FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 9, 2020
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Members of the Senate Environmental Justice Caucus and the House United for Climate and Environmental Justice Task Force are urging President Trump to reverse course on the Council on Environmental Quality’s (CEQ) final rule that would fundamentally change the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) regulations, further endangering communities of color, economically disadvantaged communities and tribal and Indigenous communities, which are already disproportionally affected by harmful impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, structural racism and longstanding exposure to air, water, and land pollution.
In their letter, 18 U.S. Senators led by Senators Tom Carper (D-Del.), Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) and Cory Booker (D-N.J.) and over 90 members of the House led by U.S. Representatives Donald McEachin (D-Va.), Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) and Nanette Diaz Barragán (D-Calif.) – members of the Senate Environmental Justice Caucus and the House United for Climate and Environmental Justice Task Force – warned the president that CEQ’s proposed NEPA rollback would eliminate core protections afforded to environmental justice communities.
“For more than 50 years, NEPA has served not only as our nation’s preeminent instrument for protection of the environment, but also as a critical tool for civil rights. NEPA and its regulations mandate government agencies to consider the environmental impacts of projects, including any potential costs and consequences for nearby communities, before those projects are executed,” the members wrote. “Subsequently, NEPA has protected Environmental Justice (EJ) communities by ensuring that all adverse impacts of projects are fully examined, and that public input from impacted communities is considered.”
“This administration’s changes to the NEPA regulations will undermine key aspects of the NEPA process and result in the comprehensive dismantling of core protections for EJ communities, with impacts that could potentially last for decades,” the members continued. “NEPA is essential to protect frontline communities and ensure that their environment, health, and quality of life are preserved for generations to come, especially in EJ communities that have been historically excluded from major decisions that affect them.”
The letter can be found here or below.
July 9, 2020
The Honorable Donald J. Trump
President
1600 Pennsylvania Ave, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20500
Dear President Trump:
We write in strong opposition to the Council on Environmental Quality’s (CEQ) final rule to fundamentally change the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) regulations. The effects of the proposed rule will exacerbate harmful environmental impacts on environmental justice (EJ) communities – communities of color, disadvantaged communities, and Tribal and indigenous communities – which are already disproportionally affected by environmental impacts.
As our nation reels from unprecedented health and economic crises and social unrest, your changes to the NEPA regulations would further endanger the very communities that have faced the greatest burdens of legacy environmental injustice and structural racism. And now these communities are also the hardest hit by the ongoing crises caused by COVID-19. Your unwarranted changes to the NEPA regulations represent an attack on these vulnerable communities when they are most in need of assistance.
For more than 50 years, NEPA has served not only as our nation’s preeminent instrument for protection of the environment, but also as a critical tool for civil rights. NEPA and its regulations mandate government agencies to consider the environmental impacts of projects, including any potential costs and consequences for nearby communities, before those projects are executed. Subsequently, NEPA has protected EJ communities by ensuring that all adverse impacts of projects are fully examined, and that public input from impacted communities is considered.
EJ communities live near factories, powerplants, and roadways that regularly expose them to toxic pollution and cause outsized health risks, such as respiratory illness, heart disease, and cancer. Historically, EJ communities have been targeted for projects, and, in turn, continue to experience negative environmental and health impacts. Lauded as landmark environmental justice legislation, NEPA was created to give a voice to those who are often rendered voiceless and has successfully allowed impacted populations to challenge projects that negatively affect their water quality, air quality, economic prosperity, and overall health and safety.
In February 1994, President Clinton issued Executive Order (EO) 12898, titled “Federal Actions to Address Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations.” EO 12898 directs federal agencies to incorporate environmental justice principles into their operations, and it includes the objective of improving opportunities for community input during the NEPA process.
CEQ’s final revisions to NEPA halt this progress and careen in the opposite direction, threatening to undermine years of hard-fought progress.
For example, CEQ’s change to NEPA’s implementing regulations to remove the consideration of cumulative impacts and indirect effects would be especially harmful to EJ communities. Allowing federal agencies to disregard the cumulative impacts and indirect effects of a project will have a disastrous effect on EJ communities that have already had higher exposure to land, air, and water pollution, which often stem from multiple legacy or active sources of pollution. Thus, in those communities, comprehensive environmental analysis is essential to determining the long-term, wideranging consequences of any federally approved project in totality.
EJ communities already have limited access and ability to participate in federal policy decisions due to the numerous economic, physical, racial, and health barriers they face. They fight to be heard when industrial projects threaten their health and well-being. Under the new rules, companies will be permitted to conduct their own Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). This is an affront to EJ communities whose only recourse is often the public input afforded to them during NEPA’s current approval process. Companies’ interests lie largely with their profit margins, and often run counter to the interests of the communities directly affected by their actions. Allowing companies to write their own EISs is akin to offering a self-graded take-home exam. We simply cannot trust every company or businesses to do the right thing when, too often, history has shown us otherwise.
The short public comment period that CEQ allowed for this proposed rule was greatly disproportionate to the scope of its implications. This process was unfair to the millions of people whose neighborhoods and communities will be impacted by the new CEQ regulations, and it stands in stark contrast to the principle of citizen participation on which both NEPA and our democracy were built. These communities deserved the opportunity to be better informed of your changes to the NEPA process, and the lack of a real and meaningful opportunity to provide feedback perpetuates a generations-long series of harmful actions that both disempower and dismiss the needs of marginalized communities and worsen existing inequities.
