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Submit ReviewThe Environmental Protection Agency recently launched a new office dedicated to environmental justice and civil rights.
EPA administrator Michael Regan says the 200-person office was needed to elevate the fight for overlooked communities, who are too-often left vulnerable to pollution, contamination, or as one guest notes, "food apartheid." There are plans to distribute $3 billion in grant money to communities in need.
This hour, we dig into the issue of environmental justice. What are the environmental injustices where we live, and who is pushing for change? How are EJ advocates feeling?
Sharon Lewis is the executive director of the Connecticut Coalition for Environmental Justice, who says she is experiencing the issue firsthand after her home in Hartford's North End was rendered uninhabitable due to sewage overflow and flooding issues.
While the EPA is actively investigating sewage issues in the area alongside the State Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, the Metropolitan District Commission or MDC, the non-profit corporation overseeing sewage and water service in the region, says they believe Lewis is dealing with a "private property issue," versus a failure of infrastructure.
There is a GoFundMe raising money to help pay for repairs and Lewis' temporary housing at a hotel, but she says she is hoping for further updates from federal, state or local authorities.
Lewis joins us to discuss her recent experience, and how it has informed the work she does. She touches on common misconceptions about environmental justice and its application. "It's everybody's problem," she says.
Lewis says the Connecticut Coalition for Environmental Justice is also working on a water justice campaign in Hartford's North End.
Hartford Courant social justice and race reporter Deidre Montague shares news-epa-deep-update-20230128-fbzfb5bykrcebdlahign3wpfuq-story.html">her reporting. Plus, we hear from Kat Morris, a local scholar-activist for intersectional environmental justice.
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