
Waste and Facility Siting Subcommittee is co-sponsoring a series of public forums to ensure that
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                                                   Environmental Justice Model Projects

 environmental justice concerns are fully incorporated into economic redevelopment and
 revitalization projects. OSWER and the Regions are also exploring the creation of business and
 industry, stakeholder and other types of public/private partnerships to address environmental
 justice concerns.
 PUBLIC HEALTH PILOT ACTIVITIES

       OSWER has initiated pilots in partnership with the Health and Human Service
 Departments to respond to health concerns of communities living near hazardous waste sites.
 The Superfund Medical Assistance Work Group (SMAWG) was established and developed the
 Medical Assistance Plan (MAP).  MAP, consisting of six elements which will vary according
 to a community's need for assistance and the availability of resources, will be implemented in
 phases.  The first phase will assess the health care needs and concerns of the community and
 evaluate the primary care capacities in that community. The second phase consists of five
 components, including technical assistance to local agencies and health care providers;
 environmental health education for health care providers; medical testing for residents
 assessing any health effects possibly related to hazardous substance exposure; referral to
 specialty clinics or specialists; and medical follow-up of persons with documented exposures to
 hazardous substances or with adverse health conditions related to possible exposures.
SOUTHEAST CHICAGO ENVIRONMENTAL INITIATIVE

       Southeast Chicago is a mosaic of predominately poor or working class, African-
American, Hispanic, and white neighborhoods.  It is an area of high structural unemployment
and multiple environmental problems, including a concentration of disposal sites, countless
urban Brownfields, and heavy industries. Located within Southeast Chicago is Altgeld
Gardens, a public housing community for thousands of low-income African-Americans and is
surrounded by a number of polluting facilities-landfills,  incinerators, oil refineries, a paint
factory, a steel mill, a sewage treatment plant, a chemical plant, a scrap metal yard, a lagoon,
a sludge drying bed, and a freeway.  This community has a high concentration of severe
environmental problems and concerns.

       EPA Region 5 developed the Southeast Chicago Urban Environmental Initiative Action
Plan, a framework to improve the environmental conditions of the community.  This unique
partnership hopes to bring together representatives of the government, industry, community,
and environmental groups.   Agencies and actions targeted include:

       *     The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) is conducting
             health assessments  of the Southeast Chicago community;

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                                                  Environmental Justice Model Projects

             The Department of Housing and Urban Development is developing residential
             lead-based paint removal projects and other environmental improvements; and,

             EPA, Chicago's Department of Environment, and the Illinois Environmental
             Protection Agency are working together to ensure tougher enforcement and
             compliance of existing environmental regulations.
MISSISSIPPI DELTA PROJECT

       The Mississippi Delta area has a high concentration of transportation routes, heavy and
petrochemical industries, waste sites, and other facilities. Environmental justice organizations
have complained that many of these facilities are sited close to minority communities ;and that
these communities are disproportionately exposed to environmental pollution. An interagency
steering committee comprised of ATSDR, the Center of Disease Control  (CDC), Occupational
Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), EPA, and the State Health and Environmental
departments is working to address these issues.

       The goal of this interagency project is to reduce environmental hazards and to prevent
them from adversely affecting minority populations and low-income populations residing in the
highly industrialized areas along the Mississippi River.  This project covers 219 counties in
seven States (Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Tennessee),
affecting more than 8.3 million people. The project is designed to: (1) identify the key
environmental hazards that might affect high risk communities; (2) evaluate the public health
impact on high exposure populations; (3)  increase health care delivery services in the region,
including capacity of State and local health departments to address public health associated
with environmental exposures; and (4) engage HBCUs and other academic institutions to help
increase environmental awareness in these communities.  This project represents the largest,
geographic-specific public health initiative ever attempted to study the association between
hazardous environmental exposure and health effects in minority communities|and low-income
communities.
NEW MEXICO AND TEXAS COLONIAS BORDER PROJECTS

       Colonias are Hispanic rural neighborhoods and unincorporated subdivisions in or near
cities in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California along the U.S.-Mexico border.
Between Texas and New Mexico there are about 1,200 colonias with an estimated population
of 300,000 people.  Colonias are characterized by substandard housing, inadequate plumbing
and sewage disposal systems, and inadequate access to clean water. The common thread is the
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                                                    Environmental Justice Model Projects

 potential and immediate health threat due to inadequate or lack of safe potable water and
 sewage disposal.

