White  House EJ

  Forum Success Story

 Less than four months after reconvening
 in December 2010, the White House,
 EJ IWG members, cabinet secretaries,
 senior officials and representatives
 from a wide range of federal agencies
 would work collaboratively to convene
 the first-ever White House Forum
 on Environmental Justice. The forum
 brought together administration
 officials, community leaders and officials
 from state, local and tribal governments
 to discuss issues that were important
 to communities overburdened with
 pollution.

 Administration leaders shared their
 vision for healthier and more sustainable
 communities and their proposed
 approaches for their agencies to
 achieve them. Administration officials
 also engaged community leaders in
 discussions on federal agency initiatives
 that were underway and encouraged
 feedback on those initiatives.

 The forum reinvigorated federal
 environmental justice action under
 EO  12898 at the Administration level
 and led to a successful exchange of
 information between federal agencies
 and external environmental justice
 advocates.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Environmental Justice
    About the Environmental Justice Interagency
                            Working Group

The Environmental Justice Interagency Working Group (EJ IWG) was established in 1994 under
Executive Order (EO) 12898. It is comprised of 17 federal agencies and White House offices to
guide, support, and enhance federal environmental justice and community-based activities.
In September 2010, the EPA and the White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ)
reconvened the EJ IWG for the first time in more than a decade. The Cabinet-level meeting was
one of a series of steps taken by the Obama Administration to elevate environmental justice and
address the inequities in low-income communities.

          Engaging Agencies  to Understand and

                          Address  EJ  Issues

Following the announcement of seven top EPA priorities in 2010, the agency's Administrator,
Lisa P. Jackson directed EPA programs and regional offices to address the needs of overburdened
communities  by reducing environmental problems, expanding environmental benefits, and by
working alongside communities as they aim to become healthier, greener and more sustainable.
As an important element of the agency's environmental justice strategy (Plan EJ 2014), EPA
seeks to facilitate the active participation of federal agencies in a coordinated approach that
acknowledges the disproportionately high and adverse human health and environmental  impacts
on overburdened communities, while providing access to the environmental, public health, and
economic benefits of their programs.

On August 4, 2011, EJ IWG agencies took a landmark step to support environmental justice by
signing the Memorandum of Understanding on Environmental Justice and Executive Order 12898
(EJ MOD). The EJ MOD serves as a formal agreement between federal agencies to recommit to
environmental justice through a more collaborative, comprehensive, and contemporary effort. It is
a formal commitment to:

1.       Declare continued importance  of identifying and addressing environmental justice
        considerations  in agency programs, policies, and activities;
2.       Agree to provide environmental justice strategies and implementation progress reports;
3.       Adopt an EJ MOD charter that establishes structures and procedures to ensure a more
        effective and efficient EJ IWG; and
4.       Identify particular areas of focus.

These commitments, in coordination with Plan EJ 2014, ensures a strong and sustained effort
to integrate environmental justice into programs, policies and activities across the federal
government.
                                            t~)./ //    February 2014 marks the 20th Anniversary of Executive
                                                         12989, "Federal Actions to Address Environmental Justii
                                            {CrtOCJ '    Minoriy Populations and Low-Income Populations." Presiden
                                            "~~—-——-^    Clinton Signed the Exective Order on February 11,1994.
                                                              Continued on back

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                                                                                                                  EJIWG
                                                                                                                  FACTS
  justice      Fostering Administration-Wide Action
As each federal agency works to advance its environmental justice integration efforts, EPA helps
agencies participate in a coordinated approach as a part of Plan EJ 2014. The EJ IWG focuses on
these four strategies:


     Assist other federal agencies to integrate environmental justice into their programs,
     policies, and activities. EPA leads federal efforts to better integrate environmental justice
     as chair of the EJ IWG. Each federal agency's committments have been articulated in
     environmental justice strategies which are available publicly. To monitor this progress, the
     EJ MOU requires each federal agency to release implementation progress reports. These
     implementation reports include performance measures to better ensure that agencies
     meet their environmental justice responsibilities and goal, including any updates or
     revisions to the agency's environmental justice strategy.
     Work with other federal agencies to strengthen use of
     interagency legal tools. National Environmental Protection
     Act (NEPA) and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 are
     important tools that can be used to help advance the goals
     of environmental justice. EPA works internally and across all
     agencies to strengthen their programs, enhance their abilities to
     incorporate environmental justice into major federal activities
     and to understand the legal tools available to them to promote
     environmental justice.
     Foster healthy and sustainable communities. EPA, in conjunction with other federal
     agencies, coordinates agencies actions to improve the health and sustainability of
     overburdened communities, including looking at climate adaptation and goods movement.
     For example, the Sustainable Communities Partnership, a partnership between the
     Department of Housing and Urban Development, Department of Transportation, and EPA
     improves access to affordable housing, transportation options, and lower transportation
     costs while protecting the environment in communities nationwide.
                                     Strengthen community access to federal agencies.
                                     In order to strengthen the ability of communities to
                                     access federal programs and expertise, the EJ IWG
                                     acts to eliminate barriers, make connections, and
                                     reduce duplication so that communities are better
                                     able to access federal resources. To implement this
                                     strategy, the EJ IWG began holding Stakeholder
                                     Dialogue Sessions, providing an opportunity for
                                     stakeholders to identify community concerns, discuss
                                     best practices and model programs.  Since 2012, the
                                     IWG has held 19  dialogue sessions and continues to
                                     conduct these meetings across the country.
      EJIWG Timeline
    t
 February
   2012
    I
    I
 August
   2011
    I
    I
December
   2010
                                                                                          December
                                                                                            2010
September
  2010
    Agencies release
  environmental justice
	strategies	
 Federal agencies sign EJ
 MOU and adopt EJ IWG
	charter	
 Community Stakeholder
 Dialogue Sessions begin
              EPA and CEQ host 1st
            White House Forum on  EJ
White House reconvenes
    EJ IWG meetings
                                                                                                    Resources
 IWG Compendium: Contains a list of EJ
 IWG federal agencies and  strategies,
 policies, guidance documents and plans
 for implementing EO 12898.

 Environmental Justice Federal
 Interagency Directory: Information
 about federal agency roles, organization
 charts and key contact information for
 agency program areas.

 The Community-Based Federal
 Environmental Justice Guide:
 Information on federal programs that
 may assist communities in reducing
 toxic exposures by providing technical
 assistance, federal funding or a
 combination of both.

 These resources can be accessed at epa.
 gov/environmentaljustice/interagency.
                                   For More Information
      Connect with EPA
EPA 300F12004
July 2012
                                   To find out more about the EJ IWG, call 202-564-2515
                                   or visit www.epa.gov/environmentaljustice/interagency

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