United States Environmental Protection Agency • 1 Oth edition summer ej news 1 office update 5 upcoming events 8 contacts & web resources... ....8 environmental A Newsletter from the EPA New England Environmental Justice Council ei nevus Lisa Jackson Visits New Bedford EPA Administrator Lisa P Jackson has made it clear since the day she stepped into her job that "environmen- tal protection is about human protec- tion." While she was in New Bedford in April, she announced $25 to $35 million in new EPA funds for clean- ing the New Bedford Harbor Super- fund site. Gov. Deval Patrick, Sen. Ted Kennedy and Rep. Barney Frank were also at the event to announce the funding. This money, from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, will provide a tremendous boost to the cleanup of New Bedford Harbor and is expected to significantly speed progress towards remov- ing PCB-contaminated sediment and returning a clean harbor back to the community. New Bedford, one of the poorest communities in New England, is among dozens of urban communities across the region receiving support from the $460 million in Recovery Act funds going to this region. President Obama directed that the Recovery Act, signed Feb. 17, be put in place with unprecedented transpar- ency and accountability. Congress appropriated $600 million in Recovery Act funds to EPA's Superfund program to clean some of the most contaminated waste sites in the country. Many of these sites, like New Bedford, Community representatives with Lisa Jackson at EPA's cleanup facility in New Bedford. are in the industrial areas hardest hit by the recession. By starting or speeding up cleanup at Superfund sites, the funding more quickly returns sites to productive use. A redeveloped Superfund site can offer economic benefits to communities, including jobs. Before the New Bedford announcement, Jackson heard concerns of community members so she could be sure they have a voice in the clean- up. Jackson's meeting exemplified her strong belief that EPA must offer a "listening ear" to all communities-and especially disadvantaged communities. According to Jackson, environmental justice "is not an issue we can afford to relegate to the margins. It has to be part of our thinking in every decision we make." Mystic River Receives a "C-" with Notable Improvement at Report Card Event The Mystic River Watershed received a grade of "C-" from EPA New England for the calendar year of 2008. This announcement, made at events in Chelsea and Woburn, Mass, on May 2, repre- sented the third time EPA has given the Mystic River Watershed a grade. The report card began in 2006 as a collaborative effort to address water quality issues in the Mystic River. While each of the past two years EPA has announced a grade of "D" for the watershed, EPA announced the "C-" for the watershed. The grade for the Mystic River Watershed indicated that over the past year, water quality met swimming standards 59 percent of the time and boating standards 90 percent of the time. The grade is based on bacterial contamination. EPA New England's Acting Deputy Regional Administrator, Stephen Perkins, joined community members and environmental advocates at Mill Creek in Chelsea and at Horn Pond Conservation Area in Woburn to announce the grade and celebrate the communities' annual spring cleanup and Earth Day events. Commu- nity members had gathered to help with river cleanup projects. "This year's Mystic River Report Card grade is a testament to the success of the strong part- nerships forged between local citizens all the way up through federal government. A "C-" is a substantial improvement from years past, but there is still much work to be done," said Perkins. "By pulling together, we hope to make the Mystic River Watershed one of the most beautiful, most usable and most valued water- sheds in the country." "The Mystic River Watershed encompasses more than 76 square miles, 22 towns and cities and ------- ii Bllironmentll • 10th edition summer the lives and well being of more than 500,000 residents. Working with Chelsea Greenspace, the Woburn Residential Environmental Network, the professional staff at EPA New England and many, many other environmental advocacy groups we are determined to achieve a restoration of environmental conditions in the Mystic River Watershed to a healthy state," said EkOngKar Singh Khalsa, executive director of the Mystic River Watershed Association. "The results of this year's EPA Report Card provide encouragement that we are moving in the right direction." The report card event was organized by the Mystic River Steering Committee, which oper- ates as a coordinating and information exchange organization to help establish priorities and recommend key actions needed to improve conditions in the Mystic River Water- shed. The Steering Committee