On Tuesday, the US environmental regulator announced new cleanup initiatives at 25 hazardous waste sites spanning from New Jersey to Oregon, backed by $1 billion in funds.
These sites fall under the Environmental Protection Agency’s Superfund program, established in 1980, aimed at revitalizing land tainted by heavy industry for new economic purposes, like parks and warehouses.
This funding marks the last phase of the $3.5 billion allocated by the bipartisan infrastructure bill signed into law by US President Joe Biden in 2021.
“This funding will help improve people’s lives especially those who have long been on the front lines of pollution,” the deputy EPA administrator Janet McCabe told Reuters reporters on a call.
US Representative Frank Pallone from New Jersey mentioned that the funding will complement Superfund’s anticipated $23 billion infusion over five years.
This additional support comes from reinstating “polluters pay” taxes through the infrastructure law and Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act.
“Reinstating that Superfund tax is really only about basic fairness that corporate polluters, not taxpayers, should have to pay to clean up the messes that they created,” Pallone told reporters.