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Environmental Justice Task Force
The Environmental Justice Initiative
Many families in California live next to
sources of pollution that pose significant
health and safety risks. In response,
local governments are forced to reconsider
traditional approaches to environmental enforcement.
One such example is the Los Angeles City
Attorney’s Environmental Justice Initiative
(EJ Initiative) which combines multi-agency
inspections, criminal prosecution, civil
remedies and public participation to improve
environmental quality in Los Angeles’ urban
communities. The EJ Initiative is the first
proactive neighborhood based task force that
focuses on compliance, enforcement, and prosecution
by combining the work of multiple local agencies.
Since January 2003, the City Attorney’s
office coordinated over 780 inspections of
facilities and has filed more than 130 criminal
cases relating to environmental violations
resulting in over $3,200,000 in fines, penalties
and upgrades. The initiative leads proactive
focused response in communities bearing a
disproportionate burden of exposure to industry
pollutants and coordinates multi-agency inspections
in communities impacted by environmental
crime with locations in Sun Valley, Wilmington,
Boyle Heights, and South LA.
EJ Paradigm
- Identify neighborhood bearing disproportionate
burden of exposure to industry
- Create a pro-active Environmental Task
Force in EJ targeted neighborhood
- Coordinate multi-agency rollouts to investigate
facilities suspected of soil, air and water
contamination
- Review compliance history: NOVs, NTCs
- Re-inspect problem facilities and/or
recalcitrant facilities
- LA Chemical: need for inspection /
search warrant
- Conduct street sweeps addressing visual
blight
- Coordinate communication and collaboration
efforts amongst agencies responsible for
environmental regulation
- Interact with neighborhood councils,
local council members, City Attorney Neighborhood
Prosecutors, town hall meetings
- Conduct public outreach and education
efforts
- Planning/Zoning: Building and Safety
zoning regulations and land use conditions
- Analyze local, state and federal laws,
regulations, statutes including public
nuisance statutes
- Evaluate referrals of NOVs for potential
criminal and/or civil enforcement action
- File cases, reach dispositions, collect
fines, investigative costs, require cleanup,
remediation, SEPs
All efforts are geared towards improving
quality of life in the EJ neighborhood at
issue.
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTS AFFECTING THE
COMMUNITY
- African Americans are 50% more likely
and Latinos are two times more likely to
live in close proximity to hazardous waste
treatment storage, transfer and disposal
facilities
- In LAUSD, African American and Latino
children face a respiratory risk associated
with air toxics near their schools that
is 25% higher than other children.
- Risks posed by environmental toxins such
as lead are affecting academic performance.
- Low-income and nonwhite residents of
Southern California breathe higher levels
of toxic pollutants.
- Studies show locations of hazardous waste
sites strongly correlated to race/ethnicity
of residents.
- Minorities in Los Angeles County are
three times as likely as whites to live
within half a mile of toxic sites. Source: L.A. Times
- Asthma rates for African Americans are
31% higher than for whites. Source: Congressional
Black Caucus
- African American children are up to six
times more likely to die of asthma than
white children. Source: Congressional
Black Caucus
FAST FACTS:
Environmental justice means the fair
treatment and meaningful involvement of all people regardless of
race, color, or income with respect to the development, implementation,
and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and policies.
Fair treatment means that no group of people, including a racial,
ethnic, or socioeconomic group, should bear a disproportionate
share of the negative environmental consequences resulting from
industrial, municipal, and commercial operations.
EJ INITIATIVE AWARDS
- Environmental Justice Award, 2004
from the Regional Water Quality Control
Board
- Collaborative Synergy Award, 2004
from the City’s Quality and Productivity
Commission
CONTRIBUTING EJ AGENCIES
- South Coast Air Quality Management
District
- California Regional Water Quality
Control Board
- California Air Resource Board
- California Department of Toxic Substances
Control
- California Department of Fish and
Game
- Los Angeles City Fire Department
- Los Angeles County Fire Department
- Los Angeles County Public Works Department
- Los Angeles City Department of Building
and Safety
- Los Angeles City Bureau of Sanitation
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