integrates environmental justice principles by bring- ing a diverse group to the table composed of nearly half commu- nity groups and non- profits. This diversity ensures that disadvan- taged groups have a voice in the planning process. Environmen- tal justice is an impor- Stephen Perkins, Acting Deputy Regional Administrator, at a Mystic River Report Card Event. tant consideration in EPA New England's urban rivers strat- egy and is a clear objective of the Mystic River Watershed Steering Committee. Environmental Justice Program Awards Four Grants To New England Non-Profits Four community organizations from New England states were awarded $20,000 each as part of EPA's Environmental Justice Small Grants Program, which supports community organiza- tions that address environmental or public health problems at a local level. The four organizations that received grants were: The Spanish American Union of Spring- field, Mass; Rhode Island Legal Services; The Connecticut Coalition for Environmental Justice and United Somali Women of Maine. The Spanish American Union of Springfield, Mass., in collaboration with Groundwork Spring- field, received a grant for its "What's Bugging You?" project, which aims to work with partners to raise awareness and reduce health hazards from pesticides for families living in public hous- ing developments in Springfield. The project will target local youths as agents for providing educa- tion and encouraging ways to improve the quality of indoor environments in public housing. The project aims to reduce exposure to pesticides, encourage integrated pest management and reduce asthma triggers for families most at risk. The Spanish Ameri- can Union, a non-profit organization, was one of several organizations that worked together to form Groundwork Springfield, a local initiative that is part of a nationwide program to help promote environmental, econom- ic, and social well- being of communities. "We are just small-town people trying to help our city come back to life without duplicating efforts and that is what Ground- work Springfield is doing through urban environ- mental work funded by EPA's grant," said Patricia Moss, project director of Groundwork Springfield. Rhode Island Legal Services received the grant for its work on the "Green Teenz Video Learning Project," which will host a 10-week class for 15 youth from the Hartford Park Public Housing Proj- ect in Providence. During the class, youth will create two 30-second public service announce- ment videos that will focus on the health risks associated with common household cleaning products (one in English and one in Spanish), and another 5-minute video that will focus on the correlation between solid waste and trash and poor living and health conditions in low-income neighborhoods. Rhode Island Legal Services provides support to low-income people with civil legal problems, ranging from family matters, housing, employ- ment, government benefits and consumer disputes. Its major priorities are to ensure that low-income people have food, shelter, income, medical care and freedom from domestic violence. "We have been very lucky to receive EPA fund- ing for our environmental justice work for many years now, but this particular grant will enable us to go in a completely different direction than we usually do," said Steven Fischbach, the project's team leader. "Our goal is to engage youth who live in public housing and have very little oppor- tunity to participate in afterschool programs because of budget cuts in the school systems, and to get them involved in environmental work that will teach them the importance of participat- ing in civic life." The Connecticut Coalition for Environmental Justice received the grant for its work on the "Clean and Safe Connecticut Cities" project, which will reduce health effects from air toxics in Hartford, New Haven and Bridgeport through education. The goals of the project are to reduce exposure to toxic cleaning products and encour- age the use of safer, less toxic alternatives to reduce environmental and public health prob- lems in indoor environments. The coalition's primary mission is to protect urban environments in Connecticut by educat- ing communities, promoting changes in govern- ment policies and promoting individual, corpo- rate and governmental responsibility towards environmental issues. Some of its goals are to educate the public about the disparities in environmental burdens borne by urban commu- nities and the reasons why negative health impacts are greater in those communities. "EPA's grant has been very helpful in enabling us to educate more people about the toxins that ordinary, over-the-counter cleaning products can contain and to suggest alternative products that are safer, work just as well, and are often cheaper than traditional