       Under recent grants from New Mexico, nine facility plans and four construction design
 plans are nearing completion for the thirteen new wastewater collection and treatment systems
 to serve colonias in New Mexico.  This grant program, administered by the New Mexico
 Environment Department, is made possible through a grant by EPA Region 6.

       The Texas Natural Resources Conservation Commission has awarded fifteen grants to
 provide waste water collection and treatment systems in Texas Colonias.  These projects will
 affect 64,000 colonias residents. Additional facility plans are being prepared for six colonias
 which have received grants for innovative/alternative methods of wastewater collection and
 treatment.  These six projects are designed to identify low cost methods of wastewater
 treatment for colonia application.
PENNSYLVANIA RISK AND ENFORCEMENT PROJECTS

       The City of Chester has among the highest concentration of industrial facilities in
Pennsylvania.  Chester hosts a number of waste processing plants and two oil refineries. All
solid waste from Delaware County is incinerated in Chester and at least 85 % of raw sewage
and associated sludge is treated there.  A large infectious medical waste facility was also
recently sited in Chester.  Many of the plants are located in close proximity to low-income,
minority residential neighborhoods.  In fact, a clustering of waste treatment facilities have
been permitted within 100 feet of over 200 Chester homes.

       Chester residents are concerned about the health effects of living and working amid
toxic substances and complain of frequent illness.  Of cities in the State, Chester has the
highest infant mortality rate, the lowest birth rate,  and among the highest death rate due to
certain malignant tumors.

       In response to the Chester community concerns, EPA Region 3 has committed to a
major initiative involving two studies addressing environmental  regulatory and pollutant
impact/risk exposure issues.  The first was a 30-day study of EPA's legal authority for existing
and proposed facilities in the Chester area.  As a result of the 30-Day Study, the Region has
focused enforcement actions and just recently issued field citations to a number of underground
storage tanks located in Chester and the nearby area of Marcus Hook.  Other focused
enforcement-related activities are proceeding in air toxics reduction and compliance,
innovative settlements for toxic emissions violators, and multi-media compliance reviews.

       In addition, an 180-day study, conducted by a team of toxicologists working with State
and local officials is assessing all available environmental media and human  exposure

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                                                   Environmental Justice Model Projects

pathways. Work products will be displayed through a Regional Geographic Information
System overlaying industrial facilities data, NPL sites and small quantity waste generators, and
air emissions data.
BALTEVIORE URBAN ENVIRONMENTAL INITIATIVE

       The Baltimore Urban Environmental Initiative (URI) is an interagency activity being
conducted by Region 3 in cooperation with the City of Baltimore and the Maryland
Department of the Environment. The URI is designed to identify and rank areas of
disproportionate risk in Baltimore City for purposes of implementing risk reduction, pollution
prevention, public awareness, and other appropriate environmental activities to minimize risks.
The Baltimore URI has both short- and long-term tracks. The short-term efforts address issues
of immediate concern as well as initial data collection, data analyses, and project planning.
The long-term effects will be expanded in areas that warrant continued action.

       A project development and problem identification report for the URI will describe the
data gathering and risk identification and characterization efforts in support of the overall
Initiative. Data has been gathered from a number of existing environmental and
demographics-based databases in order to identify and evaluate human health and ecological
threats for purposes of targeting risk reduction/prevention activities. Quantitative and
qualitative risk assessment methods have been applied and displayed through the use of a
Geographic Information System.

       The short-term efforts, based upon preliminary risk analyses, applied the knowledge
and experience of an interagency team to jointly target areas of environmental concern that
could  benefit from immediate action.  The six areas of concern identified were:  1) lead;
2) hazardous materials incident; 3) fish consumption/toxics in the Harbor; 4) air toxics;
5) ground-level ozone; and 6) indoor air and radon. Individual  action teams were formed to
address each issue.  These teams were responsible for developing action agendas to address the
overall goals of risk reduction,  pollution prevention, and outreach and education, for each risk
area.
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                                                  Environmental Justice Model Projects
LEAD ABATEMENT TRAINING AND EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE
INNER CITY COMMUNITY

       EPA, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the city of Boston, and Roxbury
Community College, joined by local community groups, have undertaken a pilot project to
train unemployed workers in a minority community to remove harmful lead paint from homes
and bridges, and provide specialized training so that minority contractors can gain access to
State and city lead paint abatement contracts.  Eighty-five percent of Boston's 230,000 public
housing units contain lead-based paint and less than 2 % have been abated to date. The current
workforce of 21 minority contracting firms is limited; this project closes the gap between
trained workers and contract workers.

