Communities respond to Trump's cuts in environmental justice funding

After the Trump administration terminated over $1.6 billion in EPA grants for environmental justice projects in early 2025, affected communities across the US have faced setbacks in addressing pollution and health risks. In places like East St. Louis, Illinois, planned air quality monitoring efforts were halted midway, leaving residents without vital data on local hazards. Groups are now seeking alternative funding or pursuing legal action amid tighter resources.

The Village of Sauget in St. Clair County, Illinois, has long been an industrial hub with relaxed environmental regulations, founded in 1926 by Monsanto executives and initially named after the company. Home to 134 residents and surrounded by a metro area of 700,000, it hosts polluters including Veolia Environmental Services, which has operated a hazardous waste incinerator since 1999, burning substances like PFAS amid complaints of foul odors.

A 1990s EPA study found elevated levels of lead, volatile organic compounds, and sulfur dioxide in the area, linked to higher cancer and respiratory risks. Children in nearby East St. Louis experience asthma rates far above the national average. Darnell Tingle of United Congregations of Metro-East (UCM), a coalition of local faith groups, noted that congregants suspect the incinerator contributes to illnesses, given the region's poor air quality.

In 2023, UCM secured a $500,000 Community Change Grant from the Biden-era EPA to install air monitors at six churches and analyze the data. However, in early 2025, the incoming Trump administration, led by EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin, withdrew the funding for 105 such grants totaling at least $1.6 billion, deeming them "unnecessary." Assisted by Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), the move also shuttered the Office of Environmental Justice, resulting in broader losses estimated at $37 billion.

Only two monitors were installed before the cutoff, and UCM lacks funds for analysis. A May CDC study in Sauget highlighted insufficient data, unable to link air pollutants definitively to health effects.

Zealan Hoover, a former Biden EPA advisor, praised the grants' direct approach to frontline needs, unlike state-distributed funds. The administration justified the cuts as ending the "green new scam" to prioritize energy production, per a White House fact sheet.

Impacts ripple nationwide: In Pocatello, Idaho, nitrate contamination persists without sewer upgrades; South Bronx flooding risks remain unmitigated; and South Dakota's Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe's $19.9 million plans for bridges, resilience hubs, and solar installations stalled.

Communities grieve the losses, Hoover said, citing disbelief turning to disappointment, as in Kipnuk, Alaska, where terminated flood prevention preceded a deluge. Responses vary: UCM seeks other funds; some litigate against the EPA; Flandreau closed its solar application. Rhonda Conn of Native Sun Community Power Development noted the scramble for scarcer resources, shifting focus to workforce training on lean budgets. "It's very stressful," she added, as competition intensifies for limited grants.

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Illustration depicting EPA headquarters amid air pollution haze, symbolizing the agency's halt on monetizing public health benefits in pollution rules.
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EPA stops monetizing key health benefits in analysis of some air pollution rules

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The Environmental Protection Agency under President Trump has stopped assigning dollar values to certain public-health benefits—such as fewer premature deaths and illnesses—from changes in fine particle (PM2.5) and ozone pollution, citing uncertainty in the economic estimates. Public-health and legal experts say the shift could make it easier for the agency to justify rolling back air pollution protections.

Four months after an explosion at an oil facility in Roseland, Louisiana, spewed toxic sludge across the majority-Black community, residents remain skeptical about federal and state relief efforts. A $1 billion lawsuit against the operator, Smitty’s Supply, targets violations but may not aid affected families directly. Cleanup lags, health issues persist, and environmental advocates highlight patterns of neglect in underserved areas.

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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under President Trump has increased the soil lead level required for cleanup from 200 to 600 parts per million, potentially halting expanded efforts in Omaha's Superfund site. This rollback affects families like Crystalyn Prine's, whose yard exceeds the previous threshold but not the new one, amid ongoing concerns about child health impacts. The change follows Biden-era plans to address contamination from a historic smelter affecting tens of thousands of properties.

One year into Donald Trump's second presidency, his administration has undermined clean energy initiatives, including gutting the Inflation Reduction Act's incentives. However, experts highlight that falling renewable prices and surging electricity demand are propelling the shift to clean energy despite federal obstacles. States and cities continue aggressive emission-reduction efforts, creating tension between policy and economic realities.

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One year into his second term, President Donald Trump aggressively dismantled environmental protections and boosted fossil fuels, slowing U.S. clean energy momentum. However, many actions rely on reversible executive orders amid legal pushback and market-driven renewable growth, limiting their long-term effects.

As Kerala's local body elections approach from December 9 to 11, pollution concerns in districts like Kozhikode, Ernakulam, and Kollam are shaping voter sentiment, while diverse candidates from environmental activists to first-time transwomen add color to the contest. Rival fronts fear public anger over environmental neglect could sway outcomes ahead of next year's assembly polls. Young first-time voters express mixed enthusiasm about participating in the democratic process.

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By year’s end, the civilian federal workforce is projected to fall from about 2.4 million to roughly 2.1 million employees, according to Office of Personnel Management Director Scott Kupor. The cuts—championed by budget chief Russell Vought and the White House initiative dubbed the Department of Government Efficiency, which Elon Musk led for the first four months—have targeted agencies overseeing health, the environment, education, and financial regulation while expanding immigration enforcement.

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