Register for The 2022 National
Environmental Justice Conference and Training Program at the Washington
Marriott at Metro Center
Day 2 Agenda
8:00 a.m.—4:00 p.m.
Exhibit Hall Open
Conference Facilitator Ms. Carolyn Sawyer Communications Strategist Tom
Sawyer Company
8:30 a.m.—9:15 a.m.
PANEL: Community and College Partners Program
(C2P2): Developing Alternative Energy Options for Indigenous People in
Tyonek, Alaska
Michael Burns Founder/Executive Director C2P2
Margaret McCurdy Graduate Student, Peace Engineering Program Drexel
University Philadelphia, PA
Joan Nguyen Graduate Student, Peace Engineering Program Drexel
University Philadelphia, PA
Kate Ryan Graduate Student, Peace Engineering Program Drexel University
Philadelphia, PA
9:15 a.m.—9:55a.m.
Introduction of Keynote Speakers
Dr. Melinda Downing Environmental Justice Program Manager U.S.
Department of Energy
KEYNOTE REMARKS
The Honorable James E. Clyburn Majority Whip (Democrat, 6th District,
South Carolina)
The Honorable Jennifer Granholm Secretary U.S. Department of Energy
9:55 a.m.—10:05 a.m.
BREAK
10:05 a.m.—11:15 a.m.
PANEL: Estimating Disproportionate Impacts of
Climate Change on Childhood Asthma Rates Among Socially Vulnerable
Populations in the U.S.
Margaret Black Abt Associates
Stefani L. Penn Industrial Economics, Inc. (IEc)
Lauren E. Gentile U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Estimating the Benefits of Reduced Air Pollution During
COVID-19 for Socially Vulnerable Populations
in New York City.
David Cooley Abt Associates
11:15 a.m.—12:15 p.m.
PANEL: USDA Forest Service’s Environmental
Justice and Climate Change Related Topics.
Elisabeth Grinspoon, Ph.D. Environmental Justice and Technology Transfer
Specialist Office of Sustainability and Climate
USDA Forest Service
Dixie Porter Deputy Director Office of Sustainability and Climate (OSC)
USDA Forest Service
12:15 p.m.—12:30 p.m.
BREAK
12:30 p.m.—1:45 p.m.
LUNCH
Introduction of Luncheon Keynote Speaker
Dr. Melinda Downing Environmental Justice Program Manager U.S.
Department of Energy
KEYNOTE REMARKS
The Honorable David Turk Deputy Secretary United States Department of
Energy Washington, D.C.
1:45 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.
BREAK
2:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.
PRESENTATIONS:
Approaches for Evaluating Environmental Justice Issues at the State
Level
Lisa McDonald, PhD Senior Associate Abt Associates
Appliance Standards: The Best Climate Change Policy You’ve Never Heard
Of
Madeline Parker Outreach & Coalition-Building Associate Appliance
Standards Awareness Project (ASAP)
3:00 p.m.—4:00 p.m.
PRESENTATIONS:
Bridging America’s Outdoor Equity Gap
Diane Regas President and CEO The Trust for
Public Land
In Defense of a Greenspace: Students Discover Agency in the Practice of
Community-Engaged Technical Communication
Bob Hyland Associate Professor University of Cincinnati
DAY 2 – Thursday, March 10, 2022
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE WORKSHOPS AND TRAINING
PROGRAMS
Grand Ballroom Salon E
10:00 a.m.–-11:00 a.m.
What’s in My Neighborhood? How Communities Can Use
EPA’s TRI Toxics
Tracker to Identify Industrial Sources of Toxic Chemical Releases and
Other Waste Management Activities.
EPA’s Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) Program
provides a detailed, multimedia dataset covering annual releases and
other waste management activities from over 20,000 facilities in the
United States for hundreds of different toxic chemicals.