products," said project leader Mark Mitchell. The United Somali Women of Maine received a grant for its work on the "New Mainers Lead and Pesticide Prevention Program." This program page | 2 ------- ei environmental news • 10th edition summer L y is set to develop and implement an outreach campaign that will educate the refugee popu- lation in the Lewiston/Auburn area of central Maine on lead hazards and the risks involved in pesticide application. The ultimate goals of the project are to reduce lead and pesticide dangers in homes and increase community capacity to ensure environmental quality and safety for their local residents' homes. United Somali Women of Maine works to promote self-sufficiency, increase access to health infor- mation and health care, prevent violence and promote a non-sexist, multicultural environment for Somali women and girls. It serves as a bridge between Somali and East African families in the Lewiston, Auburn and Portland areas and local service providers. Since the Environmental Justice Small Grants Program pilot was released in 1994, EPA has supplied thousands of community-based orga- nizations with more than $31 million. EPA announces $24.4 Million in Grants for Contaminated Land Cleanup, Economic Development in New England Nearly $112 million in EPA grants is avail- able to help communities clean up "brown- fields," sites where expansion, redevelopment, or reuse may be complicated by the pres- ence or potential presence of contamination. The grants, announced in May by EPA Adminis- trator Lisa P Jackson, include nearly $7.4 million from the Recovery Act and $17.1 mi Ilion from the EPA brownfields general program funding for the New England states. Thesefunds will help revital- ize former industrial and commercial sites, turning them from dangerous sites to productive places. "Cleaning and reusing contaminated properties provides the catalyst to improving the lives of residents living in or near brownfields commu- nities," said Jackson. "A revitalized brown- fields site reduces threats to human health and the environment, creates green jobs, promotes community involvement, and attracts investment in local neighborhoods." "EPA's Brownfield's program has been an incredibly powerful economic engine, help- ing communities throughout New England to assess, clean and reclaim abandoned parcels, returning property to productive uses," said Ira Leighton, acting regional administrator of EPA's New England office. "We are proud that with additional funding for Brownfields work in New England, the Recovery Act will be helping to jump start local economies, putting people to work creat- ing a cleaner and healthier environment." Some of the applicants selected to receive Recovery Act funds include: • City of Holyoke, Mass. $200,000, cleanup grant for Former Mountain Road Firing Range • City of New Bedford, Mass. $200,000, community-wide assessment grant • City of Worcester, Mass. $200,000, commu- nity-wide assessment grant • Rhode Island Dept. of Environmental Management, $1 million, community-wide "coalition" grant • City of Woonsocket, Rhode Island, $200,000, cleanup grant • Maine Dept. of Environmental Protection, $400,000, two community-wide assessment grants • Town of Sanford, Maine, $200,000, cleanup grant for Sanford Mill Site Some of the applicants selected to receive brownfields general program funds include: "Cleaning and reusing contaminated properties provides the catalyst to improving the lives of resi- dents living in or near brownfields communities," - Lisa P. Jackson • City of Lowell, $400,000, two community- wide assessment grants • New Garden Park, Inc., $400,000, two cleanup grants for former Worcester Voca- tional High School • New Hampshire Dept. of Environmental Services, $1 million, community-wide coali- tion grant • Southern N.H. Planning Commission, $400,000, two community-wide assessment grants • City of Burlington/CED Office, Vermont, $200,000, community-wide assessment grant • Bridgeport Housing Authority, Conn., $200,000, cleanup grant • City of Bridgeport, Conn. $1 million, community-wide Revolving Loan Fund grant Grant recipients are selected through a national competition. The Brownfields Program encourages development of the nation's esti- mated 450,000 abandoned and contaminated waste sites. Three New England Projects Share $600k for Environmental Job Training Two communities in Connecticut and one in Massachusetts will share $600,000 in EPA brownfields job training grants geared toward cleaning up contaminated properties and turning them into productive community assets. The three New England recipients that will each be awarded $200,000 EPA brownfields job train- ing grants are: • The City of New Bedford, Mass., • Workplace Inc. of Southwest Connecticut (in Bridgeport, Conn.), and, • The Northwest Regional