Draft GPUS Platform Amendment Environmental Justice

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Section title: Environmental Justice

Section subtitle: A safe environment for all.

Our position: Greens believe that no one -- including people of color and the poor -- should be poisoned nor subjected to harmful levels of toxic chemicals, and that no group of people should bear a disproportionate share of the pollution from industrial, governmental and commercial sources or policies.

Across the United States, the poor and people of color suffer disproportionately from environmental hazards in the workplace, at home, and in their communities. Inadequate environmental laws, lax enforcement, and weak penalties for environmental violations undermine environmental quality, public health and civil rights.

Environmental justice is the crossroads of environmental activism and the civil rights movement. It is founded on two fundamental beliefs: that all people have the right to live, work, learn, and play in safe and healthful environments; and that people have the right to influence decisions that affect environmental quality in their communities.

Greens believe that government must ensure the fair treatment of people of all races, cultures, and incomes with respect to the development, adoption, implementation, and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations and policies. To accomplish this, Greens unconditionally support implementation of the principle of environmental justice in our practices, policies and laws across the nation.

Green Solutions

1. Make 'pollution prevention' the preferred strategy for dealing with environmental justice issues, through eliminating environmental threats before they occur and considering cumulative environmental impacts when evaluating risk.

2. Uphold the precautionary principle, requiring polluters to bear the burden of proof in demonstrating the safety of their practices. Expand the application of the precautionary principle from chemicals and health to land use, waste, energy, food policy and local economic development.

3. Expand the public trust doctrine, which holds that government’s role is to protect the commons, to include the domains of public health and protection of the natural environment.

4. Actively promote programs, policies, and legislation that build the capacity to identify disproportionate sitings of polluting and otherwise toxic facilities. Assure nondiscriminatory compliance with all environmental, health and safety laws in order to guarantee equal protection of the public health and safety and environmental integrity.

5. Facilitate procedural justice, ensuring the public's right to know. Make rules and regulations transparent in order for communities to effectively access their rights and participate in the decision making process. Provide information in languages appropriate to the affected communities.

6. Enforce corrective justice, ensuring the rights of communities and local agencies to seek judicial redress. Communities and local agencies must not be required to show or prove “intent to discriminate" to achieve redress for problems of disproportionate and/or racist environmental impacts.

7. Target precautionary and corrective justice actions and resources in communities with the highest concentrations of environmental hazards and in communities lacking socioeconomic resources.

'"8.'" Support, enforce and strengthen NEPA, the National Environmental Protection Act.




ORIGINAL 2004 TEXT OF ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE PLATFORM PLANK

Our position: Greens believe that no one -- including people of color and the poor -- should be poisoned nor subjected to specially large doses of toxic chemicals.

Low-income citizens and minorities suffer disproportionately from environmental hazards in the workplace, at home, and in their communities. Inadequate laws, lax enforcement of existing environmental regulations, and weak penalties for infractions undermine environmental protection.

Green Solutions

1. Devote greater resources to the enforcement and prosecution of environmental crimes.

2. Add environmental crime units to district attorneys in counties with significant pollution problems.

3. Impose a moratorium on siting new toxic chemical or waste facilities in those counties with the highest percentage exposure to hazardous substances.

4. Never force workers to choose between a hazardous job or no job at all.

5. Prevent communities, especially low-income or minority communities, from being coerced by governmental agencies or corporations into siting hazardous materials, or accepting environmentally hazardous practices in order to create jobs.

6. Precede the siting of hazardous materials or practices with public hearings, conducted in the language of those community members who will be directly affected.