EPA makes these data available to the public,
which can help inform decision-making by government agencies, community
groups, companies, and other stakeholders. This training workshop will
provide users with a basic introduction to the
TRI Program and what types of data and
information are collected by the EPA, as well
as a live demonstration of the online TRI
Toxics Tracker tool. TRI Toxics Tracker can be
used to answer a variety of questions all in one place, such as what
toxic chemical releases are occurring in a particular community with EJ
concerns and which facilities might be contributing to disproportionate
releases potentially affecting nearby residents.
T.J. Pepping Abt Associates
11:15 a.m.—12:15 p.m.
Pragmatic Approaches: Reaching Students in Areas with Limited Broadband
to Access College Education
Lack of broadband access is a limiting factor to academic advancement of
a remarkable number of youths in rural areas in America and worldwide.
It has been documented that in rural areas, nearly one-fourth of the
population – 14.5 million people lack access to this service. In tribal
areas, nearly one-third of the population lacks access. Even in areas
where broadband is available, approximately 100 million Americans still
do not subscribe (FCC 2022). Consequently, an outreach was conducted in
a rural area (Marion) of South Carolina with ineffective or no access to
broadband. Parents and their high schoolers were invited. During this
event, we had on board from Allen University, officials from the
admission office, financial aid office, the university counsellors, a
faculty and one junior student from Allen University.
Application forms were already printed out and handed over to high
schoolers during this outreach. Seven high school students completed the
application form on the spot. The financial aid officer succeeded in
assisting one of these seven students to complete her
FAFSA right on the spot using our personal
hotspot internet access provided at the outreach site. Application forms
were given to the high school students that attended with the promise to
share with their friends. It is uber-important for colleges to make
concerted efforts in reaching suburbs with limited broadband access.
Such that youths in these areas will not be left behind. This workshop
intends to shed more light on pragmatic approaches employed to forestall
bottlenecks encountered during the outreach.
Oluwole Ariyo, PhD Principal Investigator, Environmental Justice
Institute Allen University
2:00 p.m.—4 p.m.
EJ & NEPA Workshop: Considering Cumulative
Effects and EJ in the NEPA Process
Increasingly, decisionmakers are recognizing the importance of looking
at projects in the context of prior impacts and developments within the
community or region. Direct effects continue to be most important to
decisionmakers, in part because they are more certain. Nonetheless, the
importance of other environmental stressors requires the need to address
cumulative impacts on environmental justice (EJ) populations. The
purpose of the workshop is to increase understanding of cumulative
effects consideration of environmental justice (EJ) populations in the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) review process. The specific
focus is the importance of understanding cumulative effects are caused
by the aggregate of past, present, and reasonably foreseeable future
actions that, for many EJ populations, may last for many years beyond
the life of the action that caused the effects. The goal is to provide
an understanding of the principles of a cumulative effects analysis
within Environmental Justice (EJ) communities.
The Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) published their Phase 1
revisions to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) Regulations
which focused on a narrow set of changes to the 2020 regulations that
restores some of the regulatory provisions from the 1978
NEPA Regulations. One of the changes restores
the definition of “effects,” including use of the terms “direct,”
“indirect,” and “cumulative” and removed potential limitations on
effects analysis.
The NEPA Subcommittee of the White House
Interagency Environmental Justice Council (WHEJAC) formally known as the
Federal Interagency Working Group on Environmental Justice (EJ
IWG), produced the “Promising Practices for EJ
Methodologies in NEPA Reviews” (Promising
Practices Report) and address various methodologies for addressing
effects within an EJ analysis and will be utilized in this session.
The workshop is designed to address the changes in
NEPA regulations, provide expectations for
cumulative effects analysis and provide case study examples for
cumulative effects.
Denise C. Freeman Co-chair, NEPA Committee,
WH EJ Interagency Council Senior
Advisor/Communications Liaison Office of Legacy Management U.S.
Department of Energy
Jomar Maldonado Director for NEPA Council on
Environmental Quality Executive Office of the President
Carolyn L. Nelson, P.E. Co-chair, NEPA
Committee, WH EJ Interagency Council Sr.
Project Development/Environmental Specialist Office of Project
Development and Environmental Review
USDOT-Federal Highway Administration
National Environmental Justice Conference
District of Columbia
10/03/2022 at 08:00AM