Workforce Investment Board, in Waterbury, Conn. The EPA grants will help teach people living in near brownfields sites how to do environmental assessments and clean up brownfields sites. The Northwest Regional Workforce Investment Board in Waterbury plans to train 60 students and aims to place 50 graduates in environmen- tal jobs. The training program will include envi- ronmental, health, safety and industrial training; page | 3 ------- ii Bllironmentll • 10th edition summer lead and asbestos abatement training; and reme- diation technologies training. The Investment Board will work with the Waterbury Development Corporation, trade unions, environmental orga- nizations and private sector remediation special- ists to place graduates in environmental jobs. The Workplace Inc., a nonprofit organization, provides employment and training services for a 20-town region in Fairfield County. Recent assessments have identified 26 brownfield sites within this area. The Workplace plans to train 60 students from five towns, including Norwalk, Ansonia, Derby, Seymour and Shelton, with a goal of placing 48 in environmental jobs. The training program will include lead and asbestos abatement, 40-hour Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response Standard ((HAZWOP- ER), and environmental technician. Trainees who go beyond the basic course requirements may become certified in other environmental areas with a potential for earning up to 13 college credits. The Workplace will create an environ- mental jobs hotline and a job club, and work with environmental professionals on the advisory board to place graduates. The City of New Bedford has clusters of under- used or abandoned textile mills, electronic manufacturing facilities and other industrial sites, many of which sit next to densely popu- lated, low-income neighborhoods. Brownfield cleanups are underway or planned for several mill, electronics and tool sites. Students will be recruited from the city's unemployed and under- employed residents in neighborhoods hurt by brownfields. New Bedford plans to train a total of 60 students in two tracks, and place at least 33 graduates in environmental jobs. The envi- ronmental competency track includes 344 hours of coursework and certifications in Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response Standards; asbestos, lead, and mold abate- ment; hazardous substance transportation; vapor intrusion; and alternative technologies. The higher-education track consists of 465 hours of training in site evaluation and GIS, incident management, hazardous waste management, and general chemistry. Trainees who complete this track will receive up to 25 college credits. The primary trainer will be Bristol Community College. New Bedford will work with the Greater New Bedford Career Center to place graduates in environmental jobs. The three New England projects were among only 13 projects in 12 states selected to share $2.6 million in job training grants. Since 1998, EPA has awarded more than $25 million in brownfields job training funds, and more than 4,000 people have completed train- ing programs nationwide. More than 3,000 of these graduates have gotten well-paying jobs in the environmental field. These programs are designed to ensure that economic benefits derived from brownfields redevelopment remain in the affected communities. EPA's Brownfields Program encourages rede- velopment of the country's estimated 450,000 abandoned and contaminated waste sites. Since the beginning of the program, EPA has awarded more than 1,400 assessment grants totaling approximately $337 million, 240 revolving loan fund grants totaling more than $233 million, and 530 cleanup grants totaling about $99 million. EPA's brownfields assistance has attracted more than $12.7 billion in private investment and helped create more than 53,000 jobs. More information is available at: January 2009 EPA Brownfields job training grant recipients (epa.gov/brownfields/09jtgrants/index.htm) EPA Brownfields program in New England (epa.gov/region1/brownfields) WE-ACT: Advancing Climate Justice Conference in NYC Lisa P Jackson, EPA Administrator, made her first public appearance at the Advancing Climate Justice Conference in New York City on January 29-30. The conference, hosted by West Harlem Environmental Action (WE-ACT), was attended by more than 400 environmental justice advo- cates, community leaders and others interested in discussing issues surrounding climate change. Speakers at this 2-day conference presented data related to various climate change topics, focus- ing on the environmental and socio-economic impacts such changes have had on low income and minority communities. The conference not only served as an outlet to present facts, but also as an open forum, where participants were encouraged to share