Disturbingly, CEQ has provided no explanation or analysis to justify these radical changes. The potential for disproportionate impacts should have been considered in a NEPA analysis on the administration’s proposal, but CEQ disregarded its own responsibility to comply with NEPA and prepare an EIS on the proposal. Furthermore, without providing the analysis CEQ says it prepared for review by the public at large and the affected environmental justice communities under EO 12898, CEQ bluntly concluded that the proposed rule “would not cause disproportionately high and adverse human health or environmental effects on minority populations and low-income.”[1] CEQ’s EJ Guidance, which outlines environmental justice principles and considerations in the NEPA process, should be rescinded.
This administration’s changes to the NEPA regulations will undermine key aspects of the NEPA process and result in the comprehensive dismantling of core protections for EJ communities, with impacts that could potentially last for decades. NEPA is essential to protect frontline communities and ensure that their environment, health, and quality of life are preserved for generations to come, especially in EJ communities that have been historically excluded from major decisions that affect them.
Communities that have disproportionately suffered from environmental injustice – and are now hardest hit by the crises caused by COVID-19 – need the government to lift them up, not make them an afterthought in the decisions that will affect their neighborhoods and the health and well-being of their families.
We urge you to undo the changes to CEQ’s NEPA regulations immediately.
Sincerely,
_____________________
A. Donald McEachin Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Pramila Jayapal Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Nanette Diaz Barragán Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Thomas R. Carper United States Senator
|
_____________________
Tammy Duckworth United States Senator
|
_____________________
Cory A. Booker United States Senator
|
_____________________ Benjamin L. Cardin United States Senator
|
_____________________ Robert P. Casey, Jr. United States Senator
|
_____________________ Richard J. Durbin United States Senator
|
_____________________ Kirsten Gillibrand United States Senator
|
_____________________ Kamala D. Harris United States Senator
|
_____________________ Martin Heinrich United States Senator
|
_____________________ Mazie K. Hirono United States Senator
|
_____________________ Amy Klobuchar United States Senator
|
_____________________ Edward J. Markey United States Senator
|
_____________________ Jeffrey A. Merkley United States Senator
|
_____________________ Gary C. Peters United States Senator
|
_____________________ Tina Smith United States Senator
|
_____________________ Debbie Stabenow United States Senator
|
_____________________ Chris Van Hollen United States Senator
|
_____________________ Elizabeth Warren United States Senator
|
_____________________ Alma S. Adams, Ph.D. Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Joyce Beatty Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Donald S. Beyer Jr. Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Earl Blumenauer Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Lisa Blunt Rochester Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Suzanne Bonamici Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Julia Brownley Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Salud O. Carbajal Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Tony Cárdenas Member of Congress
|
_____________________ André Carson Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Ed Case Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Sean Casten Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Kathy Castor Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Judy Chu Member of Congress
|
_____________________ David N. Cicilline Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Gilbert R. Cisneros, Jr. Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Yvette D. Clarke Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Emanuel Cleaver, II Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Steve Cohen Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Gerald E. Connolly Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Danny K. Davis Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Diana DeGette Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Suzan K. DelBene Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Val B. Demings Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Mark DeSaulnier Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Debbie Dingell Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Mike Doyle Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Veronica Escobar Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Anna G. Eshoo Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Adriano Espaillat Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Bill Foster Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Ruben Gallego Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Jesús G. “Chuy” García Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Raúl M. Grijalva Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Deb Haaland Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Jared Huffman Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Sheila Jackson Lee Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Henry C. “Hank” Johnson, Jr Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Joseph P. Kennedy, III Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Daniel T. Kildee Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Derek Kilmer Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Ann Kirkpatrick Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Ann McLane Kuster Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Rick Larsen Member of Congress
|
_____________________ John B. Larson Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Barbara Lee Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Mike Levin Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Alan S. Lowenthal Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Stephen F. Lynch Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Doris O. Matsui Member of Congress
|
_____________________ James P. McGovern Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Jerry McNerney Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Grace Meng Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Grace F. Napolitano Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Joe Neguse Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Eleanor Holmes Norton Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Frank Pallone, Jr. Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Chellie Pingree Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Mark Pocan Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Katie Porter Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Ayanna Pressley Member of Congress
|
_____________________ David E. Price Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Mike Quigley Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Jamie Raskin Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Raul Ruiz Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Bobby L. Rush Member of Congress
|
_____________________ John P. Sarbanes Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Mary Gay Scanlon Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Jan Schakowsky Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Robert C. “Bobby” Scott Member of Congress
|
_____________________ José E. Serrano Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Adam Smith Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Darren Soto Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Jackie Speier Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Thomas R. Suozzi Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Bennie G. Thompson Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Rashida Tlaib Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Paul D. Tonko Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Lori Trahan Member of Congress
|
_____________________
David Trone Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Juan Vargas Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Nydia M. Velázquez Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Debbie Wasserman Shultz Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Bonnie Watson Coleman Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Peter Welch Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Susan Wild Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Marcia L. Fudge Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Betty McCollum Member of Congress
|
_____________________
Ted Deutch Member of Congress
|
_____________________ Linda T. Sánchez Member of Congress
|
[1] https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2020/01/10/2019-28106/update-to-the-regulations-implementing-the-procedural-provisions-of-the-national-environmental?fbclid=IwAR0UN4lruwvGaUObyPH0rdWTej1uuZOvO-x94iRtnoXaQ8Gqcgu8NvPZsXw