       Boston's Office of Public Facilities received a $3.5 million grant from the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to do lead abatement of 400,000
housing units.  Massachusetts Housing Finance Agency will  invest $2.5 million to de-lead
2,000 housing  units in Boston. In addition, this pilot project will also build the management
capacity of struggling minority firms to support bonding, insurance, and equipment
expenditures necessary to compete on large lead abatement contracts.
COMMUNITY CHEMICAL EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS AND PREVENTION
OUTREACH AND TRAINING

       Kellog, Idaho, is one of the communities within the Bunker Hill Superfund site
boundaries.  Once a mining/smelting industry town, the area now faces a multi-million dollar
cleanup effort. This primarily blue collar community must also confront a 25 %
unemployment rate. Citizens were concerned that despite an increase in local employment
opportunities, jobs are not being filled locally. Contractors were encouraged by EPA to hire
locally, but most local individuals had not completed the 40-hour health and safety training
required for employment at cleanup sites.

       The Region 10 Superfund Site Response Section is piloting a program which conducts
hazardous waste health and safety  training for communities with nearby cleanup sites. In 1993
and 1994, Region 10's training targeted communities with high unemployment rates, with the
goal of aiding the local workers' eligibility for employment by cleanup contractors at nearby
Superfund sites.  For example, 90 people in Kellog, Idaho, were trained and certified, making
them eligible for  employment at the nearby Bunker Hill Superfund Site. The project's success
was in addressing the unemployment rate and in providing local education and awareness
training.
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                                                  Environmental Justice Model Projects

       Training was also conducted for the Makah tribe at Neah Bay, the Coeur d'Alene tribe,
and for Galena, Alaska (an Alaska Native Village). Operational level emergency response
training was conducted in Fairbanks, Alaska for the Tanana Chiefs Council.  Future training
efforts will include Tok, Alaska and other communities that request training as a method for
becoming integrated into nearby clean-up efforts.
WATER PROJECTS FOR RURAL COMMUNITIES

       EPA's Office of Water, in partnership with the Office of Environmental Justice, is
sponsoring a series of 14 projects around the country to address the pressing water and
wastewater needs of underserved rural minority communities.  EPA is working with;the Rural
Community Assistance Program (RCAP), which is responsible for the actual implementation
of the projects.  The overall goal of the effort is to demonstrate effective approaches: for
providing essential water and wastewater services to selected African American, Hispanic, and
Tribal communities.

       Each project will last approximately one year.  During this period, RCAP field offices
will take various steps to address the specific needs of these communities. Some of the
services provided by RCAP include training and education on properly operating and
maintaining alternative wastewater and water treatment systems, identifying affordable
treatment options for these communities, and helping  communities access affordable, sources of
funding.  This initiative targets underserved, rural, and Tribal communities.
LOUISIANA ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE PROGRAM

       Louisiana is one of the first States to set up a formal environmental justice program to
address its wide-ranging environmental issues.  The Louisiana Department of Environmental
Quality (LDEQ) implemented an Environmental Justice Program under a grant from EPA
Region 6. Fact-finding public hearings are being used to serve as a forum for discussion and
resolution of local environmental justice issues. The Department hired a full-time coordinator
to establish Environmental Justice Advisory Panels comprised of community and industry
representatives.

       In the first year of the program, the State hosted public meetings and built the
foundation of an environmental justice program within the Louisiana Department of
Environmental Quality. A follow-up grant was given to LDEQ to continue the environmental
justice work with formation of community advisory boards (environmental justice panels) in
key pilot parishes around the State.

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                                                  Environmental Justice Model Projects
OPEN AIRWAYS FOR SCHOOLS

       According to recent statistics from the American Lung Association (ALA), asthma
deaths in urban minority children have increased 30 % over a ten-year period. While the
reasons for this increase are many, indoor air pollutants are among the leading factors. To
address this problem, the Office of Air and Radiation in partnership with the American Lung
Association and Zeta Phi Beta (a national women of color sorority) have launched a model
school-based asthma health education program for children with asthma, their parents, and
their teachers.