opinions and concerns with the goal of developing policy recommendations that would ensure environmental justice for disadvantaged communities. The conference consisted of several sessions that concentrated on specific climate justice areas of interests. For example, the first round- table session, "Climate Justice Advocacy in Light of the Climate Crisis," highlighted efforts already underway to address climate change in vulnerable communities. It also addressed the need to incorporate climate justice into future policy. Speakers at that session were Martha Arguello from Physicians for Social Responsi- bility and Bill Gallegos from Communities for a Better Environment. In addition to attending informational sessions, participants heard from EPA Administrator, Lisa P Jackson, Dr. Robert D. Bullard from the Envi- ronmental Justice Resource Center at Clark- Atlanta University, and Dr. Beverly Wright from the Deep South Center for Environmental Justice at Dillard University, among others. Jackson assured those present that President Obama is fully aware of "urban issues and the concerns of low income communities who feel disproportionately affected by pollution and other environmental problems." She also pledged to lend "a listening ear and a heart" to climate justice issues and to address climate change initiatives through "sound science." page | 4 ------- ei environmental news • 10th edition summer L y When asked why she chose the WE-ACT conference as her first public appearance as EPA Administrator, Ms. Jackson said, "I want- ed this to be my first appearance because I'm an African-American woman and an environ- mentalist, and we have similar backgrounds. This was very meaningful to me." Jackson also emphasized her commitment to making EPA an ideal workplace for young people looking to begin their careers in envi- ronmental protection. Another of her goals as Administrator is to diversify EPA from the top down in the hopes of making EPA "look more like the people it serves." WE-ACT's Advancing Climate Justice confer- ence unified hundreds of voices from across Vernice Miller-Travis, Lisa Jackson, Cecil Corbin-Mark, and Peggy Shepard at WE-ACT Conference. the country with the common goal of creat- ing a just and responsible "climate-changed future by advocating for policies and programs that protect the most vulnerable communities of our country." Green Jobs Conference in February in Washington, DC More than 2,500 labor, environmental and business advocates came together in Wash- ington, D.C. in early February to create an agenda for a new, green economy. The 2009 Good Jobs, Green Jobs National Conference featured prominent speakers and workshops sessions all aimed at exploring new ideas and exchanging best practices. The 3-day conference alternated between plenary sessions and workshops. The plenary sessions provided a stage for national envi- ronmental experts to discuss recent initiatives related to green jobs, while the workshops allowed participants to explore new ideas and exchange best practices. The conference focused on how solutions to environmental challenges can be used to drive economic development and create successful busi- nesses. The conference worked to accomplish four objectives: •Focus the country on the specific combi- nation of policy changes, public invest- ments, and funding mechanisms that are necessary to accelerate the growth of the green economy; •Quantify and illustrate the job growth potential of global warming solutions and green chemistry; •Show the size of the coalition that supports moving to a clean, renewable energy econ- omy; and •Highlight the potential of the green econ- omy to forge a new social agenda that reduces poverty, improves public health, and strengthens our middle class. A Green Jobs Expo featured companies, academic institutions and organizations that displayed green technology or products from manufacturing. The expo served as a portal for academic institutions, manufacturers, non-profit agencies, corporations and govern- mental agencies to showcase interactive displays that demonstrated career options in the emerging green economy. The conference closed with remarks from EPA Administrator Lisa P Jackson, who expressed EPA's commitment to support the new green economy and in turn, the creation of "good jobs, green jobs." She also made it clear that she is committed to the idea that you don't have to choose between environmental protection and the economy. office update Asthma and Actions in Urban Areas The current adult asthma rate of 9.7% in New England is significantly higher than in the rest of the United States, which has a rate of 7.3%, according to a recent study.1 The study analyzes information from a 2006 call-back survey of adult asthmatics, and also found that rates in New England rose between of 