EPA awards UArizona $10M for new environmental justice center

A $10 million grant will support and implement environmental and energy justice projects across four states and the U.S. Pacific Islands.

The Environmental Protection Agency’s promise of clean air, land and water has not reached many historically marginalized communities due to a complex interaction of physical, social and economic factors. The role of a new environmental justice center will seek to fill those gaps.

The agency awarded $10 million to the University of Arizona to fund the Western Environmental Science Technical Assistance Center for Environmental Justice, or WEST EJ Center, for five years.

Led by principal investigator Paloma Beamer, PhD, professor in the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health at UArizona Health Sciences, the WEST EJ Center brings together a diverse coalition with longstanding relationships and extensive expertise working with communities to overcome these barriers.

Paloma Beamer, PhD, focuses her research on understanding how individuals are exposed to environmental contaminants and the health risks of these exposures with a special focus on vulnerable populations, including children, low-wage immigrant workers, Native American people and those in the U.S.-Mexico border region.

“Our public health and environmental researchers here at the University of Arizona are among the best in the country, and I’m proud to see their expertise and experience recognized in this Environmental Justice Center grant from the EPA,” said University of Arizona President Robert C. Robbins, MD. “Dr. Paloma Beamer has shown exceptional leadership in environmental justice, and this new funding, combined with our existing relationships and knowledge, is going to enable us to work with communities to build a more equitable world.”

Beamer’s team of public health researchers and providers will collaborate with regional community organizations to support and implement environmental and energy justice projects in EPA Region 9, which includes Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada and the U.S. Pacific Islands.

The WEST EJ Center is one of 17 Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Technical Assistance Centers selected as part of a new program launched by the EPA in partnership with the U.S. Department of Energy. The centers will help underserved and overburdened communities across the country access funds from President Biden’s Investing in America agenda, including historic investments to advance environmental justice.

The WEST EJ Center will help communities achieve environmental and energy justice by serving as a one-stop shop for hands-on technical assistance, multifaceted training, and other eligible forms of assistance, resources and support.

The center will provide assistance and training to effectively identify, apply for and manage grants and other funding opportunities; increase community involvement in environmental and energy decision-making through training in advocacy, environmental science, climate change, public health, energy infrastructure and student internship programs; and provide access to environmental and energy expertise that can assist with analysis, study design, protocol development and project management.

“Our three-thrust strategy builds on the environmental justice experience we have within our core team and the expertise that we have in the College of Public Health and around the university,” Beamer said. “In everything we do, we use a community-engaged approach so that the people who live and work in a particular area implement the projects and become local advocates and educators for the environmental justice work.”

The WEST EJ Center will follow a hub-and-spoke model, with a central hub composed of several units within the University of Arizona, including the Indigenous Resilience Center in the the Arizona Institute for Resilience, the Participatory Evaluation Institute at the Arizona Prevention Research Center, the Southwest Environmental Health Sciences Center and the Western Region Public Health Training Center. The spokes represent a coalition with five partners that have deep community-based networks and knowledge about environmental and energy justice needs across EPA’s Region 9. The partner organizations and institutions include the Sonoran Environmental Research Institute, an Arizona nonprofit; the Public Health Institute, a California nonprofit; the University of Southern California; the Larson Institute for Health Impact and Equity at the University of Nevada, Reno; and the Hawaii Public Health Institute, a nonprofit in Hawaii.

The WEST EJ Center at the University of Arizona builds on decades of environmental justice experience and project implementation conducted by public health faculty and university colleagues in the Southwest. Together, they work toward environmental and energy justice with the goal of enabling the meaningful involvement of all people in developing and implementing environmental laws, regulations and policies in their own communities.

“I am so pleased to learn about this award for an Environmental Justice Center from the EPA, and so proud of Dr. Beamer and her team,” said Iman Hakim, MD, PhD, MPH, dean of the UArizona Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health. “We have been working with rural communities, tribal communities and border communities around Arizona on environmental challenges for many years, and this new funding builds capacity to bring resources and programs that will grow environmental equity for all.”

Mel & Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health