AG HEALEY SUES TRUMP ADMINISTRATION OVER FAILURE TO STRENGTHEN STANDARDS REGULATING DANGEROUS AIR POLLUTANTS
Long-term
Exposure to Particulate Matter Linked to Higher COVID-19 Death Rates;
Concentrations of the Pollutant Are Highest in Black, Latinx, and Asian
Communities; AG Also Joining Challenge to Harmful Delays in Implementing Ozone
Standards
BOSTON – Massachusetts Attorney General
Maura Healey today joined a coalition of 17 attorneys general and the City of
New York in suing the Trump
Administration over its failure to strengthen the federal national ambient air
quality standards (NAAQS) for dangerous particulate matter pollution, as
required by the federal Clean Air Act. Fine particulate matter pollution is the
largest environmental health risk factor in the country, and increased exposure
to the pollutant is linked to higher death
rates of COVID-19.
Exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5),
a pollutant emitted from cars, factories, and construction, at the current
standards is estimated to kill up to 45,000 people every year nationwide. PM2.5
pollution is linked to many serious medical conditions including asthma,
chronic bronchitis, lung cancer, cognitive impairment, and dementia. PM2.5
pollution reduces visibility, contributes to the climate crisis, and
degrades the environment. In Massachusetts, PM2.5 concentrations are
highest in Black and Latinx communities, and these inequalities have worsened
over time.
Under the Clean Air Act, the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is required to set NAAQS for several
pollutants, including particulate matter, at a level that protects public
health and welfare. EPA is required to periodically review the standards and
revise them if new information shows that existing standards are inadequate.
Evidence overwhelmingly shows that our communities need more protection. Since
EPA’s last review in 2012, new studies have made clear that exposure to
particulate matter causes grave health risks at levels below the current
standards.
AG Healey joined a coalition of attorneys
general that filed comments on the proposed
rule in June arguing that EPA conducted a flawed and unlawfully biased review
of the current NAAQS, and the available science demonstrates the need for EPA
to strengthen the NAAQS. The comments argued that EPA failed to consider that
reducing the current NAAQS is important as a matter of environmental justice,
given the disparate particulate matter exposures and associated health risks
for Black, Latinx, and Asian communities. Additionally, the attorneys general
argued that EPA ignored new evidence regarding particulate matter’s
interference with visibility and applied the wrong standard of review for
public welfare impacts. The agency, the comments argued, also failed to
consider increasing particulate matter exposure from wildfires related to
climate change.
In May, AG Healey issued
a brief on
the environmental factors, including elevated exposure to particulate matter
pollution, that compound the COVID-19 pandemic’s disparate impact on
communities of color in Massachusetts, and the steps the state should take to
address the longstanding impact of environmental injustice on those
communities.
Joining AG Healey in filing today’s
lawsuit over the Administration’s failure to strengthen the NAAQS for
particulate matter pollution are the attorneys general of California,
Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New
York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and
Wisconsin, as well as the City of New York, the California Air Resources Board,
and the California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment.
AG Healey also joined a coalition
of five attorneys general and the City of New York in suing EPA over its
failure to take required actions necessary to control certain “upwind” states’
emissions of ozone pollution. The lawsuit filed yesterday argues EPA
violated its duty to act on pending state implementation plans, thereby
preventing implementation of those standards and putting downwind states like
Massachusetts at risk. Ground level ozone—commonly referred to as smog—is a dangerous
pollutant that causes or aggravates adverse health effects, including
bronchitis, lung tissue damage, heart disease and emphysema.
Special Assistant Attorney General Megan Herzog of AG Healey’s Environmental
Protection Division is handling the NAAQS particulate matter lawsuit for
Massachusetts. Special Assistant Attorney General David Frankel and Assistant
Attorney General Carol Iancu are handling the lawsuit challenging the delay in
the Administration’s implementation of the existing standards for ozone
pollution.
沒有留言:
發佈留言