2001 and 2006. The States' health departments further analyses showed localized areas of disproportionately high rates. In Connecticut, one of the wealthi- est states, five of its largest cities - Bridgeport, Hartford, New Haven, Stamford and Waterbury - had high rates of poverty as well as higher rates of asthma morbidity. Children, adult females, Hispanics and blacks living in these cities expe- rience higher rates of asthma impacts, such as emergency room visits, hospitalizations and deaths, all of which are preventable. Massachu- setts also finds higher hospitalizations for asthma in large cities, including Boston, Brockton, Fall River, New Bedford, Springfield and Worcester. The EPA's Regional Asthma Team, known as the A-Team, working with the state asthma coordina- tors and state and local asthma coalitions, have focused attention on these urban hotspots. The A-Team's work, amplifying the efforts of the Springfield Pioneer Valley Asthma Coalition provides an example of this focused approach. Pioneer Valley coalition, an active broad-based coalition, and their local partners enhanced work funded by EPA's Healthy Community Grant Program. This work provided home visits with families of pediatric asthma patients to educate them about home environmental expo- sures, methods of removing triggers, and tools and services to remediate. The Springfield coalition worked with the Boston Public Health Commission to train more than 40 community health workers and nurses on Healthy Homes principles. Another partner, Asthma and Allergy Foundation of New England, trained child care facilities' staff in Springfield on asthma aware- ness and on using a checklist to evaluate their facility for environmental problems. 1 "Living with Asthma in New England", presentation in 2009 by the Asthma Regional Council (ARC) page | 5 ------- ii Bllironmentll • 10th edition summer EPA helped facil- ity managers in Spring- field use the Tools for Schools' program to evaluate the health of school buildings. The city's facilities depart- ment is setting up a schedule to evalu- ate and repair schools based on asthma rates. In addition, the Ameri- can Lung Association of Massachusetts is helping with programs to reduce smoking, especially inside build- ings. The Pioneer Valley coalition is even developing a strategy to train parent-coaches in asthma awareness. The coali- tion will provide asthma awareness training and environmental improvements nearly everywhere children go in Springfield. In Connecticut, the State, EPA and the Center for Disease Control are working together to help urban areas reduce asthma impacts. Hart- ford, Bridgeport, Waterbury and Meriden are among the communities who have adopted New London's piloted "Putting on AIRS" (Asthma Indoor Risk Strategies) program. Putting on AIRS is a home education and remediation program run by the local health department for asthmatic patients referred by physicians and school nurs- es. The program has reduced asthma-related emergency room and physician visits by 75 percent and reduced school and work sick days by 62 percent. The Boston Public Health Commission has taken the lead in working with Boston hospitals (Boston Medical Center, Tufts, Children's Hospital and Brigham & Women's Hospital), the Ecumenical Social Action Committee, and EPA New England to create a more coordinated asthma care system in Boston. The initial focus is on home visits. Boston also has led the way, through the efforts of the Boston Housing Authority and its public health commission, to help residents in public housing find alternatives to typical pesticides. Webinar training sessions conducted by the Asthma Regional Council, the Boston Public Health Commission and the housing authority, were provided nationwide to over 80 asthma Springfield School Superintendent speaking at Pioneer Valley Asthma Coalition's Asthma Awareness Fair. coalitions. The training focuses on how to use the system of "integrated pest management." The training showed why this system is safer and more effective than traditional methods of pest control and discussed the nuances of the program in public housing. The training received funding from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and EPA and was distributed through EPA's Communities in Action for Asthma Friendly Environments (see http://www.asthmacommunitynetwork.org/). ACE's Kalila Barnett is Build- ing Sustainable Communities Through Local Power Kalila Barnett, executive director of Alternatives for Community and Environment, or ACE, spoke to EPA New England's Boston office in March as part of the Environmental Justice Lunch and Learn Series. Her presentation, "Build- ing Sustainable Communities through Local Power," discussed ACE's mission of achieving environmental justice by building the power of communities of color