Monday, February 13, 2012
Hi everyone. I'm happy to join Jurisdynamics as an occasional contributor. I'm a law professor at Loyola University New Orleans. I recently served in the Obama administration as Deputy Associate Administrator for Policy at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. My areas of interest include disaster law and policy, adaptation to climate change, and, as you'll see below, environmental justice.
Last fall, in a speech I gave at an environmental justice
event in Los Angeles, I ruffled some feathers with an impromptu line that went
something like this: “Believe it or not,
federal environmental statutes say nothing directly about environmental
justice.” During the “Q & A” I was challenged by an environmental activist
and lawyer who listed various ways that advocates had successfully used federal
environmental statutes to address inequalities in many of California’s minority
and low-income communities.
I saw immediately that I had not been clear. For what I meant was that although
environmental statutes could be used to further the interests of social
justice, the terrain was not landscaped for that purpose. It took activists
with imagination and grit to climb the peaks my questioner was talking
about. It took lawyers who could scan the
glaciers of the federal code and find a foothold—a
place where you could jam your steel-toothed boot, stabilize your momentum, and
launch yourself forward. (EPA policy analyst Abby Hall and I expand on our
theory of regulatory “footholds”—and also regulatory “rope lines”—here.)
Like community lawyers, policy makers need footholds
too. EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson has made environmental justice a pillar of her tenure. But
many of our environmental statutes, because they pre-date the modern
environmental justice movement, were not developed with this priority in
mind. So Administrator Jackson asked her
lawyers to survey the landscape of environmental authorities for legal
standards and directives that would provide the positioning and leverage to promote
“the fair treatment and meaningful
involvement of all people regardless of race, color, national origin, or
income.” EPA’s lawyers then catalogued those footholds and put them in a guide
intended for use across the agency.
In an
admirable display of integrity and transparency, EPA has now publicly released that
guide for all lawyers, activists, and citizens to see – and perhaps use.
The document, titled Plan
EJ 2014: Legal Tools, offers “key
legal authorities for EPA policy makers to consider in advancing environmental
justice.” (Disclosure: as an EPA
official in 2009 and 2010, I contributed to the development of environmental
justice policy and reviewed legal strategies related to environmental justice.)
More than a hundred pages in length, “Legal Tools” reviews enabling provisions along
the full armada of environmental acts.
There are sections on air programs, water programs, and programs in
Indian country. There are discussions of
environmental impact statements, government procurement programs, the
grant-making process, and more.
Scott
Fulton, EPA’s general counsel, emphasizes in a foreword to the report that
“Legal Tools” is a “living document” meant to adapt and grow. By necessity, it focuses on “those authorities that appear
to be most relevant to the environmental justice challenge as we currently
understand it.”
Some
of those authorities have already been deployed. When EPA recently required better monitoring of nitrogen dioxide
emissions near highways (where low-income and minority populations are more
likely to live), it grounded its decision in the Clean Air Act’s injunction to
protect public health with an adequate margin of safety, including the duty to
consider the vulnerability of “sensitive populations.” (EPA’s recent Interim Guidance on considering environmental justice in
rulemaking tells the story nicely.)
Similarly, in proposing new controls on hazardous-material recycling, EPA relied on an express concern for
public health stated in the Resources Conservation and Recovery Act (40 C.F.R
§§ 260, 261, 266) to support a full examination of demographic analysis and a
specially tailored community engagement plan.
Given the
scope of the “Legal Tools” inventory, there are bound to be spots in need of
expansion and improvement. That’s why “Legal
Tools” should be circulated widely among scholars, lawyers, and other
interested readers. Let’s start talking about the next pinnacle EPA should confront.
Few mountains have handrails. But the footholds are there.
cross-posted on CPRBlog.
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