White House Issues Executive Order Revitalizing Commitment to Environmental Justice


On April 21, the eve of Earth Day, President Biden signed a new Executive Order on Revitalizing Our Nation’s Commitment to Environmental Justice for All. This comes nearly three decades after the issuance of Executive Order 12898 by President Bill Clinton, Federal Actions to Address Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations, on Feb. 11, 1994, which aimed to build upon and strengthen the commitment of the federal government to deliver environmental justice to all communities across America.

The Biden executive order is intended to deepen the administration’s policy to pursue a whole-of-government approach to environmental justice and directs that the pursuit of environmental justice “is a duty of all executive branch agencies and should be incorporated into their missions.” The scope includes the following:

“Our Nation needs an ambitious approach to environmental justice that is informed by scientific research, high-quality data, and meaningful Federal engagement with communities with environmental justice concerns and that uses the tools available to the Federal Government, including enforcement of civil rights and environmental laws. Our Nation must also take further steps to dismantle racial discrimination and institutional bias that disproportionately affect the health, environment, safety, and resiliency of communities with environmental justice concerns.”

According to the fact sheet issued by the White House, the new executive order will:

The new executive order also is intended to facilitate and build on federal efforts to advance environmental justice over the past two years that include:

At the same time that the new order was signed, the White House also launched its Campaign for Environmental Justice to ensure that people nationwide are seeing and experiencing the effects of the president’s environmental justice agenda in their communities. The CEQ, working with other agencies, has already published Phase One of the Environmental Justice Scorecard, the first government-wide assessment of federal agencies’ efforts to advance environmental justice; and will continue to monitor progress on a regular basis.

This latest move has garnered praise from governmental leaders and environmental justice advocates across the country. The reservations expressed thus far have focused on the use of cumulative risk analysis for purposes of environmental justice screening, and requests by industry and other regulated parties to have an opportunity to engage with the government and other stakeholders as the policies are implemented. 


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National Law Review, Volume XIII, Number 115