and lower-income communities so that environmental racism and classism can be eliminated. Barnett highlighted three of ACE's main programs: the T-Riders union, the Roxbury Environmental Empowerment group and legal/ technical assistance. She said ACE is focused on issues related to asbestos, asthma and diesel. ACE is moving towards a membership-based structure, hoping to gain members in the low- income and minority communities it serves, Barnett said. She identified "revitalization without displace- ment" as one of ACE's biggest challenges. This concept refers to the emerging problem faced by residents of EJ communities, who must leave their homes because they can no longer afford to live there after clean-ups and other improve- ments have led to price increases in housing. ACE gives aid to residents struggling with rising housing costs. Barnett concluded by discussing the "green economy" and "green jobs." As the clean ener- gy industry grows in Boston, ACE is emphasiz- ing the need to make an impact in the life of all residents, not just those that can afford to live a "green" lifestyle, such as those who can buy hybrid cars and install solar panels on their houses. ACE continues to promote this notion of "green justice" by helping residents of EJ communities save money by reducing heating costs. ACE also is advocating an increase in the number of "green collar" jobs accessible to resi- dents of disadvantages communities. There is a need for jobs with good wages and quality work that will create a win-win situation, both for the employee and for the environment. On the Road with EPA's EJ Program: Community Engagement Meetings in New England EPA New England's Environmental Justice program has hit the road to listen to communi- ties with EJ concerns throughout New England. Community engagement meetings were held in Providence, Rl; Holyoke and Worcester, Mass.; Manchester, NH, and Hartford and Bridgeport, Conn. The purposes of the community engage- ment meetings are to learn about and discuss environmental and public health issues impor- tant to the community and identify potential EPA resources, for example grants and technical assistance, to help address these concerns. A recent community engagement meeting was held in partnership with EPA's Urban Environ- mental Program in February in Bridgeport. The residents of Bridgeport are exposed to many different sources of pollution. About 45 percent page | 6 ------- ei environmental news • 10th edition summer of the population lives in low-income areas and the community has 284 hazard- ous waste sites regulated by EPA. Some 63 percent of the population is non- white and the poverty rate is 18.4 percent, more than double the state level. The area has an elevated asthma risk, according to research completed by the Asthma Regional Council. EPA's Urban Environmental Program has been working with community partners in Bridgeport since 2004. In 2007, the Connecti- cut Coalition for Environmental Justice was awarded a grant from the Community Action for a Renewed Environment (CARE) program to create a partnership to help the community understand existing and potential sources of risk to their health and to set priorities for the reduc- tion of specific pollutants and environmental toxins. At this community engagement meeting, participants heard about EPA New England's EJ Program. Amy Braz, EPA New England's EJ coordinator, explained that EPA New England's EJ program works with communities by: •serving as community point of contact and information broker for EPA New England services and resources, including technical expertise and funding; •receiving complaints and responding to concerns; • providing resources for community projects that involve collaboration (e.g. Environmen- tal Justice Small Grant Program); and •identifying opportunities for training on key issues and challenges. The EJ program has supported the work of the CARE project by providing GIS mapping to visually overlay information on local environ- ment and public health data including asthma prevalence, location of brownfields sites, Toxic Release Inventory data, and other information including childhood lead poisoning levels. This mapping has been valuable in locating the risks and health problems in Bridgeport. Several environmental and public health issues The Bridgeport CARE program works with the community to prioritize environmental problems like the polluted Johnson Creek. were raised at the meeting including: mixed zoning, illegal dumping, exposure to dust and air toxics from industrial sources, odor and water contamination issues from a waste water treat- ment facility, vacant and contaminated proper- ties and mold and poor air quality in schools. EPA New England's EJ program will work to find new ways to help the Bridgeport community restore the