       The program, called Open Airways for Schools, focuses on developing asthma
management skills for students, helping parents and teachers create more supportive
environments for asthmatic children and developing activities to reduce indoor pollutants.
This partnership between EPA, ALA, and Zeta Phi Beta sorority will impact millions of
urban, poor households with asthmatic children.
MASTER HOME ENVIRONMENTALIST PROGRAM

       Region 10, in conjunction with the City of Seattle and the YMCA, has established a
Master Home Environmental Program which is designed to reduce exposures from toxic
materials and pollutants in the home. The focus is on indoor pollutants including lead,
contaminated soil, toxics, in-house dust, hazardous household chemicals and pollutants from
smoke and tobacco products.  A group of Seattle Health Department nurses is working with
low-income families in the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) program to provide them
with information on home toxics and lead.  The program targets communities with higher
populations of minority and low-income residents and relies on volunteers, many from the
targeted communities. Volunteers who successfully complete the training present this
information to community groups and organizations, and assist people in implementing a
survey of pollution problems in their homes.
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                                                             Environmental Justice Contacts

                         ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE CONTACT LISTING
USEPA - HEADQUARTERS CONTACTS:

401 M Street S.W., Washington, D.C. 20460
Use Mail Code (MC) for Each Office.

OFFICE OF ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
Dr. Clarice E. Gaylord - MC-3103
800/962-6215,202/260-6357

AMERICAN INDIAN ENVIRONMENTAL
OFFICE - MC-3103
Elizabeth Bell; 202/260-8106

OFFICE OF AIR AND RADIATION
MC-6101
Will Wilson; 202/260-5574

OFFICE OF CIVIL RIGHTS - MC-1201
Rodney Cash;  202/260-4582

OFFICE OF COMMUNICATION,
EDUCATION AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS
MC-1702
Doretta Reaves; 202/260-3534

OFFICE OF ENFORCEMENT AND
COMPLIANCE ASSURANCE - MC-2225
Sherry Milan; 202/260-9807

OFFICE OF GENERAL COUNSEL
MC-2378R
Mary O'Lone;  202/260-5313

OFFICE OF POLICY, PLANNING AND
EVALUATION - MC-2125
Janice Bryant; 202/260-2730

OFFICE OF PREVENTION, PESTICIDES &
TOXIC SUBSTANCES - MC-7101
Shantrel Brown; 202/260-6906

OFFICE OF REGIONAL OPERATIONS &
STATE/LOCAL RELATIONS - MC-1502
Janice Berry-Chen; 202/260-3870

OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND
DEVELOPMENT - MC-8105
Lawrence Martin; 202/260-7667

OFFICE OF SOLID WASTE AND
EMERGENCY RESPONSE - MC-5101
GregMertz; 202/260-5714

OFFICE OF WATER - MC-4102
Sandra Germann; 202/260-5410
USEPA - REGION CONTACTS:

USEPA, REGION 1
James Younger; 617/565-3403
One Congress Street, 10th Floor
Boston, MA 02114

USEPA, REGION 2
Melva Hayden; 212/637-5027
290 Broadway, 26th Floor
New York, NY 10007

USEPA, REGION 3
Reginald Harris; 215/597-6529
841 Chestnut Building
Philadelphia, PA 19107

USEPA, REGION 4
Vivian Malone-Jones; 404/347-3555, Ext.6764
345 Courtland Street, NE
Atlanta, GA  30365

USEPA, REGION 5
GinaRosario; 312/353-4716
Waste Management Division (HM7J)
77 West Jackson Blvd.
Chicago, IL 60604-3507

USEPA, REGION 6
Lynda Carroll; 214/665-7200
First Interstate Bank, at Front PI.
1445 Ross Ave., 12th Floor, Suite 1200
Dallas, TX 75202-2733

USEPA, REGION 7
Rupert Thomas; 913/551 -7282
726 Minnesota Avenue
Kansas City, KS  66101

USEPA, REGION 8
Mel McCottry; 303/293-1645
999 18th Street, Suite 500
Denver, CO  80202-2405

USEPA, REGION 9
Lori Lewis; 415/744-1561
75 Hawthorne Street
San Francisco, CA 94105

USEPA, REGION 10
Joyce Crosson-Kelly; 206/553-4029
Planning and Evaluation Branch
1200 Sixth Avenue (MD-142)
Seattle, WA  98101

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