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                  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

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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
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environmental
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• 10th edition   summer
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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;
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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."
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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)
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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

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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

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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

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