environment and improve public health. If you are interested in scheduling a commu- nity engagement meeting in your city or town to discuss environmental justice issues and learn how EPA New England's EJ program can support your community, " please contact Amy Braz, EJ coordinator, at (617) 918-1346 or via email at braz.amy@epa.gov. Partnering with New England States to Improve the Environment EPA New England held a meeting on April 7, 2009 at its regional lab in Chelmsford, Mass. to encourage the six New England states to Participants at EPA New England EJ All-States meeting. work together to address environmental justice concerns. The EJ-AII States meeting provided an opportunity for states to learn from one another and share best practices taking place throughout New England. Stephen Perkins, EPA New England's Acting Deputy Administrator, emphasized that, in addi- tion to the strong regional commitment to envi- ronmental justice, EPA Administrator Lisa P Jack- son has made it a top priority. The session was organized as a way to consider the possible connection between the stimulus funding and EJ, including the potential benefits and negative impacts to underserved communi- ties. Attendees also discussed how the public could participate in decisions on Recovery Act funding given the accelerated time frames required for distributing the funding. The meeting concluded with a discussion about green jobs and climate change. Given the Obama administration's focus on creating a green economy and combat- ing climate change, EPA and the States may have a chance to promote programs and policies related to environmental justice and leverage existing prog rams that can bene- fit communities with environmental justice concerns. Participants discussed how a multi- state climate change platform like Regional Greenhouse Gas Initia- tive (RGGI) intersects with green economic development and EJ. They also considered how the new Pathways out of Poverty grants authorized by Massachusetts Green Jobs Act are designed to jumpstart training in clean energy careers for low- and moderate-income residents. Finally, participants looked at EPA's proposed approach for advancing EJ and green jobs. page | 7 ------- ii ElViPOnmBlltll • 10th edition summer ipcoiiig mints The Capitol Hill Summit on Sutainable Communities, Environmental Justice, and the New Economy October 15-16, 2009 Washington, D.C. www. sustainablecommunity developmentgroup. org/ Bmwnfields 2009 Conference November 16-18, 2009 New Orleans, Louisiana The Bmwnfields 2009 Conference, being held at the Ernest N. Mortal Conven- tion Center in New Orleans, will bring together representatives of the commu- nity, planning, real estate, finance, and policy interests to focus on brownfields cleanup, redevelopment, and a broad range of land revitalization solutions. www.bro wnfields2009. org/ External links disclaimer This newsletter provides links to non-EPA websites. These links provide additional information that may be useful or interesting and are being provided consistent with the intended purpose of this newsletter. However, EPA cannot attest to the accuracy of the information provided by linked sites. Providing links to a non-EPA website does not constitute an endorsement by EPA or any of its employees of the sponsors of this site or the information or products presented on the site. i PA New England ej cnntacts state cnntacts Sharon Wells Acting Director, Office of Civil Rights & Urban Affairs 617-918-1007 wells.sharon@epa.gov Amy Braz Environmental Justice Coordinator 617-918-1346 braz.amy@epa.gov Michael Castagna Environmental Justice Specialist 617-918-1033 castagna.michael@epa.gov web resources EPA New England Environmental Justice Program website www.epa.gov/region1/ej National Office of Environmental Justice www.epa.gov/compliance/ environmentaljustice/index.html National Environmental Justice Advisory Council www.epa.gov/compliance/ environmentaljustice/nejac/index.html , lational Office of Civil Rights www.epa.gov/civilrights/aboutocr.htm Connecticut - Edith Pestana Environmental Justice Administrator Environmental Equity Program CT Department of Environmental Protection 860-424-3044 Maine - Malcolm Burson Office of the Commissioner Maine Department of Environmental Protection 207-287-7755 Massachusetts - David Cash Assistant Secretary for Policy MA Executive Office of Environmental Affairs 617-626-1164 Phil Weinberg MA Department of Environmental Protection 617-292-5972 New Hampshire -Michael Walls Assistant Commissioner NH Department of Environmental Services 603-271-8806 Rhode Island DEM - Terry Gray Assistant Director/Air, Waste & Compliance Rl Department of Environmental Management 401-222-4700 ext. 2422 Vermont - Justin Johnson Commissioner VT Department of Environmental Conservation 802-241-3808 ------- |